June 2, 2023 – Unjust Enrichment & Constructive Trust Claims

“If a party establishes the three elements of a claim for unjust enrichment – enrichment, corresponding deprivation, and lack of juristic reason – the remedy can take one of two forms: a personal (or monetary) award or a proprietary award: Kerr, at paras. 46, 55; Moore v. Sweet, 2018 SCC 52, [2018] 3 S.C.R. 303, at para. 89. The framework in which a court should assess the appropriate remedy was summarized by this court in Martin v. Sansome, 2014 ONCA 14, 118 O.R. (3d) 522, at para. 52:

In this way, the framework established in Kerr requires the court to ask the following questions:

1) Have the elements of unjust enrichment – enrichment and a corresponding deprivation in the absence of a juristic reason – been made out?;

2) If so, will monetary damages suffice to address the unjust enrichment, keeping in mind bars to recovery and special ties to the property that cannot be remedied by money?;

3) If the answer to question 2 is yes, should the monetary damages be quantified on a fee-for service basis or a joint family venture basis?; and,

4) If, and only if monetary damages are insufficient, is there a sufficient nexus to a property that warrants impressing it with a constructive trust interest?

A monetary award is the default remedy and should suffice in most cases to remedy the unjust enrichment: Kerr, at para. 47; Moore, at para. 89. In Kerr, the Supreme Court of Canada clarified that monetary awards for unjust enrichment could be quantified in two ways. First, a monetary award may be calculated on a quantum meruit or “fee-for-service” basis – the value of the claimant’s uncompensated services. Second, a monetary award may be calculated on a “value survived” basis, by reference to the overall increase in the couple’s wealth during the relationship: Kerr, at paras. 49 and 55.

The concept of joint family venture helps courts to quantify the monetary remedy where a claim of unjust enrichment has been made out. Where the evidence shows that the domestic arrangements under which the unmarried parties have lived amounted to a joint family venture, monetary damages should be calculated on the value survived basis, namely on the basis of a share of the wealth generated in the joint family venture proportionate to the claimant’s contributions: Kerr, at para. 102. If there was no joint family venture, monetary damages calculated on a quantum meruit basis are likely appropriate.

The proprietary remedy of constructive trust in a property requires a claimant to show two things: that monetary damages are inappropriate or insufficient to remedy the unjust enrichment; and the claimant’s contribution was linked to the acquisition, preservation, maintenance, or improvement of the disputed property. The required link has been variously described as demonstrating a “sufficiently substantial and direct” link, a “causal connection”, a “nexus” or a “clear proprietary relationship”: Kerr, at paras. 50-51, 78; Moore, at para. 91. The extent of the constructive trust interest should be proportionate to the claimant’s contributions: Kerr, at para. 53; Moore, at para. 91.”

         Lesko v. Lesko, 2021 ONCA 369 (CanLII) at 14-17