The Royal Court of Guernsey recently ruled in Jakob International Inc v HSBC Private Bank (CI) Limited on an application by HSBC to strike out a claim brought by its customer, Jakob. Although this was decided without a substantive hearing of all facts, the Court’s decision provides some guidance on terms and conditions (T&Cs) and their interpretation in the light of AML obligations.
Background
- Jakob opened an account with HSBC in April 2013.
- About a month later HSBC made a suspicious activity report to the FIU. The suspicion was based on information which HSBC became aware of concerning an authorised representative of Jakob.
- In 2015, Jakob through one of its directors instructed HSBC to close its account and transfer the funds to a third party.
- HSBC refused due to its “statutory obligations which [the bank] cannot discuss with [Jakob]”.
- HSBC later wrote to Jakob stating that on “legal and regulatory grounds outside the Bank’s control the Bank is not able to correspond with [Jakob] at present”.
- HSBC kept the FIU informed.
- The FIU notified HSBC that it was not authorised to end its relationship with Jakob.
- HSBC, therefore, argued that under the Criminal Justice (Proceeds of Crime) (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law, 1999, it was prohibited from transferring or otherwise disposing of the funds in Jakob’s account.
- HSBC claimed that Guernsey’s AML regime intervened in the contractual relationship between a bank and its customer.
- Therefore HSBC’s compliance with the regulatory and criminal law regimes provided HSBC with a defence against Jakob’s claims.
- HSBC insisted that its terms and conditions state that regulatory and AML requirements overrode its contractual obligations to its customers to comply with instructions in such circumstances.
Legal Proceedings
- Jakob commenced proceedings claiming damages and the amount standing to the credit of its account and/or an order that HSBC transfer the monies held in the account to Jakob or to Jakob’s order.
HSBC’s terms and conditions
- When Jakob opened its account in 2013, HSBC’s then standard T&Cs were applicable. New terms were introduced by HSBC from 1 January 2014.
- HSBC claimed that the new T&Cs were sent to Jakob but it was not able to provide any evidence.
- In the absence of any clarity as to which T&Cs were applicable the Judge had to consider both sets.
JUDEGE FOUND
- The Judge found that the 2013 T&Cs were not sufficiently widely drafted to exclude liability for claims brought by its own customer.
- He also found that the 2014 T&Cs, if applicable, would not necessarily have achieved a different result.
Lessons
- This case was about whether or not Jakob’s claim had any prospects of success.
- The Court found that Jakob had a realistic chance.
For institutions, the following points are key:
- Firms should take greater care when changing their T&Cs and repapering their clients.
- Attention was drawn to the inconsistency between the changes pointed out to customers in an appendix to a mailshot from HSBC and the actual changes in the T&Cs.
This ruling raises a number of questions,
- one of which is how claims should be framed by an aggrieved customer against his bank for refusing to comply with his instructions.
For banks however, it is a reminder that
- T&Cs should be reviewed regularly to ensure that they keep up with the latest judicial interpretation.
In this case, the question seems to be –
- are the T&Cs sufficiently widely drafted to deal with claims by customers for the return of their own monies?
Extracted from Collas Crill newsletter http://bit.ly/2aLPBXq