*DISCLAIMER*
The
notes below are adapted from the Kenyatta University,UoN and Moi Teaching
module and the students are adviced to take keen notice of the various legal
and judicial reforms that might have been ocassioned since the module was
adapted. the laws and statutes might also have changed or been repealed and the
students are to be wary and consult the various statutes reffered to herein
BOOKS
1. PAGET’S
LAW OF BANKING
2. SHELDON’S
PRACTICE & LAW OF BANKING
3. BANKING
ACT CAP 488
REGULATION
OF BANKING
This
Banking Act was enacted to address deposits protection after a crisis and the
intention is to protect and control the banking industry.
BANK/CUSTOMER
RELATIONSHIP
1. Respective
duties and rights of each
2. Banking
confidentiality – affairs of a customer must be kept confidential but there are
exceptions when a bank can justifiably reveal.
3. Obligations/responsibility
that a bank assumes when it gives references on behalf of the customer.
4. How
much information can a bank give on a customer’s account.
5. Issues
of securities and the grounds upon which securities can be discharged.
6. Cheques
and other negotiable instruments.
REGULATIONS:
Legal
framework in terms of statutory provisions and in terms of licensing and
regulation, specifically the provisions of the Banking Act. There
are other relevant statutes to the banking industry and financial services i.e.
the Central Bank of Kenya Act, the Building Societies Act, the Companies Act to
a certain extent etc.
The
current Banking Act Cap 488 came into force in November of 1989. In
enacting this statute parliament was seeking to address a crisis in the
industry that was precipitated by the collapse of a number of institutions. And
under the provisions of this statute the previous Banking Act that essentially
dealt with the relationship between the bank and the customer was
repealed. Section 56 of the current Banking Act is a repealing
provision repealing the previous statute.
Running
through the statute is the thread of the desire to protect depositors.
SOME
OF THE PROBLEMS THAT WERE IDENTIFIED AS LEADING TO THE COLLAPSE OF THE
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS OR BANKS INCLUDED:
1. The perceived absence of stringent licensing
requirements.
2. Inadequate supervision.
3. Control of the institutions by individual.
4. Under capitalisation.
5. Lack of proper management systems.
6. Lack of transparency in terms of operations.
7. Absence of adequate powers on the part of
the regulator.
8. In terms of what central bank that remains
the regulator could do etc.
LICENSING REQUIREMENTS
The
Banking Act under Section 3 prohibits
any person from transacting any Banking Business or financial business or the
business of a mortgage finance company unless
1. Such
person is an institution;
2. Such
institution is duly licensed or holds a valid licence.
An
institution is defined under Section 2 of the Banking Act to mean a Bank or a
Financial Institution or a Mortgage Finance Company. The provisions
effectively therefore exclude an individual from conducting any of these
classes of businesses.
STATUTORY
DEFINITIONS OF A BANK, FINANCIAL INSTITUTION ETC.
Section 2 of the Banking
Act Cap 488 Laws of Kenya defines a Bank to mean a company which
carries on or proposes to carry on banking business in Kenya and it includes
the co-operative bank of Kenya but excludes the Central Bank of Kenya.
Banking
business is then defined under Section 2
of the same Act to mean
(a) The
accepting from members of the public of money on deposit repayable on demand or
at the expiry of a fixed period or after notice.
(b) The
accepting from members of the public of money on current account and payment on
and acceptance of cheques.
(c) The
employing of money held on deposit or on current account or any part of it by
lending, investment or in any other manner for the account and at the risk of
the person so employing the money.
United
Dominions Trust vs. Kirkwood [1966] 2 QB 431
A
Company (Kirkwood) purchased cars for its business using the money it borrowed
from UDT. The company failed to pay when required to do so. When UDT
sued the company it argued that UDT was not entitled to recover because it was
not registered as a lender uder the Money lenders Act of 1906 of England. That
UDT was not a bank. UDT argued that it was a bank and it need not have been
registered under the Act alleged.
In order to conduct banking activity, a company
needs to be regulated by the Financial Services Authority (a self funding
regulator) and comply with the financial Services and Marketing Act
2000. In order to lend funds, you need to be regulated and this had
been stated in many Acts. UDT was not regulated and lending unauthorised
is a criminal activity. You cannot enforce payment of a debt if you
are not regulated. The question was asked in the court, was UDT a
bank? The Court of Appeal said UDT was not a bank and so it could
not enforce repayment.
The
key issue here was: What is the test or approach to be used to define what
is a bank? The whole idea of a bank was that you take deposits from
customers and put it into accounts. The bank can then payout funds
from these accounts by means of a cheque or otherwise. Note that the
other factor in this case was that the market in general and other
institutions regarded UDT as a bank.
The
usual characteristics of banking are
1. The
conduct of current accounts;
2. The
payment of cheques;
3. The
collection of cheques for customers.
Our
own statute banking law definition is largely influenced by the common law
definition of banking as was stated in United Dominions Trust vs. Kirkwood
[1966] 2 QB 431T. This case. Statutory definition overrides the
common law definition as provided for under the Judicature Act Cap
8. As far as Kenya is concerned we have statutory definition of bank
under the Banking Act which is applicable in Kenya.
This
definition however covers a bare minimum leaving other services provided for by
the bank which are not covered under the definition. Individuals
running the banks that lend money at the risk of the bank should be held
together with the …
FINANCIAL
BUSINESS
Financial
Business under the statutes means the accepting from members of the public of
money on deposit repayable on demand or at the expiry of a fixed period or
after notice; and the employing of money held on deposit or any part of the
money, by lending, investment or in any other manner for the account and at the
risk of the person so employing the money. This is everything the
statute says is banking business except the acceptance of money on current
account and payment on and acceptance of cheques.
MORTGAGE
BUSINESS
This
means a company other than a financial institution which accepts, from members
of the public money on deposit, repayable on demand or at the expiry of a fixed
period or after notice and is established for purposes of employing such money,
to make loans for the purpose of acquisition, construction, improvement, development,
alteration, or adaptation for a particular purpose of land in Kenya and the
repayment of that loan together with interests and other charges is secured by
a mortgage or a charge over land with or without additional security or
personal or other guarantees. The provisions of the Banking Act in
this regard which is at Section 15 were amended by Act No. 7 of 2001 which
provides that a mortgage finance company may grant other types of credit
facilities against securities other than land and may also engage in other
prudent activities.
The
minister has to address his mind to adequacy of capital. Section 7
of the Banking Act provides for minimum requirements of capital which may be
changed from time to time with approval of parliament.
If
a bank wants to merge or transfer its assets to another institution, again the
approval of the Minister is required under Section 9. A recent
example is the Cooperative Bank that merged with Cooperative
Merchant. The Minister has to satisfy himself and give approval for
a merger or amalgamation.
PRUDENTIAL
CONTROLS (IN TERMS OF RESTRICTIONS)
These
are dealt with under Part III of the Banking Act what is classified as
prohibited business.
From
Section 10 of the Act which limits advances or imposes limits on advances that
an institution is allowed to make to anyone person and the limit here is that
an institution should not grant or permit facilities to any person to exceed
25% of that institution’s core capital.
Core
capital’s definition is permanent share holders equity (issued and fully
paid-up ordinary shares and perpetual non-cumulative preference shares) in the
form of issued and fully paid up shares plus all disclosed reserves (additional
share premium plus retained earnings plus 50% of profits after tax plus
minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries), less goodwill or any other
intangible assets.
GOODWILL
This
is the difference between the value of the business as a whole and the
aggregate of the fair values of its separable net assets at the time of
acquisition or sale.
OTHER
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
These
are assets without physical existence. E.g. patents, copyrights,
formulae, trademarks, franchise etc.
An
institution is not allowed to grant or permit to be outstanding advances or
guarantees to exceed 25% of the core capital. To avoid a situation
where a person asks for facilities under different hats, the definition given
in the statute of what a person is that it includes the associates of that
person. The restriction on the person includes a restriction on that
person’s associates.
The
Central Bank of Kenya may permit with the Minister’s approval a mortgage
finance company to exceed that limit.
The
definition that is given for who an associate is for purposes of the Act
associate in relation to a company or other body corporate means
1. Its
holding company or its subsidiary;
2. A
subsidiary of its holding company;
3. A
holding company of its subsidiary;
4. Any
person who controls the company or body corporate whether alone or with his
associates or with other associates of it.
In
relation to an individual, associate means
1. Any
member of his family;
2. Any
company or other body corporate controlled directly or indirectly by him
whether alone, or with his associates
3. Any
associate of his associates.
Classification
of members of his family is extended to include
- a
parent;
- Spouse,
- Brother
- Sister;
- Uncle;
- Aunt;
- Nephew
- Niece
- Step
Father
- Step
Mother
- Step
Child;
- Adopted
Child; etc.
There
are restrictions on advances of credit facilities and these are essentially
under section 11
1. An
institution is prohibited from taking its own shares as security for advances;
2. Institutions
are prohibited from granting facilities to company or on behalf of companies in
which the institution itself holds more than 25% of the share capital in that
company.
3. Institutions
are not permitted to grant or permit to be outstanding unsecured advances in
respect of their employees or the employees’ associates.
4. a
restriction against granting or permitting facilities which are unsecured to
officers of the institutions or the associates. Any person who is an agent, a
director, a manager or a shareholder of the officer. Advances or
facilities to directors or other persons participating in the general
management of the institution are also restricted unless the facilities are
approved by the full board or directors of the institution, if the Board is
satisfied that the facility is viable. Secondly the facility to
these persons must be made in what they refer to as normal course of business
and on terms that are similar to terms that are offered to other customers of
the institution. The institution is then required to notify Central
Bank of having done so. in any event facilities to all these classes
of person must not exceed 25% of the core capital of the institution.
Act
No. 9 of 2000 essentially restricts or prohibits an institution from
transacting in a fraudulent or reckless manner. Fraudulent is
defined to include intentional deception, false and material representation,
concealment or non-disclosure of a material fact or misleading conduct that
results in the loss and injury to the institution with an intended personal
gain. Reckless transacting includes under the Act the transacting
business beyond the limits set under the Central Bank of Kenya Act offering
facilities contrary to the Central Bank guidelines or regulations, failing to
observe the institution’s policies as approved by the institution’s Board of
Directors and misusing position or facilities of the institution for personal
gain. All these are classified as reckless or fraudulent.
All
officers of an institution who transact either fraudulently or recklessly in
terms of those definitions shall be liable to indemnify the institution against
loss arising from such reckless or fraudulent advances, loan or credit
facility.
In
the case of an advance, loan or a facility to a person other than a director of
the institution or a person participating in the general management of the
institution, an officer shall not be so liable. Provided he or she
shows that, through no act or omission on his or her part, he or she was not
aware that the contravention was taking place, or he or she took all reasonable
steps to prevent it taking place.
The
Central Bank may in the case of an advance, loan or credit facility to a
director of the institution, direct the removal of such director from the Board
of Directors of the institution. The bank may direct the suspension
of any other officer or employee of the institution who sanctioned the advance,
loan or credit facility.
Any
director of an institution who defaults in the repayment of any advance or loan
made to him by the institution for three consecutive months shall forthwith be
disqualified from holding office as such. The institution
concerned is required to comply with such a directive. An officer or
director who is aggrieved by such removal or suspension has recourse to the
High Court. Such an officer or director can apply to the High Court
to determine the matter and the High Court is empowered either to confirm the
decision of removing the officer, or reverse the decision or modify the
decision even.
But
whilst proceedings are pending in the High Court challenging the removal, the
order directing the removal remains in force. If a director defaults
in the repayment of any facility, granted to him for 3 consecutive months, such
a director should forthwith be disqualified from holding office in that
institution.
The
Act prescribes and says that an institution that allows such a director to
continue holding office is guilty of an offence and equally any institution
that fails to comply with a directive from Central Bank for the removal of an
officer is also guilty of an offence.
Section
12 imposes
restrictions on trading and investments and under the Section an institution is
prohibited from engaging in wholesale or retail trade. There is a
restriction prohibiting institutions from acquiring or holding directly or
indirectly any part of the share capital in any commercial, agricultural or
other undertaking where the value of the institution’s interest would exceed in
the aggregate of 25% of that institution’s core capital.
There
are exceptions to that rule so that an institution may take an interest in such
an undertaking in satisfaction of a debt due to it and such interests have to
be disposed of within such time as the Central Bank may allow. The other
exception is where the shareholding is in a corporation established for the
purpose of promoting development in Kenya and such shareholding has been approved
by the Minister.
An
institution is not allowed and is prohibited from purchasing or acquiring land
except where such acquisition is necessary for purposes of conducting its
business or for housing and providing amenities for its staff. But
that does not prevent an institution from taking land as security or acquiring
land for what the Act describes as purposes of its own development.
Section
13 of
the Banking Act addresses the question of ownership and share capital of an
institution. The object is to avoid a situation where an institution
is at the core of the owner. This restriction on ownership of share
capital of an institution, its objective is basically to diversify ownership of
an institution for the purpose of prudent management, direct or indirect
share-holding of an institution has been restricted to a maximum of 25% to any
one person other than.
(i) another
institution;
(ii) The
government of Kenya or the Government of a foreign sovereign state.
(iii) A
state corporation within the meaning of the State Corporations Act, or
(iv) A
foreign company, which is licensed to carry on the business of an institution
in its country of incorporation.
Section
13 also states that no financial institution or mortgage finance company shall
acquire or hold, directly or indirectly any part of the share capital of, or
otherwise have beneficial interest in the bank.
An
institution is required to disclose to the Central Bank natural persons behind
nominee companies and/or any other company.
Restrictions
on making advances for Purchase of Land (Banking Act Section 14)
1. An
institution is restricted from making advances or loans for the purchase,
improvement or alteration of land so that the aggregate is in excess of 25% of
the amount of its total deposit liabilities unless it is a mortgage finance
company.
2. The
Central Bank may however, authorize an institution to exceed the limit up to a
maximum of 40% in case of a bank and 60% in the case of a financial
institution.
3. These
provisions, shall however, not prevent an institution from accepting security
over land for a loan or an advance made in good faith for any other purpose.
BANKING LAW
BANKER
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
Who
are the parties to this relationship?
The
Bank on the one hand and the customer on the other hand. The word
Bank and Banker and to an extent banking business will be used to mean bank.
What
is a Bank?
Section
2 of the Banking Act which defines a Bank as a company which carries on or
proposes to carry on banking business. Banking business in time is
defined under the Act to mean
1. The
accepting from members of the public of money on deposit repayable on demand or
at the expiry of a fixed period or after notice.
2. The
accepting from members of the public of money on current account and payment on
and acceptance of cheques.
3. The
employ of money held on deposits or on current account by lending investment or
in any other manner for the account and at the risk of the person so employing
the money.
That
is the statutory definition
Common
law meaning of a Banker, bank?
Is
it different from that given under statute?
Is
the common law meaning relevant in light of the statutory definition?
Certain
statutes refer to the terms banks/bankers/banking business without
definition. In some cases, the definition that one finds in the
statutes is different from the statutory definition under Cap 488 (Banking
Act) an example of this is the Bills of Exchange Act Cap 27 of
the Laws of Kenya. Under Section 2 of that Act, the definition of
Banker is defined in the following terms
“Banker
includes a body of persons whether incorporated or not who carry on the
business of banking. That definition appears on the face of it to be
at odds with the definition under the Banking Act Cap 488 Laws of
Kenya. Firstly because the Banking Act refers to a company which as
earlier pointed out refers to a company that is a corporate body.
Secondly
it is at odds for the reason that section 3 of the Banking Act restricts the
carrying on of banking business to institutions which when one looks at
interpretation of Section 2 of the Banking Act will again refer you
to a company. Where under Bills of Exchange a Bank includes a
company whether incorporated or not the Banking Act only recognizes an
incorporated company. This could be one of the reason why the common
law definition of Banking remains as to who is a customer and who is not a
customer.
Another
example of the statute which appears to recognize banks or banking business or
bankers, outside of the ambit of definition under the Banking Act is the
Cheques Act Cap 35 Laws of Kenya.
Cap
35 does not itself define any of those terms bank, banker or banking business but
it makes reference to the term banker. Section 2 (2) of that Act
provides that it shall be read, i.e. the Cheques Act shall be read and
construed as one with the Bills of Exchange Act. Which therefore
means that the meaning of the word Banker as ascribed under the words of the
Bills Exchange Act would apply under the Cheques Act.
Why
it is also relevance to examine the common law meaning of a ‘Banker’ according
to the authors of Paget on Law of Banking is that a Banker at Common Law has a
right of lien and set-off. Essentially the right to retain until
obligations are fully satisfied.
The
meaning of the term banker at common law. Is the meaning different
from the statute meaning
In
the case of United Dominion Trust Ltd v. Kirkwood (1966) 1 All 968
This
case is a leading authority on the question of the common law meaning of a
Banker. It is a court of Appeal decision and the Judges were Lord
Denning, Lord Harman and Lord Diplok and to an extent all three judges differed
on the law as well as on the application of that law to the particular facts of
that case.
Lord
Denning “Lonsdale motors ltd a
private company which ran a garage business in a place called
Carlisle. The Defendant Mr. Kirkwood was the MD of that company and
that he and his wife were the only shareholders of that company. The
Plaintiff UDT is a large public company which describes itself as bankers
carrying on business at United Dominion House somewhere in the city of London.
It is an important house and lends big sums of money to various
people. It has a high standard and includes Bank of England amongst
its share holders. It also owns a wholly owned subsidiary called
United Dominion Trust Commercial Ltd. which does a lot of financing of hire
purchase transactions and those two companies have branches in several towns in
England where a single manager acts on behalf of both companies at those
branches. In 1961 Lonsdale Motors desired to buy cars to put those
cars in their showrooms for sale and that they did not have money for that
purpose and they therefore went to the branch manager of UDT and borrowed that
money. And as security for that borrowing they gave bills of
exchange in favour of UDT. Lonsdale motors then disposed of those
vehicles after procuring them to customers who wanted them on hire purchase
terms. They went again to the branch manager who agreed to buy the
cars from the company and let them out on hire purchase to the
customers. This case arises from a loan of five thousand pounds
which UDT lent to Lonsdale. The bills of exchange were dishonoured
on presentation and UDT sued the Defendant.
The defendant had no defence to that case except
that he raised a plea under the Money Lenders Act of 1900. That
defence was to the effect that UDT are unregistered money lenders and therefore
they could not recover the five thousand pounds. UDT in response
said “we are not money lenders but we are Bankers and we can therefore recover
this money”
If they are Bankers, they can recover if they are
money lenders they cannot recover anything.
