For the Public
Common Concerns
Breach of Trust Conditions/Undertakings
In legal transactions, money and property must change hands.
The lawyer's role is to hold documents and property in trust until
the performance of particular conditions. These conditions
are called "trust conditions". Promises by lawyers to carry
out certain tasks and/or fulfill certain conditions are known as
"undertakings".
For example, in the sale of a residential property, the
seller's lawyer sends the document signed by the seller
transferring the land over to the buyer's lawyer on several 'trust
conditions'. The trust conditions must be fulfilled before the
buyer's lawyer can register the land transfer. The most
important trust condition in this example is that the buyer's
lawyer must ensure that they have the money in place for the seller
before registering the transfer of title.
The buyer's lawyer ensures that the seller's lawyer gives
"undertakings" or promises to do particular things such as ensuring
that any interests on the land which may attach to the land (such
as writs, caveats/interests, and mortgages) are removed so
that the buyer will receive "clear title" to the land they are
purchasing.
Chapter XVI, Commentary 10 states the following:
The lawyer shall give no
undertaking that cannot be fulfilled, shall fulfill every
undertaking given, and shall scrupulously honour any trust
condition once accepted.
Undertakings and trust conditions
shall be written or confirmed in writing and shall be absolutely
unambiguous in their terms.
The person to whom an undertaking
is given is entitled to expect that the lawyer giving it will
honour it personally.
If the lawyer is unable or
unwilling to honour a trust condition imposed by someone else, the
subject of the trust condition shall be immediately returned to the
person imposing the trust condition unless its terms can be
forthwith amended, preferably in writing, on a mutually agreeable
basis.