delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Pеtitioner Lavonne Robinson appeals a judgment in favor of defendants, the Colorado State Lottery Division and the Colorado State Lottery Commission (collectively “the Lottery”). Robinson contends that the Lottery continues to sell scratch tickets for months after all the represented and advertised prizes have already been awarded. She frames her complaint in contract and quasi-contract, arguing that she bought scratch tickets with the belief, based on the Lottery’s representations, that she had a chance to win certain represented prizes and that she did not receive the chance to win for which she had contracted.
The trial court granted the Lottery’s C.R.C.P. 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss, holding that Robinson’s claims were barred by thе Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (“the CGIA”), sections 24-10-101 to -120, C.R.S. (2007), because the claims he in tort or could lie in tort. Additionally, the trial court awarded attorney fees to the Lottery pursuant to section 13-17-201, C.R.S. (2007), which allows for attorney fees against a plaintiff whose tort action was dismissed under C.R.C.P. 12(b). On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of all claims against the Lottery pursuant to the CGIA and also affirmed the award of attorney fees.
Robinson v. Colo. State Lottery Div.,
Because the undеrlying injury asserted in Robinson’s claims arises out of the alleged misrepresentation of certain facts by the Lottery, we find that Robinson’s claims he in tort or could he in tort for the purposes of governmental immunity. Thus, they are barred by the CGIA. We further find that the grant of attorney fees to the Lottery *1002 pursuant to section 13-17-201 was error because the statute does not apply to the dismissal of contract claims. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals in part and reverse in part.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Robinson brought suit against the Lottery and Texaco, Inc. in 2000. The Colorado State Lottery Division, a part of the Colorado Department of Revenue, is authorized to operate and supervise a statewide lottery. § 24-35-203, C.R.S. (2007). The Division includes the Lottery Commission, which is responsible for promulgating rules and regulations governing the operation of the lottery. Texaco, Inc. is a corporation which has been granted a license by the Lottery Division to sell the Lottery’s instant scratch game tickets to the general public. 1
In her complaint, Robinson alleges that the Lottery sells instant scratch game tickets for a significant period of time after all the represented or advertised prizes 2 are awarded or claimed. Thus, the Lottery is selling instant scratch tickets when the players have no chance of winning the grand prize. Robinson also alleges that the Lottery is aware that the represented and advertised prizes are not available when these tickets are being sold and that the Lottery cоndones or encourages such sales. Robinson states that by ignoring the fact that it is selling scratch tickets that cannot win the prize used to induce purchase, the Lottery brings in millions of dollars per year in revenue from tickets that would not have been purchased if the players had been aware that the represented and advertised prizes were no longer available. Robinson contends that because of such “wrongful conduct,” the Lottery receives money from instant scratch players hundreds of times per day without providing those players with the chance to win that they were promised and for which they contracted.
For example, Robinson alleges that she purchased “Luck of the Zodiac” scratch game lottery tickets оn July 24, 1998, and that the ticket was emblazoned with the words “win up to $10,000.” However, the Lottery had already awarded the last $10,000 grand prize seventy-two days earlier. Robinson further states in her complaint that for the last five years she has purchased various instant scratch game tickets on a regular basis and that she played with the expectation that she could win the advertised and represented prizes. Robinson brings this suit as a representative of a class consisting of all persons who purchased instant scratch game tickets from the Lottery when all the represented or advertised prizes had already been claimed or awarded. However, the class has not been certified.
Specifically, Robinson filed seven claims against the Lottery and Tеxaco: (1) breach of express contract; (2) breach of express warranty under the Colorado Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”); (3) breach of implied warranty under the UCC; (4) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; (5) violation of section 24-35-206, C.R.S. (2007); (6) violation of the Colorado Consumer Protection Act (“the CCPA”); and (7) restitution and unjust enrichment. 3
Robinson’s complaint was initially dismissed by the trial court for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Robinson appealed, and the court of appeals reversed the dismissal and remanded the case to the trial court to determine whether Robinson’s claims were barred by the CGIA. On remand, the trial court granted the Lottery’s C.R.C.P. 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss, holding that Robinson’s claims lie in tort and are therefore barrеd by the CGIA. After the Lottery moved for attorney fees pursuant to section 13-17-201, the trial court held that the Lottery was entitled to $52,514 in attorney fees.
