*192 MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the New York City Transit Authority (“NYCTA”), both individually and on behalf of those similarly situated, alleging that the manner in which the NYCTA provides refunds for discontinued transit tokens violates the Fifth Amendment. 1 Defendant NYCTA is a public benefit corporation created by the New York State Legislature to operate New York City’s transit system, including but not limited to its subways and buses, pursuant to the New York Public Authorities Law § 1200, et seq. In order to remedy the alleged constitutional violation, plaintiffs ask the Court for declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as costs and attorneys’ fees.
By notice of motion dated May 24, 2004, defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The NYCTA has identified a number of reasons it believes plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment claim fails as a matter of law, including because (i) plaintiffs have not alleged an economic injury and therefore lack standing; (ii) the decision to phase out tokens is a non-justiciable administrative decision; (iii) tokens are not protected property under the Fifth Amendment; and (iv) the NYCTA’s refund procedure does not constitute a taking and is otherwise constitutional. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, and also moved to amend their complaint to assert a Fourteenth Amendment claim. Oral argument on all motions was heard on March 22, 2005; on March 31, 2005, the Court issued an order granting the motion for judgment on the pleadings and denying the motion for leave to amend. The basis for the Court’s ruling is set forth below.
I. Background
When considering a motion for judgment on the pleadings, district courts should not stray beyond “facts stated in the complaint or in documents attached to the complaint as exhibits or incorporated in the complaint by reference.”
Kramer v. Time Warner Inc.,
The first of New York’s subway lines opened on October 27, 1904, and for the next 44 years commuters paid a nickel for the privilege of riding. Perez-Pena, Richard, Subway Token, Currency of the City, Dies at 50, N.Y. Times, March 15, 2003, at Bl; see also http://www. nycsubway.org/ (last visited February 2, 2005). In 1948 the fare increased to $.10, forcing the transit authority to replace or modify entrance turnstiles to accept only dimes (technological limitations prevented turnstiles from accepting both nickels and dimes). Subway Token, Currency of the City, Dies at 50, at Bl. Five years later, in 1953, the fare was set to rise again, this time to $.15. Rather than modify the turnstiles to accept nickels, dimes and perhaps also quarters, the transit authority introduced the token.
The original token was a small disc with the letters “NYC” in the middle and the “Y” cut out. This token lasted 17 years, through multiple fare increases, before be *193 ing replaced by a larger “Y” cutout token in 1970, which itself was retired in 1980 in favor of a solid brass token. Id. Next in line was the “bulls-eye” token, introduced in 1986, and known for its distinctive lighter-colored center. In 1995 the token took its final form, a simple design with a pentagonal cutout in the center. Id. Of course, subway fares were increased more than five times from 1953 to 1995, which means that tokens were not replaced after every fare increase. The New York Times describes a sort of cat-and-mouse game leading up to increases:
Each fare increase over the last five decades has been accompanied by a bluffing game by the transit system as it sought to prevent hoarding of tokens at the pre-increase price. Each time, officials said they would either introduce a new token or bring back a former one, but just as often, they announced at the last moment that the token would not change.
Id. In this way, the NYCTA was frequently able to avoid the cost of designing and producing millions of new tokens when fares increased.
But that is not to say that a token-based infrastructure was inexpensive to maintain. Tokens had to be transported, recovered, and counted, and were also prone to counterfeit. For these reasons, “transit officials ... long looked forward to the day when most of their business with riders would involve exchanges of electrons, not metal and paper.” Id. That day came in 1994 with the introduction of the “Metro-Card” electronic fare system. MetroCards have several advantages over tokens. For one, they do not have to be counted, sorted or collected. Another advantage is that the cards can be sold in “unlimited use” daily, weekly and monthly blocks of time, which allows customers to reduce the average price per ride.
Although MetroCards were slow to catch on, by early 2003 they had captured a significant share of gross fare purchases, prompting the NYCTA to announce that tokens would be completely discontinued by the end of the year. Id. 2 This decision was communicated to customers through various media, including through postings on NYCTA property, in newspapers announcements, and by both radio and television news broadcasts. (Id; see, e.g. Ex. 3 to Answer). Luddite commuters were thus faced with a choice: tokens could be used before May 4, 2003 on subways, or before December 31, 2003 on buses. After May 4, 2003, tokens could be redeemed for their purchase price pursuant to a token refund procedure.
