Restitution - Restitution For Wrongs

Restitution For Wrongs

Judicial remedies
Legal remedies (Damages)
  • Compensatory damages
  • Punitive damages
  • Incidental damages
  • Consequential damages
  • Liquidated damages
  • Reliance damages
  • Nominal damages
  • Statutory damages
  • Treble damages
Equitable remedies
  • Specific performance
  • Account of profits
  • Constructive trust
  • Injunction
  • Restitution
  • Rescission
  • Rectification
  • Declaratory relief
Related issues
  • Adequate remedy
  • Election of remedies
  • Provisional remedy
  • Tracing
  • Legal costs

Imagine that A commits a wrong against B and B sues in respect of that wrong. A will certainly be liable to pay compensation to B. If B seeks compensation then the court award will be measured by reference to the loss that B has suffered as a result of A’s wrongful act. However, in certain circumstances it will be open to B to seek restitution rather than compensation. It will be in his interest to do so if the profit that A made by his wrongful act is greater than the loss suffered by B.

Whether or not a claimant can seek restitution for a wrong depends to a large extent on the particular wrong in question. For example, in English law, restitution for breach of fiduciary duty is widely available but restitution for breach of contract is fairly exceptional. The wrong could be of any one of the following types:

  1. A statutory tort
  2. A common law tort
  3. An equitable wrong
  4. A breach of contract
  5. Criminal offences

Notice that (1)-(5) are all causative events (see above). The law responds to each of them by imposing an obligation to pay compensatory damages. Restitution for wrongs is the subject which deals with the issue of when exactly the law also responds by imposing an obligation to make restitution.

Example. In Attorney General v Blake 1 AC 268, an English court found itself faced with the following claim. The defendant had made a profit somewhere in the region of £60,000 as a direct result of breaching his contract with the claimant. The claimant was undoubtedly entitled to claim compensatory damages but had suffered little or no identifiable loss. It therefore decided to seek restitution for the wrong of breach of contract. The claimant won the case and the defendant was ordered to pay over his profits to the claimant. However, the court was careful to point out that the normal legal response to a breach of contract is to award compensation. An order to make restitution was said to be available only in exceptional circumstances.

Read more about this topic:  Restitution

Famous quotes containing the words restitution and/or wrongs:

    When someone borrows an animal from another and it is injured or dies, the owner not being present, full restitution shall be made. If the owner was present, there shall be no restitution; if it was hired, only the hiring fee is due.
    Bible: Hebrew, Exodus 22:14,15.

    It is impossible for one class to appreciate the wrongs of another.
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902)