Dissenting Opinion by
Mr. Justice Manderino :1 must dissent. The appellee employer in this case has been unjustly enriched at the expense of the appellant employee and there is not one shred of evidence to support the majority’s denial of restitution to the em*238ployee. For seventeen years, the employer made a payroll deduction for life insurance from the employee’s gross pay. During the entire seventeen years the employee paid federal income tax on his gross pay. Each year, for seventeen years, the employee’s gross compensation was reviewed personally for the employee by one of the partners in the business. The employee was never told that the payroll deductions were a sham. On the contrary, he was told exactly the opposite—that his true gross pay was exactly what was listed on his W-2 forms and on the company books. One of the employer’s partners so testified and admitted that the payroll deductions were the employee’s money and were always considered part of the employee’s gross pay. The majority completely ignores this testimony by one of the partners who personally reviewed the employee’s gross compensation in two year-end meetings. That partner testified as follows : “Q. Did you not in December of 1967 and in December of 1968 personally go over with Mr. Anthony a listing of the amounts and various types of compensation which had been paid and were being paid to him for those years as an employee of the company? A. Yes I think that was the usual procedure, I guess, to name everything down the line. Q. In 1967 and ’68 you went over this listing with Mr. Anthony, is that correct? A. If you want to say that, yes. Q. I don’t want to say it. Did you or didn’t you? A. It’s the same procedures that was done previous in the other years and I didn’t change the practice. What was done was just as you said. Q. The practice was that in December of each year there would be a listing made of the salary that had been paid to Mr. Anthony on a weekly basis, a listing of expenses and a listing of other benefits that were paid to him or for him and on his behalf, correct? A. It was his wages which at that time was $200.00 a week. It was the expenses that occurred plus the gift that we gave to him at the end of the year which *239was part of the $1,077. Q. When you say gift, are you talking about a bonus that he was paid? A. I would say it was a gift. I don’t know if you call it a bonus. This is what my father did for him at the end of the year. Q. A bonus? A. A gift. You call it bonus. I call it a gift. Q. But it was given and paid to Mr. Anthony from the company funds as an employee of the company, is that correct? A. That’s right.” (Emphasis added.)
Why does the majority opinion ignore the above testimony? It completely verifies the facts as reflected on the employer’s books for seventeen years, on the employee’s W-2 forms for seventeen years, and on the employer’s tax return for seventeen years. Instead of accepting the seventeen-year record of written documentation and the admission of the employer’s partner which is unequivocal, the majority selects portions of the testimony of the employer’s accountant and concludes that the employee “knew of and acquiesced” in a tax avoidance device, and “understood” that his W-2 forms did not reflect his true compensation. Whoever told the employee what the majority claims the employee knew? Certainly not the partner who verified the facts as reflected for seventeen years on the company books and on all tax records.
The majority says that the employer’s accountant told the employee that the payroll deduction each year was a sham. I must categorically dispute that interpretation of the accountant’s testimony. The accountant testified to no such thing. He did testify that he discussed with his employer a tax avoidance device but the employee was never present in these discussions with the employer. Employers all over America may be discussing tax avoidance devices with their accountants—but those discussions surely cannot legally affect an employee’s rights. Moreover, when we examine exactly what the accountant told the employee, we find *240only very equivocal testimony, and no testimony that a tax avoidance device was ever discussed with the employee. The accountant was most cautious in his testimony about his discussions with the employee. We must examine exactly what the accountant said, not what we think he said. All of the accountant’s testimony about a tax avoidance device concerns Ms conversations with the employer—not the employee. When asked what he told the employee, the accountant said he mentioned “the accounting procedures . . . for the best tax advantages of all parties . . . everyone would benefit. ..TMs is a far cry from the majority conclusion that the employee was told his payroll deductions were a sham. When the accountant was specifically asked if anything was said to the employee about the insurance premium deduction, the accountant answered “just that I asked Mm if he was receiving ample dollars to pay the tax thereon.”
