Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly
Unjust enrichment in the USA
Mark Gergen*
ANNUAL SURVEY
The most noteworthy case of the year is Citibank NA v Brigade Capital Management LP (§134), which is the decision on appeal in last year’s most noteworthy case, In re Citibank August 11, 2020 Wire Transfers. The case involves a $900 million mistaken payoff by Citibank of the entire principal amount of the debt of a company that was in deep financial difficulty. The district court held the discharge for value defence precluded recovery of the payment. The courts of appeals reversed. The opinion of Leval J, is an important contribution to the law on what constitutes “inquiry notice”.
Also of special note are three cases involving claims for restitution of premiums paid on illegal life insurance policies. The cases are the tip of a large iceberg. The secondary market in life insurance policies has led people to buy life insurance on the lives of strangers (which is prohibited because of the lack of an insurable interest) or fictitious people (which is fraud). The cases involve claims by downstream purchasers to recover premiums they paid when they are not entitled to the insurance benefit. The three cases are Geronta Funding v Brighthouse Life Insurance Co (§138), Sun Life Assurance Co of Canada v Wells Fargo Bank NA (§150) and Wells Fargo Bank NA v Estate of Malkin (§154). The issue of inquiry notice also looms large in these cases.
CASES
133. Artisan Builders Inc v Jang (2022) 271 A.3d 889 (Pa. Sup. Ct)
Quantum meruit—performance pursuant to unenforceable contract
Plaintiff ABI did renovation work on defendant’s home pursuant to multiple contracts and change orders. Plaintiff filed a lawsuit when defendant refused to pay for the work. The court of common pleas held that the contracts were unenforceable for failure to comply with multiple provisions of the Home Improvement and Consumer Protection Act. The court allowed a fallback claim that was described both as a quantum meruit claim and an unjust enrichment claim. Plaintiff “produced over five hundred (500) pages of receipts, time sheets, invoices, documents signed by Jang, emails, and other evidence of the work ABI performed”. The court of common pleas held that it must decide for defendant
Unjust enrichment in the USA
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