In answering that question, Lord Denning at pg 74
set out the characteristics of Banking.
Seeing that there is no statutory definition of
Banking one must do the best one can to find out the usual characteristics
which go to make up the business of banking. In the eighteenth
century, before cheques came into common use, the principle characteristics
were that the Banker accepted the money of others on the terms that the person
who deposited it could have it back from the Banker when they asked for
it. Sometimes on demand at other times on notice and meanwhile the
Banker was at liberty to make use of the money by lending it out at interest or
investing it on mortgage or otherwise.
You notice that those characteristics do not
mention the use of cheques or the keeping of current accounts. The
march of time has taken us far beyond the cases of the Eighteenth
Century. Money is now paid and received by cheque.
There are therefore two characteristics usually
found in bankers today.
1. they accept money from and collect cheques
for their customers and place them to their credit
.
2. They honour cheques or orders drawn on them
by their customers when presented for payments and debit their customers
accordingly.
These two characteristics carry with them also a
third namely
3. they keep current accounts or something of
that nature in their books in which the credits and debits are entered.
Lord Denning continues
Page 979 thus far the evidence adduced
by UDT would not suffice to show that …. The usual characteristics
are not the sole characteristics there are other characteristics that go to
make a banker, soundness and probity parliament would
not to
a ramshackle concern whose methods are dubious.
Reputation is also an additional consideration in
this enquiry.
Lord
Harman says It is difficult to
define banking business and he identifies the principle attribute or
characteristic by saying that a banker is one who carries on as his principle
business the accepting of deposits of money on current account or otherwise
subject to withdrawal by cheque draft or
He differs with Lord Denning on reputation and says
that reputation on its own is not enough.
Lord Diplock on his part says that it is essential
to the business of banking that a banker should accept money from his customers
upon a running account into which sums of money are from time to time paid by
the customer and from time to time withdrawn by the customers. He
says the payment in collection of cheque is also essential.
What
therefore is the ratio of UDT v. Kirkwood – it is that the 3 characteristics
namely conduct of current account, payment of cheques and collection of cheques
are essential to the carrying on of banking business and that evidence of
reputation is potentially relevant.
WHO
IS A CUSTOMER
The
relationship between a bank and a customer embraces mutual duties and
obligations and it is therefore necessary to know what in law is a
customer. The statutes do not define who a customer
is. For example under the Banking Act we have seen an attempt to
define who a bank is but not who a customer is. Other statutes like
the Bills of Exchange Act or the Cheques Act do not define a
customer. The ordinary meaning of the word customer is a person who
buys goods or services from a shop or business.
In
the context of banking, it is difficult to define with exactness who a customer
is. The main criteria as to whether a person is a customer or not or
as to whether the relationship of a banker and customer exist is whether there
exists in relations to that person an account with the bank through which
transactions are passed. In the case of
THE
GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY CO. V. LONDON & COUNTY BANKING CO. LTD. H.L A.C. 414
The
case involved the question of who is a customer for purposes of the Bills of
Exchange Act and Lord Davey at page 420 had this to say
“ it is true that there is not
definition of customer in the Act. But it is a well known expression and I
think that there must be some sort of account either a deposit or a current
account or some similar relation to make a man a customer of a bank.”
Lord
Brampton in the same case said at page 422
“it is not necessary to say that the keeping of an
ordinary account is essential to constitute a person a customer of a
bank. For if it were shown that cheques were habitually lodged with
a bank for presentation on behalf of the person lodging them and that when
honoured the amount was credited and paid to such person, I would not say that
such transactions might not constitute such a person a customer.”
For
a person to be a customer it matters not that the duration of the relationship
is short or protracted in other words the duration when an account has been
held is immaterial to the question of whether the status of the customer has
been achieved and that is according to another English position in the case
of Commissioners of Taxation v. English Scottish and Australian Bank
Limited. (1920) A.C. 683
Their
Lordships expressed themselves in the following language. Their
Lordships are of the opinion that the word customer signifies a relationship in
which duration is not of the essence. A person whose money has been
accepted by the bank on the footing that they undertake to honour cheques upto
the amount standing to this credit is in the view of their Lordships a customer
of the bank irrespective of whether his connection is of short or long
standing. The contrast is not between an habitué and a new comer but
between a person for whom the bank performs a casual service such as for
instance cashing a cheque for a person introduced by one of their customers and
a person who has an account of his own at the bank.
Effectively
even if all a person has is one transaction, it does not disqualify the person
from being a customer of the bank in the case of
Landbroke
v. Todd (1914) Vol 30 T.L.R
Single
first transaction
Woods
v. Martins Bank
Makes
the point of explaining who a customer of a bank is and it is also relevant to
the question of the responsibility a banker assumes when it advises
customers. The other point made by this case is that it is not a
matter of law but a question of fact as to whether any class of business
amounts to banking business. It is not a matter of pure law to
determine whether a firm at common law is a bank doing banking business it is a
matter of interpretation. It is a matter of interpretation to see
whether a person is a customer and who is not a customer.
WHAT
ARE THE RESPECTIVE RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF THE PARTIES
The
nature of the bank customer relationship is contractual. It is a relationship
based on contract and if you were to apply contract law to this question.
Foley
v. Hill (1848) Vol H.L
There
is an argument that the relationship of a banker and customer consists of a
general contract which is basic to all transactions together with special
contracts which arise in relation to the specific transactions or services that
the Bank offers. The nature of the contract is described in a
leading case of
Joachimson
v. Swiss Bank Corporation. 1921 Vol. 3 A.B. 110
Lord
Atkin in this case described that contract at page 127 in the following terms
“I think that there is only one contract made
between the bank and its customer. The terms of that contract
involve obligations on both sides and require statements. They
appear upon consideration to include the following provisions. The
bank undertakes to receive money and to collect bills for its customers
account. The proceeds so received are not to be held in trust for
the customer but the bank borrows the proceeds and undertakes to repay
them. the promise to repay is to repay at the branch of the bank
where the account is kept and during banking hours. It includes a
promise to repay any part of the amount due against the written order of the
customer addressed to the bank, at the branch. It is a term of the contract
that the bank will not cease to do business with a customer except upon
reasonable notice. The customer on his part undertakes to exercise
reasonable care in executing his written orders so as not to mislead the bank
or to facilitate forgery. I think it is necessarily a term of such contract
that the bank is not liable to pay the customer the full amount of his balance
until he demands payments from the bank at the branch at which a current
account is kept.
The
debtor creditor relationship emerges in this quote.
Demand
is necessary before the obligation by the part of the bank to pay becomes due.
The
passage sums up the nature of the relationship on the contract.
The
relationship entails mutual obligations as covered in Joachimson Swiss
Bank Corporation
IMPLIED
DUTIES ON BANKER AND CUSTOMER
Typically
the commencement of the relationship in practice is documented in the sense
that the Bank will impose standard terms and conditions on the customer on
which that relationship is to be based. To the extent that there are
express stipulations in that contractual relationship then the question of
whether or not one of the parties to that relationship is in breach of the
express terms is a matter of interpretation of the express terms of the
contract. When talking of implied duties we are not concerned with where those
duties have expressly been stipulated under the contract. It is also
necessary to say that if an express term exists, then the question of implying
terms does not arise.
If
for instance the contract says that the bank is at liberty to close an account
after the stipulated time, the question of whether or not the bank has given a
reasonable notice does not arise as long as the parties have contracted and
agree to the number of days. We can only talk of implied terms where
there are no stipulations.
The
Banking Code which seeks to set the standards of banking practice became
effective on 1st October 2001 by the Kenya association of
bankers. It is modelled to a very large extent on the UK Good
Banking Code of Practice. To an extent this code sets out standards
which the Kenya Bankers Association considers to be standards of good banking
practice.
The
question is whether these standards form part and parcel of the Banker Customer
Relationship?
In
its introduction, the code states that it is a voluntary code and that it sets
standards of good banking practice for banks choosing to participate in the
code i.e. it is voluntary and the banks have an option of whether to use it or
not to use it.
For
instance one of the standards imposed is the requirement for banks to give
information to their customers about their accounts, operations etc, this is
required by the code of practice of the Kenya Association of Bankers.
Another
feature of the code is with regard to the question of changes in interest
rates. While one might expect that it would be good practice for
banks to inform their customers of changes in interest rates, the code suggests
that there is no obligation for the banks to do so.
Another
undertaking is that the written terms and conditions that govern the
relationship will be fair and will set out the customers’ rights and responsibilities
in clear and clean language.
They
also impose an obligation under the code that a customer’s account will not be
closed without notice to the customer unless there are exceptional
circumstances which might prevent the giving of notice. The exceptional
circumstance would be like if an account has been used to perpetrate fraud etc.
There
is the question of statements – the obligation on the part of the bank to give
regular account statements.
The
code stipulates that it is recommended that the customer should check those
statements on a regular basis and if a wrong entry is noted then the customer
is required to inform the bank. If the express terms and conditions
of the contract so provide, then the customer will be bound by the express terms
and conditions and cannot raise a claim against the bank.
Obligation
on the part of the customer in the code is to the effect that the customer must
himself exercise care in writing cheques and also in the storing of cheque
books, the ATM cards the pin numbers etc so that should a loss arise and is
attributed to the customer’s failure in either filling out the cheques or
handling of ATM cards or Pin Numbers then the Bank will be protected.
There
is also the obligation requiring the Banker to keep the affairs of the Customer
confidential and there are exceptions to the rule where the law permits
disclosure, where the customer has authorised disclosure and where public duty
or interest demands that there be disclosure and when it is in the banks own
interest to disclose.
Ordinarily
the banks will stipulate their terms and conditions and the customers are bound
by these.
What
are the implied duties
It
is not possible to exhaustively list the duties owed by the Banker and the
Customer to each other. No case is like the other and in each case
the court will be concerned with the particular facts and the particular
circumstances of the case before it and in addressing the question whether in a
particular case a Banker or a customer is in breach of an implied term, or
whether a term should be implied, the court will be guided by the usual
principles in law of proximity, reasonableness and justice and to a very large
extent, those principles themselves or the application of those principles will
be guided by the customs and usages of Bankers.
Case
law gives a guidance about situations where a duty of care will or will not be
found to exist. For example, case law has established that a Banker
owes a duty of care in giving financial investment advice. For
instance in the case of Woods v. Martins Bank the court held
that on the facts of that case it was within the scope of the banks business to
advise on financial matters and that in doing so, the bank owed a duty of care
to the Plaintiff to advise him with reasonable care and skill. The
bank in this case was seeking to avoid liability to the Plaintiff on the
grounds that it was not part of bankers business to advise on financial matters. The
court found and made the statement that what is to be defined as bankers
business is not a matter to be laid down by the courts as a matter of
law. What constitutes banking business is a matter to be decided on
the facts before the court.
Statement
by Samuel J. “in my judgment the limits of a bankers business cannot
be laid down as a matter of law …”
This
case is important for immediate purpose in terms of establishing that a bank
that gives financial advise assumes responsibility of reasonable care and
should the customer suffer as a result of negligent advise then the bank will
be held responsible.
At
Page 71 Salmon J. says “I find that it was and is within the scope
of the Defendant Bank’s business to advise on all financial matters and that as
they did advise him they owed a duty to the Plaintiff to advise him with
reasonable care and skill in each of the transactions.”
This
principle is covered in the case of Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd v.
Heller (1961) All E.R.
Another
example where the courts have recognised the existence of a duty of care is the
duty of a paying banker to protect its customer from fraud i.e.
agent, directors, etc and with that duty is the duty on the part of the bank to
meet and comply with the customers’ mandate. It is an implied term
of the contract between the banker and the customer that the bank will observe
reasonable skill and care in and about executing the customers’ orders and the
leading authority is the case of
Barclays
Bank Plc v. Quince care & Another (1992) Vol. 4 All E.R. 363
A
bank agreed to lend £400,000 to a company formed to purchase four chemists
shops. The bank imposed a condition that that company i.e. the borrower, be
formed for that purpose. The Chairman of the new company caused a
sum of £340,000 to be drawn out and to be misapplied for dishonest purposes and
almost the entire sum was lost. As part of the terms of the facility
or on the basis of which the bank agreed to lend £400,000, was that it required
a guarantee from a company called Unichem.
The
bank sued both the company as the principal debtor and the guarantor and the
defences raised there involved the central question or issue whether the bank
acted in breach of its duty to the principal debtor. The principal
debtor contended that the bank acted in breach of the implied duty of care in
the Banker Customer relationship because according to the company (the
customer) the circumstances under which the £340,000 were transferred raised
questions in their submissions in the mind of a reasonable banker as to whether
that transaction was in fact authorised by the customer. The
customer also contended that those circumstances surrounding the transfer of
the funds should
X
Attorney General v. A Banks [1983] 2 All ER 464
Two corporate customers of London Branch of an American bank applied for an injunction to restrict the bank from producing documents relating to their accounts pursuant to a subpoena issued by a grand jury and upheld by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The court granted the interlocutory injunction to restrain disclosure. The issue having arisen on an interlocutory application, it was dealt with in strict conformity with American cynamid principles.
The
court has power to order discovery of documents which would normally be subject
to the obligation of confidentiality owed by a bank to its
customer. Thus in the case of
Bankers
Trust Co. v. Shapira
The
Plaintiff bank claimed that it had been fraudulently deprived of US$1 Million
by two men, who then placed the money on deposit at the Hatton Garden branch of
the Discount Bank (Overseas) Ltd. The Plaintiff bank brought an
action against the two men and against the Discount Bank. The
defendant bank was duly served with the proceedings, but it was impossible to
serve the individual defendants, both of whom were said to be on the continent,
one of them being in jail in Switzerland during a fraud investigation by the
Swiss police. The plaintiff bank claimed as against the defendant
bank an order for discovery of the documents relating to these sums of
money. In his judgment in the court of appeal, Lord Denning said
that the Discount Bank had got mixed up with the wrongful acts of the two
men. The bank was under a duty to assist the plaintiff bank by
giving them full information and disclosing the position of the
wrongdoers. Though banks had a confidential relationship with their
customers, it did not apply to conceal the fraud and iniquity of
wrongdoers. In the result, the Court of Appeal made an order for
discovery (i.e. disclosure) of the relevant documents.
Libyan
Arab Foreign Bank v. Bankers Trust
A
relationship between bank and customer is contained in one contract which may
encompass a variety of matters.
L
had Eurodollar deposits amounting to over $300 million with the
bank. There were two accounts, one was held in New York and one at a
London branch. The bank refused to repay the deposit on L’s demand
as a US Presidential order had sought to freeze the accounts. It
became important to decide whether the contract was subject to English or to
New York Law. It was held that there was one contract between the
parties, although the New York account was subject to New York law and the London
account was subject to English Law. It was also decided that, in the
absence of any express provision, L was entitled to demand the balance held on
the London account in cash. This was despite the evidence that it
would involve seven plane journeys from New York to bring over the necessary
dollar bills.
The
rationale of the exception of the Public duty is that there exists a higher
duty than the private duty owed to the customer.
Status Enquiries (Bankers References) & the
Responsibilities that the Banks assume in answering status enquiries or in
giving Bankers References
The
bank runs the risk that the person to whom the information is given there is
exposure to the bank and the bank has to ensure that they give correct
information. The person to whom the information is being given,
there is also exposure there since more information than authorised may be
given.
The
second danger is that inaccurate information may be given with the result that
one loses the deal that the information was required to aid.
The
problem arises from the standpoint or from the perspective of the Customer
about whom the information is given and secondly from the perspective of the
person to whom information is given. The legal question is whether
the giving of information by the bank would give rise to a ground for
liability.
If
the information is false the cause of action is defamation, misrepresentation,
negligence, all these claims could arise. If you exceed the
authority, again you may be in breach of contract and the relief in all these
cases will be damages.
The
more problematic area is with regard to the liability the bank may incur with
respect to the person who is the recipient of the information. Here
exposure to a claim of negligence could arise for misrepresentation.
The
3 ingredients for sustaining a course of action in negligence are
1. Existence
of a duty of care;
2. Breach
of that duty;
3. Loss
resulting from the breach of that duty.
The
law imposes a duty on the part of the bank when giving information regarding
the credit of a customer to exercise care and the leading authority for this
proposition is the case of
Hedley
Byrne & co. v. Heller & Partners
Bare
facts are that the Plaintiffs who were advertising agents booked space and time
on behalf of a customer under a contract making them liable. The
Plaintiffs made an inquiry through their bankers and the enquiry was with
regard to the financial status of the defendant. As a result of the
answers they got in response to their enquiry, they incurred liabilities which
ended in loss. The trial judge held that the answer given in
response to the inquiry was negligent but that the defendant’s duty did not go
beyond being honest in giving a reply. The appeal court upheld that
finding on the basis that there was no duty of care in the absence of a
contractual fiduciary or other special relationship and that in the
circumstances of the case, no special relationship existed between the
Plaintiffs and the Defendants.
The
matter went to the House of Lords which considered the matter and stated as
follows:
Lord
Morris “If someone who was not a customer of a bank made a formal approach to
the bank with a definite request that the bank would give him deliberate advice
as to certain financial matters of a nature with which the bank ordinarily
dealt, the bank would be under no obligation to accede to the
request. If however, they undertook, though gratuitously to give
deliberate advice, they would be under a duty to exercise reasonable care in
giving it. They would be liable if they were negligent although there
being no consideration no enforceable relationship was created. It
should now be regarded as settled that if someone possessed of a special skill
undertakes to apply that skill for the assistance of another who relies upon
such skill, a duty of care will arise.”
The
relationship that gives rise to a duty of care is not stemming from contract or
the existence of fiduciary responsibility but purely from proximity.
Woods
v. Martins Bank – financial advice to a customer
TAKING
SECURITY
The
issues are if one takes the example of a property registered in the names of
Mr. and Mrs. X have raised a red flag in the eyes of the banker or the
circumstances were such that the bank should have been put on inquiry or a duty
to inquire arose on the part of the bank whether that transfer was in fact
authorised by the customer. It was contended for the customer that
in failing to make such inquiry the bank was negligent.
The
court held that the relationship between a banker and a customer regarding the
drawing and payment of the customers’ cheques against the money of the
customers in the bankers hands was that of a principal and agent and that as an
agent the bank owed fiduciary duties to the customer and prima facie was also
bound to exercise reasonable care and skill in carrying out the instructions of
its principal. Accordingly it was an implied term of the contract
between the bank and the customer that the bank would observe reasonable skill
and care in and about executing the customers orders but generally that duty
was subordinate to the bank’s other conflicting contractual duties such as its
prima facie duty when it received a valid order to execute the order promptly
on the pain of incurring liability for consequential loss to the customer.