That refund procedure is the subject of this suit. In order to clarify the mechanics of the procedure, the Court invited the parties to submit additional evidence on the topic. Defendant responded with two affidavits. The first is sworn to by Carol Noymer, the NYCTA’s attorney of record in this case, and generally outlines the refund procedure as it stood in 1995. The second is sworn to by Carolyn Lewis, the Administrative Manager in the NYCTA’s Comptroller’s Treasury Business Office, who is responsible for the oversight and administration of the refund procedure. Plaintiff did not submit evidence in response to the Court’s request, but stipulated at argument that the current refund procedure is as set forth in defendant’s affidavits.
*194 In 1995, when the NYCTA last changed tokens, customers were allowed to exchange an old token worth $1.25, along with a quarter, for a new one worth $1.50. (March 18, 2005 Aff. of Carol Noymer, ¶ 4). For the first six weeks after the introduction of the new token, customers wishing to make an exchange could do so at any token booth. (Id.) Thereafter, customers wishing to obtain refunds for fewer than 20 tokens were required to travel to NYTCA’s Brooklyn headquarters or its Lost Property Office at the 34th and 8th Avenue station in Manhattan. (Id., ¶ 5). Customers wishing to refund more than 20 tokens could only go to the Brooklyn headquarters. (Id.).
Following the events of September 11, 2001, the NYCTA instituted tighter security precautions at all its facilities. At its Brooklyn headquarters, for example, non-employees had to be escorted at all times. (March 17, 2005 Aff. of Carolyn Lewis, ¶ 4). As a result, because the token refund desk was located on the second floor of the Brooklyn building, refund-seekers needed an escort, which meant that they needed to call ahead and make an appointment. (Id.). This is the procedure that was in effect at the time that tokens were discontinued in 2003, and is also the procedure described in plaintiffs complaint, which was filed in February 2004.
In September 2004 the procedure changed yet again, this time because the NYCTA moved its Comptroller’s Office from Brooklyn to an address in lower Manhattan. (Id., ¶ 5). After the move, the NYCTA was able to drop the requirement that token holders call ahead because the refund desk was situated in a manner that did not allow access to the rest of the building. (Id.). This is the procedure as it stands today — anyone seeking to redeem tokens can do so by traveling to 2 Broadway in lower Manhattan from Monday to Friday between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. (Id., ¶ 6). No advance notice is required, and cash redemptions are offered if the value of the refunded tokens is less than $30. Higher amounts are paid by check. (Id.).
Thus, the allegation in plaintiffs complaint that customers seeking a refund must “make an appointment by telephone and appear in person at NYCTA headquarters at 370 Jay Street, Brooklyn, New York”, is no longer correct. (Compl., ¶ 15). In any case, plaintiffs still maintain that the refund procedure is “inadequate ... in that it is extremely impractical ... to avail [oneself] of [the] procedure in [light] of the time and cost involved.” (Compl., ¶ 16). According to plaintiffs, the cost of the refund procedure is especially burdensome when compared with “the value of the refunds to which [customers] are entitled.” (Id.). The crux of their claim appears to be that their tokens have been “taken” by the state because the “value” df the discontinued tokens is reduced by the relatively high cost of recovery. 3
Defendant, of course, disagrees with this characterization, noting that while the procedure may involve a “slight inconvenience”, it does not violate the Fifth Amendment. (See, e.g., Mot. to Dismiss, pp. 12-21). The Court now turns to that question.
II. Discussion
“In deciding a Rule 12(c) motion, [courts] apply the same standard as [is] applicable to a motion under Rule 12(b)(6), accepting the allegations contained in the
*195
complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.”
Ziemba v. Wezner,
A. The Takings Clause
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment — made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment — prevents “private property” from being “taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const, amend. Y. Generally speaking, takings claims arise in one of two ways. “The clearest sort of taking,” commonly referred to as a “physical” taking, “occurs when the government encroaches upon or occupies private land for its own proposed use.”
