[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Philipp v Barclays Bank UK Plc [2022] EWCA Civ 318 (14 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/318.html Cite as: [2022] 2 WLR 872, [2022] EWCA Civ 318, [2022] Bus LR 353, [2022] QB 578, [2022] WLR(D) 121 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2022] QB 578] [Buy ICLR report: [2022] Bus LR 353] [Buy ICLR report: [2022] 2 WLR 872] [View ICLR summary: [2022] WLR(D) 121] [Help]
(Formerly A4/2021/0509) |
ON APPEAL FROM High Court Business and Property Courts of
England and Wales, Circuit Commercial Court (QBD)
HHJ Russen QC
CC-2020-BRS-000004
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
____________________
Fiona Lorraine Philipp |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Barclays Bank UK PLC |
Respondent |
|
- and – |
||
The Consumers' Association |
Intervening Party |
____________________
Patrick Goodall QC and Alexia Knight (instructed by TLT LLP) for the Respondent
David McIlroy (instructed by Pennington Manches Cooper LLP) for the Intervening Party
Hearing dates: 8th and 9th February 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Birss:
"183. One cannot reasonably feel anything other than acute sympathy for Mrs and Dr Philipp who have fallen victim to the dishonesty of JW and any of his partners in crime. They have lost a very significant part of their personal savings to the fraudster.
184. However, it would not be fair, just or reasonable to impose liability on the part of the Bank in respect of the APP fraud perpetrated upon Mrs Philipp. For the reasons expressed above, such liability could only rest upon what I regard to be an unprincipled and impermissible extension of the Quincecare duty."
"A later paper published by the PSR in February 2018 referred to APP fraud as being the second biggest type of fraud reported by UK Finance (the trade association for the UK banking and financial services sector) after card fraud. That paper was produced in anticipation of the banking industry developing a voluntary system for reimbursement for victims of APP fraud which became the Contingent Reimbursement Model Code for Authorised Push Payment Scams ("the CRM Code"). The CRM Code was introduced in late May 2019 and therefore more than a year after the two payments in this case. In any event, the code does not extend to international payments."
Assessment
"In Barclays Bank v Quincecare [1992] 4 All ER 363, Steyn J held that it was an implied term of the contract between a bank and its customer that the bank would use reasonable skill and care in and about executing the customer's orders; this was subject to the conflicting duty to execute those orders promptly so as to avoid causing financial loss to the customer; but there would be liability if the bank executed the order knowing it to be dishonestly given, or shut its eyes to the obvious fact of the dishonesty, or acted recklessly in failing to make such inquiries as an honest and reasonable man would make; and the bank should refrain from executing an order if and for so long as it was put on inquiry by having reasonable grounds for believing that the order was an attempt to misappropriate funds."
"Daiwa should have realised that something suspicious was going on and suspended payment until it had made reasonable enquiries to satisfy itself that the payments were properly to be made. The company (and through the company its creditors) has been the victim of Daiwa's negligence."
"23. […] the purpose of the Quincecare duty is to protect a bank's customers from the harm caused by people for whom the customer is, one way or another, responsible. Hence Mr Crow argues that the loss was caused, not by the dishonesty, but by Daiwa's breach of its duty of care. Had it not been for that breach, the money would still have been in the company's account and available to the liquidators and creditors. This was not a case where the company's act came after Daiwa's breach of duty (unlike Reeves, where the prisoner's suicide came after the police's breach of duty). The fraudulent instruction to Daiwa gave rise to the duty of care which the bank breached, thus causing the loss."
"The context of this case is the breach by the company's investment bank and broker of its Quincecare duty of care towards the company. The purpose of that duty is to protect the company against just the sort of misappropriation of its funds as took place here. By definition, this is done by a trusted agent of the company who is authorised to withdraw its money from the account. To attribute the fraud of that person to the company would be, as the judge put it, to "denude the duty of any value in cases where it is most needed" (para 184). If the appellant's argument were to be accepted in a case such as this, there would in reality be no Quincecare duty of care or its breach would cease to have consequences. This would be a retrograde step."
