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by toomuchtodo
1716 days ago
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The sender did not mean to send it, making it misappropriation or unjust enrichment. Edit: (Re Revlon) https://www.npr.org/2021/07/23/1019909860/banque-worms (NPR piece on the Revlon incident) > Elisabeth de Fontenay is a professor at Duke University's law school, and she used to be a corporate lawyer. > DE FONTENAY: When payments are made, for example, from banks to individuals like all of us in error, we have to give it back. And in fact, if we don't give it back, the banks actually will come after you. They will sue you, and sometimes they will bring criminal cases against you. |
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I’m not saying this is identical to that case, which depended upon New York law. But it is far from clear-cut and I think you are being way too confident in your view, since nothing like this has ever appeared in court.
[0] the decision: https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rrBrQQPB...