*1003 On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of all claims against the Lottery and affirmed the award of attorney fees. The court held that Robinson’s claims sounded in tort for purposes of the CGIA. The court of appeals reasoned that any claim that alleges negligent misrepresentation is based in tort and would be subject to the CGIA. Looking to the underlying factual basis for Robinson’s claims, the court of appeals determined that the essence of Robinson’s claims was that the Lottery negligently misrepresented to her the possibility that she could win one of the represented or аdvertised prizes and that the Lottery thereby fraudulently induced her into purchasing scratch game tickets. Thus, the court of appeals concluded that Robinson’s claims lie in tort or could lie in tort and were barred by the CGIA.
Robinson now petitions this court for cer-tiorari on two issues. First, Robinson contends that the court of appeals erred in holding that her claims against the Lottery, although pleaded in contract and equity, “sound in tort” and are therefore barred by the CGIA. Second, Robinson argues that the court of appeals erred in holding that the Lottery was entitled to an award of attorney fees under section 13-17-201. 4
II. The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act
We review the issue of whether Robinson’s claims are barred by the CGIA de novo because it concerns a matter of statutory construction.
City of Colo. Springs v. Conners,
Pursuant to the CGIA, public entities are immune from liability in all claims for injury that lie in tort or could lie in tort, unless the claim falls within an exception to that immunity. Section 24-10-106(1), C.R.S. (2007), provides: “A public entity shall be immune from liability in all claims for injury which lie in tort or could lie in tort regardless of whether that may be the type of action or the form of relief chosen by the claimant except as provided otherwise in this section.” In contrast, the CGIA was not intended to apply to actions grounded in contract.
Berg v. State Bd. of Agric.,
Because Robinson’s claims here are framed in the pleadings as contractual and quasi-contractual, rather than tort claims, the issue before us is whether these claims “lie in tort or could lie in tort” and are thus barred by the CGIA. As we have made clear, the form of the complaint is not determinative of the claim’s basis in tort or contract.
Id.; City & County of Denver v. Desert Truck Sales, Inc.,
Not surprisingly, where the nature of the injury and the relief requested implicate both tort and contract, the analysis becomes more complicated. Indeed, certain common law tort claims that are expressly intеnded to remedy economic loss such as fraud or negligent misrepresentation can exist independent of or in conjunction with a contractual claim.
Town of Alma v. AZCO Constr., Inc.,
We have had several opportunities to consider whether a particular claim lies solely in contract or whether it could also lie in tort and would thus be barred by the CGIA. In
Berg,
we addressed the question of whether the plaintiffs particular claim of promissory estoppel was actually based on a theory of equitable estoppel, which is fundamentally a tort theory because it is based on the misrepresentation of facts.
Our reasoning in
Berg
was based on a similar case,
Board of County Commissioners v. DeLozier,
in which this court distinguished promissory estoppel claims from the theory of equitable estoppel.
In an equitable estoppel claim for negligent misrepresentation of facts, the misrepresentation must be of material fact that presently exists or has existed in the past. A promise relating to future events without a present intent not to fulfill the promise is not actionable as a tortious misrepresentation of facts. Thus, a claim of equitable estopрel lies in tort, whereas a claim of promissory estoppel lies in contract.
Id. at 716 (citations omitted). 5 Thus, DeLo-zier’s claim was contractual and was not barred by the CGIA. Id.
*1005
As
Berg
and
DeLozier
illustrate, a claim that is supported by allegations of misrepresentation or fraud is likely a claim that could lie in tort.
See Berg,
A. Contractual Claims
We turn first to Robinson’s contractual claims for relief: (1) breach of express contract; (2) breach of UCC express warranties; (3) breach of UCC implied warranties; and (4) breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
Underlying these claims are the following factual allegations regarding the Lottery’s conduct. The Lottery sells instant scratch game tickets for a significant time period after all represented and advertised prizes are awarded when players have no chance of winning the prizes. The Lottery is aware that these scratch tickets do not have the represented prize available and that an instant scratch ticket without a grand prize would not sell. In fact, the Lottery continues to encourage the purchase and sale of scratch tickets that have no more represented prizes available. By ignoring the fact that it is selling scratch tickets that cannot win the prize used to induce purchase, the Lottery brings in millions of dollars per year in revenue from tickets purchased when the scratch player has no chance of winning the prize that he or she sought to win. For example, tickets that Robinson purchased were emblazoned with the words “win up to $10,000” even though the last $10,000 prize had already been awarded. Robinson paid $1 to $2 per scratch ticket and would not have done so if she had been aware that the represented and advertisеd prizes were no longer available at the time of purchase.