The
court in this case is saying that on one hand the bank is under an obligation
to honour cheques that on the face of them appear proper but on the other hand
they have an obligation to protect their customers from loss.
It
goes on to say that if the bank executed the order knowing it to be dishonestly
given or shut its eyes to the obvious facts of dishonesty or acted recklessly,
in failing to make such inquiries as an honest and reasonable man would make
the bank would plainly be liable.
The
obligation of the bank is that it must not act recklessly and if circumstances
demands that it inquires it should inquire and should not knowingly facilitate
fraud. It is a balancing act.
DUTY
OF THE CUSTOMER OWED TO THE BANK IN DRAWING A CHEQUE
This
duty can be expressed in these terms
“a
Customer of a bank owes a duty of care in drawing a cheque to take reasonable
and ordinary precautions against forgery.”
The
leading authority for this proposition is the case of
London
Joint Stock Bank Ltd v. Macmillan (1918) A.C. 777
The
bare facts of this case are that a firm who were customers of a bank entrusted
the duty of filling out their cheques to a clerk whose integrity they had no
reason to doubt. The clerk presented to one of the partners for
signature a cheque drawn in favour of the firm or bearer. There was
no sum on words written on the cheque in the space provided and there were the
figures 2 in the space intended for the figures. The partner signed
the cheque. The clerk subsequently tampered with the cheque by
adding the words one hundred and twenty pounds in the space that had been
left. The clerk then presented that cheque for payment at the firm’s
bank and received a hundred and twenty pounds out of the firm’s
account. The question was whether the bank would then be liable to
the firm for that loss that was perpetrated by their own clerk.
The
House of Lords held that the firm had been guilty of a breach of duty arising
out of the relation of a banker and customer to take care in the mode of
drawing the cheque and that the alteration of the cheque by the clerk was a
direct result of that breach of duty. And accordingly the bank was
entitled to debit the customer’s account with the amount of that cheque.
Lord
Finley summed up that duty at page 789 as follows:
“the relationship between a banker and a
customer is that of debtor and creditor with a super added obligation on the
part of the banker to honour the customers cheques if the account is in
credit. A cheque drawn by a customer is in points of law a mandate
to the banker to pay the amount according to the tenor of the
cheque. It is beyond dispute that the customer is bound to exercise
reasonable care in drawing the cheque to prevent the banker being
misled. If he draws the cheque in a manner which facilitates fraud,
he is guilty of a breach of duty as between himself and the banker and he will
be responsible to the banker for any loss sustained by the banker as a natural
and direct consequence of this breach of duty.”
Sections
3 and 4 of the Cheques act s. 3 (2) that where a banker in good faith and
without negligence and in the ordinary course of business
(a) Receives
payment for a customer of a prescribed instrument to which the customer has no
title or defective title
Protection
is essentially being proffered to protect the bank
Section
24 of the Bills of Exchange Act which provides that where a signature on a bill
is forged, or placed thereon without the authority of the person whose
signature it purports to be, the forged or the authorised signature is wholly
inoperative. In other words if the bank honours a forged
cheque and it subsequently turns out the cheque was forged, then the banker
bears the loss.
Does
the duty of the customer extend to scrutinising bank statements and are the
statements to be deemed to be accurate unless challenged by the customer within
a given period.
As
a matter of practice the banks will expressly provide that that is the case, in
the absence however of an express agreement with the bank, is such a duty to be
implied? If under the written terms of the contract there is no
agreement that statements will be binding after a certain time has
lapsed. This was the issue in the case of Tai Hing Cotton
Mills Ltd v. Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd P.C 1985 2 947
Brief
statement of facts
A
company was a customer of a bank and maintained accounts with that
bank. The bank honoured cheques 300 of them totalling approximately
5.5 million Hong Kong dollars. The cheques on the face of them
appeared to have been drawn by the company and appeared to bear the signature
of the Managing Director of the Company who was one of the authorised
signatories and so the bank honoured these cheques. It later
transpired that those cheques were not infact the company’s cheques, they were
in fact forgeries and the forgeries had been perpetrated by the company’s own
accounts clerk and the question was whether that loss should fall on the
company or on the bank.
The
holding of the privy council was as follows: “that in the absence of express agreement to
the contrary the duty of care owed by a customer to his bank in the operation
of a current account was limited to a duty to refrain from drawing a cheque in
such manner as to facilitate fraud or forgery and that a customer had a duty to
inform the bank of any unauthorised cheques purportedly drawn on the account as
soon as the customer became aware of it. And on the question whether
there was an obligation on the part of the customer to screen statements which
is what the bank had advocated or argued, the court held, that the customer was
not under a duty to take reasonable precautions in the management of
his business with the Bank to prevent forged cheques being presented for
payments nor was he under a duty to check his periodic bank statements so as to
enable him to notify the bank of any unauthorised debit items because such wide
a duty was not a necessary incident of the Banker/Customer relationship since
the business of Banking was not the business of the customer but the business
of the bank and forgery of cheques was a risk of the service which
the bank offered.
It
had been suggested in this case that there was a duty owed to the bank by the
customer but the Privy Council stated that the customer was under no duty to
scrutinise statements to check if they are erroneous.
WHEN
CAN A CONDITION BE IMPLIED
Conditions
that must be satisfied
A
term will not be implied into a contract unless it satisfied the following
conditions:
1. The
term proposed to be implied must be reasonable and equitable.
2. It
must be necessary to give business efficacy to the contract i.e. a term will
not be implied into a contract if the contract is effective without that
implied term.
3. The
term must be so obvious that it goes without saying as it were.
4. The
term must be capable of clear expression;
5. It
must not contradict any express term of the contract.
So
if the customer has a term to be implied in the relationship, it must meet
these 5 conditions.
CONFIDENTIALITY
The
duty that the bank owes to the customer or the duty of secrecy.
There
are situations when the banks could be in their right to disclose.
A
banker is under an obligation of secrecy under the Banking Contract regarding
his customers’ affairs. This obligation is a legal obligation
arising out of the contract. A breach of that duty on the part of
the banker will expose the banker to liability. In other words a
banker is not generally permitted to disclose the affairs of his customers to 3rd parties. The
duty is not an absolute duty because there are exceptions when a bank is at
liberty to disclose the affairs of the customer.
The
leading authority on this subject is the case of
Tournier
v. National Provincial and Union Bank of England. (1924) 1 KB 461
It
was held in that case that it is an implied term of the contract between a
banker and its customer that the banker will not divulge to 3rd persons
without the consent of the customer express or implied either the state of the
customer’s account or any of his transactions with the bank or any information
relating to the customer, acquired through the keeping of the customer’s
account unless the banker is compelled to do so by order of a court, or the
circumstances give rise to a public duty of disclosure or the protection of the
banker’s own interests require disclosure.
The
facts briefly
The
Plaintiff was a customer of the Defendant bank. A cheque was drawn
by another customer of the Defendant’s in favour of the Plaintiff who instead
of paying it into his own account endorsed it in favour of another person who
had an account at another bank. On return of the cheque to the
Defendant the manager enquired from the other bank to whom this cheque had been
paid and the information given was that it was paid to a
bookmaker. That information was disclosed by the Defendant to 3rd persons
and the Plaintiff brought an action against the bank and the holding was that
the disclosure constituted a breach of the Defendant’s duty to the Plaintiff
and that although the information was acquired not through the Plaintiff’s
account but through the drawer of the cheque, the information was none the less
acquired by the defendants during the currency of the Plaintiff’s account and
in their character as bankers.
The
classic statement is by Bankes L.J at page 472
“In my opinion it is necessary in a case like
the present to direct the jury what are the limits and what the qualifications
of the contractual duty of secrecy implied in the relation of banker and
customer. There appears to be no authority on the
point. On principle I think that the qualifications can be
classified under four heads:
(a) Where
disclosure is under compulsion by law;
(b) Where there is a duty to the public to
disclose;
(c) Where the interests of the Bank require
disclosure;
(d) Where the disclosure is made by the express
or implied consent of the customer.
He
goes on to say “the duty of secrecy
does not cease the moment a customer closes his account. Information
gained during the currency of the account remains confidential unless released
under circumstances bringing the case within one of the classes of
qualifications I have already referred to. Again the confidence is
not confined to the actual state of the customer’s account it extends to information
derived from the account itself.”
CONFIDENTIALITY
Tournier
v. National Provincial and Union Bank of England (1924) 1 KB 461
Judgment
of Scrutton J.
“I have no doubt that it is an implied term of
bankers contract with this customer that the bank shall not disclose his
account or the transaction relating thereto except in certain
circumstances. The circumstances in which disclosure is allowed are
sometimes difficult to state. I think it is clear that the bank may disclose
the customer’s account and affairs to an extent reasonable and proper for its
own protection (as when a bank is collecting or suing for an overdraft. Or to
the extent reasonable and proper for carrying on the business of the account as
in giving a reason for declining to honour cheques when there are insufficient
assets or when ordered to answer questions in the law courts or to prevent
frauds or crimes.
I think also that the implied legal duty towards
the customer to keep secret his affairs does not apply to knowledge which the
bank acquires before the relation of banker and customer was in contemplation
or after it ceased or to knowledge derived from other sources during the
continuance of the relation. The banks can by express agreement
provide for circumstances when the bank may be at liberty to disclose.
Judgment
of Lord Atkins
Intercom
Services Limited & Other v. Standard Chartered Bank Limited Civil Case No.
761 of 1988 E.A. L. R 2002 Vol. 2 391
Judgment
of Visram J.
The
facts in this case are that a Mr. James Kanyita Nderitu was a director of 4
companies Intercom Services Ltd, Inter State, Swiftair, and Kenya Continental
Ltd. In 1985 Mr. Nderitu received a cheque for 17 Million shillings
drawn by Customs & Excise in favour of his company Intercom Services
Ltd. And he banked it on the persuasion of the Branch Manager of
Standard Bank Westlands and it was common ground or it was conceded that, that
cheque represented a substantial amount of money in those days. One
Saturday Mr. Nderitu went to Westlands Branch of Standard Chartered Bank and
deposited that cheque there. The account was relatively new having
been opened some 8 days prior to the depositing of the cheque. The
bank accepted the cheque without raising any questions as it appeared to be
proper on the face of it. The cheque was specially cleared and on
the following Monday the Bank manager telephoned Mr. Nderitu and informed him
that his superiors thought the deposit was somewhat unusual and he was
requested to provide some documentary proof of payment.
The
bank has no business asking for proof at this stage. But anyway Mr.
Nderitu obliged and produced a payment voucher from the Customs & Excise,
for money paid under the Export Compensation Scheme. The bank
noticed from the payment voucher what it considered significant discrepancies
on the payment voucher not on the cheque namely the amount shown in words in
the payment voucher does not tally with the amount shown in figures and this
raises eyebrows at the bank. Mr. Nderitu was in fact allowed to use
some of the funds in the Intercom account and he drew some of the money and
transferred 15 Million shillings to the account of Swiftair Kenya Ltd in the
same Bank. Meanwhile the bank commenced a series of
enquiries. The first enquiry was to Kenya Commercial Bank upon which
the cheque was drawn and KCB confirmed that the cheque was good and hence they
made the payment. The enquiry does not end there as the bank calls
the department of customs and excise and speak to the first signatory of the
cheque who assured them of the legitimacy of the cheque. They called
the 2nd signatory who also assured them that the cheque was
legitimate. The suspicion did not end there and they spoke to
a Police Officer in the Fraud section of the Central Bank of
Kenya. Mr. Nderitu was ultimately arrested and charged with a
criminal offence of obtaining money by false pretences and all his accounts
were frozen. He was finally acquitted after a very long battle.
Mr.
Nderitu brought an action against the bank on the following
1. Breach
of the bank’s duty to his company by disclosing his account affairs to other
parties; bank violated its duty of confidentiality.
Visram
J. found the bank guilty of violating its duty of
confidentiality. He discussed the law at great length and analysis
the bankers duty of confidentiality and the duties of a collecting bank and to
an extent the duties of a paying bank in as far as the cheque is concerned. He
also discussed the principle and cites Joachimson with approval and concludes
that “that a banker in these circumstances is not to inquire for what purpose
the customer opened the account, he is not to inquire what the moneys are that
are paid into the account and he is not to inquire for what purpose moneys are
drawn out of the account. He also pegs the responsibility of the bank to what
would be considered good banking practice. I accordingly enter
judgment on liability in favour of the plaintiff.
Cheques
Guarantees
Electronic
banking
THE
TAKING OF SECURITY
A
contract can be set aside on a number of grounds;
1. Undue
Influence
2. Misrepresentation
3. Illegality
4. Duress
The
Application of these principles to Banking i.e. what a banker should safeguard
against when taking security to avoid being liable.
CIBC
Mortgages PLC V. Pitts & Another (1993) Vol. 4 All E.R. 433
This
is an illustration as to how a problem can arise when securities are being
taken.
A
debenture is a floating security tied on assets of a company that will
crystallise after certain effects.
The
facts in this case were that a husband and wife jointly owned a matrimonial
home which was valued at £275,000 in 1986. There was an encumbrance
on that property in favour of a building society for £16700. In 1986
the husband told the wife that he would like to borrow money on the security of
the home and to use the loan to buy shares in the stock market. The
wife was most reluctant but as a result of pressure, brought upon to bear on
her by the husband, she eventually agreed. Both the husband and wife
signed an application for a loan from the plaintiff in the amount of a £150,000
for a period of twenty years. And the purpose of the loan was
expressed in the application to be for the purpose of paying off the existing
mortgage with the building society and for the Purchasing of a Holiday
Home. The Plaintiff agreed to advance the £150,000 for 19 years and
the husband and wife signed the Mortgage offer and the legal charge prepared by
the Plaintiff’s solicitors. The wife did not read those documents
before signing them neither did she receive separate advice about the
transaction and nobody suggested that she should in fact seek
advice. She did not know the amount that was being borrowed, the
bank then proceeded to disburse the loan, the existing mortgage with the building
society was paid off and the balance of the amount of the loan was paid into a
joint account in the names of the husband and wife. The husband then
utilised that money to speculate on the stock market and was in fact at some
stage at least in the books able to convert himself into a Millionaire through
his stock dealings. The stock market then crashed in October of 1987
and the husband was then unable to keep up the Mortgage repayments and the
Plaintiff then applied for an order for possession of the matrimonial
home.
The
wife contested the application for possession of the matrimonial home on the
ground that she had been induced to sign the mortgage by misrepresentation,
duress and undue influence on the part of the husband. The judge
held that the husband had exercised actual undue influence on the wife to
procure her agreement and that the transaction was manifestly disadvantageous
to her. But since the husband had not acted as an agent of the
Plaintiff and the fact that there had been a joint advance to both the husband
and the wife, the wife’s claim failed. She appealed to the court of
appeal and the appeal was dismissed on the grounds that the transaction was not
manifestly disadvantageous and therefore the wife could not succeed on undue
influence. And furthermore the Plaintiff had neither actual or
constructive notice of any irregularity.
She
then appealed to the House of Lords which held that a claimant who proved
actual undue influence was not under the further burden of proving that the
transaction induced by undue influence was manifestly disadvantageous but was
entitled as of right to have it set aside as against the person exercising the
undue influence since actual undue influence was a species of fraud and a
person who had been induced by undue influence to carry out a transaction which
he did not freely and knowingly enter into was entitled to have that
transaction set aside as of right. However the House of Lords went
to hold, although the wife had established actual undue influence by the
husband, the Plaintiff was not affected by it because the husband had not in a
real sense acted as its agent in procuring her agreement and that the Plaintiff
had no actual or constructive notice of the undue influence. So far
as the Plaintiff was concerned there was a joint application by both husband
and wife, the loan was advanced to both husband and wife and there was nothing
to indicate that this was anything other than a normal advance to a husband and
wife for their joint benefit and for that reason the appeal was dismissed.
Look
at the Judgement of Wilkinson J. and his discussion of the law in that case.
Under
our statutes the requirements is that the signatures of the chargees must be
witnessed by an advocate and he must say that he has agreed.
The
circumstances when the security of a bank may be challenged
- UNDUE
INFLUENCE
- DURESS
- UNCONSCIONABLE
TRANSACTIONS
- MISREPRESENTATIONS
UNDUE
INFLUENCE
The
equitable doctrine of undue influence covers cases in which the particular
relationship of trust and confidence leads the court to presume that undue
influence has been exerted without necessity for proof. There are
those relationships that are based on trust and confidence where the assumption
will be made , i.e. doctor/patient, or advocate/client.
The
doctrine also extends to cases outside of such relationships in which the court
will uphold the plea of undue influence if satisfied that such influence has
been in fact exerted based on the evidence. These will be cases of
actual undue influence and the basis of the doctrine is the principle that the
court is justified in setting aside a transaction for undue influence a
transaction that is based on the victimisation of one party by another.
In
the case for presumed undue influence it has to be established that a
relationship of influence exists between the parties and that a transaction has
taken place between those parties which was wrongful in the sense that the
party in the position of influence has obtained an unfair advantage from the
party subject of the influence.
ACTUAL
UNDUE INFLUENCE IS A QUESTION OF FACT
Under
what circumstances will the Bank be hit with the notice of undue
influence. When is the bank affected by undue influence.
Undue
influence exerted by a third party over the giving of security will generally
not have effect on the validity of the security given by a
bank. There are circumstances however when the bank may be affected
by such undue influence
1. Where
the Bank has constituted the 3rd Party its agent for purposes
of procuring the execution of the security; (Agency)
2. Where
the Bank has actual or constructive notice at the time of execution that it has
been procured by undue influence. (Notice)
Bank
Credit & Commerce (1990) Vol 1 QB 923
Paget
argues that before this decision, there was a tendency on the part of the
courts to utilise and widen the concept of agency for this
purpose. In a typical situation where a bank to which the husband
was indebted sought security in the form of a guarantee from the wife or a
legal charge in the joint names of husband and wife and the bank then left it
to the husband to procure his wife to execute the security but did not take
steps to communicate with the wife, it was then sufficient to constitute the
husband the agent of the bank. This theory is artificial and the
authority is the case of
Barclays
Bank v. Obrien
When
will the Bank be put on notice?
If
at the time of execution of a security the Bank has actual notice or
constructive notice that the security has been procured through undue influence
and equity is raised that disentitles the bank to rely on that security, the
circumstances constituting notice required to fix the bank with the liability
for another person’s undue influence will depend on the nature of the undue
influence that is alleged. Where actual undue influence is alleged,
it must be shown that notice of the circumstances alleged to amount to the undue
influence were known to the
bank.