During cross-examination, the accountant was specifically asked: “Q. Now, Mr. Yerrichio, [the accountant] when Mr. Anthony [the employee] asked you why tMs $1,077.00 was being put on his W-2 as additional compensation, did you say anything more to him than it has to be done this way for tax reasons. Was that the gist of your explanation and about the extent of your explanation? A. I would think so, yes.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Why did the employee even ask the question? There is only one possible answer. He had been promised insurance benefits by his employer, as he testified, but did not know why the cost was on Ms W-2 form. The employee was not an accountant or a tax expert. He was an employee who was told he would receive insurance benefits and asked why they were on his W-2 form. The accountant did not then answer “it’s a tax avoidance device, it’s not really your money” or “you do not have any insurance benefit, you know that.” The only an*241swer the accountant gave—in fact, the “gist” and “extent” of Ms explanation as he admitted—was that “it has to be done this way for tax reasons.” What had to be done that way for tax reasons? What was the accountant talldng about?
The accountant’s testimony makes complete sense only when read in the light of the partner’s testimony verifying the employee’s testimony. The employee was to receive an insurance benefit and the accountant devised a way to give that benefit and also help the employer.
I must comment on other testimony by the accountant. He testified, according to the majority, that he helped the employee prepare his tax returns. So what? He never said he told the employee that the employee was not to receive any insurance benefit from the yearly payroll deduction. In addition, the accountant admitted that he helped the employee with Ms tax return for only two yews and he could not remember what years. This help could have occurred years after the yearly payroll deduction began. The accountant also admitted that for over fifteen years he had nothing to do with determining the total amount of the employee’s yearly compensation. He testified that he would tell a partner the approximate amount that would have to be included in the employee’s bonus to pay taxes on the payroll deduction for insurance—but the partner, not the accountant, then determined the total amount of the employee’s regular draws and bonus compensation. The accountant had nothing to do, by his own admission, with the amount of the employee’s gross pay and did not participate in the year-end compensation and bonus review between the employee and a partner. The accountant hnew nothing about conversations between the employee and the employer concerning the employee’s true total compensation. The only witness who did know and participated in conversations with the em*242ployee about Ms compensation, admitted that deductions for insurance were the employee’s money—not the employer’s. There is absolutely no testimony in tMs record that anyone ever told the employee that Ms W-2 did not reflect his true compensation. A partner admitted that it did. There is no testimony that the employee knew the accountant was cheating the federal government. No one testified that he was so told. In effect, there is not one shred of evidence to support the trial court’s conclusions and the majority’s conclusions.
All of the evidence in this record supports only one conclusion—that the total amount stated on employee’s tax statements and on the written year-end statements reflected the employee’s real compensation. Thus, the deductions made by the employer each year, from the employee’s total compensation, constituted a withholding of monies by the employer wMch belonged to the employee. To allow the employer to retain the benefit of these monies would constitute an unjust enrichment. The employee is, therefore, entitled to restitution.
“Where one party has been unjustly enriched at the expense of another, he is required to make restitution to the other. In order to recover, there must be both (1) an enrichment, and (2) an injustice resulting if recovery for the enrichment is denied.” Meehan v. Cheltenham Twp., 410 Pa. 446, 449, 189 A. 2d 593, 595 (1963).
The employer was obviously enriched by the retention of the employee’s monies as they were deducted each year for seventeen years. An injustice would certainly result if recovery is denied to the employee. For seventeen years, the employee reasonably assumed and was led to assume that his employer was withholding monies from his gross compensation and that these withholdings were being used for the employee’s insurance benefits. The employee may have assumed too *243much by concluding that his insurance benefits would eventually come from a specific insurance policy, but he did not assume too much in concluding that he would receive some benefit for Ms money.
The employer has had the benefit of using the employee’s money for seventeen years. The proper restitution to the employee is the amount of enrichment received by the employer. Wingert v. T. W. Phillips Gas & Oil Co., 398 Pa. 100, 157 A. 2d 92 (1959). The employee is, therefore, entitled to a return of the amount deducted each year from his gross compensation with interest computed annually on the amount of the employee’s money retained by the employer, including interest each year on the accumulated deductions and accumulated interest. Restatement of Restitution §158 (1937). Such restitution is the amount of enrichment received by the employer during the seventeen-year period.
I would reverse the decree and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Mr. Justice Roberts joins in this dissenting opinion.