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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Diya v Halifax Plc [2009] EWCA Civ 183 (19 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/183.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 183 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MACKIE QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
DIYA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HALIFAX PLC |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr W Edwards (instructed by Cobbetts LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
"I refer to my roll number [and it is given] due to mature on 11 April 2005 and hereby authorise you to debit the sum of £201,000.00 at maturity and transfer by wire to my account in Japan. This is to enable me to carry out some contract transactions."
The account details are then given in Japan. It continues:
"NOTE: Kindly disregard my registered instruction and act on this urgently.
Thank you for your usual cooperation and God bless.
Sincerely yours…"
Then there is a signature, beneath which is given the name Deborah Folashade Diya, and then in manuscript:
"Original of this letter of instruction has been mailed with DHL Courier Service. Attached herewith is the copy of my deposit certificate."
"Due to insufficient funds for the completion of my contract transactions, kindly debit the sum of £102,000.00 from my roll number [given] and transferred to my account in Japan detailed below: [and the details of that are given]
NOTE: Do transfer my balance to my account with you. This is not a total withdrawal of my investment, after the contract transactions period of one month I will definitely reinvest more funds.
Please do treat urgently so as to enable me to meet the contract mandate. Thank you for your usual cooperation and God bless.
Sincerely yours…"
Then, again, there is a signature, and beneath that the name of the claimant, and below that in manuscript the words:
"Original of this letter of instruction and my investment certificate has been mailed with courier."
"Mrs Diya [overseas cust] rang through to me yesterday to see whether her guaranteed reserve D/93336813-3 has been rolled over for 6 months. When I checked it had been closed and the amount replayed [repaid] as TT via this branch. [As I] cant gain access to any files from within the branch is it possible that you can look into this as the cust did not want the funds repaying. And contact the cust back asap on…"
Then two numbers were given which, it is common ground, were the correct home and mobile phone numbers for the claimant.
"03/05/2005 Customer calls into branch to see if Guaranteed reserve has been rolled over, I interview the customer.
Customer claims that she knows nothing about the withdrawals and she hasn't got a bank account in Japan. I place customers bankcard next to the signature on the letter and ask her how someone has obtained a copy of her signature which is a perfect match, customer replies 'I don't know'.
I asked how someone would have been able to obtain the original certificate she replied 'I don't know'.
When asked where she kept her documents she replied 'in her purse' she then said in her brief case which she explained had a combination lock, when asked who has access she replied 'her husband & partner, three people'.
She confirmed that nothing has been stolen from her house and she doesn't know how someone has got hold of her documents.
Mrs Diya confirms that she received the account closure statement 22/04/2005 but didn't telephone Halifax to check what had happened until the 27th April, claims the person she spoke to confirmed that her balance was correct.
I informed that customer that she would have to report the matter to the police and obtain a crime reference number, customer insisted that she didn't have to as she was reporting it to us, seemed reluctant to report it to the police just kept saying I know nothing about this.
Informed Mrs Diya that until it was reported as a crime, we would not investigate her claim, spent the next 15 minutes going around in circles that she would have to report it to the police, I asked Mrs Diya why she was reluctant to go to the Police to which she replied 'don't say that it's not true'. The only way I managed to get her to leave to go to the police was to stand up and start to leave the room.
Mrs Diya did mention that she had made a fraudulent claim for £5400 last year on her joint account D/4696584-7 which was paid out on the 18th June.
We have just received a phone call 11.15 from someone saying they are Mrs Diya and would like to know the balance on her account, we obtained a contact number of [number given], we got cut off before we could confirm security information, I rang [same number] and got an 02 voice mail message, left a message to call me ASAP."
"It is extremely difficult to interpret the evidence available given the restrictions placed upon my examination. These signatures are either genuine or they are very good simulations of Mrs Deborah Diya's signature. The majority of simulated signatures are not of high quality. The degree to which the questioned signatures [1 to 3] match the undisputed signatures of Mrs Deborah Diya suggest that these signatures are genuine. However, given the copy nature of the questioned documents the possibility cannot be excluded that the questioned documents [1 to 3] are montages into which images of genuine signatures have been introduced. My findings as to whether Mrs Deborah Diya signed the questioned Instructions [1 to 3] are inconclusive."
"I have not examined the handwriting on the two copies of the Letters dated 20 April 2005 because I had not understood these to be relevant. However, I have now reviewed them and Mrs Deborah Diya's handwriting. This is a difficult examination since the definition of the copies is poor, there are only small amounts of handwriting on the questioned Letters dated 20 April 2005, and the handwritings of Mrs Deborah Diya available to me are very limited.
As far as I have been able to carry out examinations I have found similarities but also some differences. The differences are such to suggest that the writings on these two copy Letters of Instruction were not made by Mrs Deborah Diya. However, I should wish to examine the original documents and further handwritings of Mrs Diya before expressing any firmer conclusions."