CHEQUES
How
relevant are cheques considering the inroads that have been made technology
wise? Now there are credit cards, ATM Machines, Debit Cards
There
are more ways of accessing the funds in the bank than merely the use of the
cheque. In future a cheque might not be as important as it is today.
WHAT
IS A CHEQUE?
It
is defined under Section 73 of the Bills of Exchange Cap 27 as a Bill of Exchange
drawn on a banker payable on demand. Which in turn raises the
question what is a Bill of Exchange? Defined under Section 3 of the
same Act as an unconditional order in writing addressed by one person to
another signed by the person giving it requiring the person to whom it is
addressed to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time a sum
certain in money or to the order of a specified person or to bearer.
When
you link section 3 and 17 the definition of a cheque becomes a cheque is an unconditional
order in writing addressed by a person to a banker. Signed by such
person and requiring the banker to pay on demand a sum of money to the order of
a specified person or bearer. When you break down that definition,
it gives one certain prerequisites as to what must constitute a cheque
1. It
is not a requirement that the cheque must be drawn by a customer;
2. The
order must be drawn on a Banker – meaning that the bank must be the drawee.
London
City & Midland Bank Ltd V. Gordon [1903] A.C. 240
Relationship
between Branch and Head Office
3. The
cheque must be an order; imperative in its terms
4. The
order must be unconditional; i.e. the person making the order must not impose
conditions on the drawee;
Thairlwall
v Great Northern Railway Co. [1910] Vol. 2 K.B. 509
What
is conditional?
5. The
cheque must be payable on demand;
CROSSED
CHEQUES
Section
76 to Section 83 of the Bills of Exchange Act:
Crossing
of Cheques and the statutory provisions with regard to crossed cheques
essentially afford the public a safer method of drawing cheques. The
object of crossing a cheque is to hamper or prevent its negotiation by a person
who may have wrongly or wrongfully obtained that cheque. That object
is attained by placing certain matters across the face of the cheque,
transversely to the matter of the cheque itself or overriding the matter of the
cheque itself. It is that added matter that is referred to as the
crossing.
Crossing
may be such as to merely force a person to obtain payment of the cheque through
the medium of a bank. So that that payee must have an account at a
Bank or in the days when negotiation was permitted, he must know someone with
an account. The crossing may go further and specify the Bank so that
the payee must have an account at that particular bank or when negotiations was
permitted, he must negotiate the cheque to someone with an account at that
bank. The crossing may also be such as to completely destroy the
element of negotiability which in Kairu’s view is what has happened with the
account of payee crossing and the statutory protection that has come with it.
Under
Section 76 (2) crossing are essentially recognised
(i) General
Crossing;
(ii) Special
Crossing.
The
general crossing is where the crossing assures payment through a bank without
specifying a bank. But where the bank is specified that is special
crossing or the cheque is said to be crossed specially. Section 76
(1) (a ) provides that where a cheque bears across its face an additional of
the words and company or an abbreviation of those words between two parallel
transverse lines with or without the words not negotiable, that addition
constitutes a crossing and the cheque is crossed generally.
Section
76 (1) (b) of the Bills of Exchange Act provides that where a cheque bears
across its face an addition of simply two parallel transverse lines either with
or without the words “not negotiable” the additions also constitute a crossing
and it is a general crossing.
Section
76 (2)
Special
crossing: It stipulates that where a cheque bears across its
face an addition of the name of a Banker either with or without the words “not
negotiable”, that addition constitutes a crossing and the cheque is specially
crossed.
BANKERS
LIEN
Lien
is a right to retain property belonging to a debtor until the debtor has
discharged the debt due to the creditor. This form of protection
known as the general lien of bankers arose from usage of trade from time
immemorial and is judiciary recognized.
The
nature of the securities Subject to the lien must come to the bank in its
capacity as a banker and in the course of banking
business. Securities held by a bank or deposited with a bank for
safe custody are not subject to the lien unless there is an agreement between
the parties to the contrary.
Does
a lien give the bank the right to sell? a mere lien gives no power
of sale, neither does it give a ground for applying to court to grant the power
of sale. The method that appears open to a banker for realising
securities held under a lien would seem to be to sue for the debt obtain
injunction for the debt, and then take the securities in execution of that
judgment.
The
right of lien extends only to the customers own property and not to property
held in trust by the customer for their clients.
GUARANTEES
Problems
associated with guarantees.
Extent
to which a guarantor remains bound under the guarantee even after the terms of
the principal lending have been varied.
In
the Donde Bill there was a proposal to get rid of guarantees,
What
is a guarantee?
It
is a written promise by the guarantor to answer for the debt of another and
that other is the principal debtor made to a person namely the lender to whom
that other is already or is about to become liable.
Under
the Law of Contract Act Cap 23 the guarantee must be in writing or there must
be a Memorandum of it in writing signed by the guarantor.
The
banks will ordinarily or as part of their requirements for lending purposes
require that the principal borrower should furnish security by providing a
guarantor. This is a common method by which bankers seek to protect
themselves against loss on advances.
To
effectively protect itself the banks will usually frame the bank guarantees so
as to apply to all accounts of the principal debtor whether such accounts are
solely in the name of that principal debtor or whether such accounts are joint
accounts or partnership accounts so that if the principal debtor has two
accounts with outstanding facilities at the bank, the bank will ensure that the
language of the guarantee covers both accounts for instance.
The
guarantees will also usually be framed in such broad terms so as to extend to
the liabilities of the principal debtor in the capacity of that debtor in
principal form or in the capacity of that debtor as a surety or as a guarantor
for lending to another party.
There
are situations where the guarantee is given by more than one person i.e. where
there is more than one guarantor to the guarantee. In that event the
guarantee should stipulate whether the obligation of the guarantors is several
or joint and several. If the obligation be joint only, it means that
if the lender sues one of the guarantors and obtains judgment against that
guarantor, he cannot subsequently bring an action under the same guarantee
against the other guarantor. But in the case of the guarantee being
several the remedy by the bank can be pursued against both guarantors at
different times. The caution is that when one is dealing with a
joint guarantee one has to sue all the guarantors.
The
banks invariably provide in the language of the guarantee that the liability of
the guarantors is joint and several.
The
other measure that a guarantor should take or the other factor that a guarantor
should be alive to is whether the guarantee is limited or
unlimited. If it is intended to be limited meaning that the
liability of the guarantor should not exceed a certain limit, then the
guarantor should ensure that the instrument of the guarantee so provides.
A
further distinction is also made between specific guarantees and continuing
guarantees. A specific guarantee is where provision is made for the
advance of a specified sum and the guarantee is only applicable to that
particular advance and it ceases on the repayment of that amount. A
continuing guarantee is designed to cover a fluctuating or running account and
it secures the debit balance at any time irrespective of payments which clear
past advances.
HOW
DOES ONE BRING TO AN END THE INSTRUMENT OF GUARANTEE?
Most
guarantees will provide that a guarantor wishing to determine the guarantee
must give notice to the lender and pay into the bank the amount that may be
due. The guarantee may simply provide that the liability of the
guarantor will cease upon the expiry of a specified notice to be given by the
guarantor to the bank and upon payment of all outstanding sums notified by the
bank upon receipt of such notice.
The
bank has to be careful coz the effect of this is that the guarantor can give
notice to the bank should the bank receive notice that is responds by stating
the amount that is outstanding.
DEATH
OF A GUARANTOR
Does
the death of a guarantor determine a guarantee? It does not
necessarily determine the guarantee unless provision to the contrary is
provided. The other way to bring the guarantee to an end is for the
principal debtor to discharge his liabilities with the bank and therefore if
the lender releases the principal debtor, it follows also that the guarantor is
discharged.
Mahand
Singh v. Ubayi [1939] A.C. 601
This
is authority for the proposition that where the creditor releases the principal
debtor, the guarantee is discharged.
This
follows the principles in Rees V. Barrington following a case
bearing those names.
The
other way in which the guarantor may be released is where the creditor agrees
to vary the terms of the lending with the principal debtor to the prejudice of
the guarantor.
Holme
v. Branskill [1878] 3 QBD 495
This
has been followed by our courts in the case of
Harilal
and Co. v. The Standard Bank Ltd. [1967] EA 512
In
this case, Standard Bank advanced a facility to the principal debtor which was
secured by a guarantee of the wife of the principal debtor. That was
in 1955. in 1962 the Bank was dissatisfied in the way in which the
account was being operated and it then required the principal debtor to open
another account which was always to be in credit and from which an amount would
be transferred on a monthly basis to the initial account towards the repayment
of the facility then. Notice of this arrangement i.e. the
arrangement where the principal debtor was to open a second account was not
given to the guarantor i.e. the guarantor was not consulted and neither was she
aware and subsequently the bank then sued both the principal debtor and the
guarantor. The guarantor defended the action by the bank on the
basis that the variation of the terms of lending by the bank without the
consent of the guarantor had the effect of discharging the guarantee. The
High /court dismissed the argument but on Appeal the court held:
That
the opening of the second account without the consent of the guarantor
discharged the guarantor from all liability under the guarantee.
The
principle that underlies this holding is found in the judgment of Charles
Newbold at page 509 president of the East Africa Court of Appeal at the time
“if
there is any agreement between the principals with reference to the contract
guaranteed, the surety ought to be consulted if there is to be an alteration to
his prejudice to that agreement.”
Patel
& Others v. National & Grindlays Bank Ltd [1970] EA 121
Reid
v. National Bank of Commerce [1971] EA 525
Abraham
Kiptanui v Delphis Bank Ltd H.C. No. 1864 of 1999 H.C. Milimani
In
this case Justice Ransley also suggested that the instrument of guarantee can
be worded in such broad language to allow the lender to vary the terms of the
lending without thereby discharging the guarantee. In other words
the language can be so broad as to allow the bank to do that.
The
other way that a guarantee could be discharged is where the lender releases the
security that he holds for the debt.
Polak
v. Everet [1876] 1 QBD 669
CO-GUARANTORS
Smith
v. Wood [1929] 1 Ch.D 14
Liverpool
Con Trade Association v. Hurst [1936] 2 AER 309
Halsbury’s
Laws of England
Chitty
on Contract
ELECTRONIC
FUNDS TRANSFER
This
is a transfer of funds in which one or more steps in the process of that
transfer was previously done by paper based techniques but is now done by
electronic techniques. That is the definition given to the
expression electronics transfer by the United Nations Commission on
International Trade Law (UNCITAL)
The
authors of Paget on Banking Law have identified two categories of electronic
funds transfer systems. There are those that are consumer activated
Electronic Funds Transfer systems and those that are non consumer
In
the category of consumer it is the consumer who selects and activates the
system that is to be used in a transaction. Examples are the ATM,
Point of Sale Electronic Fund transfer systems i.e. debit cards and home
banking.
In
the non consumer activated systems it is the bank that activates the
system by selecting and activating that particular system for a particular
transaction and the example is given of a system called SWIFT system which is
the Society for Worldwide Interbank Telecommunications. This is a
system that operates a message transfer system so that if a customer of a bank
in Kenya wishes to instruct its bank to transfer money to another country or to
a payee in another country, the customer or the consumer will hardly be
concerned as to how that is achieved and so it will be the bank that activates
the system to effect that transfer.
All
of these systems whether they are consumer activated or not are systems that
facilitate transfer of funds either between bank accounts or between banks.
The
system involves the adjustment of balances of the payers account and the
payee’s account at their respective banks.
Intercom Services Ltd & 4 others v Standard
Chartered Bank
HIGH COURT, NAIROBI
VISRAM, J.
Date of Judgment: 18 November 2002
Citation: [1999] LLR 2536 (HCK)
Sourced from: LLR
Edited By: C Kanjama
Citation: [1999] LLR 2536 (HCK)
Sourced from: LLR
Edited By: C Kanjama
BANK – Customer account – Account in company’s name
– Account operated by director of company as sole signatory – Whether bank owed
any duty of care to the signatory – Whether bank liable to director of company
for losses suffered due to breach of duty of care to the company
BANK – Duty of care – Duty of collecting bank – Duty to act in good faith and avoid negligence – Extent of duty of care – Duty of confidence – Limitations to the duty of non-disclosure – Collecting bank conducting inquiries with signatories of cheque and officers of Central Bank – Inquiries resulting in freezing of funds and subsequent criminal prosecutions – Whether bank exceeded responsibility in its inquiries and disclosures – Whether there was breach of confidentiality – Cheques Act (Cap 35) ss. 2, 3, 4 – Bills of Exchange Act (Cap 27) s 80.
WORDS & PHRASES – “true owner of a cheque” – Who is entitled to the proceeds of a cheque.
BANK – Duty of care – Duty of collecting bank – Duty to act in good faith and avoid negligence – Extent of duty of care – Duty of confidence – Limitations to the duty of non-disclosure – Collecting bank conducting inquiries with signatories of cheque and officers of Central Bank – Inquiries resulting in freezing of funds and subsequent criminal prosecutions – Whether bank exceeded responsibility in its inquiries and disclosures – Whether there was breach of confidentiality – Cheques Act (Cap 35) ss. 2, 3, 4 – Bills of Exchange Act (Cap 27) s 80.
WORDS & PHRASES – “true owner of a cheque” – Who is entitled to the proceeds of a cheque.
The 5th plaintiff was the managing director of
various companies (IS, IC, SK and KC) of which his wife was the other
shareholder. He received an export compensation cheque for Kshs.17 million from
Customs & Excise in the name of IS and deposited it with the defendant bank
in a one-week old account. The defendant was subsequently requested by the bank
to obtain the payment voucher accompanying the cheque issued by the drawee
(Commissioner of Customs and Excise). The voucher was made out to IC, not IS,
and had a minor discrepancy of Kshs.70,000 on its face. The defendant made
inquiries with the paying bank and the signatories of the drawee. It was
confirmed that the cheque was in order.
The funds were collected and credited to IS’s
account. Shortly thereafter, Kshs.15 million was transferred to SK’s account in
the same bank. The 5th plaintiff then instructed the bank to transfer the
moneys to SK’s account with another bank. Meanwhile, the bank inquired with the
Central Bank regarding the export compensation payment. The Central Bank’s
investigation officers, who happened to be police officers, acquired various
documents from the defendant as a result of which the 5th plaintiff was charged
with various counts of obtaining by false pretences. He was convicted on trial
but eventually acquitted on appeal.
Shortly after instituting the criminal case, a
police officer obtained orders freezing the accounts of SK and IS. The orders
were quashed by the High Court. The drawee then filed a suit against the
Plaintiffs for recovery of the funds. He obtained ex-parte orders of attachment
before judgment. By consent, the Kshs.15 million in SK’s account was deposited
into a joint interest-earning account and the remaining amounts released. The
suit was later settled by consent and all the money released to the Plaintiffs.
The 5th Plaintiff’s companies therefore brought
this suit against the bank seeking more than 600 million shillings in damages,
on ground of breach of fiduciary relationship through the disclosures to
Central Bank, which resulted in freezing of the accounts and eventual closure
of the business of IS, IC and SK. The 5th Plaintiff’s case was that his arrest
in his capacity as managing director of the aforesaid companies resulted in
restriction of his movement and crippled day-to-day operation of the
Plaintiffs.
The issue for determination herein was the question
of liability, quantum being reserved for later. In essence, did the bank breach
its duty of confidentiality by making the disclosures it did to Central Bank?
Further, was the bank liable to the 5th Plaintiff, the managing director of the
first four Plaintiffs, because its actions resulted in his arrest and the
crippling of his family businesses?
Held:
Held:
1. A collecting banker has a responsibility to the
true owner of a cheque, i.e. the person who is in the circumstances of the case
entitled to the proceeds of the cheque. If the banker receives payment for a
defective cheque and credits it to the customer’s account while (1) acting in
good faith and (2) without negligence (3) in the ordinary course of business,
he does not incur liability if the customer appears to be the payee thereof.
The collecting banker’s common law duty to the owner of a cheque is qualified
by statute. It is now a duty to take reasonable care not to take a step that he
can reasonably foresee is likely to cause damage to the true owner. The
banker’s responsibility is to ensure that his own customer’s title to the
cheque delivered to him for collection is not defective. Marfani & Co. Ltd
v Midland Bank Ltd [1968] 2 All ER 573, Bissell & Co v Fox Brothers (1884)
51 L.T. 663 adopted.
2. Conversely, the collecting banker has a
contractual duty of non-disclosure to his own customer. He should not be
abnormally suspicious, but is entitled to make inquiries where the
circumstances in which the cheque is presented for collection are unusual and
out of the ordinary course of business. Thackwell v Barclays Bank Ltd [1986] 1
All ER 676 adopted. It is an implied term that the banker will not divulge to
third persons without the express or implied consent of the customer either the
state of the customer’s account, or transactions relating thereto unless the
bank is compelled to do so by order of a court or the circumstances give rise
to a public duty of disclosure (e.g. to prevent frauds or crime) or the
protection of the banker’s own interests require it. Halsbury’s Laws of England
4th Ed Vol.3(1) at 200, Tournier v National Provincial & Union Bank
of England [1923] All ER 550 adopted.
3. A paying bank has a similar duty as a collecting
bank to act in good faith and without negligence. Karak Rubber Co Ltd v Burden
& others (No.2) [1972] 1 All ER 1210 adopted. The only difference is that
the collecting banker has a positive burden of proof to establish that he
collected without negligence while in the case of the paying bank the burden is
shifted to the customer to prove negligence. Lipkin Corman v Karpnale Ltd
& anor [1992] 4 All ER 409 adopted.
4. The collecting banker need only inquire with the
true owner of a cheque to avail himself the statutory protection conferred by
section 3(2) of the Cheques Act (Cap 35). The fact that the cheque in this case
represented a statutory payment made by a government agency did not imply a
higher duty of care. The bank is not entitled to inquire what the moneys are
that are paid into or drawn out of the account. Bodeham v Hoskins
[1843-60] All ER 692 adopted.
5. In the circumstances of this case, the inquiry
made to the Central Bank breached the duty of disclosure. The bank’s duty to
prevent a crime does not imply a duty to investigate the funds in a client’s
account. Further, the bank’s responsibility to the true owner of a cheque
ceases when the bank allows the customer to make use of that money; the bank
should therefore not
*DISCLAIMER*
The
notes below are adapted from the Kenyatta University,UoN and Moi Teaching
module and the students are adviced to take keen notice of the various legal
and judicial reforms that might have been ocassioned since the module was
adapted. the laws and statutes might also have changed or been repealed and the
students are to be wary and consult the various statutes reffered to herein
BOOKS
1. PAGET’S
LAW OF BANKING
2. SHELDON’S
PRACTICE & LAW OF BANKING
3. BANKING
ACT CAP 488
REGULATION
OF BANKING
This
Banking Act was enacted to address deposits protection after a crisis and the
intention is to protect and control the banking industry.
