From: | Duncan Sheehan (LAW) <Duncan.Sheehan@uea.ac.uk> |
To: | John Randall QC <jrandall@st-philips.com> |
Andrew Burrows <andrew.burrows@law.ox.ac.uk> | |
obligations@uwo.ca | |
'enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca' (enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca) | |
Date: | 11/11/2013 14:04:13 UTC |
Subject: | RE: Causes of Action |
Thanks everyone
I think my problem partly stems from Letang v Cooper. What counts as only one factual scenario? If it’s the absence of a basis that counts, and there are several bases is that one cause of action or several? There’s a whole debate in Scots
or South African law on this, but they don’t start (as far as I can see) from the question what would count as a single cause of action in theoretical terms.
More generally then it’s the question of what constitutes a united group of facts: if I can paraphrase something Fred said albeit not generally, if a remedy R is generated by facts A-D do we think A-D is the group? Might we say a group
of A, C, D and F is sufficiently similar to be the same factual scenario or a different one; is the cause of action then ACD, or are there two causes of action? I could of course complicate still further by wondering what a remedy was: is a quantum meruit
claim a cause of action, or a misnomer because it’s a remedy? In Canada part of the complication seems to be whether QM is a remedy for UE or an overlapping cause of action.
Time to plough through the suggestions.
Duncan
From: John Randall QC [mailto:jrandall@st-philips.com]
Sent: Monday, November 11, 2013 1:36 PM
To: Andrew Burrows; Duncan Sheehan (LAW);
obligations@uwo.ca; 'enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca' (enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca)
Subject: RE: Causes of Action
Duncan
One possible source (which may or may not be helpful for you in the unjust enrichment context) is Letang v Cooper [1965] 1 QB 232 per Diplock LJ at 242G-243A
(a factual situation the existence of which entitles one person to obtain from the court a remedy against another person)
Best wishes
John
John Randall QC
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Opening in Spring 2014
From: Andrew Burrows [andrew.burrows@law.ox.ac.uk]
Sent: 11 November 2013 13:32
To: Duncan Sheehan (LAW); obligations@uwo.ca; 'enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca'
(enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca)
Subject: RE: Causes of Action
In the advisory group on the Restatement of the English Law of Unjust Enrichment we had considerable early discussion on the question of whether one should describe unjust enrichment as a cause of action. That
is reflected in what is written at p 26 of the Restatement (OUP, 2012). I am not aware of a theoretical account of this but certainly some of the practitioners and judges on the advisory group were concerned about calling unjust enrichment a cause of action
because they had a conception of a cause of action as being narrow and specific. There are cases on limitation of actions, esp on s 35 of the Limitation Act 1980, that involve discussion of what constitutes a cause of action.
Andrew Burrows
Professor of the Law of England,
All Souls College,
Oxford,
OX1 4AL
From: Duncan Sheehan (LAW) [mailto:Duncan.Sheehan@uea.ac.uk]
Sent: 11 November 2013 13:20
To: obligations@uwo.ca; 'enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca'
(enrichment@lists.mcgill.ca)
Subject: Causes of Action
A question:
Does anybody know of anything written on what counts as a cause of action in terms of a theoretical account of what one is and how they work? I’m struggling with the question of whether Canadian unjust enrichment
law has one cause of action or several: Garland v Consumer Gas (and others) talk of the cause of action in unjust enrichment, which given what it says the prerequisites are seems reasonable. Whatever you might think of what the SCC says, it does appear to
be a single cause of action, but there are others (Bell Mobility v Anderson) that talk of several causes of action.
One point of attack seems to me to ask “what counts as a single cause of action?” but I’m struggling to find anything.
Duncan
Ps apologies if you get this twice
Professor Duncan Sheehan
Deputy Head of School
UEA Law
University of East Anglia
Norwich Research Park
Norwich
NR4 7TJ
Phone: +44(1603)593255
Papers at http://ssrn.com/author=648495
See my BePress site at http://works.bepress.com/duncan_sheehan
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