Landmark Case of Pavey vs Matthews
14 July 2022 in Civil and Commercial Litigation and LawThe Landmark case of Pavey and Matthews v Paul
The landmark civil litigation case of Pavey and Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul 1987 (HCA) sets out the circumstances in which payment for construction work without a written contract may occur.
The High Court judgement was based on the concepts of
- Unjust enrichment
- Awarding restitution for this enrichment, (to the plaintiffs who were the builders Pavey and Matthews).
- The amount of this restitution being an equitable remedy referred to as quantum meruit.
Background
The civil litigation case involved the renovation of a property belonging to Mrs Paul and performed by Pavey and Matthews. The contract was orally agreed. At the end of the renovation, Pavey and Matthews were paid $36,000. This was only a portion of what they claimed they were owed, which they believed to be the prevailing rate of $63,000.
The Issues and Judgment
The question that the case needed to answer was whether a quantum meruit claim could be independent of a contract and therefore avoid the Building Licensing Act 1971 (NSW). The High Court of Australia did indeed uphold that the case was independent of the Builders Licensing Act 1971 (NSW). The basis of this was not Mrs Paul’s promise to pay, rather it was the work done and her acceptance of this work.
The Court contended that although the Licensing Act allowed owners to withdraw from oral commitments, it did not enable them to avoid payment for work that they had requested and approved.
The builders would have received the lower amount only if Mrs Paul had withdrawn her promise before the work had begun and the builders had gone ahead anyway.
The court also noted that the amount rewarded could be no higher than the objective market rate for the work, even if Mrs Paul’s promise was for a higher price.
” Unjust enrichment in the law of this country constitutes a unifying legal concept which explains why the law recognises, in a variety of distinct categories of case, an obligation on the part of a defendant to make a fair and just restitution for a benefit derived at the expense of a plaintiff and which assists in the determination, by the ordinary processes of legal reasoning, of the question whether the law should, in justice, recognise such an obligation in a new or developing category of case”
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