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Negotiorum Gestio: A Civilian Concept in the Common Law?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2008
Abstract
This paper assesses whether English law recognizes a concept of negotiorum gestio. Claimants intervening in other' affairs and seeking restitution or reimbursement of expenses are often labeled ‘officious’, and disallowed relief. That, however, gives a misleading impression of English law. English law does recognize a concept of negotiorum gestio, which while very different to that found in German law, has parallels to versions found in other Civilian systems. It provides a cause of action to recover the intervenor's expenses, and any loss suffered during the intervention. It also provides a defence to the intervenor's intentional torts, although negligent intervenors will remain liable for their negligence
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References
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46 § 680 BGB.
47 § 683I BGB.
48 § 683II BGB.
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55 ibid 200. Art 2292 Louisiana CC.
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80 [1939] ch 286.
81 ibid 321–2.
82 (1884) 15 QBD 60
83 ibid 64–5.
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92 Dagan (n 73) 99–101. On altruism as its own reward see 103–6, and Kortmann (n 3) 88.
93 Burrows (n 4) ch 9. For an alternative and much criticized view see Stoljar, S ‘Unjust Enrichment and Unjust Sacrifice’ (1987) 50 MLR 603, Stoljar (n 3) 12–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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100 Birks (n 3) 124.
101 [1987] 1 Lloyd's Rep 151.
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113 ibid 1116. We value life under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976, for example, but refuse to value it in other areas, such as the ‘wrongful life cases’. See McKay v Essex AHA [1982] QB 116 (CA).
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119 Surrey Breakdown Ltd v Knight [1999] RTR 84.
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137 Aitken (n 88) 566.
138 ibid 567.
139 Kortmann (n 3) 164–5.
140 See Street (n 63) 94–6.
141 For a discussion of the tort of negligence and the standard see ibid 247–54.
142 Ersk 3.3.52.
143 Birks and Mitchell (n 130) para 15.160.
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153 [1913] 1 KB 103; Munro v Willmott [1949] 1 KB 295. For the modern statutory authority for bailees to sell see Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977, ss 12–13.
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156 [1982] AC 939.
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164 ibid para 4.005; Goff and Jones (n 129) 450.
165 Aitken (n 88) 586.
166 ibid 586.
167 Bowstead and Reynolds (n 149) para 4.006; Chitty (n 158) para 31.036.
168 Bowstead and Reynolds (n 149) para 4.002
169 Ersk III.3.16; Art 2297 Louisiana CC.
170 Lorenzen (n 27) 198. Note however, that Roman law did not have a concept of true agency, or ‘direct representation’ Zimmermann (n 10) 421.
171 Müchener Kommentar (n 25) Band 1 § 164. The rules of ‘agency’ or Vertretungsrecht can be found in § 164ff BGB.
172 Markesinis (n 28) 72, but see Kortmann (n 3) 110. This separation also exists in South African law Encyclopaedia of South African Lae (n 21) vol 1 para 17. On the separation in Scots law see Walker (n 59) 213–15.
173 Jebara v Ottoman Bank [1927] 2 KB 254.
174 AG Ceylon v de Silva [1953] AC 461; United Bank of Kuwait v Hammond [1988] 1 WLR 1051.
175 Kortmann (n 3) 134–6
176 ibid 186.
177 Stewart (n 18) 173.
178 Walker (n 59) 218.
179 Bills of Exchange Act 1882, s 66.
180 Goff and Jones (n 129) 461.
181 Bills of Exchange Act 1882, s 68(5).
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185 (1841) 7 M&W 595, 151 ER 903.
186 Aitken (n 88) 577–80.
187 D.11.7.12.
188 Aitken (n 88) 571. It provides an exception to the general rule against recovery where the payment was against the express wishes of principal, as did repairs to the outside a rented house D.43.10.3.
189 Marasinghe, ML ‘The Place of Negotiorum Gestio in English Law’ (1976) 8 Ottawa L Rev 573, 577; Kortmann (n 3) 118–20.Google Scholar
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191 McInnes (n 144) 54–5.
192 D.3.5.3.5.
193 (1890) 44 Ch D 94; See also Re Gibson (1871) LR 7 Ch App 52, Williams v Wentworth (1842) 5 Beav 325, 49 ER 603. See generally Stoljar (n 3) 76–94.
194 D.3.5.4.
195 Treitel (n 150) ch 13.
196 Ayres and Landry (n 24) 124; Art 2296 Louisiana CC; Leslie (n 19) 34.
197 Re F [1990] 2 AC 1 (HL) 75–6. This also applies to the defence of necessity Clerk and Lindsell (n 66) para 3, 105–6.
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200 Albert (n 198) 98–9.
201 Road Traffic Act 1988, s 158(2).
202 McInnes (n 144) 48.
203 Albert (n 198) 104; this is a concern shared in Germany see Larenz (n 25) 355.
204 Larenz (n 25) 355–6; this is not easy to justify Markesinis (n 28) 751; Dawson (n 6) 1126.
205 McInnes (n 144) 66–7.
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207 Degeling (n 114) 95.
208 ibid 97.
209 ibid ch 8; Degeling deals with tort claims and carers at 195–200; Degeling, S ‘A New Rason for Restitution: The Policy against Accumulation’ (2002) 22 OJLS 435, ‘The Defence of Passing On a Policies against Accumulation: Consumers and Unjust Enrichment’ [2004] RLR 25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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214 ibid 570.
215 Note, however, that in Scots law Walker separates the two—salvage is dealt with Walker (n 59) 514–20; Dawson (n 6) 1098.
216 [1988] AC 831 (HL) 857 (Lord Brandon).
217 [1987] QB 687 (CA) 709.
218 See also The Telemachus [1957] P 47.
219 Rose, F ‘Restitution for the Rescuer’ (1989) 9 OJLS 167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
220 Walker (n 59) 514–20.
221 McCamus (n 123)315; Sorrel v Paget [1950] 1 KB 252; this is not so in cases of the defence of necessity Clerk and Lindsell (n 64) paras 3, 109–10.
222 Sachs v Miklos [1948] 2 KB 25; Birks and Mitchell (n 130) para 15.158; Jaffey, PThe Nature and Scope of Restitution (Hart Publishing Oxford 2000) 80.Google Scholar
223 Dagan (n 73) 91; Palmer (n 84) 369.
224 (1874) LR 9 Ex 132; Chapman v Champman [1954] AC 429.
225 [1911] 2 KB 528.
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227 (1793) 2 H B1 254, 128 ER 536; Kortmann (n 3) 111–12.
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230 Hanbury and Martin (n 228) 47–8; Kortmann (n 3) 156–8.
231 Stoljar (n 3) 10.
232 [1996] 2 All ER 672.
233 Now replaced by Trustee Act 2000, s 31(1).
234 Ersk 3.3.52–4.
235 [1981] 3 All ER 220.
236 ibid 223 (Fox LJ).
237 [1966] 3 WLR 1009 (HL); O'Sullivan v Management Agency [1985] QB 428; contrast Guinness v Saunders [1990] 2 AC 663.
238 [1964] 1 WLR 993, 1018.
239 [1989] ch 32.
240 ibid 53.
241 Excluding salvage.
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