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island,
Whichever form the alleged taking assumes, to succeed in establishing a constitutional violation claimants must demonstrate: (1) that they have a property interest protected by the Fifth Amendment, (2) that they were deprived of that interest by the government for public use, and (3) that they were not afforded just compensation.
Frooks v. Town of Cortlandt,
Plaintiffs have failed to state their Fifth Amendment claim with precision. 4 In their opposition to defendant’s motion, plaintiffs ask for a “judgment ... declaring that [the] NYCTA’s refund procedure violates the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” (Opp., p. 16; Compl., ¶ 20). Elsewhere in the complaint, plaintiffs allege that certain NYC- *196 TA past acts constituted a Fifth Amendment taking, and characterize the current refund procedure as “inadequate”. (See, e.g., Compl., ¶¶ 13, 16). Reading plaintiffs’ submissions together, the Court will construe their claim as alleging that the refund procedure constitutes a regulatory taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Thus, plaintiffs’ claim is as follows: (i) purchasers of transit tokens have a right to recover what they paid for those tokens; (ii) this right constitutes a constitutionally protected property interest; and (ii) that property is “taken” by the refund procedure because it is an “inadequate” method of recovery. With that construction in mind, the Court turns to the merits of the claim.
1. What is the Scope of Constitutionally Protected Property?
As noted,
supra,
the first step in analyzing a taking claim is to ask whether the claimant has a cognizable property interest that has been jeopardized by governmental action.
See Story v. Green,
*197
At issue in both
Roth
and
Sindermcmn
was whether employees of public universities had property interests in their continued employment sufficient to warrant Fourteenth Amendment due process protection.
Roth,
at 564,
The answer, according to the Court, is that property interests must rest on some “legitimate claim of entitlement,” as distinguished from a mere “abstract need or desire” or “unilateral expectation” of the claimed interest.
Roth,
at 577,
The Supreme Court has not since limited the universe of independent sources, instead leaving lower courts to define the range of constitutional property interests 'within the “positivist” framework of
Roth.
7
These courts have been anything but consistent. Most have struggled to square
Roth’s
expansive view of “property” with the Court’s admonition that “the range of interests protected ... is not infinite”.
Roth,
at 570,
2. What is a Token?
Plaintiffs have failed to identify the “independent source” that would establish a *198 protected property interest in this case. Instead, plaintiffs begin their discussion by alleging that, whatever property is at stake here, it is not based on a contract with the state. (Opp., p. 19 (noting that “the present case is not based on a breach-of-contract theory.”)). Rather than following that disclaimer with their view of what the claimed interest is based on, plaintiffs make two conclusory assertions: first that this case is “based solely on the onerous requirements that NYCTA has placed on them in order to obtain the refunds to which they are entitled,” and second that they “only seek just compensation for property for which they have paid and whose value was eliminated.” (Id.) (emphasis in original).
But what, exactly, is the “property for which [plaintiffs] have paid”? In one sense, of course, it is the token itself. 8 In a more accurate sense, though, the alleged property at stake is whatever bundle of rights is conferred upon token holders. Plaintiffs must sense the truth in this, for they allow that a token is the same as “a ticket to a Broadway show,” arguing that both “clearly ha[ve] value.” (Id., p. 16). Certainly, a ticket to a Broadway show confers upon its holder certain rights, as does a ticket for passage on an Atlantic steamer, or a New York City subway. All are therefore in the nature of a contract. 9
This conclusion is supported by at least two New York decisions, both of which hold that the relationship between transit customers and a transit authority is in the nature of a contract. In
D’Angelo v. Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority,
[S]ince plaintiff purchased his book of tickets in advance, he exchanged the present use of his money for a promise of future service and for the convenience of using tickets rather than cash each time he obtained the service, while [defendant] gained the benefit of present value and use of the money transferred.
D’Angelo,
at 130,
Although this Court sees no reason to view the relationship between token purchasers and the NYCTA differently, it is worth noting that one New York court has expressed doubts about the existence of a contractual relationship. In
Leeds v. MTA,
the First Department considered whether a commuter was entitled to a refund of $15.00 for token purchases where he claimed that the MTA “provided persistently late train service and permitted unsanitary, unsafe, and overcrowded conditions on its trains.”
