Call: 1976
“Trust disputes – claims in negligence against trustees for their administration of the trust.” Lexis PSL Private Client (2019, 2022)
“Student Lettings, Frustration and the Pandemic” Legalease March 2021 (available on the Ten Old Square website).
Atkin’s Court Forms Vol 37 (1) – Specific Performance (2015) (2020)
“Neighbourhood Watch” (the effect of Coventry v Lawrence on nuisance claims where there have been changes in the locality)”: Property Law Journal Dec. 2017 and Jan. 2018
“Threat to Independence (Charities and Gagging Clauses)” Legalease April and May 2014
“An Unresolved Question – “Whether the Will Must Be Present when the Testator Acknowledges his Signature”: Trusts and Estates Law and Tax Journal Sept. 2013
David delivers talks at Ten Old Square seminars as well as in-house seminars for chambers clients.
Edwards v Aurora Leasing Ltd. [2021] EWHC96 (CH): The circumstances where a trustee in bankruptcy can recover a payment or a preference that is made by a bankrupt between the presentation of the bankruptcy petition and the making of the bankruptcy order, and the surprising contrast with the situation with regard to payments or preferences made before the petition, or with regard to payments or preferences made by a company. Ten Old Square blog post (2021). Available on Ten Old Square website.
Business and Property Court Pilot Scheme on Disclosure: Pre action to Close of Statements of Case and e-Disclosure (2019)
Fire Safety and Cladding in Blocks of Flats: Liability and Prevention (2018) A wide-ranging review of the relevant common law and statutes.
“Digging the Dirt on Basements” (2017). A survey of the issues arising out of excavations of basements.
“Powers and Duties of Mortgagees, Receivers and Administrators in the Management and Sale of Property” 2016.
David Schmitz is a self-employed, independent barrister whose practice is governed by the Code of Conduct of the Bar of England and Wales. He is regulated by The Bar Standards Board [Bar Ref 16939] and is fully insured with the Bar Mutual Indemnity Fund [BMIF Ref 2360/024] to provide legal services, please refer to the BMIF website for full details of the world-wide cover provided. He is registered for VAT under the reference 446971904.
David Schmitz has a wealth of experience in most areas of Chancery and Commercial practice, and this background makes him particularly adept at dealing with complex problems that require knowledge of several fields.
To take a recent example, he has advised a national charity, with a large property portfolio, on how to get in the title to the freehold and leasehold interests of a property, where the titles are unregistered, the trusts pre-date TLATA and the ownership of both interests is vested in an associated company which has been dissolved.
His practice has an emphasis on property litigation and on professional negligence cases involving property, but he also deals with private client work, in particular pensions and charities, and with cases of insolvency, undue influence and cohabitation.
He is a qualified mediator. He has just completed a two-part work on the law governing liability of fiduciaries, as well as certain non-fiduciaries, to account for secret profits, and on the law governing liability of third parties to compensate for dishonest assistance in such cases. The analyses cover recent English cases such as Wood v Commercial First Business Ltd. and Business Mortgage Finance 4 plc v Pengelly, both reported at [2022] Ch 123, as well as Medsted Associates Ltd v Canaccord Genuity Wealth (International) Ltd. [2018] 1 WLR 314, Lifestyle Equities CV v Ahmed [2024] 2 W.L.R. 1297, and Hotel Portfolio II UK Ltd. v Ruhan [2023] Bus LR 175. The work also focusses on issues raised in the cases brought in Singapore and New York by the art collector Dmitry Rybolovlev against an agent/broker for alleged fraud and (unsuccessfully) against Sotheby’s for allegedly assisting him, and suggests how these would be resolved in England. (Bouvier and another v Accent Delight International [2016] 1 LRC 60 and Accent Delight International Ltd. v Sotheby’s18-CV-9011 (JMF) (3rd January 2023) (Furman J, U.S. Federal Court, Southern District of New York).
David undertakes all manner of property work (including landlord and tenant). He advises and represents developers, as well as persons who have been caught up in cohabitation and undue influence disputes, where his experience goes back to Grant v Edwards [1986] Ch 629 and CIBC v Pitt [1994] AC 200). He has also done many cases of professional negligence relating to property transactions (please see below).
David employs his experience in property law (above) to good effect in claims against solicitors and other professionals. He has frequently dealt with the complexities which affect the measure and recoverability of damages.
David advises and represents clients in commercial disputes. Examples of his work in this field include:
Reported under Esso Petroleum Co. Ltd. v Addison and others [2003] All ER (D) 253 (Jul).
David has acted in a number of matters where substantial questions in the law of insolvency have arisen.
David has been involved in a number of pensions cases over the years. These include Krasner v Dennison (above, under the heading Insolvency) as well as:
David has done many cases where trust law questions form a part of the questions in issue. He is also the author of the LexisNexis practice note on trustees’ negligence and he has done applications by trustees for the court to approve settlements on behalf of persons lacking capacity. He is engaged in a case to expand the investment powers of a trustee, whose statutory powers were excluded by a home-made will.
David Schmitz has written an article for Thomson Reuters Practical Law on Rukhadze & Others…
David Schmitz recently appeared for the appellant in the Court of Appeal in Campbell v…
When Can the Bastards Grind You Down? Times Travel (UK) Ltd. v Pakistan International Airlines…