Robinson contends that her underlying injury arises out of the Lottery’s failure to deliver what it offered, namely a chance to win one of the represented and advertised prizes. Specifically, Robinson submits that she is not arguing that the Lottery wrongfully induced her to enter into an unfavorable contract.
However, the CGIA is less concerned with what the plaintiff is arguing and more concerned with what the plaintiff could argue.
See Berg,
Furthermore, in this instance, the nature of the relief requested does not deter our conclusion that Robinson’s contractual claims could lie in tоrt. Although Robinson is vague about the specific damages she is requesting in conjunction with her contractual claims,
*1006
Robinson does state that the Lottery’s conduct has resulted in damages “including but not limited to the money expended on lottery tickets.” In her prayer for relief, Robinson requests “actual damages” and “appropriate damages, including restitution of the revenues received either after a represented prize was no longer available or when it was unwinnable.” Robinson contends, based on our opinion in
Conners,
that her contractual claims do not lie in tort because they are equitable in nature and are not claims for “compensatory relief for personal injuries.”
See
In Conners, we addressed the question of whether a former city employee’s claim for backpay and reinstatement under Colorado’s Civil Rights Act (“the CRA”), a civil rights statute designed to redress workplace discrimination, was a claim that lies in tort or could he in tort. See id. at 1176-77. In that case, we were presented with a statutory claim, without origins in common law, which was intended by the legislature to address constitutionally based concerns of equality rather than mere compensation for personal injuries. See id. at 1173-75. On the clean slate of a statutorily imposed duty, we analyzed the CRA’s “conception of injury and remedy” in order to inform our understanding of the nature of the underlying claim. See id. at 1176-77. Regarding the nature of the relief requested, we stated that the “form of relief alone, whether damages or equitable relief, does not govern the categorization of a claim as a tort or other type of action.” Id. at 1176. However, we noted that courts must consider the nature of the relief, particularly in cases such as Conners where the statutory claim was not based on an action with common law roots in tort or contract. See id. Thus, by looking at the nature of the relief requested in order to inform our understanding of the underlying duty that the statute imposes, we determined that CRA claims are not tortious in nature because they are non-compensatory, equitable claims, which are intended to redress general discriminatory employment practices rather than compensate the plaintiff for tort-like personal injuries. See id. at 1176-77. Accordingly, we held that the CRA claims did not lie in tort for the purposes of the CGIA. Id. at 1177.
In sum, contrary to Robinson’s contention, the nature of the relief is not dispositive as to the question of whether a claim lies in tort. Rather, the relief requested is merely an aid in understanding the duty breached or the injury caused to determine if the claim lies or could lie in tort.
Here, we need not determine whether a statutorily created claim lies in tort. Instead, we have determined above that regardless of whether Robinson has presented valid contract claims, the pleaded allegations underlying the contract claims could be alternatively pleaded in tort — in other words, the claims could lie in tort. The complaint and the pleadings in this case clearly reveal an injury that is tortious in nature. Consequently, analysis of the relief requested plays a less significant role in informing our understanding of the underlying injury. Thus, irrespective of the label attached to the damages requested, Robinson cannot elude the conclusion that the underlying injury and the duty breached are tortious in nature and therefore her claims could lie in tort. 6 Accordingly, Robinson’s contract claims are barred by the CGIA.
B. Unjust Enrichment Claim
Robinson’s seventh claim for restitution and unjust enrichment alleges the following. Robinson conferred a benefit on the Lottery in the form of monies paid for scratch tickets. Robinson would not have *1007 purchased the tickets had she known that the represented and advertised prizes were unavailable, unwinnаble, or previously claimed. The Lottery’s retention of Robinson’s money unjustly enriches the Lottery. According to Robinson, the Lottery is aware that “the reality of the scratch games is that they are simply a regressive tax on lower-income, undereducated and minority citizens.” 7 Robinson argues that because this claim seeks equitable relief that is non-compensatory in nature, it does not he in tort for purposes of the CGIA.
It is a matter of first impression for this court as to whether a claim for unjust enrichment is a claim that lies or could lie in tort for the purposes of the CGIA. Unjust enrichment is a form of quasi-contract or contract implied in law that does not depend in any way upon a promise or privity between the parties.
