Undergraduate Course: Unjustified Enrichment (LAWS10155)
Course Outline
School | School of Law |
College | College of Humanities and Social Science |
Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Year 3 Undergraduate) |
Availability | Available to all students |
SCQF Credits | 20 |
ECTS Credits | 10 |
Summary | This course will consider the law of unjustified enrichment, predominantly from the perspective of Scots law but also within a comparative legal context. The history of the principle against unjustified enrichment will be considered first from an historical perspective, before a consideration of the component elements of claims in the modern law. The course will set unjustified enrichment within the wider context of the law of obligations, as well as considering its boundaries and connections with other areas of law such as property law, trusts, and negotiorum gestio. The nature of both direct and indirect unjustified enrichment claims will be studied. |
Course description |
The course may include seminars addressing the following topics (among others):
1. Historical development of the legal principle against the retention of unjustified enrichments.
2. External boundaries of enrichment law with other areas of law.
3. Internal taxonomy of unjustified enrichment.
4. Enrichment by transfer.
5. Enrichment by interference.
6. Enrichment by imposition.
7. Third party enrichment.
8. Defences.
9. The measure of recovery.
10. Property law, constructive trusts, tracing, and unjustified enrichment.
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Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites |
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Co-requisites | |
Prohibited Combinations | |
Other requirements | None |
Information for Visiting Students
Pre-requisites | None |
Course Delivery Information
Not being delivered |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- 1. Knowledge and Sources of Law:
- An advanced understanding of the principle against unjustified enrichment within the law of obligations.
- An advanced understanding of the current law of unjustified enrichment in Scotland, and its relationship with other areas of the law of obligations and with other categories of legal liability.
- A deeper knowledge of the role of unjustified enrichment within a comparative legal context.
- A deeper knowledge of the place of unjustified enrichment in proposed instruments of European legal harmonisation, such as the Draft Common Frame of Reference.
- 2. Subject-specific Skills:
- An ability to analyse, evaluate and interpret relevant source material.
- An ability to identify the material legal issue under discussion.
- The development of an advanced approach to addressing critically complex legal
Questions.
- An ability to apply knowledge of legal rules/concepts/principles to solve legal problems.
- An ability to critique conventional legal rules and doctrines.
- An ability to understand legal doctrines within a wider historical and inter-disciplinary context
- The further development of an awareness of the need to provide evidence for assertions and in argument, in particular appropriate legal authority.
- The further development of an ability to critique possible avenues for legal development, and to assess the merits of such.
- 3. General Transferable Intellectual Skills:
The course aims to provide students with skills in:-
- developing complex evaluative and critical reasoning;
- developing creative thinking;
- developing an ability to apply knowledge outcomes to complex questions in written and oral form;
- developing an advanced ability to present arguments for and against a proposition in a dispassionate manner;
- developing the faculty of assessing and presenting the relative weight to be accorded to arguments;
- developing doctrinal and taxonomical skills in a logical manner; and
- using electronic legal and other disciplinary resources at an advanced level.
- 4. Key Personal Skills:
The course aims to provide students with skills in:-
- developing advanced written communication by way of formative assessment and examination, including the ability to compose written work in conformity with a prescribed format;
- formatting and presentation skills by virtue of word processing;
- oral communication skills developed in seminar discussions;
- group work, including the importance of appreciating different dynamics within a group and learning to respect the opinions of other people even if there is disagreement.
- 5. Subject-specific Legal and Ethical Values:
The course aims to provide students with:
- an awareness of the moral and philosophical questions posed by the course;
- an appreciation of the way in which philosophical and moral concepts can become embedded in law;
- provide students with a space to reflect on their view of the implementation of moral values in the law, and the extent to which the law should reflect such values.
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Additional Information
Graduate Attributes and Skills |
Not entered |
Keywords | Unjustified Enrich |
Contacts
Course organiser | Prof Martin Hogg
Tel: (0131 6)50 2071
Email: Martin.Hogg@ed.ac.uk |
Course secretary | Mrs Heather Haig
Tel: (0131 6)50 2053
Email: Heather.Haig@ed.ac.uk |
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