BANK/CUSTOMER
RELATIONSHIP
1. Respective
duties and rights of each
2. Banking
confidentiality – affairs of a customer must be kept confidential but there are
exceptions when a bank can justifiably reveal.
3. Obligations/responsibility
that a bank assumes when it gives references on behalf of the customer.
4. How
much information can a bank give on a customer’s account.
5. Issues
of securities and the grounds upon which securities can be discharged.
6. Cheques
and other negotiable instruments.
REGULATIONS:
Legal
framework in terms of statutory provisions and in terms of licensing and
regulation, specifically the provisions of the Banking Act. There
are other relevant statutes to the banking industry and financial services i.e.
the Central Bank of Kenya Act, the Building Societies Act, the Companies Act to
a certain extent etc.
The
current Banking Act Cap 488 came into force in November of 1989. In
enacting this statute parliament was seeking to address a crisis in the
industry that was precipitated by the collapse of a number of
institutions. And under the provisions of this statute the previous
Banking Act that essentially dealt with the relationship between the bank and
the customer was repealed. Section 56 of the current Banking Act is
a repealing provision repealing the previous statute.
Running
through the statute is the thread of the desire to protect depositors.
SOME
OF THE PROBLEMS THAT WERE IDENTIFIED AS LEADING TO THE COLLAPSE OF THE
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS OR BANKS INCLUDED:
1. The perceived absence of stringent licensing
requirements.
2. Inadequate supervision.
3. Control of the institutions by individual.
4. Under capitalisation.
5. Lack of proper management systems.
6. Lack of transparency in terms of operations.
7. Absence of adequate powers on the part of
the regulator.
8. In terms of what central bank that remains
the regulator could do etc.
LICENSING REQUIREMENTS
The
Banking Act under Section 3 prohibits
any person from transacting any Banking Business or financial business or the
business of a mortgage finance company unless
1. Such
person is an institution;
2. Such
institution is duly licensed or holds a valid licence.
An
institution is defined under Section 2 of the Banking Act to mean a Bank or a
Financial Institution or a Mortgage Finance Company. The provisions
effectively therefore exclude an individual from conducting any of these
classes of businesses.
STATUTORY
DEFINITIONS OF A BANK, FINANCIAL INSTITUTION ETC.
Section 2 of the Banking
Act Cap 488 Laws of Kenya defines a Bank to mean a company which
carries on or proposes to carry on banking business in Kenya and it includes
the co-operative bank of Kenya but excludes the Central Bank of Kenya.
Banking
business is then defined under Section 2
of the same Act to mean
(a) The
accepting from members of the public of money on deposit repayable on demand or
at the expiry of a fixed period or after notice.
(b) The
accepting from members of the public of money on current account and payment on
and acceptance of cheques.
(c) The
employing of money held on deposit or on current account or any part of it by
lending, investment or in any other manner for the account and at the risk of
the person so employing the money.
United
Dominions Trust vs. Kirkwood [1966] 2 QB 431
A
Company (Kirkwood) purchased cars for its business using the money it borrowed
from UDT. The company failed to pay when required to do so. When UDT
sued the company it argued that UDT was not entitled to recover because it was
not registered as a lender uder the Money lenders Act of 1906 of England. That
UDT was not a bank. UDT argued that it was a bank and it need not have been
registered under the Act alleged.
In order to conduct banking activity, a company
needs to be regulated by the Financial Services Authority (a self funding
regulator) and comply with the financial Services and Marketing Act
2000. In order to lend funds, you need to be regulated and this had
been stated in many Acts. UDT was not regulated and lending
unauthorised is a criminal activity. You cannot enforce payment of a
debt if you are not regulated. The question was asked in the court,
was UDT a bank? The Court of Appeal said UDT was not a bank and so
it could not enforce repayment.
The
key issue here was: What is the test or approach to be used to define what
is a bank? The whole idea of a bank was that you take deposits from
customers and put it into accounts. The bank can then payout funds
from these accounts by means of a cheque or otherwise. Note that the
other factor in this case was that the market in general and other
institutions regarded UDT as a bank.
The
usual characteristics of banking are
1. The
conduct of current accounts;
2. The
payment of cheques;
3. The
collection of cheques for customers.
Our
own statute banking law definition is largely influenced by the common law
definition of banking as was stated in United Dominions Trust vs. Kirkwood
[1966] 2 QB 431T. This case. Statutory definition overrides the
common law definition as provided for under the Judicature Act Cap
8. As far as Kenya is concerned we have statutory definition of bank
under the Banking Act which is applicable in Kenya.
This
definition however covers a bare minimum leaving other services provided for by
the bank which are not covered under the definition. Individuals
running the banks that lend money at the risk of the bank should be held
together with the …
FINANCIAL
BUSINESS
Financial
Business under the statutes means the accepting from members of the public of
money on deposit repayable on demand or at the expiry of a fixed period or
after notice; and the employing of money held on deposit or any part of the
money, by lending, investment or in any other manner for the account and at the
risk of the person so employing the money. This is everything the
statute says is banking business except the acceptance of money on current
account and payment on and acceptance of cheques.
MORTGAGE
BUSINESS
This
means a company other than a financial institution which accepts, from members
of the public money on deposit, repayable on demand or at the expiry of a fixed
period or after notice and is established for purposes of employing such money,
to make loans for the purpose of acquisition, construction, improvement,
development, alteration, or adaptation for a particular purpose of land in
Kenya and the repayment of that loan together with interests and other charges
is secured by a mortgage or a charge over land with or without additional
security or personal or other guarantees. The provisions of the
Banking Act in this regard which is at Section 15 were amended by Act No. 7 of
2001 which provides that a mortgage finance company may grant other types of
credit facilities against securities other than land and may also engage in
other prudent activities.
The
minister has to address his mind to adequacy of capital. Section 7
of the Banking Act provides for minimum requirements of capital which may be
changed from time to time with approval of parliament.
If
a bank wants to merge or transfer its assets to another institution, again the
approval of the Minister is required under Section 9. A recent
example is the Cooperative Bank that merged with Cooperative
Merchant. The Minister has to satisfy himself and give approval for
a merger or amalgamation.
PRUDENTIAL
CONTROLS (IN TERMS OF RESTRICTIONS)
These
are dealt with under Part III of the Banking Act what is classified as prohibited
business.
From
Section 10 of the Act which limits advances or imposes limits on advances that
an institution is allowed to make to anyone person and the limit here is that
an institution should not grant or permit facilities to any person to exceed 25%
of that institution’s core capital.
Core
capital’s definition is permanent share holders equity (issued and fully
paid-up ordinary shares and perpetual non-cumulative preference shares) in the
form of issued and fully paid up shares plus all disclosed reserves (additional
share premium plus retained earnings plus 50% of profits after tax plus
minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries), less goodwill or any other
intangible assets.
GOODWILL
This
is the difference between the value of the business as a whole and the
aggregate of the fair values of its separable net assets at the time of
acquisition or sale.
OTHER
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
These
are assets without physical existence. E.g. patents, copyrights,
formulae, trademarks, franchise etc.
An
institution is not allowed to grant or permit to be outstanding advances or
guarantees to exceed 25% of the core capital. To avoid a situation
where a person asks for facilities under different hats, the definition given
in the statute of what a person is that it includes the associates of that person. The
restriction on the person includes a restriction on that person’s associates.
The
Central Bank of Kenya may permit with the Minister’s approval a mortgage
finance company to exceed that limit.
The
definition that is given for who an associate is for purposes of the Act
associate in relation to a company or other body corporate means
1. Its
holding company or its subsidiary;
2. A
subsidiary of its holding company;
3. A
holding company of its subsidiary;
4. Any
person who controls the company or body corporate whether alone or with his
associates or with other associates of it.
In
relation to an individual, associate means
1. Any
member of his family;
2. Any
company or other body corporate controlled directly or indirectly by him
whether alone, or with his associates
3. Any
associate of his associates.
Classification
of members of his family is extended to include
- a
parent;
- Spouse,
- Brother
- Sister;
- Uncle;
- Aunt;
- Nephew
- Niece
- Step
Father
- Step
Mother
- Step
Child;
- Adopted
Child; etc.
There
are restrictions on advances of credit facilities and these are essentially
under section 11
1. An
institution is prohibited from taking its own shares as security for advances;
2. Institutions
are prohibited from granting facilities to company or on behalf of companies in
which the institution itself holds more than 25% of the share capital in that
company.
3. Institutions
are not permitted to grant or permit to be outstanding unsecured advances in
respect of their employees or the employees’ associates.
4. a
restriction against granting or permitting facilities which are unsecured to
officers of the institutions or the associates. Any person who is an agent, a
director, a manager or a shareholder of the officer. Advances or
facilities to directors or other persons participating in the general
management of the institution are also restricted unless the facilities are
approved by the full board or directors of the institution, if the Board is
satisfied that the facility is viable. Secondly the facility to
these persons must be made in what they refer to as normal course of business
and on terms that are similar to terms that are offered to other customers of
the institution. The institution is then required to notify Central
Bank of having done so. in any event facilities to all these classes
of person must not exceed 25% of the core capital of the institution.
Act
No. 9 of 2000 essentially restricts or prohibits an institution from
transacting in a fraudulent or reckless manner. Fraudulent is
defined to include intentional deception, false and material representation,
concealment or non-disclosure of a material fact or misleading conduct that
results in the loss and injury to the institution with an intended personal
gain. Reckless transacting includes under the Act the transacting
business beyond the limits set under the Central Bank of Kenya Act offering
facilities contrary to the Central Bank guidelines or regulations, failing to
observe the institution’s policies as approved by the institution’s Board of
Directors and misusing position or facilities of the institution for personal
gain. All these are classified as reckless or fraudulent.
All
officers of an institution who transact either fraudulently or recklessly in
terms of those definitions shall be liable to indemnify the institution against
loss arising from such reckless or fraudulent advances, loan or credit
facility.
In
the case of an advance, loan or a facility to a person other than a director of
the institution or a person participating in the general management of the
institution, an officer shall not be so liable. Provided he or she
shows that, through no act or omission on his or her part, he or she was not
aware that the contravention was taking place, or he or she took all reasonable
steps to prevent it taking place.
The
Central Bank may in the case of an advance, loan or credit facility to a
director of the institution, direct the removal of such director from the Board
of Directors of the institution. The bank may direct the suspension
of any other officer or employee of the institution who sanctioned the advance,
loan or credit facility.
Any
director of an institution who defaults in the repayment of any advance or loan
made to him by the institution for three consecutive months shall forthwith be
disqualified from holding office as such. The institution
concerned is required to comply with such a directive. An officer or
director who is aggrieved by such removal or suspension has recourse to the
High Court. Such an officer or director can apply to the High Court
to determine the matter and the High Court is empowered either to confirm the
decision of removing the officer, or reverse the decision or modify the
decision even.
But
whilst proceedings are pending in the High Court challenging the removal, the
order directing the removal remains in force. If a director defaults
in the repayment of any facility, granted to him for 3 consecutive months, such
a director should forthwith be disqualified from holding office in that
institution.
The
Act prescribes and says that an institution that allows such a director to
continue holding office is guilty of an offence and equally any institution
that fails to comply with a directive from Central Bank for the removal of an
officer is also guilty of an offence.
Section
12 imposes
restrictions on trading and investments and under the Section an institution is
prohibited from engaging in wholesale or retail trade. There is a
restriction prohibiting institutions from acquiring or holding directly or
indirectly any part of the share capital in any commercial, agricultural or
other undertaking where the value of the institution’s interest would exceed in
the aggregate of 25% of that institution’s core capital.
There
are exceptions to that rule so that an institution may take an interest in such
an undertaking in satisfaction of a debt due to it and such interests have to
be disposed of within such time as the Central Bank may allow. The other
exception is where the shareholding is in a corporation established for the
purpose of promoting development in Kenya and such shareholding has been
approved by the Minister.
An
institution is not allowed and is prohibited from purchasing or acquiring land
except where such acquisition is necessary for purposes of conducting its
business or for housing and providing amenities for its staff. But
that does not prevent an institution from taking land as security or acquiring
land for what the Act describes as purposes of its own development.
Section
13 of
the Banking Act addresses the question of ownership and share capital of an
institution. The object is to avoid a situation where an institution
is at the core of the owner. This restriction on ownership of share
capital of an institution, its objective is basically to diversify ownership of
an institution for the purpose of prudent management, direct or indirect
share-holding of an institution has been restricted to a maximum of 25% to any
one person other than.
(i) another
institution;
(ii) The
government of Kenya or the Government of a foreign sovereign state.
(iii) A
state corporation within the meaning of the State Corporations Act, or
(iv) A
foreign company, which is licensed to carry on the business of an institution
in its country of incorporation.
Section
13 also states that no financial institution or mortgage finance company shall
acquire or hold, directly or indirectly any part of the share capital of, or otherwise
have beneficial interest in the bank.
An
institution is required to disclose to the Central Bank natural persons behind
nominee companies and/or any other company.
Restrictions
on making advances for Purchase of Land (Banking Act Section 14)
1. An
institution is restricted from making advances or loans for the purchase,
improvement or alteration of land so that the aggregate is in excess of 25% of
the amount of its total deposit liabilities unless it is a mortgage finance
company.
2. The
Central Bank may however, authorize an institution to exceed the limit up to a
maximum of 40% in case of a bank and 60% in the case of a financial
institution.
3. These
provisions, shall however, not prevent an institution from accepting security
over land for a loan or an advance made in good faith for any other purpose.
BANKING LAW
BANKER
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
Who
are the parties to this relationship?
The
Bank on the one hand and the customer on the other hand. The word
Bank and Banker and to an extent banking business will be used to mean bank.
What
is a Bank?
Section
2 of the Banking Act which defines a Bank as a company which carries on or
proposes to carry on banking business. Banking business in time is
defined under the Act to mean
1. The
accepting from members of the public of money on deposit repayable on demand or
at the expiry of a fixed period or after notice.
2. The
accepting from members of the public of money on current account and payment on
and acceptance of cheques.
3. The
employ of money held on deposits or on current account by lending investment or
in any other manner for the account and at the risk of the person so employing
the money.
That
is the statutory definition
Common
law meaning of a Banker, bank?
Is
it different from that given under statute?
Is
the common law meaning relevant in light of the statutory definition?
Certain
statutes refer to the terms banks/bankers/banking business without
definition. In some cases, the definition that one finds in the
statutes is different from the statutory definition under Cap 488 (Banking
Act) an example of this is the Bills of Exchange Act Cap 27 of
the Laws of Kenya. Under Section 2 of that Act, the definition of
Banker is defined in the following terms
“Banker
includes a body of persons whether incorporated or not who carry on the
business of banking. That definition appears on the face of it to be
at odds with the definition under the Banking Act Cap 488 Laws of
Kenya. Firstly because the Banking Act refers to a company which as
earlier pointed out refers to a company that is a corporate body.
Secondly
it is at odds for the reason that section 3 of the Banking Act restricts the
carrying on of banking business to institutions which when one looks at
interpretation of Section 2 of the Banking Act will again refer you
to a company. Where under Bills of Exchange a Bank includes a
company whether incorporated or not the Banking Act only recognizes an
incorporated company. This could be one of the reason why the common
law definition of Banking remains as to who is a customer and who is not a
customer.
Another
example of the statute which appears to recognize banks or banking business or
bankers, outside of the ambit of definition under the Banking Act is the
Cheques Act Cap 35 Laws of Kenya.
Cap
35 does not itself define any of those terms bank, banker or banking business
but it makes reference to the term banker. Section 2 (2) of that Act
provides that it shall be read, i.e. the Cheques Act shall be read and
construed as one with the Bills of Exchange Act. Which therefore
means that the meaning of the word Banker as ascribed under the words of the
Bills Exchange Act would apply under the Cheques Act.
Why
it is also relevance to examine the common law meaning of a ‘Banker’ according
to the authors of Paget on Law of Banking is that a Banker at Common Law has a
right of lien and set-off. Essentially the right to retain until
obligations are fully satisfied.
The
meaning of the term banker at common law. Is the meaning different
from the statute meaning
In
the case of United Dominion Trust Ltd v. Kirkwood (1966) 1 All
968
This
case is a leading authority on the question of the common law meaning of a
Banker. It is a court of Appeal decision and the Judges were Lord
Denning, Lord Harman and Lord Diplok and to an extent all three judges differed
on the law as well as on the application of that law to the particular facts of
that case.
Lord
Denning “Lonsdale motors ltd a
private company which ran a garage business in a place called
Carlisle. The Defendant Mr. Kirkwood was the MD of that company and
that he and his wife were the only shareholders of that company. The
Plaintiff UDT is a large public company which describes itself as bankers
carrying on business at United Dominion House somewhere in the city of London.
It is an important house and lends big sums of money to various
people. It has a high standard and includes Bank of England amongst
its share holders. It also owns a wholly owned subsidiary called
United Dominion Trust Commercial Ltd. which does a lot of financing of hire
purchase transactions and those two companies have branches in several towns in
England where a single manager acts on behalf of both companies at those
branches. In 1961 Lonsdale Motors desired to buy cars to put those
cars in their showrooms for sale and that they did not have money for that
purpose and they therefore went to the branch manager of UDT and borrowed that
money. And as security for that borrowing they gave bills of
exchange in favour of UDT. Lonsdale motors then disposed of those
vehicles after procuring them to customers who wanted them on hire purchase
terms. They went again to the branch manager who agreed to buy the
cars from the company and let them out on hire purchase to the
customers. This case arises from a loan of five thousand pounds
which UDT lent to Lonsdale. The bills of exchange were dishonoured
on presentation and UDT sued the Defendant.
The defendant had no defence to that case except
that he raised a plea under the Money Lenders Act of 1900. That defence
was to the effect that UDT are unregistered money lenders and therefore they
could not recover the five thousand pounds. UDT in response said “we
are not money lenders but we are Bankers and we can therefore recover this
money”
If they are Bankers, they can recover if they are
money lenders they cannot recover anything.
In answering that question, Lord Denning at pg 74
set out the characteristics of Banking.
Seeing that there is no statutory definition of
Banking one must do the best one can to find out the usual characteristics
which go to make up the business of banking. In the eighteenth
century, before cheques came into common use, the principle characteristics
were that the Banker accepted the money of others on the terms that the person
who deposited it could have it back from the Banker when they asked for
it. Sometimes on demand at other times on notice and meanwhile the
Banker was at liberty to make use of the money by lending it out at interest or
investing it on mortgage or otherwise.