Leeds v. MTA,
The essence of plaintiffs lawsuit is that the Transit Authority ... breached its implied contract to transport him arising from the sale and purchase of a token, and that there is no specific statute exempting the defendant from ordinary, common-law contract liability.... At the outset, it is at once apparent that however the relationship between the Transit Authority and the subway rider may be defined, it does not easily fit within the mold of familiar contract concepts. Of course one may recover what has been paid where there is a substantial failure of performance by the contracting party, but in this instance the consideration charged the user bears no logical relationship to the cost of a facility operated “not for gain but for service and convenience.”
Id.,
at 329-330,
Having considered the foregoing cases, the Court is of the opinion that the better view for present purposes is expressed in
D’Angelo
and
Levine,
where the courts assumed the relationship to be contractual in nature. To be sure, the contract at issue here is neither written nor oral — it is implied. “Implied contracts normally arise in situations where,” as here, “there is a bargained-for exchange contemplated by the parties, but no overt expression of agreement.” 6 Fletcher Cyclopedia of Private Corp. § 2580 (2004). In
Sindermann,
the Supreme Court observed that not every term of a contract must be reduced to writing,
Sindermann,
at 602,
As noted, supra, plaintiffs’ claim that the refund procedure constitutes a regulatory taking. Thus, assuming that their implied contract with the NYCTA gives them the right to a refund at least under certain circumstances, the question is whether that right qualifies as “property” for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.
3. Can Contract Rights Ever Give Rise to Constitutional Property Interests?
As a threshold matter, it is clear that contract rights can give rise to constitutional entitlements. Indeed, in both
Roth
and
Sindermann,
discussed
supra,
the Supreme Court held that public employment contracts give rise to constitutional property interests under certain conditions. Likewise, in
Lynch v. United States,
It follows from
Lynch
that contracts can be “independent sources” within the
Roth
framework. At the same time, it is apparent — in this Circuit at least — that not
all
contracts between the government and a private party create property interests that warrant constitutional protection, at least not in the context of the Due Process Clause.
S & D Maintenance v. Goldin,
*201
The Second Circuit clarified its view on this subject in
S & D Maintenance,
The Second Circuit framed the question on appeal as whether S & D had “a contractual right giving rise to a ‘legitimate claim of entitlement’ and thus a constitutionally protected property interest under Roth.” Id., at 966. Although noting that “every enforceable contract right can be said to be an ‘entitlement’ ” as long as “a state provides judicial remedies for the enforcement of contracts,” the Court explained:
If the concept of “entitlement” were this expansive, federal courts could be asked to examine the procedural fairness of every action by a state alleged to be in breach of its contracts ... [T]he doctrinal implications of constitutionalizing all public contract rights would raise substantial concerns, and we seriously doubt that Roth and its progeny portend such a result.
Id., at 966. The court then observed that the property interest attendant to “an ordinary commercial contract with a state” is “qualitatively different from” the property interests afforded constitutional status by the Supreme Court in the past, which have included (i) welfare benefits; 10 (ii) social security benefits; 11 and (iii) tenured status in public employment. 12
Relying on this distinction, the Second Circuit announced that property interests having contracts as their source are protectable by the Due Process Clause
only
where “protection is sought in connection with a state’s revocation of a
status.” Id.
(emphasis in original).
13
According to the court, “status” is “an estate within the public sphere characterized by a quality of either extreme dependence ... or permanence ... or sometimes both.”
Id.
Status is to be distinguished from contractual interests that “are not associated with any cognizable status of the claimant beyond” some “temporary” relationship with a government entity.
Id.,
at 967;
see also Martz v. Incorporated Village of Valley Stream,
The question for this Court is whether plaintiffs’ implied contract with the NYC-TA gives rise to a constitutionally protected property interest for purposes of the Takings Clause.
4. Does the Implied Contract Give Rise to a Protected Property Interest?
Having considered the source of plaintiffs’ claim in this case, the Court finds that plaintiffs’ right to a refund, or to a particular refund procedure, stems from a
routine
contract between a provider of services and its customers, analogous to other commercial arrangements in which funds are advanced prior to the provision of a service.