"The question must be whether, if a reasonable and honest banker knew of the relevant facts, he would have considered that there was a serious or real possibility, albeit not amounting to a probability, that its customer might be being defrauded, […]. That, at least, the customer must establish. If it is established, then in my view a reasonable banker would be in breach of duty if he continued to pay cheques without inquiry."
"The relationship between the parties is contractual. The principal obligation is upon the bank to honour its customers' cheques in accordance with its mandate on instructions. There is nothing in such a contract, express or implied, which could require a banker to consider the commercial wisdom or otherwise of the particular transaction. Nor is there normally any express term in the contract requiring the banker to exercise any degree of care in deciding whether to honour a customer's cheque which his instructions require him to pay. In my opinion any implied term requiring the banker to exercise care must be limited. To a substantial extent the banker's obligation under such a contract is largely automatic or mechanical. Presented with a cheque drawn in accordance with the terms of that contract, the banker must honour it save in what I would expect to be exceptional circumstances."
"Mr. Sumption on behalf of the Bank accepted that an objective test had to be applied and that accordingly there had to be some limits of the Bank's entitlement to treat its mandate as absolute. However, he contended that the circumstances in which this was so would be very limited indeed. He accepted that there would be implied into the mandate a term that it should not be given effect to if the relevant transaction was patently dishonest. In so far as any duty to enquire before paying a cheque drawn in accordance with the mandate was concerned, he submitted that this duty could only arise when the transaction on its face was dishonest, but could have an honest explanation if appropriate enquiry was made. Counsel accepted that if a bank knows of facts which a reasonable bank manager would think were probably dishonest then enquiry would be appropriate." [p1356 C-D]
"For my part I would hesitate to try to lay down any detailed rules in this context. In the simple case of a current account in credit the basic obligation on the banker is to pay his customer's cheques in accordance with his mandate. Having in mind the vast numbers of cheques which are presented for payment every day in this country, whether over a bank counter or through the clearing bank, it is in my opinion only when the circumstances are such that any reasonable cashier would hesitate to pay a cheque at once and refer it to his or her superior, and when any reasonable superior would hesitate to authorise payment without enquiry, that a cheque should not be paid immediately upon presentation and such enquiry made. Further, it would I think be only in rare circumstances, and only when any reasonable bank manager would do the same, that a manager should instruct his staff to refer all or some of his customers' cheques to him before they are paid. In this analysis I have respectfully derived substantial assistance from the material parts of the unreported judgment of Steyn J. in [Quincecare]."
"It seems to me that if that [Barclays Bank v Simms] is a correct statement of the law it is really conclusive of this case, unless it can be said that there was something in the circumstances which were or should have been present to the bank's mind when the cheque was presented, which should have given it pause for thought.
On the face of it there was, by virtue of the presentation of the cheque, a request for an overdraft in that amount which the bank could choose whether or not to accede to. On analysis it seems to me that the only circumstance that Mr Verjee really relies upon as showing that the bank was somehow in breach of its duty of care to him in deciding to accede to that request, is the fact that he had not previously, in respect of this account, made such a request. But that, it seems to me, is quite insufficient to put the bank on notice that there was something sufficiently odd about the request to suggest the possibility that some fraud was being committed in connection with the cheque."
"(b) The bank's general contractual duty to the customer
22.51 The bank is under a duty to obey the customer's mandate. Where the bank acts outside the mandate, eg transmitting a payment message to the wrong bank, to the wrong payee, or in the wrong amount, it cannot debit its customer's account.
The doctrine of strict compliance, which applies to documentary credit transactions, has been held not to apply to a customer's instruction to transfer funds. Where payment is not made at all, or is made only after a delay, the originator's bank does not act outside its mandate. In such cases the originator's bank will only be liable for the customer's consequential loss where this is caused by its own negligence or that of its employees or agents."