You notice that those characteristics do not
mention the use of cheques or the keeping of current accounts. The
march of time has taken us far beyond the cases of the Eighteenth
Century. Money is now paid and received by cheque.
There are therefore two characteristics usually
found in bankers today.
1. they accept money from and collect cheques
for their customers and place them to their credit
.
2. They honour cheques or orders drawn on them
by their customers when presented for payments and debit their customers
accordingly.
These two characteristics carry with them also a
third namely
3. they keep current accounts or something of
that nature in their books in which the credits and debits are entered.
Lord Denning continues
Page 979 thus far the evidence adduced
by UDT would not suffice to show that …. The usual characteristics
are not the sole characteristics there are other characteristics that go to
make a banker, soundness and probity parliament would
not to
a ramshackle concern whose methods are dubious.
Reputation is also an additional consideration in
this enquiry.
Lord
Harman says It is difficult to
define banking business and he identifies the principle attribute or
characteristic by saying that a banker is one who carries on as his principle
business the accepting of deposits of money on current account or otherwise
subject to withdrawal by cheque draft or
He differs with Lord Denning on reputation and says
that reputation on its own is not enough.
Lord Diplock on his part says that it is essential
to the business of banking that a banker should accept money from his customers
upon a running account into which sums of money are from time to time paid by
the customer and from time to time withdrawn by the customers. He
says the payment in collection of cheque is also essential.
What
therefore is the ratio of UDT v. Kirkwood – it is that the 3 characteristics
namely conduct of current account, payment of cheques and collection of cheques
are essential to the carrying on of banking business and that evidence of
reputation is potentially relevant.
WHO
IS A CUSTOMER
The
relationship between a bank and a customer embraces mutual duties and
obligations and it is therefore necessary to know what in law is a
customer. The statutes do not define who a customer
is. For example under the Banking Act we have seen an attempt to
define who a bank is but not who a customer is. Other statutes like
the Bills of Exchange Act or the Cheques Act do not define a
customer. The ordinary meaning of the word customer is a person who
buys goods or services from a shop or business.
In
the context of banking, it is difficult to define with exactness who a customer
is. The main criteria as to whether a person is a customer or not or
as to whether the relationship of a banker and customer exist is whether there
exists in relations to that person an account with the bank through which
transactions are passed. In the case of
THE
GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY CO. V. LONDON & COUNTY BANKING CO. LTD. H.L A.C. 414
The
case involved the question of who is a customer for purposes of the Bills of
Exchange Act and Lord Davey at page 420 had this to say
“ it is true that there is not
definition of customer in the Act. But it is a well known expression and I
think that there must be some sort of account either a deposit or a current
account or some similar relation to make a man a customer of a bank.”
Lord
Brampton in the same case said at page 422
“it is not necessary to say that the keeping of an
ordinary account is essential to constitute a person a customer of a
bank. For if it were shown that cheques were habitually lodged with
a bank for presentation on behalf of the person lodging them and that when
honoured the amount was credited and paid to such person, I would not say that
such transactions might not constitute such a person a customer.”
For
a person to be a customer it matters not that the duration of the relationship
is short or protracted in other words the duration when an account has been
held is immaterial to the question of whether the status of the customer has
been achieved and that is according to another English position in the case
of Commissioners of Taxation v. English Scottish and Australian Bank
Limited. (1920) A.C. 683
Their
Lordships expressed themselves in the following language. Their
Lordships are of the opinion that the word customer signifies a relationship in
which duration is not of the essence. A person whose money has been
accepted by the bank on the footing that they undertake to honour cheques upto
the amount standing to this credit is in the view of their Lordships a customer
of the bank irrespective of whether his connection is of short or long
standing. The contrast is not between an habitué and a new comer but
between a person for whom the bank performs a casual service such as for
instance cashing a cheque for a person introduced by one of their customers and
a person who has an account of his own at the bank.
Effectively
even if all a person has is one transaction, it does not disqualify the person
from being a customer of the bank in the case of
Landbroke
v. Todd (1914) Vol 30 T.L.R
Single
first transaction
Woods
v. Martins Bank
Makes
the point of explaining who a customer of a bank is and it is also relevant to
the question of the responsibility a banker assumes when it advises
customers. The other point made by this case is that it is not a
matter of law but a question of fact as to whether any class of business
amounts to banking business. It is not a matter of pure law to
determine whether a firm at common law is a bank doing banking business it is a
matter of interpretation. It is a matter of interpretation to see
whether a person is a customer and who is not a customer.
WHAT
ARE THE RESPECTIVE RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF THE PARTIES
The
nature of the bank customer relationship is contractual. It is a relationship
based on contract and if you were to apply contract law to this question.
Foley
v. Hill (1848) Vol H.L
There
is an argument that the relationship of a banker and customer consists of a
general contract which is basic to all transactions together with special
contracts which arise in relation to the specific transactions or services that
the Bank offers. The nature of the contract is described in a
leading case of
Joachimson
v. Swiss Bank Corporation. 1921 Vol. 3 A.B. 110
Lord
Atkin in this case described that contract at page 127 in the following terms
“I think that there is only one contract made
between the bank and its customer. The terms of that contract
involve obligations on both sides and require statements. They
appear upon consideration to include the following provisions. The
bank undertakes to receive money and to collect bills for its customers
account. The proceeds so received are not to be held in trust for
the customer but the bank borrows the proceeds and undertakes to repay
them. the promise to repay is to repay at the branch of the bank
where the account is kept and during banking hours. It includes a
promise to repay any part of the amount due against the written order of the
customer addressed to the bank, at the branch. It is a term of the contract
that the bank will not cease to do business with a customer except upon
reasonable notice. The customer on his part undertakes to exercise
reasonable care in executing his written orders so as not to mislead the bank
or to facilitate forgery. I think it is necessarily a term of such contract
that the bank is not liable to pay the customer the full amount of his balance
until he demands payments from the bank at the branch at which a current
account is kept.
The
debtor creditor relationship emerges in this quote.
Demand
is necessary before the obligation by the part of the bank to pay becomes due.
The
passage sums up the nature of the relationship on the contract.
The
relationship entails mutual obligations as covered in Joachimson Swiss
Bank Corporation
IMPLIED
DUTIES ON BANKER AND CUSTOMER
Typically
the commencement of the relationship in practice is documented in the sense
that the Bank will impose standard terms and conditions on the customer on
which that relationship is to be based. To the extent that there are
express stipulations in that contractual relationship then the question of
whether or not one of the parties to that relationship is in breach of the
express terms is a matter of interpretation of the express terms of the
contract. When talking of implied duties we are not concerned with where those
duties have expressly been stipulated under the contract. It is also
necessary to say that if an express term exists, then the question of implying
terms does not arise.
If
for instance the contract says that the bank is at liberty to close an account
after the stipulated time, the question of whether or not the bank has given a
reasonable notice does not arise as long as the parties have contracted and
agree to the number of days. We can only talk of implied terms where
there are no stipulations.
The
Banking Code which seeks to set the standards of banking practice became
effective on 1st October 2001 by the Kenya association of
bankers. It is modelled to a very large extent on the UK Good
Banking Code of Practice. To an extent this code sets out standards
which the Kenya Bankers Association considers to be standards of good banking
practice.
The
question is whether these standards form part and parcel of the Banker Customer
Relationship?
In
its introduction, the code states that it is a voluntary code and that it sets
standards of good banking practice for banks choosing to participate in the
code i.e. it is voluntary and the banks have an option of whether to use it or
not to use it.
For
instance one of the standards imposed is the requirement for banks to give
information to their customers about their accounts, operations etc, this is
required by the code of practice of the Kenya Association of Bankers.
Another
feature of the code is with regard to the question of changes in interest
rates. While one might expect that it would be good practice for
banks to inform their customers of changes in interest rates, the code suggests
that there is no obligation for the banks to do so.
Another
undertaking is that the written terms and conditions that govern the
relationship will be fair and will set out the customers’ rights and
responsibilities in clear and clean language.
They
also impose an obligation under the code that a customer’s account will not be
closed without notice to the customer unless there are exceptional
circumstances which might prevent the giving of notice. The
exceptional circumstance would be like if an account has been used to
perpetrate fraud etc.
There
is the question of statements – the obligation on the part of the bank to give
regular account statements.
The
code stipulates that it is recommended that the customer should check those
statements on a regular basis and if a wrong entry is noted then the customer
is required to inform the bank. If the express terms and conditions
of the contract so provide, then the customer will be bound by the express
terms and conditions and cannot raise a claim against the bank.
Obligation
on the part of the customer in the code is to the effect that the customer must
himself exercise care in writing cheques and also in the storing of cheque
books, the ATM cards the pin numbers etc so that should a loss arise and is
attributed to the customer’s failure in either filling out the cheques or
handling of ATM cards or Pin Numbers then the Bank will be protected.
There
is also the obligation requiring the Banker to keep the affairs of the Customer
confidential and there are exceptions to the rule where the law permits
disclosure, where the customer has authorised disclosure and where public duty
or interest demands that there be disclosure and when it is in the banks own
interest to disclose.
Ordinarily
the banks will stipulate their terms and conditions and the customers are bound
by these.
What
are the implied duties
It
is not possible to exhaustively list the duties owed by the Banker and the
Customer to each other. No case is like the other and in each case
the court will be concerned with the particular facts and the particular
circumstances of the case before it and in addressing the question whether in a
particular case a Banker or a customer is in breach of an implied term, or
whether a term should be implied, the court will be guided by the usual
principles in law of proximity, reasonableness and justice and to a very large
extent, those principles themselves or the application of those principles will
be guided by the customs and usages of Bankers.
Case
law gives a guidance about situations where a duty of care will or will not be
found to exist. For example, case law has established that a Banker
owes a duty of care in giving financial investment advice. For
instance in the case of Woods v. Martins Bank the court held that
on the facts of that case it was within the scope of the banks business to
advise on financial matters and that in doing so, the bank owed a duty of care
to the Plaintiff to advise him with reasonable care and skill. The
bank in this case was seeking to avoid liability to the Plaintiff on the
grounds that it was not part of bankers business to advise on financial
matters. The court found and made the statement that what is to be
defined as bankers business is not a matter to be laid down by the courts as a
matter of law. What constitutes banking business is a matter to be
decided on the facts before the court.
Statement
by Samuel J. “in my judgment the limits of a bankers business cannot
be laid down as a matter of law …”
This
case is important for immediate purpose in terms of establishing that a bank
that gives financial advise assumes responsibility of reasonable care and
should the customer suffer as a result of negligent advise then the bank will
be held responsible.
At
Page 71 Salmon J. says “I find that it was and is within the scope
of the Defendant Bank’s business to advise on all financial matters and that as
they did advise him they owed a duty to the Plaintiff to advise him with
reasonable care and skill in each of the transactions.”
This
principle is covered in the case of Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd v.
Heller (1961) All E.R.
Another
example where the courts have recognised the existence of a duty of care is the
duty of a paying banker to protect its customer from fraud i.e.
agent, directors, etc and with that duty is the duty on the part of the bank to
meet and comply with the customers’ mandate. It is an implied term
of the contract between the banker and the customer that the bank will observe
reasonable skill and care in and about executing the customers’ orders and the
leading authority is the case of
Barclays
Bank Plc v. Quince care & Another (1992) Vol. 4 All E.R. 363
A
bank agreed to lend £400,000 to a company formed to purchase four chemists
shops. The bank imposed a condition that that company i.e. the borrower, be
formed for that purpose. The Chairman of the new company caused a
sum of £340,000 to be drawn out and to be misapplied for dishonest purposes and
almost the entire sum was lost. As part of the terms of the facility
or on the basis of which the bank agreed to lend £400,000, was that it required
a guarantee from a company called Unichem.
The
bank sued both the company as the principal debtor and the guarantor and the
defences raised there involved the central question or issue whether the bank
acted in breach of its duty to the principal debtor. The principal
debtor contended that the bank acted in breach of the implied duty of care in
the Banker Customer relationship because according to the company (the
customer) the circumstances under which the £340,000 were transferred raised
questions in their submissions in the mind of a reasonable banker as to whether
that transaction was in fact authorised by the customer. The customer
also contended that those circumstances surrounding the transfer of the funds
should
X
Attorney General v. A Banks [1983] 2 All ER 464
Two corporate customers of London Branch of an American bank applied for an injunction to restrict the bank from producing documents relating to their accounts pursuant to a subpoena issued by a grand jury and upheld by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The court granted the interlocutory injunction to restrain disclosure. The issue having arisen on an interlocutory application, it was dealt with in strict conformity with American cynamid principles.
The
court has power to order discovery of documents which would normally be subject
to the obligation of confidentiality owed by a bank to its
customer. Thus in the case of
Bankers
Trust Co. v. Shapira
The
Plaintiff bank claimed that it had been fraudulently deprived of US$1 Million
by two men, who then placed the money on deposit at the Hatton Garden branch of
the Discount Bank (Overseas) Ltd. The Plaintiff bank brought an
action against the two men and against the Discount Bank. The defendant
bank was duly served with the proceedings, but it was impossible to serve the
individual defendants, both of whom were said to be on the continent, one of
them being in jail in Switzerland during a fraud investigation by the Swiss
police. The plaintiff bank claimed as against the defendant bank an
order for discovery of the documents relating to these sums of
money. In his judgment in the court of appeal, Lord Denning said
that the Discount Bank had got mixed up with the wrongful acts of the two
men. The bank was under a duty to assist the plaintiff bank by
giving them full information and disclosing the position of the
wrongdoers. Though banks had a confidential relationship with their
customers, it did not apply to conceal the fraud and iniquity of wrongdoers. In
the result, the Court of Appeal made an order for discovery (i.e. disclosure)
of the relevant documents.
Libyan
Arab Foreign Bank v. Bankers Trust
A
relationship between bank and customer is contained in one contract which may
encompass a variety of matters.
L
had Eurodollar deposits amounting to over $300 million with the
bank. There were two accounts, one was held in New York and one at a
London branch. The bank refused to repay the deposit on L’s demand
as a US Presidential order had sought to freeze the accounts. It
became important to decide whether the contract was subject to English or to
New York Law. It was held that there was one contract between the
parties, although the New York account was subject to New York law and the
London account was subject to English Law. It was also decided that,
in the absence of any express provision, L was entitled to demand the balance
held on the London account in cash. This was despite the evidence
that it would involve seven plane journeys from New York to bring over the
necessary dollar bills.
The
rationale of the exception of the Public duty is that there exists a higher
duty than the private duty owed to the customer.
Status Enquiries (Bankers References) & the
Responsibilities that the Banks assume in answering status enquiries or in
giving Bankers References
The
bank runs the risk that the person to whom the information is given there is
exposure to the bank and the bank has to ensure that they give correct
information. The person to whom the information is being given,
there is also exposure there since more information than authorised may be
given.
The
second danger is that inaccurate information may be given with the result that
one loses the deal that the information was required to aid.
The
problem arises from the standpoint or from the perspective of the Customer
about whom the information is given and secondly from the perspective of the
person to whom information is given. The legal question is whether
the giving of information by the bank would give rise to a ground for
liability.
If
the information is false the cause of action is defamation, misrepresentation,
negligence, all these claims could arise. If you exceed the
authority, again you may be in breach of contract and the relief in all these
cases will be damages.
The
more problematic area is with regard to the liability the bank may incur with
respect to the person who is the recipient of the information. Here
exposure to a claim of negligence could arise for misrepresentation.
The
3 ingredients for sustaining a course of action in negligence are
1. Existence
of a duty of care;
2. Breach
of that duty;
3. Loss
resulting from the breach of that duty.
The
law imposes a duty on the part of the bank when giving information regarding
the credit of a customer to exercise care and the leading authority for this
proposition is the case of
Hedley
Byrne & co. v. Heller & Partners
Bare
facts are that the Plaintiffs who were advertising agents booked space and time
on behalf of a customer under a contract making them liable. The
Plaintiffs made an inquiry through their bankers and the enquiry was with
regard to the financial status of the defendant. As a result of the
answers they got in response to their enquiry, they incurred liabilities which
ended in loss. The trial judge held that the answer given in
response to the inquiry was negligent but that the defendant’s duty did not go
beyond being honest in giving a reply. The appeal court upheld that
finding on the basis that there was no duty of care in the absence of a
contractual fiduciary or other special relationship and that in the
circumstances of the case, no special relationship existed between the
Plaintiffs and the Defendants.
The
matter went to the House of Lords which considered the matter and stated as
follows:
Lord
Morris “If someone who was not a customer of a bank made a formal approach to
the bank with a definite request that the bank would give him deliberate advice
as to certain financial matters of a nature with which the bank ordinarily
dealt, the bank would be under no obligation to accede to the
request. If however, they undertook, though gratuitously to give
deliberate advice, they would be under a duty to exercise reasonable care in
giving it. They would be liable if they were negligent although
there being no consideration no enforceable relationship was
created. It should now be regarded as settled that if someone
possessed of a special skill undertakes to apply that skill for the assistance
of another who relies upon such skill, a duty of care will arise.”
The
relationship that gives rise to a duty of care is not stemming from contract or
the existence of fiduciary responsibility but purely from proximity.
Woods
v. Martins Bank – financial advice to a customer
TAKING
SECURITY
The
issues are if one takes the example of a property registered in the names of
Mr. and Mrs. X have raised a red flag in the eyes of the banker or the
circumstances were such that the bank should have been put on inquiry or a duty
to inquire arose on the part of the bank whether that transfer was in fact
authorised by the customer. It was contended for the customer that
in failing to make such inquiry the bank was negligent.
The
court held that the relationship between a banker and a customer regarding the
drawing and payment of the customers’ cheques against the money of the
customers in the bankers hands was that of a principal and agent and that as an
agent the bank owed fiduciary duties to the customer and prima facie was also
bound to exercise reasonable care and skill in carrying out the instructions of
its principal. Accordingly it was an implied term of the contract
between the bank and the customer that the bank would observe reasonable skill
and care in and about executing the customers orders but generally that duty
was subordinate to the bank’s other conflicting contractual duties such as its
prima facie duty when it received a valid order to execute the order promptly
on the pain of incurring liability for consequential loss to the customer.
The
court in this case is saying that on one hand the bank is under an obligation
to honour cheques that on the face of them appear proper but on the other hand
they have an obligation to protect their customers from loss.
It
goes on to say that if the bank executed the order knowing it to be dishonestly
given or shut its eyes to the obvious facts of dishonesty or acted recklessly,
in failing to make such inquiries as an honest and reasonable man would make
the bank would plainly be liable.
