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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Architects of Wine Ltd v Barclays Bank Plc [2007] EWCA Civ 239 (20 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/239.html Cite as: [2007] 2 Lloyd's Rep 471, [2007] EWCA Civ 239, [2007] BusLR D37, [2007] Bus LR D37 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM the COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice David Steel
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(President of the Family Division)
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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Architects of Wine Limited (in liquidation, a company registered in the Cayman Islands) |
Respondent / Claimant |
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- and - |
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Barclays Bank Plc |
Appellant /Defendant |
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WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr M Black QC and Mr S Andrew (solicitor advocate) (instructed by Messrs SimmonsCooperAndrew) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 28 February & 1 March 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
Section 4 of the Cheques Act 1957
"(1) Where a banker, in good faith and without negligence, -
(a) receives payment for a customer of an instrument to which this section applies; or
(b) having credited a customer's account with the amount of such an instrument, receives payment thereof for himself;
and the customer has no title, or a defective title, to the instrument, the banker does not incur any liability to the true owner of the instrument by reason only of having received payment thereof."
The authorities
"It is, however, in my view, clear that the intention of the subsection and its statutory predecessors is to substitute for the absolute duty owed at common law by a banker to the true owner of a cheque not to take any steps in the ordinary course of business leading up to an including the receipt of payment of the cheque, and the crediting of the amount of the cheque to the account of his customer, in usurpation of the true owner's title thereto a qualified duty to take reasonable care to refrain from taking any such step which he foresees is, or ought reasonably to have foreseen was, likely to cause loss or damage to the true owner.
The only respect in which this substituted statutory duty differs from a common law cause of action in negligence is that, since it takes the form of a qualified immunity from a strict liability at common law, the onus of showing that he did take such reasonable care lies upon the defendant banker. Granted good faith in the banker (the other condition of the immunity), the usual matter with respect to which the banker must take reasonable care is to satisfy himself that his own customer's title to the cheque delivered to him for collection is not defective, i.e., that no other person is the true owner of it. Where the customer is in possession of the cheque at the time of delivery for collection and appears upon the face of it to be the "holder", i.e., the payee or indorsee or the bearer, the banker is, in my view, entitled to assume that the customer is the owner of the cheque unless there are facts which are, or ought to be, known to him which would cause a reasonable banker to suspect that the customer was not the true owner.
What facts ought to be known to the banker, i.e., what inquiries he should make, and what facts are sufficient to cause him reasonably to suspect that the customer is not the true owner, must depend upon current banking practice, and change as that practice changes. Cases decided 30 years ago, when the use by the general public of banking facilities was much less widespread, may not be a reliable guide to what the duty of a careful banker in relation to inquiries, and as to facts which should give rise to suspicion, is today. [at 972]…
What the court has to do is to look at all the circumstances at the time of the acts complained of and to ask itself: were those circumstances such as would cause a reasonable banker possessed of such information about his customer as a reasonable banker would possess, to suspect that his customer was not the true owner of the cheque? [at 973]…
In all actions of the kind with which we are here concerned, the banker's customer has in fact turned out to be a fraudulent rogue, and attention is naturally concentrated upon the duty of care which was owed by the banker to the person who has in fact turned out to be the true owner of the cheque. We are always able to be wise after the event, but the banker's duty fell to be performed before it, and the duty which he owed to the true owner ought not to be considered in isolation. At the relevant time, the true owner was entitled to take into consideration the interests of his customer, who, be it remembered, would in all probability turn out to be honest, as most men are, and his own business interests, and to weigh those against the risk of loss or damage to the true owner of the cheque in the unlikely event that he should turn out not to be the customer himself." [at 974]
"The only evidence of the practice of bankers was given by the manager and the securities clerk of the branch in question of the defendant bank. No evidence that the general practice of other bankers differed from that adopted by the defendant bank was called by the plaintiff company, although they knew well in advance of the trial, as a result of searching interrogatories, exactly what steps the defendant bank had taken, and what inquiries they had made. It seems a reasonable inference that what the defendants did in the present case was in accordance with current banking practice. Nield J accepted that it was, and Mr Lloyd has not sought to argue the contrary. What he contends is that this court is entitled to examine that practice and to form its own opinion as to whether it does comply with the standard of care which a prudent banker should adopt. That is quite right, but I venture to think that this court should be hesitant before condemning as negligent a practice generally adopted by those engaged in banking business."
"the test of negligence is whether the transaction of paying in any given cheque [coupled with the circumstances antecedent and present] was so out of the ordinary course that it ought to have aroused doubts in the bankers' mind, and caused them to make inquiry."
"If banks, for fear of offending their customers will not make inquiries into unusual circumstances, they must take with the benefit of not annoying their customer the risk of liability because they do not inquire."
"I must attribute to the cashiers and clerks of the defendants the degree of intelligence and care ordinarily required of persons in their position to fit them for the discharge of their duties. It is therefore necessary to consider whether a bank cashier of ordinary intelligence and care on having these cheques presented to him by a private customer of the bank would be informed by the terms of the cheques themselves that it was open to doubt whether the customer had a good title to them."
"When, however, the cheque emerges from that multitude and is referred by the clerical staff to management, albeit only as a result of an inquiry after fate, it seems to me that different considerations come into play. The cheque is no longer a mere item following a course in a factory-like process. It no longer becomes impracticable to give it individual attention, or the attention of management. It is referred for just such individual attention, even if the cause of referral is something collateral."
"a bank cannot be held to be liable for negligence merely because they have not subjected an account to a microscopic examination. It is not to be expected that the officials of banks should also be amateur detectives."