D’Angelo,
In any case, the refund procedure does not induce in token holders anything approaching a “quality” of dependence. Plaintiffs’ claims, at best, are based on a right to redeem approximately $10.00 worth of tokens — not an insignificant amount but hardly equivalent to an employment contract or benefit on which a claimant’s livelihood depends. Moreover, the New York Legislature has granted the NYCTA broad discretion to modify the terms of its contract with riders, including by:
[M]ak[ing], amending] and repealing] rules governing the conduct and safety of the public as it may deem necessary, convenient or desirable for the use and operation of the transit facilities under its jurisdiction, including without limitation rules relating to the protection or maintenance of such facilities, the conduct and safety of the public, the payment of fares or other lawful charges for the use of such facilities, the presentation or display of documentation permitting free passage, reduced fare passage or full fare passage on such facilities and the protection of the revenue of the authority.
New York Public Authorities Law § 1204(5-a) (2004) (emphasis added). Such broad discretion — which clearly allows the NYCTA to regulate its fare structure — -is simply not consistent with a protected property interest under either the Due Process or Takings Clause.
Indeed, in
Bowen v. Public Agencies Opposed to Social Sec. Entrapment,
[T]he “contractual right” at issue in this case bears little, if any, resemblance to rights held to constitute “property” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.... The [termination] provision [at issue] constituted neither a debt of the United States ... nor an obligation of the United States to provide benefits under a contract for which the obligee paid a monetary premium .... [T]he provision was simply part of a regulatory program over which Congress retained authority to amend in the exercise of its power to provide for the general welfare.... [Thus, it] did not rise to the level of “property.”
Bowen,
at 55,
For all of these reasons, the Court finds that the rights at issue here are not “property” within the meaning of the Takings Clause, and therefore holds that plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
B. Does the Refund Procedure Constitute a Taking?
As an independent ground for dismissal, defendant argues that — even if there is a protected property interest at stake here — there has been no actual or regulatory taking. Because plaintiffs do not— and cannot — contend that the refund procedure constitutes an actual taking, the Court will consider the refund procedure in light of the standard for establishing a regulatory taking.
A party challenging governmental action as a regulatory taking bears a substantial burden.
See United States v. Sperry Corp.,
As the Second Circuit has noted, “[t]he evaluation of whether a taking has occurred is essentially a factual inquiry, which ... [therefore] calls ‘as much for the exercise of judgment as for the application of logic.’ ”
Sadowsky,
at 317
(citing An-drus v. Allard,
“The factors accorded particular significance in this inquiry are: (1) ‘[t]he economic impact of the regulation on the claimant and, particularly, (2) the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct investment-backed expectations,’ and (3) ‘the character of the governmental action.’ ”
Sadowsky,
at 317 (quoting
Penn Central,
The first issue is the economic impact of the refund procedure on plaintiffs. As noted, plaintiffs allege that they can only obtain a refund for discontinued tokens by traveling to Manhattan, whether by paying the $2.00 subway fare, by driving, or in some other manner. Thus, the actual economic impact of the procedure— if any — is necessarily limited to the cost of travel. This cost is not only
de minimis,
it is impossible to quantify, depending as it does on several factors, including the chosen means of travel, and the distance traveled. In any case, courts “uniformly reject the proposition that diminution of property value” is grounds for a regulatory taking, which, because plaintiffs agree that a refund is available, is their best case.
Penn Central,
Although the Court need go no further in its analysis, it will also consider whether plaintiffs have investment-backed expectations in the refund procedure. According to the Second Circuit, “the purpose of the investment-backed expectation requirement is to limit recover to [property holders] ‘who could demonstrate that they bought their property in reliance on a state of affairs that did not include the challenged regulatory regime.’ ”
Cuomo,
Having considered the facts at issue here, and having applied the “factors accorded particular significance” to the regulatory taking analysis by the Supreme Court, Sadowsky, at 317, the Court con- *205 eludes that plaintiffs have failed as a matter of law to allege a Fifth Amendment taking for this second reason.
B. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend the Complaint
Courts should grant leave to amend a complaint unless amendment would be futile or another valid ground for denial exists.
Ronzani v. Sanofi, S.A.,
In
Kraebel,
the Second Circuit held that the claimant-landlord had a protected property interest in the right to certain rental reimbursements for senior tenants that were provided for by statute.