The
obligation of the bank is that it must not act recklessly and if circumstances
demands that it inquires it should inquire and should not knowingly facilitate
fraud. It is a balancing act.
DUTY
OF THE CUSTOMER OWED TO THE BANK IN DRAWING A CHEQUE
This
duty can be expressed in these terms
“a
Customer of a bank owes a duty of care in drawing a cheque to take reasonable
and ordinary precautions against forgery.”
The
leading authority for this proposition is the case of
London
Joint Stock Bank Ltd v. Macmillan (1918) A.C. 777
The
bare facts of this case are that a firm who were customers of a bank entrusted
the duty of filling out their cheques to a clerk whose integrity they had no
reason to doubt. The clerk presented to one of the partners for
signature a cheque drawn in favour of the firm or bearer. There was
no sum on words written on the cheque in the space provided and there were the
figures 2 in the space intended for the figures. The partner signed
the cheque. The clerk subsequently tampered with the cheque by
adding the words one hundred and twenty pounds in the space that had been
left. The clerk then presented that cheque for payment at the firm’s
bank and received a hundred and twenty pounds out of the firm’s
account. The question was whether the bank would then be liable to
the firm for that loss that was perpetrated by their own clerk.
The
House of Lords held that the firm had been guilty of a breach of duty arising
out of the relation of a banker and customer to take care in the mode of
drawing the cheque and that the alteration of the cheque by the clerk was a
direct result of that breach of duty. And accordingly the bank was
entitled to debit the customer’s account with the amount of that cheque.
Lord
Finley summed up that duty at page 789 as follows:
“the relationship between a banker and a
customer is that of debtor and creditor with a super added obligation on the
part of the banker to honour the customers cheques if the account is in
credit. A cheque drawn by a customer is in points of law a mandate
to the banker to pay the amount according to the tenor of the
cheque. It is beyond dispute that the customer is bound to exercise
reasonable care in drawing the cheque to prevent the banker being
misled. If he draws the cheque in a manner which facilitates fraud,
he is guilty of a breach of duty as between himself and the banker and he will
be responsible to the banker for any loss sustained by the banker as a natural
and direct consequence of this breach of duty.”
Sections
3 and 4 of the Cheques act s. 3 (2) that where a banker in good faith and
without negligence and in the ordinary course of business
(a) Receives
payment for a customer of a prescribed instrument to which the customer has no
title or defective title
Protection
is essentially being proffered to protect the bank
Section
24 of the Bills of Exchange Act which provides that where a signature on a bill
is forged, or placed thereon without the authority of the person whose
signature it purports to be, the forged or the authorised signature is wholly
inoperative. In other words if the bank honours a forged
cheque and it subsequently turns out the cheque was forged, then the banker
bears the loss.
Does
the duty of the customer extend to scrutinising bank statements and are the
statements to be deemed to be accurate unless challenged by the customer within
a given period.
As
a matter of practice the banks will expressly provide that that is the case, in
the absence however of an express agreement with the bank, is such a duty to be
implied? If under the written terms of the contract there is no
agreement that statements will be binding after a certain time has
lapsed. This was the issue in the case of Tai Hing Cotton
Mills Ltd v. Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd P.C 1985 2 947
Brief
statement of facts
A
company was a customer of a bank and maintained accounts with that
bank. The bank honoured cheques 300 of them totalling approximately
5.5 million Hong Kong dollars. The cheques on the face of them
appeared to have been drawn by the company and appeared to bear the signature
of the Managing Director of the Company who was one of the authorised
signatories and so the bank honoured these cheques. It later
transpired that those cheques were not infact the company’s cheques, they were
in fact forgeries and the forgeries had been perpetrated by the company’s own
accounts clerk and the question was whether that loss should fall on the
company or on the bank.
The
holding of the privy council was as follows: “that in the absence of express agreement to
the contrary the duty of care owed by a customer to his bank in the operation
of a current account was limited to a duty to refrain from drawing a cheque in
such manner as to facilitate fraud or forgery and that a customer had a duty to
inform the bank of any unauthorised cheques purportedly drawn on the account as
soon as the customer became aware of it. And on the question whether
there was an obligation on the part of the customer to screen statements which
is what the bank had advocated or argued, the court held, that the customer was
not under a duty to take reasonable precautions in the management of
his business with the Bank to prevent forged cheques being presented for
payments nor was he under a duty to check his periodic bank statements so as to
enable him to notify the bank of any unauthorised debit items because such wide
a duty was not a necessary incident of the Banker/Customer relationship since
the business of Banking was not the business of the customer but the business
of the bank and forgery of cheques was a risk of the service which
the bank offered.
It
had been suggested in this case that there was a duty owed to the bank by the
customer but the Privy Council stated that the customer was under no duty to
scrutinise statements to check if they are erroneous.
WHEN
CAN A CONDITION BE IMPLIED
Conditions
that must be satisfied
A
term will not be implied into a contract unless it satisfied the following
conditions:
1. The
term proposed to be implied must be reasonable and equitable.
2. It
must be necessary to give business efficacy to the contract i.e. a term will
not be implied into a contract if the contract is effective without that
implied term.
3. The
term must be so obvious that it goes without saying as it were.
4. The
term must be capable of clear expression;
5. It
must not contradict any express term of the contract.
So
if the customer has a term to be implied in the relationship, it must meet
these 5 conditions.
CONFIDENTIALITY
The
duty that the bank owes to the customer or the duty of secrecy.
There
are situations when the banks could be in their right to disclose.
A
banker is under an obligation of secrecy under the Banking Contract regarding
his customers’ affairs. This obligation is a legal obligation
arising out of the contract. A breach of that duty on the part of
the banker will expose the banker to liability. In other words a
banker is not generally permitted to disclose the affairs of his customers to 3rd parties. The
duty is not an absolute duty because there are exceptions when a bank is at
liberty to disclose the affairs of the customer.
The
leading authority on this subject is the case of
Tournier
v. National Provincial and Union Bank of England. (1924) 1 KB 461
It
was held in that case that it is an implied term of the contract between a
banker and its customer that the banker will not divulge to 3rd persons
without the consent of the customer express or implied either the state of the
customer’s account or any of his transactions with the bank or any information
relating to the customer, acquired through the keeping of the customer’s
account unless the banker is compelled to do so by order of a court, or the
circumstances give rise to a public duty of disclosure or the protection of the
banker’s own interests require disclosure.
The
facts briefly
The
Plaintiff was a customer of the Defendant bank. A cheque was drawn
by another customer of the Defendant’s in favour of the Plaintiff who instead
of paying it into his own account endorsed it in favour of another person who
had an account at another bank. On return of the cheque to the
Defendant the manager enquired from the other bank to whom this cheque had been
paid and the information given was that it was paid to a
bookmaker. That information was disclosed by the Defendant to 3rd persons
and the Plaintiff brought an action against the bank and the holding was that
the disclosure constituted a breach of the Defendant’s duty to the Plaintiff
and that although the information was acquired not through the Plaintiff’s
account but through the drawer of the cheque, the information was none the less
acquired by the defendants during the currency of the Plaintiff’s account and
in their character as bankers.
The
classic statement is by Bankes L.J at page 472
“In my opinion it is necessary in a case like
the present to direct the jury what are the limits and what the qualifications
of the contractual duty of secrecy implied in the relation of banker and
customer. There appears to be no authority on the
point. On principle I think that the qualifications can be classified
under four heads:
(a) Where
disclosure is under compulsion by law;
(b) Where there is a duty to the public to
disclose;
(c) Where the interests of the Bank require
disclosure;
(d) Where the disclosure is made by the express
or implied consent of the customer.
He
goes on to say “the duty of secrecy
does not cease the moment a customer closes his account. Information
gained during the currency of the account remains confidential unless released
under circumstances bringing the case within one of the classes of
qualifications I have already referred to. Again the confidence is
not confined to the actual state of the customer’s account it extends to
information derived from the account itself.”
CONFIDENTIALITY
Tournier
v. National Provincial and Union Bank of England (1924) 1 KB 461
Judgment
of Scrutton J.
“I have no doubt that it is an implied term
of bankers contract with this customer that the bank shall not disclose his
account or the transaction relating thereto except in certain
circumstances. The circumstances in which disclosure is allowed are
sometimes difficult to state. I think it is clear that the bank may disclose
the customer’s account and affairs to an extent reasonable and proper for its
own protection (as when a bank is collecting or suing for an overdraft. Or to
the extent reasonable and proper for carrying on the business of the account as
in giving a reason for declining to honour cheques when there are insufficient
assets or when ordered to answer questions in the law courts or to prevent
frauds or crimes.
I think also that the implied legal duty towards
the customer to keep secret his affairs does not apply to knowledge which the
bank acquires before the relation of banker and customer was in contemplation
or after it ceased or to knowledge derived from other sources during the continuance
of the relation. The banks can by express agreement provide for
circumstances when the bank may be at liberty to disclose.
Judgment
of Lord Atkins
Intercom
Services Limited & Other v. Standard Chartered Bank Limited Civil Case No.
761 of 1988 E.A. L. R 2002 Vol. 2 391
Judgment
of Visram J.
The
facts in this case are that a Mr. James Kanyita Nderitu was a director of 4
companies Intercom Services Ltd, Inter State, Swiftair, and Kenya Continental
Ltd. In 1985 Mr. Nderitu received a cheque for 17 Million shillings
drawn by Customs & Excise in favour of his company Intercom Services
Ltd. And he banked it on the persuasion of the Branch Manager of
Standard Bank Westlands and it was common ground or it was conceded that, that
cheque represented a substantial amount of money in those days. One
Saturday Mr. Nderitu went to Westlands Branch of Standard Chartered Bank and
deposited that cheque there. The account was relatively new having
been opened some 8 days prior to the depositing of the cheque. The
bank accepted the cheque without raising any questions as it appeared to be
proper on the face of it. The cheque was specially cleared and on
the following Monday the Bank manager telephoned Mr. Nderitu and informed him
that his superiors thought the deposit was somewhat unusual and he was
requested to provide some documentary proof of payment.
The
bank has no business asking for proof at this stage. But anyway Mr.
Nderitu obliged and produced a payment voucher from the Customs & Excise,
for money paid under the Export Compensation Scheme. The bank
noticed from the payment voucher what it considered significant discrepancies
on the payment voucher not on the cheque namely the amount shown in words in
the payment voucher does not tally with the amount shown in figures and this
raises eyebrows at the bank. Mr. Nderitu was in fact allowed to use
some of the funds in the Intercom account and he drew some of the money and
transferred 15 Million shillings to the account of Swiftair Kenya Ltd in the
same Bank. Meanwhile the bank commenced a series of
enquiries. The first enquiry was to Kenya Commercial Bank upon which
the cheque was drawn and KCB confirmed that the cheque was good and hence they
made the payment. The enquiry does not end there as the bank calls
the department of customs and excise and speak to the first signatory of the
cheque who assured them of the legitimacy of the cheque. They called
the 2nd signatory who also assured them that the cheque was
legitimate. The suspicion did not end there and they spoke to
a Police Officer in the Fraud section of the Central Bank of
Kenya. Mr. Nderitu was ultimately arrested and charged with a
criminal offence of obtaining money by false pretences and all his accounts
were frozen. He was finally acquitted after a very long battle.
Mr.
Nderitu brought an action against the bank on the following
1. Breach
of the bank’s duty to his company by disclosing his account affairs to other
parties; bank violated its duty of confidentiality.
Visram
J. found the bank guilty of violating its duty of
confidentiality. He discussed the law at great length and analysis
the bankers duty of confidentiality and the duties of a collecting bank and to
an extent the duties of a paying bank in as far as the cheque is
concerned. He also discussed the principle and cites Joachimson with
approval and concludes that “that a banker in these circumstances is not to
inquire for what purpose the customer opened the account, he is not to inquire
what the moneys are that are paid into the account and he is not to inquire for
what purpose moneys are drawn out of the account. He also pegs the
responsibility of the bank to what would be considered good banking
practice. I accordingly enter judgment on liability in favour of the
plaintiff.
Cheques
Guarantees
Electronic
banking
THE
TAKING OF SECURITY
A
contract can be set aside on a number of grounds;
1. Undue
Influence
2. Misrepresentation
3. Illegality
4. Duress
The
Application of these principles to Banking i.e. what a banker should safeguard
against when taking security to avoid being liable.
CIBC
Mortgages PLC V. Pitts & Another (1993) Vol. 4 All E.R. 433
This
is an illustration as to how a problem can arise when securities are being
taken.
A
debenture is a floating security tied on assets of a company that will
crystallise after certain effects.
The
facts in this case were that a husband and wife jointly owned a matrimonial
home which was valued at £275,000 in 1986. There was an encumbrance
on that property in favour of a building society for £16700. In 1986
the husband told the wife that he would like to borrow money on the security of
the home and to use the loan to buy shares in the stock market. The
wife was most reluctant but as a result of pressure, brought upon to bear on
her by the husband, she eventually agreed. Both the husband and wife
signed an application for a loan from the plaintiff in the amount of a £150,000
for a period of twenty years. And the purpose of the loan was
expressed in the application to be for the purpose of paying off the existing
mortgage with the building society and for the Purchasing of a Holiday
Home. The Plaintiff agreed to advance the £150,000 for 19 years and
the husband and wife signed the Mortgage offer and the legal charge prepared by
the Plaintiff’s solicitors. The wife did not read those documents
before signing them neither did she receive separate advice about the
transaction and nobody suggested that she should in fact seek
advice. She did not know the amount that was being borrowed, the
bank then proceeded to disburse the loan, the existing mortgage with the
building society was paid off and the balance of the amount of the loan was
paid into a joint account in the names of the husband and wife. The
husband then utilised that money to speculate on the stock market and was in
fact at some stage at least in the books able to convert himself into a
Millionaire through his stock dealings. The stock market then
crashed in October of 1987 and the husband was then unable to keep up the
Mortgage repayments and the Plaintiff then applied for an order for possession
of the matrimonial home.
The
wife contested the application for possession of the matrimonial home on the
ground that she had been induced to sign the mortgage by misrepresentation,
duress and undue influence on the part of the husband. The judge
held that the husband had exercised actual undue influence on the wife to
procure her agreement and that the transaction was manifestly disadvantageous
to her. But since the husband had not acted as an agent of the
Plaintiff and the fact that there had been a joint advance to both the husband
and the wife, the wife’s claim failed. She appealed to the court of
appeal and the appeal was dismissed on the grounds that the transaction was not
manifestly disadvantageous and therefore the wife could not succeed on undue
influence. And furthermore the Plaintiff had neither actual or
constructive notice of any irregularity.
She
then appealed to the House of Lords which held that a claimant who proved
actual undue influence was not under the further burden of proving that the
transaction induced by undue influence was manifestly disadvantageous but was
entitled as of right to have it set aside as against the person exercising the
undue influence since actual undue influence was a species of fraud and a
person who had been induced by undue influence to carry out a transaction which
he did not freely and knowingly enter into was entitled to have that
transaction set aside as of right. However the House of Lords went
to hold, although the wife had established actual undue influence by the
husband, the Plaintiff was not affected by it because the husband had not in a
real sense acted as its agent in procuring her agreement and that the Plaintiff
had no actual or constructive notice of the undue influence. So far
as the Plaintiff was concerned there was a joint application by both husband
and wife, the loan was advanced to both husband and wife and there was nothing
to indicate that this was anything other than a normal advance to a husband and
wife for their joint benefit and for that reason the appeal was dismissed.
Look
at the Judgement of Wilkinson J. and his discussion of the law in that case.
Under
our statutes the requirements is that the signatures of the chargees must be
witnessed by an advocate and he must say that he has agreed.
The
circumstances when the security of a bank may be challenged
- UNDUE
INFLUENCE
- DURESS
- UNCONSCIONABLE
TRANSACTIONS
- MISREPRESENTATIONS
UNDUE
INFLUENCE
The
equitable doctrine of undue influence covers cases in which the particular
relationship of trust and confidence leads the court to presume that undue
influence has been exerted without necessity for proof. There are
those relationships that are based on trust and confidence where the assumption
will be made , i.e. doctor/patient, or advocate/client.
The
doctrine also extends to cases outside of such relationships in which the court
will uphold the plea of undue influence if satisfied that such influence has
been in fact exerted based on the evidence. These will be cases of
actual undue influence and the basis of the doctrine is the principle that the
court is justified in setting aside a transaction for undue influence a
transaction that is based on the victimisation of one party by another.
In
the case for presumed undue influence it has to be established that a
relationship of influence exists between the parties and that a transaction has
taken place between those parties which was wrongful in the sense that the
party in the position of influence has obtained an unfair advantage from the
party subject of the influence.
ACTUAL
UNDUE INFLUENCE IS A QUESTION OF FACT
Under
what circumstances will the Bank be hit with the notice of undue
influence. When is the bank affected by undue influence.
Undue
influence exerted by a third party over the giving of security will generally
not have effect on the validity of the security given by a
bank. There are circumstances however when the bank may be affected
by such undue influence
1. Where
the Bank has constituted the 3rd Party its agent for purposes
of procuring the execution of the security; (Agency)
2. Where
the Bank has actual or constructive notice at the time of execution that it has
been procured by undue influence. (Notice)
Bank
Credit & Commerce (1990) Vol 1 QB 923
Paget
argues that before this decision, there was a tendency on the part of the
courts to utilise and widen the concept of agency for this
purpose. In a typical situation where a bank to which the husband
was indebted sought security in the form of a guarantee from the wife or a
legal charge in the joint names of husband and wife and the bank then left it
to the husband to procure his wife to execute the security but did not take
steps to communicate with the wife, it was then sufficient to constitute the husband
the agent of the bank. This theory is artificial and the authority
is the case of
Barclays
Bank v. Obrien
When
will the Bank be put on notice?
If
at the time of execution of a security the Bank has actual notice or
constructive notice that the security has been procured through undue influence
and equity is raised that disentitles the bank to rely on that security, the
circumstances constituting notice required to fix the bank with the liability
for another person’s undue influence will depend on the nature of the undue
influence that is alleged. Where actual undue influence is alleged,
it must be shown that notice of the circumstances alleged to amount to the
undue influence were known to the bank.
CHEQUES
How
relevant are cheques considering the inroads that have been made technology
wise? Now there are credit cards, ATM Machines, Debit Cards
There
are more ways of accessing the funds in the bank than merely the use of the
cheque. In future a cheque might not be as important as it is today.
WHAT
IS A CHEQUE?
It
is defined under Section 73 of the Bills of Exchange Cap 27 as a Bill of
Exchange drawn on a banker payable on demand. Which in turn raises
the question what is a Bill of Exchange? Defined under Section 3 of
the same Act as an unconditional order in writing addressed by one person to
another signed by the person giving it requiring the person to whom it is
addressed to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time a sum
certain in money or to the order of a specified person or to bearer.
When
you link section 3 and 17 the definition of a cheque becomes a cheque is an
unconditional order in writing addressed by a person to a
banker. Signed by such person and requiring the banker to pay on
demand a sum of money to the order of a specified person or
bearer. When you break down that definition, it gives one certain
prerequisites as to what must constitute a cheque
1. It
is not a requirement that the cheque must be drawn by a customer;
2. The
order must be drawn on a Banker – meaning that the bank must be the drawee.
London
City & Midland Bank Ltd V. Gordon [1903] A.C. 240
Relationship
between Branch and Head Office
3. The
cheque must be an order; imperative in its terms
4. The
order must be unconditional; i.e. the person making the order must not impose
conditions on the drawee;
Thairlwall
v Great Northern Railway Co. [1910] Vol. 2 K.B. 509
What
is conditional?
5. The
cheque must be payable on demand;
CROSSED
CHEQUES
Section
76 to Section 83 of the Bills of Exchange Act:
Crossing
of Cheques and the statutory provisions with regard to crossed cheques
essentially afford the public a safer method of drawing cheques. The
object of crossing a cheque is to hamper or prevent its negotiation by a person
who may have wrongly or wrongfully obtained that cheque. That object
is attained by placing certain matters across the face of the cheque,
transversely to the matter of the cheque itself or overriding the matter of the
cheque itself. It is that added matter that is referred to as the
crossing.
Crossing
may be such as to merely force a person to obtain payment of the cheque through
the medium of a bank. So that that payee must have an account at a
Bank or in the days when negotiation was permitted, he must know someone with
an account. The crossing may go further and specify the Bank so that
the payee must have an account at that particular bank or when negotiations was
permitted, he must negotiate the cheque to someone with an account at that
bank. The crossing may also be such as to completely destroy the
element of negotiability which in Kairu’s view is what has happened with the
account of payee crossing and the statutory protection that has come with it.
Under
Section 76 (2) crossing are essentially recognised
(i) General
Crossing;
(ii) Special
Crossing.
The
general crossing is where the crossing assures payment through a bank without
specifying a bank. But where the bank is specified that is special
crossing or the cheque is said to be crossed specially. Section 76
(1) (a ) provides that where a cheque bears across its face an additional of
the words and company or an abbreviation of those words between two parallel
transverse lines with or without the words not negotiable, that addition
constitutes a crossing and the cheque is crossed generally.
Section
76 (1) (b) of the Bills of Exchange Act provides that where a cheque bears
across its face an addition of simply two parallel transverse lines either with
or without the words “not negotiable” the additions also constitute a crossing
and it is a general crossing.
Section
76 (2)
Special
crossing: It stipulates that where a cheque bears across its
face an addition of the name of a Banker either with or without the words “not
negotiable”, that addition constitutes a crossing and the cheque is specially
crossed.
BANKERS
LIEN
Lien
is a right to retain property belonging to a debtor until the debtor has
discharged the debt due to the creditor. This form of protection
known as the general lien of bankers arose from usage of trade from time
immemorial and is judiciary recognized.
The
nature of the securities Subject to the lien must come to the bank in its
capacity as a banker and in the course of banking
business. Securities held by a bank or deposited with a bank for
safe custody are not subject to the lien unless there is an agreement between
the parties to the contrary.
Does
a lien give the bank the right to sell? a mere lien gives no power
of sale, neither does it give a ground for applying to court to grant the power
of sale. The method that appears open to a banker for realising
securities held under a lien would seem to be to sue for the debt obtain
injunction for the debt, and then take the securities in execution of that
judgment.
The
right of lien extends only to the customers own property and not to property
held in trust by the customer for their clients.
GUARANTEES
Problems
associated with guarantees.
Extent
to which a guarantor remains bound under the guarantee even after the terms of
the principal lending have been varied.
In
the Donde Bill there was a proposal to get rid of guarantees,
What
is a guarantee?
It
is a written promise by the guarantor to answer for the debt of another and
that other is the principal debtor made to a person namely the lender to whom
that other is already or is about to become liable.
Under
the Law of Contract Act Cap 23 the guarantee must be in writing or there must
be a Memorandum of it in writing signed by the guarantor.
The
banks will ordinarily or as part of their requirements for lending purposes
require that the principal borrower should furnish security by providing a
guarantor. This is a common method by which bankers seek to protect
themselves against loss on advances.
To
effectively protect itself the banks will usually frame the bank guarantees so
as to apply to all accounts of the principal debtor whether such accounts are
solely in the name of that principal debtor or whether such accounts are joint
accounts or partnership accounts so that if the principal debtor has two
accounts with outstanding facilities at the bank, the bank will ensure that the
language of the guarantee covers both accounts for instance.
The
guarantees will also usually be framed in such broad terms so as to extend to
the liabilities of the principal debtor in the capacity of that debtor in
principal form or in the capacity of that debtor as a surety or as a guarantor
for lending to another party.
There
are situations where the guarantee is given by more than one person i.e. where
there is more than one guarantor to the guarantee. In that event the
guarantee should stipulate whether the obligation of the guarantors is several
or joint and several. If the obligation be joint only, it means that
if the lender sues one of the guarantors and obtains judgment against that
guarantor, he cannot subsequently bring an action under the same guarantee
against the other guarantor. But in the case of the guarantee being
several the remedy by the bank can be pursued against both guarantors at
different times. The caution is that when one is dealing with a
joint guarantee one has to sue all the guarantors.
The
banks invariably provide in the language of the guarantee that the liability of
the guarantors is joint and several.
The
other measure that a guarantor should take or the other factor that a guarantor
should be alive to is whether the guarantee is limited or
unlimited. If it is intended to be limited meaning that the
liability of the guarantor should not exceed a certain limit, then the
guarantor should ensure that the instrument of the guarantee so provides.
A
further distinction is also made between specific guarantees and continuing
guarantees. A specific guarantee is where provision is made for the
advance of a specified sum and the guarantee is only applicable to that
particular advance and it ceases on the repayment of that amount. A
continuing guarantee is designed to cover a fluctuating or running account and
it secures the debit balance at any time irrespective of payments which clear
past advances.
HOW
DOES ONE BRING TO AN END THE INSTRUMENT OF GUARANTEE?
Most
guarantees will provide that a guarantor wishing to determine the guarantee
must give notice to the lender and pay into the bank the amount that may be
due. The guarantee may simply provide that the liability of the
guarantor will cease upon the expiry of a specified notice to be given by the
guarantor to the bank and upon payment of all outstanding sums notified by the
bank upon receipt of such notice.
The
bank has to be careful coz the effect of this is that the guarantor can give
notice to the bank should the bank receive notice that is responds by stating
the amount that is outstanding.
DEATH
OF A GUARANTOR
Does
the death of a guarantor determine a guarantee? It does not
necessarily determine the guarantee unless provision to the contrary is
provided. The other way to bring the guarantee to an end is for the
principal debtor to discharge his liabilities with the bank and therefore if
the lender releases the principal debtor, it follows also that the guarantor is
discharged.
Mahand
Singh v. Ubayi [1939] A.C. 601
This
is authority for the proposition that where the creditor releases the principal
debtor, the guarantee is discharged.
This
follows the principles in Rees V. Barrington following a case
bearing those names.
The
other way in which the guarantor may be released is where the creditor agrees
to vary the terms of the lending with the principal debtor to the prejudice of
the guarantor.
Holme
v. Branskill [1878] 3 QBD 495
This
has been followed by our courts in the case of
Harilal
and Co. v. The Standard Bank Ltd. [1967] EA 512
In
this case, Standard Bank advanced a facility to the principal debtor which was
secured by a guarantee of the wife of the principal debtor. That was
in 1955. in 1962 the Bank was dissatisfied in the way in which the
account was being operated and it then required the principal debtor to open
another account which was always to be in credit and from which an amount would
be transferred on a monthly basis to the initial account towards the repayment
of the facility then. Notice of this arrangement i.e. the
arrangement where the principal debtor was to open a second account was not
given to the guarantor i.e. the guarantor was not consulted and neither was she
aware and subsequently the bank then sued both the principal debtor and the
guarantor. The guarantor defended the action by the bank on the
basis that the variation of the terms of lending by the bank without the
consent of the guarantor had the effect of discharging the
guarantee. The High /court dismissed the argument but on Appeal the
court held:
That
the opening of the second account without the consent of the guarantor
discharged the guarantor from all liability under the guarantee.
The
principle that underlies this holding is found in the judgment of Charles
Newbold at page 509 president of the East Africa Court of Appeal at the time
“if
there is any agreement between the principals with reference to the contract
guaranteed, the surety ought to be consulted if there is to be an alteration to
his prejudice to that agreement.”
Patel
& Others v. National & Grindlays Bank Ltd [1970] EA 121
Reid
v. National Bank of Commerce [1971] EA 525
Abraham
Kiptanui v Delphis Bank Ltd H.C. No. 1864 of 1999 H.C. Milimani
In
this case Justice Ransley also suggested that the instrument of guarantee can
be worded in such broad language to allow the lender to vary the terms of the
lending without thereby discharging the guarantee. In other words
the language can be so broad as to allow the bank to do that.
The
other way that a guarantee could be discharged is where the lender releases the
security that he holds for the debt.
Polak
v. Everet [1876] 1 QBD 669
CO-GUARANTORS
Smith
v. Wood [1929] 1 Ch.D 14
Liverpool
Con Trade Association v. Hurst [1936] 2 AER 309
Halsbury’s
Laws of England
Chitty
on Contract
ELECTRONIC
FUNDS TRANSFER
This
is a transfer of funds in which one or more steps in the process of that
transfer was previously done by paper based techniques but is now done by
electronic techniques. That is the definition given to the
expression electronics transfer by the United Nations Commission on
International Trade Law (UNCITAL)
The
authors of Paget on Banking Law have identified two categories of electronic
funds transfer systems. There are those that are consumer activated
Electronic Funds Transfer systems and those that are non consumer
In
the category of consumer it is the consumer who selects and activates the
system that is to be used in a transaction. Examples are the ATM,
Point of Sale Electronic Fund transfer systems i.e. debit cards and home
banking.
In
the non consumer activated systems it is the bank that activates the
system by selecting and activating that particular system for a particular
transaction and the example is given of a system called SWIFT system which is
the Society for Worldwide Interbank Telecommunications. This is a
system that operates a message transfer system so that if a customer of a bank
in Kenya wishes to instruct its bank to transfer money to another country or to
a payee in another country, the customer or the consumer will hardly be
concerned as to how that is achieved and so it will be the bank that activates
the system to effect that transfer.
All
of these systems whether they are consumer activated or not are systems that
facilitate transfer of funds either between bank accounts or between banks.
The
system involves the adjustment of balances of the payers account and the
payee’s account at their respective banks.
Intercom Services Ltd & 4 others v Standard
Chartered Bank
HIGH COURT, NAIROBI
VISRAM, J.
Date of Judgment: 18 November 2002
Citation: [1999] LLR 2536 (HCK)
Sourced from: LLR
Edited By: C Kanjama
Citation: [1999] LLR 2536 (HCK)
Sourced from: LLR
Edited By: C Kanjama
BANK – Customer account – Account in company’s name
– Account operated by director of company as sole signatory – Whether bank owed
any duty of care to the signatory – Whether bank liable to director of company
for losses suffered due to breach of duty of care to the company
BANK – Duty of care – Duty of collecting bank – Duty to act in good faith and avoid negligence – Extent of duty of care – Duty of confidence – Limitations to the duty of non-disclosure – Collecting bank conducting inquiries with signatories of cheque and officers of Central Bank – Inquiries resulting in freezing of funds and subsequent criminal prosecutions – Whether bank exceeded responsibility in its inquiries and disclosures – Whether there was breach of confidentiality – Cheques Act (Cap 35) ss. 2, 3, 4 – Bills of Exchange Act (Cap 27) s 80.
WORDS & PHRASES – “true owner of a cheque” – Who is entitled to the proceeds of a cheque.
BANK – Duty of care – Duty of collecting bank – Duty to act in good faith and avoid negligence – Extent of duty of care – Duty of confidence – Limitations to the duty of non-disclosure – Collecting bank conducting inquiries with signatories of cheque and officers of Central Bank – Inquiries resulting in freezing of funds and subsequent criminal prosecutions – Whether bank exceeded responsibility in its inquiries and disclosures – Whether there was breach of confidentiality – Cheques Act (Cap 35) ss. 2, 3, 4 – Bills of Exchange Act (Cap 27) s 80.
WORDS & PHRASES – “true owner of a cheque” – Who is entitled to the proceeds of a cheque.
The 5th plaintiff was the managing director of
various companies (IS, IC, SK and KC) of which his wife was the other
shareholder. He received an export compensation cheque for Kshs.17 million from
Customs & Excise in the name of IS and deposited it with the defendant bank
in a one-week old account. The defendant was subsequently requested by the bank
to obtain the payment voucher accompanying the cheque issued by the drawee
(Commissioner of Customs and Excise). The voucher was made out to IC, not IS,
and had a minor discrepancy of Kshs.70,000 on its face. The defendant made
inquiries with the paying bank and the signatories of the drawee. It was
confirmed that the cheque was in order.
The funds were collected and credited to IS’s
account. Shortly thereafter, Kshs.15 million was transferred to SK’s account in
the same bank. The 5th plaintiff then instructed the bank to transfer the
moneys to SK’s account with another bank. Meanwhile, the bank inquired with the
Central Bank regarding the export compensation payment. The Central Bank’s
investigation officers, who happened to be police officers, acquired various
documents from the defendant as a result of which the 5th plaintiff was charged
with various counts of obtaining by false pretences. He was convicted on trial
but eventually acquitted on appeal.
Shortly after instituting the criminal case, a
police officer obtained orders freezing the accounts of SK and IS. The orders
were quashed by the High Court. The drawee then filed a suit against the
Plaintiffs for recovery of the funds. He obtained ex-parte orders of attachment
before judgment. By consent, the Kshs.15 million in SK’s account was deposited
into a joint interest-earning account and the remaining amounts released. The
suit was later settled by consent and all the money released to the Plaintiffs.
The 5th Plaintiff’s companies therefore brought
this suit against the bank seeking more than 600 million shillings in damages,
on ground of breach of fiduciary relationship through the disclosures to
Central Bank, which resulted in freezing of the accounts and eventual closure
of the business of IS, IC and SK. The 5th Plaintiff’s case was that his arrest
in his capacity as managing director of the aforesaid companies resulted in
restriction of his movement and crippled day-to-day operation of the
Plaintiffs.
The issue for determination herein was the question
of liability, quantum being reserved for later. In essence, did the bank breach
its duty of confidentiality by making the disclosures it did to Central Bank? Further,
was the bank liable to the 5th Plaintiff, the managing director of the first
four Plaintiffs, because its actions resulted in his arrest and the crippling
of his family businesses?
Held:
Held:
1. A collecting banker has a responsibility to the
true owner of a cheque, i.e. the person who is in the circumstances of the case
entitled to the proceeds of the cheque. If the banker receives payment for a
defective cheque and credits it to the customer’s account while (1) acting in
good faith and (2) without negligence (3) in the ordinary course of business,
he does not incur liability if the customer appears to be the payee thereof.
The collecting banker’s common law duty to the owner of a cheque is qualified
by statute. It is now a duty to take reasonable care not to take a step that he
can reasonably foresee is likely to cause damage to the true owner. The
banker’s responsibility is to ensure that his own customer’s title to the
cheque delivered to him for collection is not defective. Marfani & Co. Ltd
v Midland Bank Ltd [1968] 2 All ER 573, Bissell & Co v Fox Brothers (1884)
51 L.T. 663 adopted.
2. Conversely, the collecting banker has a
contractual duty of non-disclosure to his own customer. He should not be
abnormally suspicious, but is entitled to make inquiries where the
circumstances in which the cheque is presented for collection are unusual and
out of the ordinary course of business. Thackwell v Barclays Bank Ltd [1986] 1
All ER 676 adopted. It is an implied term that the banker will not divulge to
third persons without the express or implied consent of the customer either the
state of the customer’s account, or transactions relating thereto unless the
bank is compelled to do so by order of a court or the circumstances give rise
to a public duty of disclosure (e.g. to prevent frauds or crime) or the
protection of the banker’s own interests require it. Halsbury’s Laws of England
4th Ed Vol.3(1) at 200, Tournier v National Provincial & Union Bank
of England [1923] All ER 550 adopted.
3. A paying bank has a similar duty as a collecting
bank to act in good faith and without negligence. Karak Rubber Co Ltd v Burden
& others (No.2) [1972] 1 All ER 1210 adopted. The only difference is that
the collecting banker has a positive burden of proof to establish that he collected
without negligence while in the case of the paying bank the burden is shifted
to the customer to prove negligence. Lipkin Corman v Karpnale Ltd
& anor [1992] 4 All ER 409 adopted.
4. The collecting banker need only inquire with the
true owner of a cheque to avail himself the statutory protection conferred by
section 3(2) of the Cheques Act (Cap 35). The fact that the cheque in this case
represented a statutory payment made by a government agency did not imply a
higher duty of care. The bank is not entitled to inquire what the moneys are
that are paid into or drawn out of the account. Bodeham v Hoskins
[1843-60] All ER 692 adopted.
5. In the circumstances of this case, the inquiry
made to the Central Bank breached the duty of disclosure. The bank’s duty to
prevent a crime does not imply a duty to investigate the funds in a client’s
account. Further, the bank’s responsibility to the true owner of a cheque
ceases when the bank allows the customer to make use of that money; the bank
should therefore not have continued with enquiries after that moment.
6. While the 5th Plaintiff was not a customer of
the bank, he was the sole signatory of the company accounts. The bank’s own
conduct shows that it intended to deal with the 5th Plaintiff personally, and
was treating the aforesaid accounts as the 5th Plaintiff’s accounts. It
therefore must have had the 5th Plaintiff in contemplation as the person who
would suffer damages as a result of its irregular actions.
Per curiam: The true owner of a cheque is the
person who would be kept out of his money were the proceeds to be paid out to
the wrong person. Where the cheque is not a forgery, the true owner is the
intended payee or endorsee of the cheque or the bearer of it. If the cheque is
forged, the true owner is the drawer thereof.
Judgment entered on liability in favour of the
Plaintiffs against the Defendant. Case set down for assessment of damages,
however because of the magnitude of the decision it is more than likely that
the Defendant will appeal to the Court of Appeal.
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