DCB Constr. Co., Inc. v. Cent. City Dev. Co.,
In other jurisdictions, courts have held that a claim based on unjust enrichment can be predicated on either tort or contract law.
Westwood Pharms., Inc. v. Nat’l Fuel Gas Distrib. Corp.,
Because an unjust enrichment claim can be predicated on either tort or contract, we apply the same case-by-casе analysis to an unjust enrichment claim as we have done with other claims, assessing the nature of the injury and the relief requested.
See Berg,
Furthermore, the mere fact that Robinson is requesting equitable relief in the form of rescission does not deter our conclusion that this particular unjust enrichment claim for equitable relief lies in tort. Although the relief requested informs our understanding of whether the injury is tortious in nature, it is not dispositive of the claim’s underlying basis in tort or contract. Robinson seeks restitution of the Lottery’s profits on scratch tickets sold after the represented prizes were no longer available. Although this relief is labeled restitution, it is in effect the equivalent of damages that Robinson could plead in tort — money expended on lottеry tickets when the Lottery misrepresented certain facts in order to induce Robinson to purchase the tickets. Thus, in this particular instance, where the nature of the injury underlying the unjust enrichment claim arguably arises out of tortious conduct and the request for relief is effectively equivalent to the damages that Robinson could seek in tort, the claim lies in tort or could lie in tort. Accordingly, Robinson’s unjust enrichment claim is barred by the CGIA.
III. Attorney Fees
Robinson contends that the court of appeals incorrectly affirmed the award of attorney fees to the Lottery pursuant to section 13-17-201. Section 13-17-201 provides that a defendant may recover attorney fees when a tort action is dismissed prior to trial in response to the defendant’s C.R.C.P. 12(b) motion. Specifically, Robinson contends that because she framed her action in contract and it was the contract claims that were dismissed, section 13-17-201 does not warrant the grant of attorney fees to the Lottery. She relies on two court of appeals’ cases that have adopted an interpretation of section 13-17-201 that supports her argument.
See Kennedy v. King Soopers Inc.,
We have not yet considered this issue and consequently we granted certiorari to decide the question of whether the trial court properly assessed attorney fees against Robinson even though section 13-17-201 applies to tort actions and her claims were pleaded in contract and quasi-contract. In reviewing the statute, we agree with Robinson that section 13-17-201 does not apply to claims that are pleaded in contract, but are dismissed pursuant to the CGIA because they lie or could lie in tort.
A.
As a preliminary matter, we address the Lottery’s contention, raised in the briefs, that we may not decide this question because Robinson did not present the argument in the courts below. After a thorough reviеw of the record, we conclude that it is appropriate to review the question of attorney fees.
We have often said that issues not raised in or decided by a lower court will not be addressed for the first time on appeal.
See Moody v. People,
In
Roberts,
we exercised our discretion to review an issue that the parties did not raise in the trial court.
Reviewing the record on the case before us, we find that Robinson objected to the imposition of attorney feеs in the trial court and in the court of appeals. However, she failed to challenge the trial court’s implicit holding that section 13-17-201 is, as a threshold matter, applicable to contract claims that are dismissed prior to trial because they lie or could lie in tort and are barred by the CGIA.
After Robinson filed her opening brief with the court of appeals, the court in
Sweeney
held that section 13-17-201 does not apply where contract claims are dismissed pursuant to the CGIA.
In light of these circumstances, we exercise our discretion to review and correct the error underlying the trial court’s and the court of appeals’ judgments, which granted and upheld the award of attorney fees to the Lottery. First, the interpretation of section 13-17-201 is a matter of statutory construction, for which our review is de novo. Second, both the trial court and the court of appeals had the opportunity to hold as a matter of law that section 13-17-201 was not applicable to Robinson’s claims; however, by failing to address the issue directly, both courts implicitly held that the statute applies to Robinson’s claims. Third, Robinson has consistently opposed the imposition of attorney fees and has never acquiesced to a finding that attorney fees were appropriately assessed. Finally, because both parties have briefed the issue extensively in this court and presented their contentions at oral argument, neither side is prejudiced by our consideration of the question. Thus, we conclude that the issue is appropriate for review.
B.
