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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Donegan & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Financial Services Compensation Scheme Ltd [2021] EWHC 760 (Admin) (29 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/760.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 760 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of (1) EMMET DONEGAN (2) JOANNE ELLIS-CLARKE (3) ALAN CONSIDINE (4) NATHAN BROWN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPENSATION SCHEME LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Richard Handyside QC, Rupert Allen and Rebecca Loveridge (instructed by Dentons UK & Middle East LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 19-21 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Bourne :
Introduction
Confidentiality
Factual background
Legal background
"establish a scheme for compensating persons in cases where … relevant persons are unable, or likely to be unable, to satisfy claims against them".
"… assess and pay compensation, in accordance with the scheme, to claimants in respect of claims made in connection with – (i) a regulated activity carried on (whether or not with permission) by relevant persons …".
"a person who was – (a) an authorised person at the time the act or omission giving rise to the claim against him…took place…"
The definition covers all persons with FCA authorisation, which included LCF at the material time.
"an activity of a specified kind which is carried on by way of business and –
(a) relates to an investment of a specified kind…".
By section 22(5), "specified" means specified in an order made by the Treasury.
"Where an investment firm or credit institution –
(a) provides or performs investment services and activities on a professional basis; and
(b) in doing so would be treated as carrying on an activity of a kind specified by a provision of this Part but for an exclusion in any of articles 15 …, 18 ...,
that exclusion is to be disregarded and, accordingly, the investment firm or credit institution is to be treated as carrying on an activity of the kind specified by the provision in question."
"… those classes of securities which are negotiable on the capital market, with the exception of instruments of payment, such as:
(a) shares in companies and other securities equivalent to shares in companies, partnerships or other entities, and depositary receipts in respect of shares;
(b) bonds or other forms of securitised debt, including depositary receipts in respect of such securities;
(c) any other securities giving the right to acquire or sell any such transferable securities or giving rise to a cash settlement determined by reference to transferable securities, currencies, interest rates or yields, commodities or other indices or measures".
The Defendant's Decision
"FSCS is now ready to announce its key decisions for claims in relation to the London Capital and Finance (LCF) failure. FSCS will protect the 159 bondholders who switched from stocks and shares ISAs to LCF bonds. Customers in this category do not need to take any action. We will pay compensation to these customers by the end of February 2020.
FSCS is unable to protect the 283 bondholders who dealt with LCF before it was authorised to carry out financial services business (on 7 June 2016). We will contact these customers to confirm this.
While FSCS maintains that the act of issuing mini bonds is not a regulated activity, and is therefore not something we protect, we have concluded there will be some customers who were given misleading advice by LCF and so have valid claims for compensation.
However, we expect that many customers will not be eligible for compensation on this basis. We will provide a further communication with details of when and how customers in this category can submit their claims. We will aim to start reviewing these advice claims in the first quarter of 2020. ….
[B]ased on our investigations so far, we believe many LCF customers are unlikely to be eligible for compensation on the basis of misleading advice."
The Grounds of Challenge
1. The Defendant was wrong to decide that the Bonds were not "transferable securities". Bonds, as a class, fall within the scope of that term. On a proper construction of the legislation, the insertion of a no-transfer provision into a bond does not remove it from that class.
2. Alternatively, the no-transfer clauses are "unfair", and therefore ineffective, pursuant to the Consumer Rights Act 2015 ("CRA"). All of the Bonds could have been transferred and, accordingly, qualified as transferable securities ("Ground 2A"). Alternatively, that is true of the ISA Bonds in view of their particular terms and circumstances. Further and in any event, in the case of the ISA Bonds, the effect of the CRA's interpretative provisions is that the no-transfer clauses must be read as subject to the ISA provisions, allowing those Bonds to qualify as transferable securities ("Ground 2B").
3. In the further alternative, on a proper construction of the subscription agreements between LCF and its investors when read subject to the CRA, LCF agreed to provide investors with transferable Bonds and therefore carried on the regulated activity, under RAO Article 64, of agreeing to deal in investments as principal.
The Bonds
The non-ISA Bonds
"3-year
8.0% Income Bonds
(Non-Transferable Securities)
Series 10
A simple and transparent investment".
"Bonds are non-transferable
There is, and will be, no established market for the Bonds as the Bonds are non-transferable and you should not invest if you may need to realise your investment prematurely.
Illiquidity and non-transferability
Investments in unquoted securities … such as these Bonds are illiquid … . The Bonds are non-transferable, so your money is effectively locked in until the Maturity Date of each specific Bond.
…
Financial Services Compensation Scheme
The protections offered by the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 including recourse to the Financial Ombudsman Service and compensation entitlements under the Financial Services Compensation Scheme do not apply. All prospective Investors and Bondholders are strongly recommended to seek advice on the suitability of this investment."
"A detailed presentation of each Bond offered can be found in the Information Memorandum, which has been approved for promotion for the purposes of section 21 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 … by LCF."
"PLEASE NOTE THAT THESE BONDS ARE NOT REGULATED BY THE FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY (FCA) AND IS [sic] NOT COVERED BY THE FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPENSATION SCHEME."
"The Bonds are not transferable. Investors should therefore be aware that they are effectively 'locked in' to the investment for the intended timescale outlined in this Information Memorandum."
"The Bonds will not be listed or traded on any recognised investment exchange. The Bonds are NOT transferable."
"How is a non transferable corporate bond different from a transferable corporate bond?
This Bond is effectively a private borrowing agreement between LCF and a Bondholder that cannot be transferred to someone else. In contrast, transferable corporate bonds are freely tradeable instruments.
Are the Bonds listed?
No, and LCF will not apply for the Bonds to be admitted to trading on any market or exchange.
…
Can I withdraw my money before the end of the term?
No, the Bonds have a fixed term, are not transferable and Bondholders do not have the right to redeem their Bonds prior to the Maturity Date."
"Risks relating to the Bonds
Financial Services Compensation Scheme
The protections afforded by the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 including recourse to the Financial Ombudsman Service and compensation entitlements under the Financial Services Compensation Scheme do not apply. All prospective investors and Bondholders are strongly recommended to seek advice on the suitability of this investment.
Bonds are not regulated securities
The Bonds constitute loans to LCF and are not regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.
Bonds are not transferable
There is, and will be, no established market for the Bonds as the Bonds are not transferable and you should not invest if you may need to realise your investment prematurely.
Illiquidity and non-transferability
Investments in unquoted securities (i.e. investments not listed or traded on any stock market or exchange) such as the Bonds are illiquid (i.e., they cannot be disposed of prior to the Maturity Date so as to realise cash). The Bonds are non-transferable, so your money is effectively locked in until Maturity Date of each specific Bond."
"The Bonds and the Certificates shall be held subject to the terms of this Instrument which shall be binding on the Company and the Bondholders."
"The Bonds shall not be capable of being dealt in on any stock exchange or any other investment exchange in the United Kingdom or elsewhere and accordingly no application shall be made to any such stock exchange or investment exchange for permission to deal in or for an official or other listing in respect of the Bonds."
"7.1 The Bonds are not transferable in whole or in part.
7.2 The Company and the Bondholder shall not be entitled to assign or transfer all or any of its rights, benefits or obligations hereunder save as set out in this Clause 7.
7.3 Any person becoming entitled to a Bond as a result of the death or bankruptcy of a Bondholder or of any other event giving rise to the transmission of such Bond by operation of law may, upon producing such evidence as reasonably required by the Company be registered as the holder of such Bond.
7.4 In the case of death by a registered holder of a Bond, the only persons recognised by [sic] Company as having any title to the Bond are the executors or administrators of a deceased sole registered holder of a Bond or such other person or persons as the Company may reasonably determine and, at the absolute discretion of the Company, the Company may at any time repay all or part of the Bond at par without interest."
The ISA bonds
"8.95%
5 year ISA
Interest paid annually
Series 3".
"The statements in this brochure and the associated Information Memorandum are intended to be a brief description of some of the realities of investing in bonds. Potential bondholders should seek their own specialist advice if they are unsure of their taxation position in relation to investing in bonds.
To hold an ISA investment, you are required to remain eligible under HMRC rules. The interest on our innovative ISA's in [sic] tax free. This means that, while you usually pay income tax on interest from other mini bonds, you don't pay any on our ISA bonds. You don't pay any additional personal income tax or capital gains tax on any money you earn from an innovative finance ISA. You don't need to declare any ISA interest as the ISA manager does this for you."
"Financial Conduct Authority
LCF is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), with FRN 722603. The bonds are not regulated by the FCA."
"These Series 2 ISA, 2-year, 6.5% interest bearing securities described herein and offered by LCF subject to this Information Memorandum."
