Common Law In a Florida case Gene B. Glick Company, Inc., Continental Casualty Company and Back Bay Apartments, Appellants, v Sunshine Ready Concrete Company, Inc., Appellee. It was held that an unjust enrichment cannot exist “where payment has been made for the benefit conferred.” Back Bay had paid Glick Company the full amount of its contract for the construction project. Accordingly, there was no unjust enrichment to support Sunshine's claim under unjust enrichment. In a State of Georgia case, Bailey v. West, 105 R.I. 61, 249 A.2d 414 (1969),it was held that where parties have no intention to enter into a contract, a party conferring benefit to another is volunteering and cannot not expect to recover for a benefit conferred under quasi-contract law. In the Supreme Court of Alabama in the case of Precision Gear Company, Precision Gear LLC, and General Metal Heat Treating, Inc. v. Continental Motors, Inc.1110786. It was held that Alabama's two-year statute of limitations was applicable for an action brought for non-contractual indemnification arising from an accident and alleged damage that occurred in Oklahoma. In North Carolina it was held in the case of Scheerer v. Fisher Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 688 S.E.2d 472