"The signature of the faxed letter of 21st April 2005 appears to overlap congruently with the signature on the faxed version of the letter dated 20 April 2005. Is this apparent observation correct; if so are there any conclusions which can be drawn?"
The answer given by Dr Giles to this question was:
"The observation is correct. The signatures on the copy Letters of Instruction dated 20 April 2005..., and 21st April 2005…are so close in shape and design as to be virtually superimposable. These are not two independently written signatures but are copies of the same original signature. This important observation was omitted from my report dated 9th April 2008, for which I apologise. However, it is clear that these cannot be two independently written instructions."
"35. The position as I see it is as follows. I do not place much weight on the information available about previous frauds. I do not attach significance to the particular amounts withdrawn, or the timing. I do not attach much weight to other material which is either on the edge of things or cuts both ways or covers an area about which there is not enough useful evidence for me to form a reliable view. For example, the fact that the money was still there on 6th May is consistent both with the fact that the money was going to Mrs Diya and not a fraudster, but it is also consistent with being odd that she would allow the money to stay where it was at a time when she came into the bank, if of course she knew the money was still there. It seems to me that I have to concentrate on the evidence that I have before me, not speculate about what is or is not consistent with a fraudster. That means that I concentrate on three matters. One is the undisputed documents, another is the handwriting expertise, and the other is the evidence of the witnesses.
36. I agree with counsel for the defendant that, if one leaves aside the question of a montage, then there are good indications, subject to the limitations which I have mentioned, that the handwriting expertise shows the initial documents signed by the claimant to be genuine or very good simulations. Other than the question of montage, it seems reasonably clear in relation to the 20th and 21st that I cannot draw much clear evidence one way or the other beyond that.
37. Secondly, looking at the records of the bank, they show that there were two calls on 27th April. It seems to me that there is no reason to believe that either record is inaccurate, no one would have any motive for making it up, and it seems to me very likely that these are accurate records of what took place.
38. If Mrs Diya called the bank to recall the £102,000 transaction, that is an end of any doubts about the 20th and 21st April, because she was plainly aware of what happened in relation to those transactions. If she was aware of what happened in relation to those transactions, then, given the admittedly tentative conclusions one forms about the earlier signatures, it seems inevitable that she was aware about the first as well. If she is not telling the truth about the 20th and the 21st, it is unlikely that she is telling the truth about the earlier transactions either.
39. That then leads to the evidence of Mrs Diya. I am not sure whether it was a difficulty in comprehension bearing in mind that this lady does not speak English as her first language and would not have been familiar with colloquial London English necessarily, or whether it was a reluctance to be candid. But I did not find her a helpful witness, because her recollections did nothing to improve or fill out the limited picture given by her witness statement and what the documents appear to show. Her recollection about what she brought with her to the meeting in May and what she recalled of 27th April seemed to be inconsistent not only with the material but also to move in the course of cross-examination. She was altogether less articulate in her evidence than she appears to be in the letter that she writes and/or signs. Her replies were brief and guarded and it did not seem to me that what she said and the pattern of events she described from her point of view were consistent with someone who had lost an enormous amount of money through a disgraceful fraud by or on the bank. I should say at once that I am not much moved or impressed by the view formed by the bank's witnesses about the calmness or otherwise of this lady, because that would be thoroughly unreliable material to proceed on. The picture I have formed from the expert evidence and from the material was not changed by the evidence from this lady, given the inconsistencies in what she said and her reluctance to do much more in answer to some questions in cross-examination than to suggest this all must be within the knowledge of the bank.
40. That then leaves the question of whether or not Mr Richards' evidence is reliable, because I bear in mind that so far as the 27th April transaction is concerned, while we have one contemporaneous e-mail the other document is his note of 3rd or possibly 4th May. In my judgment, Mr Richards' collection was a thoroughly reliable one. As I say, he was someone who was quite willing to disclose information which was not particularly helpful to the defence case, for example in relation to fraud, and he seemed to me to be a straightforward witness who was also honest in the sense of admitting to the adverse view which he had formed about the potential honesty of the claimant. Moreover, this witness is someone with absolutely no axe to grind. He no longer works at the bank but runs a practice at a veterinary hospital, and in those circumstances I have no hesitation in concluding that his note of the 3rd and 4th May would have accurately and objectively recorded the facts as reported to him and no one would have had any particular reason to invent anything in relation to the £102,000.
41. In short I conclude…that the instructions to the bank did emanate from Mrs Diya. This claim therefore fails."
"It seems to me that I have to concentrate on the evidence that I have before me, not speculate about what is or is not consistent with a fraudster. That means that I concentrate on three matters. One is the undisputed documents, another is the handwriting expertise, and the other is the evidence of the witnesses."
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Waller:
Order: Appeal dismissed