(i) Onerous and unworkable?
"The law should not impose too burdensome an obligation on bankers, which hampers the effective transacting of banking business unnecessarily. On the other hand, the law should guard against the facilitation of fraud, and exact a reasonable standard of care in order to combat fraud and to protect bank customers and innocent third parties. To hold that a bank is only liable when it has displayed a lack of probity would be much too restrictive an approach. On the other hand, to impose liability whenever speculation might suggest dishonesty would impose wholly impractical standards on bankers. In my judgment the sensible compromise, which strikes a fair balance between competing considerations, is simply to say that a banker must refrain from executing an order if and for so long as the banker is "put on inquiry" in the sense that he has reasonable grounds (although not necessarily proof) for believing that the order is an attempt to misappropriate funds of the company [citation of Alliott J in Lipkin Gorman]. And the external standard of the likely perception of the ordinary prudent banker is the governing one."
[my emphasis]
Unworkable in the particular context of BACS and other payment systems?
(ii) The pleadings
"56. When executing Mrs Philipp's instructions to make funds transfers Barclays acted as her agent, and as such owed her a duty, at common law, as a term to be implied into the current account and/or agency contract and/or tort, and/or pursuant to section 13 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982, to observe reasonable care in and about executing her instructions.
57. Further, and in particular, it would constitute a breach of such duties if Barclays executed the order of Mrs Philipp having failed to make such inquiries as an honest and reasonable man would make.
58. Further, Barclays were under a duty to refrain from executing an order of Mrs Philipp if and for so long as it was put on inquiry, by having reasonable grounds for believing that the order was an attempt to misappropriate funds from Mrs Philipp."
"61. In the premises, in order to discharge its duties of reasonable skill and care as pleaded above, Barclays should have had the following policies and procedures in place by March 2018 which included:
(a) For the purpose of detecting potential APP fraud:
(i) Transactional data and customer behaviour analytics incorporating, where appropriate, the use of fraud data and typologies to identify payments that are at higher risk of being affected by an APP fraud;
(ii) Training employees on how to identify indicators of circumstances around and leading to transactions that are at higher risk of facilitating APP fraud;
(b) For the purpose of preventing potential APP fraud:
(i) Measures to identify people who were vulnerable to APP fraud;
(ii) Where an APP fraud or scam risk has been identified, reasonable steps to gather in further information in order to assess the risk, and provide their customers with impactful warnings, including additional measures whether the customer may be considered to be vulnerable;
(c) For the purpose of stopping potential APP fraud:
(i) Where there is or should be concern that a payment may be affected an APP fraud, take action to delay the payment while the matter is investigated;
(ii) Appropriate investigative steps include, where appropriate, seeking written confirmation as to the rationale for the transaction, including from any third party professionals involved, and invoking protocols which it is inferred are in place with the Police to enable further information to be gained from the Police, and investigating recent account activity; and
(d) For the purpose of stopping or reversing or reclaiming monies the subject of a potential APP fraud:
(i) Where there is or should be concern that a payment may be affected by an APP fraud, take action to delay the payment while the matter is investigated;
(ii) Communicating and/or writing to the recipient bank seeking assurances from them that monies will be held or frozen pending any review."
"Paragraph 58 is admitted, in so far as the test is whether an ordinary and reasonable banker would have had reasonable grounds for believing that the order was an attempt to misappropriate Mrs Philipp's funds. It is denied, if it is alleged, that there was an absolute obligation, even in those circumstances, not to execute the Transfers."
(iii) Novel duty of care?
Conclusion
Lord Justice Coulson:
The Chancellor:
Note 1 In Lipkin Gorman at p1355-H May LJ criticised passages from Selangor and Karak as stating the common law duty of care too highly. They are the same passages I have referred to but I do so to highlight the chain of reasoning itself, rather than the end point reached in those cases. May LJ employed that same chain of reasoning (and it was employed by Steyn J inQuincecare, which May LJ approved). [Back]