"Description of the bonds
6.5% (being 5.2% when paid net of basic rate income tax) Sterling corporate bonds due on redemption at the Maturity Date …
Innovative Finance ISA
Investors subject to their own tax position are able to hold the Bonds in the LCF Innovative Finance ISA ('IFISA'), allowing them to benefit from tax free income. The annual ISA allowance can be invested in whole or in part into the LCF IFISA, or existing ISA balances can be transferred into the LCF IFISA.
…
Withholding tax
All payments of principal and interest made by LCF in respect of the Bonds may be made subject to deduction for UK income tax, subject to lawful or any customary exception.
Please note that Bond Holders may have to pay additional tax depending on their own tax position.
…
Interest rate
The Bonds will bear interest from the date of issue at 6.5% (being 5.2% when interest is paid net of basic rate income tax at 20%). … If the Bonds are held in the LCF IFISA the Investor will receive interest on the Bonds without deduction from the date of issue at 6.5%.
…
Early redemption
LCF has the right to redeem any or all of the Bonds in issue early in its discretion (and the Bonds to be redeemed may be selected at the discretion of LCF) and upon such early redemption LCF shall pay to the relevant Bond Holders the principal amount of the relevant Bonds together with accrued interest."
"LCF does not intend to accept any applications for the Bonds and/or the Series 1 ISA Bonds and/or the Series 3 ISA Bonds that are not held in the LCF IFISA."
"I apply to subscribe for a LCF Innovative Finance ISA for the current tax year.
I wish to invest the following amount … in LCF Bonds Series 2 ISA 2 year 6.5% Bonds as specified below in respect of new ISA Investment … and transferred ISA Investment."
"[name] is the registered holder of 200 Series 4 ISA, 8.0% 3-year secured bonds, Interest to be paid quarterly on the last day of March, June, September, December and upon maturity, subject to the Loan Note Instrument."
Ground 1
"(i) First, LCF's bonds were – de facto – not tradable on the capital markets. No secondary market existed for these bonds and they were, in reality, not traded.
(ii) Second, the bonds that the Investigation has seen were, by their terms and conditions, expressed to be 'non-transferable'".[2]
"Bonds and other forms of securitised debt
which are negotiable on the capital market …"
"In recent years more investors have become active in the financial markets and are offered an even more complex wide-ranging set of services and instruments. In view of these developments the legal framework of the Community should encompass the full range of investor-oriented activities. To this end, it is necessary to provide for the degree of harmonisation needed to offer investors a high level of protection."
Ground 2
Ground 2A
"(1) An unfair term of a consumer contract is not binding on the consumer.
…
(3) This does not prevent the consumer from relying on the term … if the consumer chooses to do so.
(4) A term is unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations under the contract to the detriment of the consumer.
(5) Whether a term is fair is to be determined—
(a) taking into account the nature of the subject matter of the contract, and
(b) by reference to all the circumstances existing when the term was agreed and to all of the other terms of the contract or of any other contract on which it depends."
"(1) Part 1 of Schedule 2 contains an indicative and non-exhaustive list of terms of consumer contracts that may be regarded as unfair for the purposes of this Part.
(2) Part 1 of Schedule 2 is subject to Part 2 of that Schedule; but a term listed in Part 2 of that Schedule may nevertheless be assessed for fairness under section 62 unless section 64 or 73[3] applies to it."
"(1) A term of a consumer contract may not be assessed for fairness under section 62 to the extent that—
(a) it specifies the main subject matter of the contract, or
(b) the assessment is of the appropriateness of the price payable under the contract by comparison with the goods, digital content or services supplied under it.
(2) Subsection (1) excludes a term from an assessment under section 62 only if it is transparent and prominent.
(3) A term is transparent for the purposes of this Part if it is expressed in plain and intelligible language and (in the case of a written term) is legible.
(4) A term is prominent for the purposes of this section if it is brought to the consumer's attention in such a way that an average consumer would be aware of the term.
(5) In subsection (4) "average consumer" means a consumer who is reasonably well-informed, observant and circumspect.
(6) This section does not apply to a term of a contract listed in Part 1 of Schedule 2."
"… that it is for the national court to establish all the consequences, arising under national law, of a finding that the term in question is unfair in order to ensure that the consumer is not bound by that term. In that regard, the Court has stated that, where the national court considers a contractual term to be unfair, it is required to disapply it in order that it may not produce binding effects with regard to the consumer, except if the consumer opposes that non-application (see, to that effect, judgments of 30 May 2013, Asbeek Brusse and de Man Garabito, C-488/11, EU:C:2013:341, paragraph 49 and the case-law cited, and of 26 March 2019, Abanca Corporación Bancaria and Bankia, C-70/17 and C-179/17, EU:C:2019:250, paragraph 52)."