The background
"I do not recall the reason why AOW UK wanted to open these foreign currency accounts but it is likely that the reason was because they were in the business of receiving foreign currency cheques, and indeed may even have purchased wine in Euros and so it would have been more convenient and cost-efficient…"
The cheques
"27. But be that as it may, the position overall was this: the relevant account was in the name of AWUK. (2) None of the 400 cheques were payable to AWUK, the payee was variously: Architects of Wine, or Architects of Wine Limited. (3) All the cheques were in United States dollars, drawn on various United States banks, in sums averaging about $3,000, but up to as much as $27,000. And (4) some of them, about 10 per cent of them, gave the payee's address in the Cayman Islands."
"However the system meant that the Relationship Manager never actually saw the cheques only a form stating the amount to be negotiated. Thus, the Bank's system meant that the only person who knew anything about the customer's business, ie the Relationship Manager, was unaware of any of the details of the cheques" (paras 5/6 of Mr Black's skeleton argument on appeal).
"34…I cannot recollect how many sanction requests I actually received from Poole relating to foreign currency cheques presented by AOW UK. These requests would not necessarily have come to me personally, but may have been sent to my assistant, Kate Maggs, who could have dealt with them without reference to me.
35. If I received a sanction request from ICO in Poole, I would look at the amount for which sanction was being requested before making a decision whether to sanction the negotiation…I would not have been likely to refuse sanction for any request to negotiate a foreign cheque or a batch of such cheques with a value under £100,000, unless there had been a prior history of foreign cheques not being paid. I was not aware of any such history in relation to AOW UK. I do not recall thinking that it was unusual to have received sanction requests in respect of US Dollar currency cheques payable to AOW UK. This is probably because I had previously been informed by the company that it would be receiving payments in US Dollars…
37. I would not have expected to receive (nor did I receive) from ICO in Poole copies of any of the foreign cheques in respect of which sanction to negotiate was being requested. Unless ICO was concerned as to AOW UK's title to a cheque, there would have been no reason for ICO to send a copy to me. It was ICO's responsibility to satisfy itself as to this matter and to refer any queries to me. I do not recall that ICO ever expressed any concern to me regarding AOW UK's title to any of the foreign currency cheques which ICO processed on its behalf."
Mr Workman's monitoring of AoW UK
"25.The quarterly Financial History Reports, examples of which are referred to above did not contain any information regarding AOW UK's US Dollar account. If I had wanted to access information relating to the US Dollar account after it opened in June 2004, I would have needed to run a specific search. I do not recall monitoring the activity of the US Dollar account while I was the relationship manager for AOW UK.
26. I am not aware that anyone else within Barclays would have monitored the activity on AOW UK's US Dollar account. It is likely that a specific transaction would only have been flagged on Barclays's system if it had been considered outside the usual course of AOW UK's business. For example, if a very large cheque (say for US$ 1 million) had been paid into AOW UK's account, this would probably have attracted the attention of Barclays's anti-money laundering team because its size would have been considered unusual in the context of AOW UK's business. I do not believe that the relatively low value batches of US Dollar cheques which were regularly being paid into AOW UK's Sterling and US Dollar accounts during the period April-September 2004 would, of themselves, have triggered an alert on Barclays's system."
The fate of the money, and of AOW Ltd
These proceedings
"9. The question of whether the payee name sufficiently matches the account name is treated as a matter of common sense. If the name of the payee on the cheque sufficiently (albeit not precisely) matches the account name – and I regard this as having been the case in respect of cheques made payable to "Architects of Wine" and "Architects of Wine Limited"…then I would expect both the cashier in the branch and the operators at ICO to process the cheque without demur, provided that there is nothing else on the face of the cheque or in the circumstances surrounding its presentation to Barclays for collection that appears irregular or suspicious.
10. I understand from the particulars of claim and from the witness statement of Ian Workman, both of which I have had the opportunity of reading before preparing this statement, that in the present case the cheques were individually of fairly low value, averaging approximately US$ 3,500 each, and that the customer into whose account they were being paid was regarded as (and was) a bona fide trading business which had had accounts with Barclays since approximately 1999. I cannot discern anything in the facts relating to the customer, as set out in Mr Workman's statement, that ought to have warned the Barclays staff who processed these cheques (either in the branch where they were presented or at ICO) for payment to AOW UK that the customer had no right to ask the Defendant to collect the cheques for its account."
The argument and judgment below
"He would merely have received a cheque collection or negotiation form or a currency lodgement form…which would identify the total value of the cheques in the relevant batch, together with the customer's name, which was variously described as Architects of Wine Limited, and Architects of Wine."
"26. It thus remains difficult to see how and when the name on the cheque was in fact checked, since the office that was expected to carry out a check of the payee's name was not a recipient of the cheque."
"28. In my judgment, as I have indicated, the defendants have fallen well short of establishing a prima facie case of due care. First: there is no evidence of any employee who exercised any judgment in the matter. Second: the payee never matched the account name. At best, it is accepted by the defendants that the names on the cheques were ambiguous. Thirdly: the business of AWUK had been described as a mail order wine company by way of adoption of a wine retailing business in Northampton and the only anticipated source of United States dollars from AWUK's point of view was from the parent company in the Cayman Islands."
"30. Disregarding the fact that this response is by no means expressed from any independent source and the difficulty about the sanction being granted without the apparent sight of the cheques themselves, it does not address the issue in the context which I have just described. At the very least I accept the proposition that Barclays have been unable to make good an arguable case that they were not put on notice, and accordingly called upon to make further enquiries, given the circumstances in which these cheques were presented, as well as the content of the same. These points were not touched on in the evidence at all. Given that the burden is on the defendants to disprove negligence, the material is sufficient to conclude that there is no prospect of so doing."
Mr Black's submissions
Discussion and decision
Conclusion
Lord Justice Wilson:
The President: