This paper argues that courts should recognise unjust enrichment as a cause of action, mainly due to the structure and discipline this can bring to New Zealand’s private law. This paper explores the historical development of unjust enrichment, and its relationship to the general law of restitution. This involves an exploration of legal taxonomy, and the different roles the concept of unjust enrichment can play in a common law legal system. The current New Zealand position on unjust enrichment is unclear: it can be seen operating as a label, a legal principle and some argue it is a cause of action in its own right. This paper considers how other jurisdictions have treated the concept of unjust enrichment, before briefly outlining how the cau...
This chapter examines the nature and origins of legal responsibility for gain in private law. Contra...
An award of damages in lieu of an injunction can have vast and far-reaching consequences. It can und...
Courts and commentators frequently use the noun “subsidiarity” and the adjective “subsidiary” to hel...
This paper argues that courts should recognise unjust enrichment as a cause of action, mainly due to...
From the 1970s onward there have been numerous attempts to persuade the courts of New Zealand that u...
From the 1970s onward there have been numerous attempts to persuade the courts of New Zealand that u...
The modern law of unjust enrichment is unique in many respects. In one sense, it is the newest and m...
That there exists a law of restitution concerned with reversing unjust enrichments is widely conside...
In law, gains, like losses, don’t always lie where they fall. The circumstances in which the law req...
The English law of unjust, or unjustified, enrichment is part of the civil law of obligations, which...
New Zealand’s accident compensation scheme replaced compensatory damages for personal injury with a ...
$."... to be consulted before any significant legal debate." W. J. Stewart in: Scots Law Times 1995$...
A definitive version is available online on a current, full text basis on the Westlaw database - htt...
The question of what justice has to do with the law of unjust enrichment (if it has anything to do w...
The law of unjust enrichment is a subject of intense doctrinal debate. While it has received increas...
This chapter examines the nature and origins of legal responsibility for gain in private law. Contra...
An award of damages in lieu of an injunction can have vast and far-reaching consequences. It can und...
Courts and commentators frequently use the noun “subsidiarity” and the adjective “subsidiary” to hel...
This paper argues that courts should recognise unjust enrichment as a cause of action, mainly due to...
From the 1970s onward there have been numerous attempts to persuade the courts of New Zealand that u...
From the 1970s onward there have been numerous attempts to persuade the courts of New Zealand that u...
The modern law of unjust enrichment is unique in many respects. In one sense, it is the newest and m...
That there exists a law of restitution concerned with reversing unjust enrichments is widely conside...
In law, gains, like losses, don’t always lie where they fall. The circumstances in which the law req...
The English law of unjust, or unjustified, enrichment is part of the civil law of obligations, which...
New Zealand’s accident compensation scheme replaced compensatory damages for personal injury with a ...
$."... to be consulted before any significant legal debate." W. J. Stewart in: Scots Law Times 1995$...
A definitive version is available online on a current, full text basis on the Westlaw database - htt...
The question of what justice has to do with the law of unjust enrichment (if it has anything to do w...
The law of unjust enrichment is a subject of intense doctrinal debate. While it has received increas...
This chapter examines the nature and origins of legal responsibility for gain in private law. Contra...
An award of damages in lieu of an injunction can have vast and far-reaching consequences. It can und...
Courts and commentators frequently use the noun “subsidiarity” and the adjective “subsidiary” to hel...