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68 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 973 (2011)
Measurement of Restitution: Coordinating Restitution with Compensatory Damages and Punitive Damages

handle is hein.journals/waslee68 and id is 981 raw text is: Measurement of Restitution: Coordinating
Restitution with Compensatory Damages
and Punitive Damages
Doug Rendleman*
And whence they came and whither they shall go
the dew upon their feet shall manifest.
Wallace Stevens, Sunday Morning
Abstract
Courts apply    compensatory   damages, restitution, and punitive
damages to formulate litigants' civil remedies. The frequently contested
policy justifications for these three remedies are often hazy and uncertain.
The transitions between the three remedies are disputed. Lawyers and
courts often misunderstand restitution with deleterious consequences for
litigants and the administration ofjustice.
The American Law Institute's completion of the Restatement (Third) of
Restitution & Unjust Enrichment provides the legal profession with
opportunities to dispel this haze and to clarify the distinctions. In addition
to  obviating   defendants' unjust    enrichment,   restitution  with  its
measurement choices provides a midpoint on a continuum of the three
remedies.     Restitution's  policy  justifications  often  overlap  with
*  Huntley Professor, Washington and Lee Law School. This Article began to take
its shape during three presentations: the South Eastern Association of Law Schools
Conference panel, Restitution Revival-Restatement (Third) of Restitution & Unjust
Enrichment, August 2010; the Frances Lewis Law Center Faculty Enclave, March 2011; and
the Remedies Discussion Forum, University Aix-en-Provence, France, June 2011.
Well-earned thanks: To Professor Mark Gergen, Professor and Reporter Andrew Kull,
Professor Douglas Laycock, and Professor Caprice Roberts for their extraordinary assistance
in eliminating errors of omission and commission. To Professor Jeff Berryman for a crucial
and formative nudge at an auspicious time. To Ms. Helena Jedziniak for research assistance.
To Editor in Chief, Brandon Hasbrouck; Frances Lewis Law Center Director, Josh Fairfield;
and American Law Institute Director, Lance Liebman for their outstanding efforts on behalf
of this splendid symposium; also to Editor in Chief Christine Shepard and her able staff for
bringing it to publication. For, finally, a 2011 summer research grant from the Frances
Lewis Law Center that supported researching and writing this Article.

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