1. What Distinguishes Unjust Enrichment from a Breach of Contract Claim?
Unjust enrichment and breach of contract are separate legal theories, and the distinction matters because each has different requirements and remedies. A contract claim requires proof of an agreement, whereas unjust enrichment claims do not depend on mutual assent or a written or oral agreement between the parties.
When a contract exists, courts generally will not recognize an unjust enrichment claim because the contract defines the parties' obligations and remedies. However, if a contract is unenforceable, void, or was never formed, unjust enrichment may provide an alternative path to recovery. This doctrine fills a gap: it prevents a party from retaining a benefit they received through the plaintiff's efforts or resources when no enforceable contract governs the relationship.
When Courts Apply Unjust Enrichment over Contract Remedies
Courts turn to unjust enrichment when a contract claim fails but equity demands recompense. Common scenarios include situations where services were performed without a written agreement, family members provided labor or money with an oral understanding that was never memorialized, or a party conferred a benefit on another with the expectation of payment that did not materialize. New York courts recognize that enforcing a contract is not always possible or appropriate, and unjust enrichment doctrine allows recovery based on fairness rather than contractual language.
2. What Are the Core Elements a Plaintiff Must Prove in an Unjust Enrichment Claim?
To succeed in an unjust enrichment claim, a plaintiff must establish three essential elements: the defendant received a benefit, the plaintiff conferred that benefit, and it would be unjust for the defendant to retain the benefit without compensating the plaintiff. The elements of unjust enrichment are fact-intensive and require careful documentation of what was provided and why retention of the benefit is inequitable.
From a practitioner's perspective, the burden of proof rests with the plaintiff, and courts scrutinize whether the defendant's enrichment was truly unjust or merely the result of a failed negotiation or voluntary transfer. The plaintiff must show not only that the defendant benefited but that the circumstances surrounding the benefit—including the plaintiff's intent, the defendant's knowledge, and industry custom—support a finding that retention would violate principles of equity and fairness.
Documenting Benefit Conferred and Unjust Retention
Proof of benefit conferred requires concrete evidence: receipts, invoices, work logs, communications showing the plaintiff's labor or resources, and the defendant's use or enjoyment of those resources. Courts examine whether the defendant accepted the benefit with knowledge that payment was expected or whether the defendant passively received it without objection. In many disputes, the pivotal question is whether the defendant's silence or acceptance constitutes tacit acknowledgment of an obligation to pay. Timing matters significantly; delayed objections or failure to disavow the benefit early can weigh against the defendant's position.
Procedural Considerations in New York Courts
Unjust enrichment claims in New York are often brought as alternative counts when contract claims are uncertain, and courts have recognized that a plaintiff may pursue both theories simultaneously. However, parties frequently encounter timing and notice issues; incomplete or delayed documentation of the benefit conferred can complicate proof, particularly in commercial courts where detailed transaction records are expected. Courts may find that vague or post-hoc descriptions of services rendered or value transferred undermine credibility, and parties benefit from contemporaneous written records or prompt written notice of expectation of payment.
3. How Does a Court Measure Damages in an Unjust Enrichment Case?
Damages in unjust enrichment cases are typically measured by the value of the benefit the defendant received, not necessarily by the plaintiff's cost or loss. This distinction is important because a plaintiff may have invested significant resources to create a benefit that the defendant values at a different amount, and courts generally award the lesser of the two or the fair market value of the benefit at the time it was conferred.
Courts avoid speculative or inflated valuations and instead focus on objective measures: the market rate for services rendered, the resale value of goods transferred, or the reasonable replacement cost of the benefit. If the defendant profited substantially from the plaintiff's contribution, courts may consider that profit in assessing the appropriate remedy, though the plaintiff bears the burden of proving the connection between the benefit and the defendant's gain with reasonable clarity.
Restitution and Quantum Meruit Standards
When services were rendered without a fixed price, courts apply a quantum meruit standard, which means as much as deserved. Under this approach, the plaintiff recovers the reasonable value of services performed, not an inflated or speculative amount. Quantum meruit claims often arise in construction, consulting, and professional service disputes where work was performed but payment terms were never finalized. The plaintiff must prove the services were necessary, were actually performed, and had a measurable market value at the time of performance.
| Damage Measure | Application |
| Benefit Received by Defendant | Market value of goods, services, or assets the defendant obtained |
| Plaintiff's Cost or Expense | What the plaintiff spent to create or provide the benefit (used if lower than market value) |
| Quantum Meruit | Reasonable value of services when no price was agreed |
| Profit Attributable to Benefit | Portion of defendant's profit directly traceable to plaintiff's contribution |
4. What Defenses Might a Defendant Raise against an Unjust Enrichment Claim?
A defendant may argue that the plaintiff voluntarily conferred the benefit with no expectation of payment, that a valid contract governed the relationship and bars the unjust enrichment claim, or that the benefit was not truly retained because it was consumed, transferred, or lost. Voluntary gift is a complete defense; if the plaintiff intended to transfer value without compensation, no unjust enrichment occurs.
Defendants also challenge the measurement of damages by disputing the value of the benefit or arguing that the plaintiff's contribution did not actually produce the benefit the plaintiff claims. In practice, these disputes rarely map neatly onto a single rule, and courts weigh competing factors depending on the record and the parties' conduct. A defendant's good faith belief that no payment was owed, or reliance on an oral understanding that differed from the plaintiff's account, may reduce but does not eliminate liability if the evidence shows the defendant knew or should have known compensation was expected.
Strategic considerations for a potential litigant include gathering contemporaneous written evidence of the benefit conferred, documenting communications that show the defendant's knowledge of an expectation of payment, and preserving records of the value of services or goods provided. If payment discussions occurred, emails, texts, or written proposals showing the parties' understanding of compensation will be critical. Similarly, if the benefit was partially paid or acknowledged in writing by the defendant, that record strengthens a claim significantly. Early consultation on whether to formalize an arrangement in writing or to memorialize an oral agreement can prevent costly disputes and clarify each party's obligations before work begins or value is transferred.
11 May, 2026