Section 13-17-201 provides for a reasonable award of attorney fees “[i]n all actions brought as a result of a death or an injury to person or property occasioned by the tort of any other person, where any such action is dismissed on motion of the defendant prior to trial under [C.R.C.P.] 12(b).” Thus, an award of attorney fees is appropriate when the trial court dismisses an entire tort action pursuant to C.R.C.P. 12(b).
See State v. Golden’s Concrete Co.,
The court of appeals has interpreted this statute on several occasions. In
Sweeney,
the plaintiff contended that his claim was expressly founded upon an alleged breach of contract, and therefore that section 13-17-201 did not apply to the dismissal of his
*1010
contract action.
[P]laintiff explicitly labeled his claim as a contract claim ... We have concluded that plaintiffs action should properly have been founded in tort under § 13-21-115. Plaintiffs claim was, nevertheless, framed as a contract claim, and it was the purported contract claim that was dismissed.
Id. Thus, the court of appeals concluded that section 13-17-201 was not applicable to the plaintiffs claim that was pleaded in contract, in spite of the court’s conclusion that the claim was founded in tort and barred by the CGIA. Id.
The court of appeals followed the holding of
Sweeney
in
Kennedy,
where the plaintiffs complaint presented a tort claim but the trial court determined that the plaintiffs claim was grounded on thе federal laws governing collective bargaining agreements rather than on tort law.
Here, Robinson intentionally and purposely filed a contract action, alleging both contractual and quasi-contractual claims against the Lottery. Based on our holding today, it is the contract claims that are barred by the CGIA and the contract claims that are dismissed. Although section 13-17-201 was enacted to discourage the unnecessary litigation of tort claims,
see Smith v. Town of Snowmass Village,
Accordingly, we find that section 13-17-201 does not apply to the dismissal of Robinson’s claims, where her action was pleaded in contract and it was the contract claims that were dismissed.
IV. Conclusion
Although a plaintiff may legitimately proceed against an entity covered by the CGIA with claims that arise out of the breach of contractual duty, she may not do so when her alleged injury and relief requested could alternatively be pleaded and remedied through a tort claim. Here, we conclude that Robinson’s claims lie or could lie in tort and are thus barred by the CGIA. Further, we find that the award of attorney fees to the Lottery was based on an incorrect interpretation of section 13-17-201. Because the statute does not aрply to the dismissal of contract actions, we hold that the court of appeals erred in awarding attorney fees to the Lottery. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the court of appeals.
Notes
. This appeal does not pertain to Robinson's claims against Texaco.
. Generally, the "represented and advertised prizes” consist solely of the grand prize that is advertised on the face of the scratch ticket.
.In the briefs that Robinson submitted to this court, she states that she abandoned the Fifth and Sixth claims as they pertained to the Lottery's alleged violations of section 24-35-206 and the CCPA. Thus, we will not address whether these statutory claims are barred by the CGIA.
. We granted certiorari on the following issues:
1. Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that petitioner’s claims against the state lottery, although pleaded in contract and equity, "sound in tort” and are therefore barred by the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act.
2. Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that the state lottery was entitled to an award of attorney fees under section 13-17-201.
. We noted recently in
Wheat Ridge Urban Renewal Authority v. Cornerstone Group XXII, L.L.C.,
that equitable estoppel is not actually a cause of action as
DeLozier
and
Berg
appear to suggest.
. Although the prayer for relief in Robinson's complaint also included a request for injunctive relief, Robinson did not present a separate or distinct claim for injunctive relief. It is therefore unclear as to which specific claims this request for injunctive relief pertains. Nor did Robinson argue in the courts below or in the briefs to this court that a claim for injunctive relief was separable from the contract claims that we have determined to be barred by the CGIA. Thus, we do not consider today whether a non-compensatory claim for declarаtory or injunctive relief would be barred by the CGIA.
. Robinson’s seventh claim also incorporates all of the complaint's preceding paragraphs, which include the factual allegations outlined above in the discussion of Robinson's contractual claims.
. A well respected commentator describes the possible overlap between tort claims and unjust enrichment claims as follows:
[T]here has developed the doctrine that where the commission of a tort results in the unjust enrichment of the defendant at the plaintiff’s expense, the plaintiff may disregard, or “waive" the tort action, and sue instead on a theoretical and fictitious contract of restitution of the benefits which the defendant has so received. "Waiver" of the tort is an unfortunate term, since the quasi-contract action itself is still based on the tort, and there is merely an election between alternative, co-existing remedies
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Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts 672-73 (5th ed.1984).