Kraebel,
at 404. Only after reaching the conclusion that there was a statutory basis for plaintiffs alleged property right did the court proceeded to ask whether the claimant had been afforded due process. Here, as in
Kraebel,
plaintiffs must demonstrate they were deprived of a protected property interest to proceed with a Fourteenth Amendment due process claim. As discussed,
supra,
they cannot do so. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motion to amend is denied as futile.
See Acito v. IMCERA Group, Inc.
III. Conclusion
Wherever the line between constitutional contract entitlements and other, mere “commercial contracts”, it is clear — at least under the prevailing law in this Circuit — that the property interest claimed by plaintiffs in this case is not among those protected by the Fifth or Fourteenth Amendments. Rather, plaintiffs’ remedy' — if one exists at all — lies in state court, whether for breach of contract or, as plaintiffs’ have alleged here, for “money had and received”.
14
Although New York courts are admittedly reluctant to “embroil the judiciary in the management and operation of the New York City Transit System”,
McKechnie v. New York City Transit Police Dept.,
Notes
. Plaintiffs also bring a pendant state law claim for "money had and received”. (Compl., ¶¶ 21-24).
. According to the MTA's "Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Year Ended December 31, 2002,” available at http://www. mta.nyc.ny.us/mta /investor/pdP 2002an-nualreport_complete.pdf (last visited March 8, 2005), by the end of 2002 "only 9% of ... [transit customers] still use[d] tokens.”
. At argument on the motion plaintiffs’ counsel stated that each named plaintiff held five to seven tokens.
. For example, plaintiffs state in their opposition to defendant’s motion that "the Complaint does not allege that NYCTA’s elimination of tokens violated [their] rights.” (Opp. Memo., p. 16 (emphasis in original)). Yet paragraph 13 of the Complaint claims that: ”[t]he phasing out of tokens on NYTCA’s subways and buses constituted a taking of private property for public use under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution.” (Compl., ¶ 13). Assuming that the "phasing out” and "elimination” of tokens are different ways of describing the same process — linguistically, a fair assumption' — these two statements appear to contradict one another.
. There is no question that — whatever its form — the alleged taking in this case involved government action of some sort because, pursuant to New York's Public Authorities Law, the NYCTA undertakes "governmental action" whenever it adjusts fares, sets refund procedures, or otherwise modifies the rights of token holders. See New York Public Authorities Law § 1202(2) (2004) ("[The NYC-TA] shall be regarded as performing a governmental function in carrying out its corporate purpose and in exercising the powers granted by this title.”).
. Indeed, the Court is mindful of the fact that Justice Breyer has suggested that "property” for Due Process purposes may be different than "property” for purposes of the Takings Clause.
Eastern Enterprises v. Apfel,
. See generally, Kreynin supra note 6, at 1098-1117.
. The NYCTA seems to sense the problem with this conceptualization, arguing that a token "is simply an object with no intrinsic value that allowed its holder to enter the NYCT [transportation] system,” and noting that the holder's "sole expectation ... was to secure passage on either a subway or a bus.” (Def.Memo., p. 13). Defendant further notes that "[a]ny assumption by plaintiffs that the purchase of a subway token entitled them to passage on New York City's transit system indefinitely is belied by common sense” because "repeated fare increases since 1953 and multiple changes in token format [have rendered] prior tokens obsolete” in the past. (Id., pp. 13-14).
. In the interest of thoroughness, the Court notes that a ticket might also take the form of a license, such as where the right conferred upon the holder is limited to the right not to be sued for some conduct.
See, e.g., Tyson & Bro.-United Theatre Ticket Offices v. Banton,
.
Goldberg
v.
Kelly,
.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
. Both Roth and Sindermann involved claims to tenured status as a public employee.
.In reaching this conclusion, the Second Circuit did
not
address or otherwise distinguish the
Lynch
Court's more expansive view that "[v]alid contracts are property.”
Lynch,
at 579,
. Money had and received is an equitable cause of action premised upon unjust enrichment, and is therefore founded not on a contract or agreement but, rather, on “an obligation which the law creates in the absence of agreement when one party possesses money that in equity and good conscience [the party] ought not to retain and that belongs to another."
Parsa v. State of New York,
