Gain-based Remedies for Breach of Contract: A Comparative Analysis of English and Polish Law

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This book focuses on an emerging problem in English contract law: what should be done when a party has been unjustly enriched as the result of a breach of contract but there is no measurable loss suffered by said party? Two rulings are at the heart of the book: Wrotham Park Estate v Parkside Homes and Attorney-General v Blake. These two cases can be said to have established gain-based remedies in English contract law. However, the principles that underpin these remedies are not entirely clear and are subject to debate.

This book analyses these principles through the lens of compensatory and restitutionary approaches. Moreover, it applies a comparative analysis of these approaches through the lens of the civil law jurisdiction in Poland.

Since the term ‘compensation’ is not a universal concept, the book distinguishes between two rationales in the compensatory analysis. The first, reparative compensation, is defined as a form of monetary recompense for loss or damage actually suffered. The second, substitutive compensation, represents a monetary equivalent to a right that a person has been deprived of or denied. Both rationales require the application of a broad notion of loss in order to make gain-based remedies workable in both English and Polish law.

In contrast, ‘restitution’ states that a person cannot be permitted to profit from their own wrongdoing. Based on this principle, the book argues that gain-based remedies could be applied under Polish law through the rules of unjust enrichment. However, in order to do so, a broader understanding of the subtraction prerequisite (the enrichment being at the aggrieved party’s expense) would have to be adopted. The book concludes that unjust enrichment is a more natural way of implementing gain-based remedies in civil law jurisdictions.

Author(s): Daniel Zatorski
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 168
City: Cham

Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction and Methodology
1.1 The Methodology
1.2 The Comparative Question
1.3 The Approach Towards Answering the Question
1.4 The Work´s Structure
References
Books
Articles
Chapter 2: Gain-Based Remedies for Breach of Contract in General
2.1 Introduction to Gain-Based Remedies and Basic Terminology
2.2 An Overview of the Most Relevant English Case Law on Gain-Based Remedies
2.2.1 The Wrotham Park Remedy
2.2.2 Case Law After Wrotham Park
2.2.3 The Blake Remedy
2.2.4 Case Law After Blake
2.3 The Relation Between Wrotham Park and Blake
References
Books
Articles
Chapter 3: Finding Gain-Based Remedies Under Compensatory Principles
3.1 The Principles of the Law of Damages
3.1.1 The Compensatory Principle of Damages
3.1.2 The Interests Protected by an Award of Damages
3.1.2.1 Performance/Expectation Interest
3.1.2.2 Reliance Interest
3.2 Criticism of the Traditional Notion of Compensatory Damages
3.3 Alternative Understandings of Compensation
3.3.1 Reparative Compensation
3.3.1.1 Compensation for Lost Opportunity to Bargain or Apply for an Injunction
3.3.1.2 Reparative Compensation Rationales Under Polish Law
3.3.2 Substitutive Compensation
3.3.2.1 Compensation for Lost Right
3.3.2.1.1 The User Principle and the Lost Right of Dominium
3.3.2.1.2 The Problematic Nature of Property
3.3.2.1.3 Compensation for Lost Right Under Polish Law
3.3.2.2 Compensation for Lost Objective Benefits
3.3.2.3 The Rights-Based Approach
3.3.2.3.1 The Performance Interest
3.3.2.3.2 Damages as the Next Best Thing
3.3.2.3.3 Putting a Price Tag on Performance
3.3.2.3.4 The Rights-Based Approach Under Polish Law
3.4 The Most Suitable Compensatory Approach
References
Books
Commentaries
Articles
Chapter 4: Finding Gain-Based Remedies Under Restitutionary Principles
4.1 The Lack of a Common Language of Restitution
4.2 The Interrelation Between Contract and Restitution
4.3 Restitutionary Disgorgement for Breach of Contract
4.3.1 Establishing a Restitutionary Interest
4.3.2 Unjust Enrichment as the Underlying Principle of Restitutionary Disgorgement for Breach of Contract
4.3.2.1 The Scope of Unjust Enrichment
4.3.2.2 The Necessity to Apply a Broad Understanding of Unjust Enrichment
4.3.2.3 The Necessity to Apply a Broad Understanding of Subtraction
4.3.2.3.1 Subtraction as a Wrongful Interference with Property
4.3.2.3.2 Subtraction as a Broader Category of Wrong
4.4 The Most Suitable Restitutionary Approach
References
Books
Commentaries
Articles
Chapter 5: Summary and Conclusions
References
Articles
Case Law
England and Wales
Poland
Other Jurisdictions
Other Materials
Normative Acts
Restatements and Miscellaneous