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Remedial consistency in private law

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-16, 09:41 authored by Peter Jaffey
<p>This article is concerned with the concept of ‘remedial consistency,’ the consistency of remedial rights with primary rights in the sense I explain. I argue that the requirement of remedial consistency has important implications across private law. It suggests that the ‘continuity thesis’ does not provide a justification for the right to compensation for a wrong, and I argue that rights to compensation are not generally based on wrongdoing. I also consider whether the absence of a right to specific performance is consistent with the existence of a duty of performance, and I discuss the need for alternative remedies to be mutually consistent. I also discuss the implications of remedial consistency for the concept of unjust enrichment, and I argue on the basis of remedial consistency for the general availability of proprietary claims for invalid transfers.</p>

History

Citation

University of Toronto Law Journal, Volume 72 Issue 2, spring 2022, pp. 216-244

Author affiliation

School of Law

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

University of Toronto Law Journal

Volume

72

Issue

2

Pagination

216-244

Publisher

University of Toronto Press

issn

0042-0220

Acceptance date

2021-05-26

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-10-08

Language

en

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