Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
The situation which is created when rules of quasi-contract are in conflict has been neglected by English writers and has also received little attention on the Continent. It is possible, no doubt, to explain this lack of interest on the ground that the question is not one which occurs very often in practice. The various Continental rules relating to quasi-contract do not, in substance, differ widely from one another. Further, the somewhat narrow view of quasi-contractual liability hitherto taken by English law has probably discouraged foreign creditors from pressing claims of this type in our Courts.
2 See Diekeson, Leigh v. (1885) 15 Q. B. D. 60.Google Scholar
3 See Winfield, The Province of the Law of Tort; Lord Wright, Sinclair v. Brougham, 6 C. L. J. 305; Jackson, The History of Quasi-Contract; Friedmann, , ‘The Principle of Unjust Enrichment’, Canadian Bar Eeview, xvi, 247, 369;Google ScholarLogan, , ‘Restatement on Restitution’, 2 Modern Law Eeview, 153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Cf. Holdsworth, ‘Unjustifiable Enrichment’, 55 L. Q. R. 37; Gutteridge and David, ‘Unjustified Enrichment’, 5 C. L. J. 204.