August 2017

The requirement that a claim to return unjust enrichment shall not be asserted under Article 180, Subparagraph 3 of the Civil Code is only limited to circumstances where debt payment is deliberately made with clear awareness(Taiwan)

Jenny Chen
The Supreme Court rendered the 105-Tai-Shang-229 Civil Decision of February 4, 2016 (hereinafter, the "Decision"), holding that the requirement that a claim to return the unjust enrichment shall not be asserted under Article 180, Subparagraph 3 of the Civil Code is only limited to circumstances where debt payment is deliberately made with clear awareness.
According to the facts underlying this Decision, the Appellant asserted that Company A had been awarded the Appellee's project contract at issue. To provide a bond, Company A applied to the Appellant for a letter of guarantee for performance bond (hereinafter, the "Guarantee at Issue") as the guarantee. Later on due to serious construction delay of Company A, the Appellee informed the Appellant that the contract had been terminated and requested payment of the bond, which was fully paid by the Appellant. However, it was later found that Company A completed 50% of the construction and that the bond could have been reduced accordingly. Therefore, the Appellant requested that the excessive bond received by the Appellee be returned pursuant to provisions concerning unjust enrichment under the Civil Code.
According to the Decision, the Guarantee at Issue was a guarantee contract with an independent payment commitment. If the contract contains rescission terms which stipulate that the bond should be reduced on a pro rata basis when the project at issue has progressed to a certain stage as determined by the original trial court, the rescission terms should have been fulfilled when the construction progress was determined to have reached 50% and the bond should have been reduced on a pro rata basis. Therefore, the excessive bond received by the Appellee could probably constitute unjust enrichment. According to this Decision, Article 180, Subparagraph 3 of the Civil Code provides that when payment is made to repay a debt when the payer is obviously aware that the payment obligation does not exist, the return of the payment shall not be claimed. This is limited to circumstances where payment is made when it is deliberately decided that the debt exists. As for circumstances where a debt which does not exist is erroneously believed to exist, even though the erroneous belief is attributed to negligence or gross negligence, this is still not debt repayment out of willfulness. Therefore, such subparagraph does not apply. It was further pointed out in the Decision that whether the Appellant was clearly aware that it had no payment obligation and deliberately waived its claim for a return at the time of payment in this matter should be further clarified and confirmed. Therefore, the original decision was reversed and remanded.

本网站上所有资料内容(「内容」)均属理慈国际科技法律事务所所有。本所保留所有权利,除非获得本所事前许可外,均不得以任何形式或以任何方式重制、下载、散布、发行或移转本网站上之内容。

所有内容仅供作参考且非为特定议题或具体个案之法律或专业建议。所有内容未必为最新法律及法规之发展,本所及其编辑群不保证内容之正确性,并明示声明不须对任何人就信赖使用本网站上全部或部分之内容,而据此所为或经许可而为或略而未为之结果负担任何及全部之责任。撰稿作者之观点不代表本所之立场。如有任何建议或疑义,请与本所联系。

作者

Katty
Katty