Unjust Enrichment Claims: How to Recover Funds When No Contract Exists



Unjust enrichment claims exist because courts recognized long ago that allowing a party to profit from another's expense without a valid contract is as unjust as breaching a written agreement, and the restitution remedy available in these cases can recover the value of the benefit the defendant wrongfully retained.

Contents


1. Situations Where Unjust Enrichment Claims Arise


Unjust enrichment claims arise from payments made without a binding contract to benefits retained where it would be unconscionable to allow the recipient to keep them, and identifying which situation applies is the first step in assessing whether a restitution claim is viable.



Payments Made without a Formal Contract


Payments made without a formal contract, including advance payments for services that were never delivered, funds transferred based on a failed oral agreement, and amounts paid under a contract subsequently found to be void, all generate unjust enrichment claims because the payee received a benefit, the payor suffered a corresponding loss, and courts applying the implied-in-law contract doctrine impose an obligation to make restitution. Unjust enrichment and elements-of-unjust-enrichment counsel can evaluate the facts to determine whether all three elements of an unjust enrichment claim are present.



Retention of Benefits without Compensation


The retention of benefits without adequate compensation arises when one party confers a valuable benefit on another through services performed, improvements made to the recipient's property, or business opportunities generated without a legally enforceable agreement requiring compensation, and courts applying the quantum meruit doctrine impose a legal obligation to pay the reasonable value of the benefit. Equitable relief and business-dispute counsel can assess whether the benefit was conferred under circumstances that gave rise to a reasonable expectation of compensation.



2. Legal Risks of Allowing Unjust Enrichment to Continue


Allowing an unjust enrichment to continue unaddressed exposes the claimant to specific legal and financial risks, because the passage of time erodes the evidentiary record, may allow the statute of limitations to run, and permits the defendant to continue benefiting from improperly retained funds.



Financial Loss without Contractual Protection


A claimant who cannot point to an enforceable written contract is in a precarious position if they allow the unjust enrichment to continue without taking legal action, because the absence of a contract means the claimant's recovery depends entirely on the equitable claim's success, and a defendant who dissipates assets can leave the claimant with a judgment that cannot be collected. Civil-damages-claim and damages-for-breach counsel can evaluate the defendant's financial position and advise on the urgency of initiating legal proceedings.



3. When Can You File an Unjust Enrichment Claim?


An unjust enrichment claim is available in a wide range of situations, but the claimant must satisfy the three-element test that courts apply under the Restatement Third of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment, and the threshold question of whether a valid contract already covers the relationship is often determinative.



Meeting the Legal Elements of Unjust Enrichment


The three elements a claimant must establish are that the defendant was enriched by receiving a measurable benefit, that the enrichment came at the claimant's expense in the form of a corresponding loss, and that retention of the enrichment without compensation would be unjust because the defendant's retention violates the claimant's reasonable expectations or produces a result that equity cannot countenance. Unjust enrichment and civil-litigation-evidence counsel can evaluate the facts against each of the three elements and identify the documentary and testimonial evidence that establishes each element.



Distinguishing Contract Claims from Equitable Claims


Courts in most jurisdictions do not permit a claimant to bring an unjust enrichment claim when an enforceable express contract governs the subject matter of the dispute, but this rule does not bar an unjust enrichment claim when the parties dispute whether an enforceable contract exists, when the contract is alleged to be void or voidable, or when the claim arises from conduct that falls outside the existing contract. Breach-of-contract and civil-litigation counsel can plead the breach of contract claim and the unjust enrichment claim in the alternative, preserving all available theories of recovery.



4. How Legal Counsel Recovers Funds through Unjust Enrichment Claims


Recovering funds through an unjust enrichment claim requires counsel who can build the restitution theory on the specific facts of the case, present the equitable arguments that persuade the court to impose liability in the absence of a contract, and execute the litigation strategy that produces the fastest and most complete recovery.



Building Restitution Claims and Legal Arguments


Building a restitution claim for unjust enrichment requires counsel to establish the precise measure of the defendant's enrichment, which may be the market value of the benefit received, the cost the defendant saved by obtaining the benefit without paying, or the profit the defendant generated by deploying the improperly retained benefit. Awarding-damages and plaintiffs-rights counsel can calculate the restitution amount under each available measure and assert the claimant's right to disgorgement of all profits the defendant derived from the wrongfully retained benefit.



Litigation Strategies for Financial Recovery


When an unjust enrichment dispute cannot be resolved through direct negotiation, counsel must choose whether to initiate formal litigation, pursue the claim through arbitration, or structure a negotiated settlement that returns the retained benefit with accrued interest, and the correct forum choice depends on the amount in dispute, the strength of the claimant's equitable position, and the defendant's financial condition. Settlement-negotiation and commercial--litigation counsel can design and execute the recovery strategy that produces the fastest return of the improperly retained benefit.


19 Mar, 2026


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