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Volokh Conspiracy

Ward Farnsworth guest-blogging about his new book, 'Restitution'

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FarnsworthRestitution

I'm delighted to report that Ward Farnsworth, who is now Dean of the University of Texas School of Law, will be guest-blogging this coming week about his new book, "Restitution: Civil Liability for Unjust Enrichment". I've long much liked Ward's work, including his "The Legal Analyst" (about which he guest-blogged here; see also Ken Anderson's post praising the book) and his "Classical English Rhetoric." His new book likewise looks excellent; here's a summary (paragraph break added):

Restitution is the body of law concerned with taking away gains that someone has wrongfully obtained. The operator of a Ponzi scheme takes money from his victims by fraud and then invests it in stocks that rise in value. Or a company pays a shareholder excessive dividends or pays them to the wrong person. Or a man poisons his grandfather and then collects under the grandfather's will.

In each of these cases, one party is unjustly enriched at the expense of another. And in all of them the law of restitution provides a way to undo the enrichment and transfer the defendant's gains to a party with better rights to them. Tort law focuses on the harm, or costs, that one party wrongfully imposes on another. Restitution is the mirror image; it corrects gains that one party wrongfully receives at another's expense. It is an important topic for every lawyer and for anyone else interested in how the legal system responds to injustice.

In Restitution, Ward Farnsworth presents a guide to this body of law that is compact, lively, and insightful—the first treatment of its kind that the American law of restitution has received. The book explains restitution doctrines, remedies, and defenses with unprecedented clarity and illustrates them with vivid examples. Farnsworth demonstrates that the law of restitution is guided by a manageable and coherent set of principles that have remarkable versatility and power.

This is an important area of the law, to which law students, lawyers, and law professors often pay too little attention; I much look forward to Ward's posts on the subject.