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- Q1192404 subject Q6497407.
- Q1192404 subject Q7006577.
- Q1192404 subject Q8586652.
- Q1192404 abstract "A quasi-contract (or implied-in-law contract or constructive contract) is a fictional contract created by courts for equitable, not contractual, purposes. A quasi-contract is not an actual contract, but is a legal substitute formed to impose equity between two parties. The concept of a quasi-contract is that of a contract that should have been formed, even though in actuality it was not. It is used when a court finds it appropriate to create an obligation upon a non-contracting party to avoid injustice and to ensure fairness. It is invoked in circumstances of and is connected with the concept of restitution.Generally the existence of an actual or implied-in-fact contract is required for the defendant to be liable for services rendered, and a person who provides a service uninvited is an officious intermeddler who is not entitled to compensation. "Would-be plaintiffs cannot deliver unordered goods or services and demand payment for the benefit....A corollary is that one who does have an enforceable contract is bound by the contract's terms: subject to a few controversial exceptions, she cannot sue for restitution of the value of benefits conferred..." However, in many jurisdictions under certain circumstances plaintiffs may be entitled to restitution under quasi-contract (as in the example of Oklahoma below). They are used as remedies for unjust enrichment, management of another's affairs (negotiorum gestio), or payment of a thing not due (indebiti solutio). Quasi-contracts are defined to be "the lawful and purely voluntary acts of a man, from which there results any obligation whatever to a third person, and sometime a reciprocal obligation between the parties." The French Civil Code covers quasi-contracts in the 3rd Book, Title IV, Chapter 1 (articles 1371-1381). One authority defines a quasi-contract as "A licit and voluntary act from which derives obligations subject to a regime close to the contractual one imposing on the author of the act and a third party, not-bound by a contract".".
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q1142833.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q1156800.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q1416315.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q151060.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q159394.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q16246919.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q1649.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q2578557.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q466629.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q562566.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q6497407.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q697327.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q7006577.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q7079621.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q7082395.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q7269070.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q748845.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q818977.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q8586652.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q931483.
- Q1192404 wikiPageWikiLink Q93288.
- Q1192404 comment "A quasi-contract (or implied-in-law contract or constructive contract) is a fictional contract created by courts for equitable, not contractual, purposes. A quasi-contract is not an actual contract, but is a legal substitute formed to impose equity between two parties. The concept of a quasi-contract is that of a contract that should have been formed, even though in actuality it was not.".
- Q1192404 label "Quasi-contract".