"A term which has the object or effect of inappropriately excluding or limiting the legal rights of the consumer in relation to the trader or another party in the event of total or partial non-performance or inadequate performance by the trader of any of the contractual obligations"
and
"A term which has the object or effect of excluding or hindering the consumer's right to take legal action or exercise any other legal remedy" (emphasis added)."
"1) The test of 'significant imbalance' and 'good faith' in article 3 of the Directive (regulation 5(1) of the 1999 Regulations) 'merely defines in a general way the factors that render unfair a contractual term that has not been individually negotiated' (para 67). A significant element of judgment is left to the national court, to exercise in the light of the circumstances of each case.
2) The question whether there is a 'significant imbalance in the parties' rights' depends mainly on whether the consumer is being deprived of an advantage which he would enjoy under national law in the absence of the contractual provision (paras 68, 75). In other words, this element of the test is concerned with provisions derogating from the legal position of the consumer under national law.
3) However, a provision derogating from the legal position of the consumer under national law will not necessarily be treated as unfair. The imbalance must arise 'contrary to the requirements of good faith'. That will depend on 'whether the seller or supplier, dealing fairly and equitably with the consumer, could reasonably assume that the consumer would have agreed to such a term in individual contract negotiations' (para 69).
4) The national court is required by article 4 of the Directive (regulation 6(1) of the 1999 Regulations) to take account of, among other things, the nature of the goods or services supplied under the contract. This includes the significance, purpose and practical effect of the term in question, and whether it is 'appropriate for securing the attainment of the objectives pursued by it in the member state concerned and does not go beyond what is necessary to achieve them" (paras 71-74).'"
"[I]t is of fundamental importance, for the purpose of complying with the requirement of transparency, to determine whether the loan agreement sets out transparently the reasons for and the particularities of the mechanism for altering the interest rate and the relationship between that mechanism and the other terms relating to the lender's remuneration, so that the consumer can foresee, on the basis of clear, intelligible criteria, the economic consequences for him which derive from it."
"… the requirement that a contractual term must be drafted in plain intelligible language is to be understood as requiring also that the contract should set out transparently the specific functioning of the mechanism to which the relevant term relates and the relationship between that mechanism and that provided for by other contractual terms".
Ground 2B
"If a term in a consumer contract … could have different meanings, the meaning that is most favourable to the consumer is to prevail."
Ground 3
Conclusion
Note 1 Individual Savings Accounts or ISAs are a vehicle by which UK residents can make tax-free savings within certain annual limits. The managers of such accounts are required to be approved under the Individual Savings Account Regulations 1998 (SI 1998/1870 as amended) and the accounts themselves must comply with various requirements in those Regulations. [Back] Note 2 Gloster Report, Appendix 5, paragraph 5.13(a). [Back] Note 3 Section 73, which excludes terms reflecting mandatory statutory requirements from the assessment of fairness, is not material for present purposes. [Back] Note 4 As the Defendant points out, offering transferable securities to the public without making available a FCA-approved prospectus would be an offence under FSMA section 85. [Back] Note 5 See Article 15 of MiFID II and the Capital Requirements Regulation 575/2013/EU. [Back] Note 6 The Defendant identifies a second reason why the Bonds were not ISA-eligible and would not have been so even without the non-transfer provisions, namely that the investments did not satisfy the further requirement of reg 8A(4)(b) of the ISA Regulations 1998 to be “facilitated by a person carrying on an activity of the kind specified in Article 25 of the Regulated Activities Order 2001 through an electronic system operated by that person”. The Claimants rely on evidence to show that this assertion is incorrect. It is not necessary or appropriate for this Court to resolve that collateral question. As I explain in the body of this judgment, the non-transfer provisions were inconsistent with the professed ISA status of the Bonds and that could be expected to be of decisive importance for investors. [Back] Note 7 After the hearing, the Claimants’ solicitors also informed me that one of their clients is in a position to contend that LCF agreed to issue bonds to them during the relevant period although those bonds were never in fact issued because regulatory action supervened. The position of that client and perhaps other investors would therefore be affected by my decision on Ground 3, regardless of the outcome on Ground 2. [Back]