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RDG
online Restitution Discussion Group Archives |
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Hi all,
I have a question for the group.
Generally, before a claim in restitution may be brought the defendant
must be unjustly enriched "at the expense of" the plaintiff. This is usually
taken to require that the defendant's enrichment must have caused a diminution
in the plaintiff's wealth. The purpose of this requirement is to identify
the proper plaintiff.
I am wondering whether the incurring of a liability by the plaintiff
will suffice or whether the plaintiff's wealth must "actually" be reduced
before an action may be brought.
To put the question in context, consider a variation
of the situation considered in the Australian High Court case of Pavey
& Mathews v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221. Say a builder constructs a house
under an ineffective contract and then sues the owner of the land for
reasonable remuneration (ie. on a quantum meruit basis). If the builder
did not perform the work personally but contracted with subcontractors
who performed the work, would the builder have a claim against the owner
for the value of all the work done BEFORE he expended any of his own funds
by paying for the work?
Does anyone know of any decisions in which this issue has been considered?
The second question is whether there would still be a valid claim if
the subcontractors released the builder from liability. Since the "passing
on defence" has been rejected, I would assume that the builder's position
vis-a-vis third parties would be irrelevant to his claim for the reasonable
value of the benefit conferred on the owner.
Regards
Rafal <== Previous message Back to index Next message ==> |
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