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The Scope and Structure of Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

The Scope and Structure of Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

This ambitious restatement grapples with the complex debates ongoing on the structure of unjust enrichment, proving to be a major contribution to the field. If there is one field of private law that generates excessive debate and deliberation it is that of unjust enrichment. Even the basic structure of the subject is open to misunderstanding. Arguments range from whether there is a unified principle of unjust enrichment, to whether it should be considered as a branch of property or of the law of equity. In this major critique of the subject, a leading private lawyer interrogates the ongoing criticisms of how the subject is constructed. Through a process of justification of unjust enrichment and responses to its critics, it presents a clearly articulated structure of this key branch of private law.

Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 360

Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2005-01-13
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  • Publisher: OUP Oxford

This new edition of Unjust Enrichment by the editor of the Clarendon Law Series, is a fully updated, clear and concise account of the law of unjust enrichment. It attempts to move away from the use of obscure terminology inherited from the past. This text is the first book to insist on the switch from restitution to unjust enrichment, from response to event. It organises modern law around five simple questions: Was the defendant enriched? If so, was it at the claimant's expense? If so, was it unjust? The fourth question is then what kind of right the claimant has, and the fifth is whether the defendant has any defences. This second edition was revised and updated by Peter Birks before his death from cancer on 6 July 2004 at the age of 62. It represents the final thinking of the world's leading authority on the subject.

The Foundations of Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 164

The Foundations of Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

Six public lectures given by Peter Birks when he was the Centennial Visiting Fellow at the Victoria University of Wellington Law School in August and September 1999.

Understanding Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 430

Understanding Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

This book is a collection of articles based on Understanding Unjust Enrichment,a symposium held at the University of Western Ontario in January 2003. The articles, written from the perspective of English, Australian, Canadian, German and Jewish law, deal with numerous theoretical and practical issues that surround restitution and unjust enrichment. The articles outline recent developments across the Commonwealth, explain the unjust enrichment principle and its component parts, and address discrete issues such as tracing, choice of law, disgorgement damages for breach of contract, and the use of unjust enrichment in the cohabitation context. The contributors are Kit Barker, Peter Benson, Jeffrey Berryman, Michael Bryan, Andrew Burrows, Robert Chambers, Gerald Fridman, Peter Jaffey, Dennis Klimchuk, Thomas Krebs, John McCamus, Mitchell McInnes, Stephen Pitel, Stephen Waddams and Ernest Weinrib.

Research Handbook on Unjust Enrichment and Restitution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 544

Research Handbook on Unjust Enrichment and Restitution

  • Categories: Law

This comprehensive yet accessible Research Handbook offers an expert guide to the key concepts, principles and debates in the modern law of unjust enrichment and restitution.

Rethinking Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 401

Rethinking Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

This inter-disciplinary volume brings together scholars from across the globe to challenge the dominant position of unjust enrichment and suggest more satisfactory alternatives. Rethinking Unjust Enrichment includes a broad range of voices from the UK, US, Australia, Canada, China, Singapore, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and South America. The book includes voices of sceptics who think that the current unjust enrichment doctrine must be seriously qualified and others who think that it should be eliminated altogether. The contributions cast doubt on the various parameters of unjust enrichment from an analytical standpoint, representing four interrelated perspectives: history, soc...

A Restatement of the English Law of Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

A Restatement of the English Law of Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

This Restatement presents a distillation of the current state of the common law of unjust enrichment into a coherent set of doctrines. Written by an authority in the area, assisted by senior judges, academics, and practitioners, the Restatement offers a persuasive statement of the law in this newly recognized and uncertain branch of the common law.

Enrichment in the Law of Unjust Enrichment and Restitution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

Enrichment in the Law of Unjust Enrichment and Restitution

  • Categories: Law

Enrichment is key to understanding the law of unjust enrichment and restitution. This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the concept of enrichment and its implications for restitutionary awards. Dr Lodder argues that enrichment may be characterised either factually or legally, and explores the consequences of that distinction. In factual enrichment cases, the measure of enrichment is the objective value received. This is the basis of many awards of money had and received, quantum meruit, quantum valebat and money paid. In legal enrichment cases, the benefit is the acquisition of a specific right or the release of a specific obligation. The remedy is restitution of that right or reinstatement of that obligation. It is demonstrated that specific restitution of the defendant's legal enrichment is often the basis for resulting trusts, rescission, rectification and subrogation. This book has profound implications for understanding restitutionary awards and the relationship between the enrichment inquiry and other aspects of the law of unjust enrichment, including the 'at the expense of' inquiry and the defence of change of position.

Unjust Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 208

Unjust Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

This book challenges the orthodox approach to the analysis of unjust enrichment, developed by Peter Birks and adopted by the House of Lords and Supreme Court in a series of later decisions. It does so in 3 ways. First, the book argues that the Birksian model fails to fit some typical situations unless the language of the formula is stretched to the point of being artificial. For example, "enrichment" is now just a term of art. Secondly, the Birksian model fails to provide a normative justification for the courts awarding recovery in unjust enrichment claims. For example, it offers no explanation on the basis on which an "unjust factor" should be categorised as "unjust". Thirdly, and most fundamentally, the book rejects the Birksian approach of adopting a top-down academic theory of unjust enrichment and ignoring the authorities which pre-date its adoption by the House of Lords. Instead, the book seeks to arrive at a theoretical understanding of unjust enrichment by tracing the historical development of this area of the law through the authorities and commentaries from the 18th century onwards, and analysing the reasoning of the judges and scholars.

Unjustified Enrichment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 802

Unjustified Enrichment

  • Categories: Law

Unjustified enrichment has been one of the most intellectually vital areas of private law. There is, however, still no unanimity among civil-law and common-law legal systems about how to structure this important branch of the law of obligations. Several key issues are considered comparatively in this 2002 book, including grounds for recovery of enrichment, defences, third-party enrichment, as well as proprietary and taxonomic questions. Two contributors deal with each topic, one a representative of a common-law system, the other a representative of a civil-law or mixed system. This approach illuminates not just similarities or differences between systems, but also what different systems can learn from one another. In an area of law whose territory is still partially uncharted and whose borders are contested, such comparative perspectives will be valuable for both academic analysis of the law and its development by the courts.