Skip to content
purabalela

purabalela

purabalela

  • Home
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Law
  • Music
  • Toggle search form

Privy Council Refuses To Extend The Quincecare Duty To Protect Third Party Beneficiaries Of Funds Held In A Bank Account – Fund Management / REITs

Posted on June 24, 2022 By admin No Comments on Privy Council Refuses To Extend The Quincecare Duty To Protect Third Party Beneficiaries Of Funds Held In A Bank Account – Fund Management / REITs

24 June 2022

Herbert Smith Freehills


To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

In the recent decision of Royal Bank of Scotland International Ltd (Respondent) v JP SPC 4 and another (Appellants) (Isle of Man)
[2022] UKPC 18, the Privy Council confirmed that a bank would not owe a Quincecare duty to any third party beneficial owners of monies held in an account. In this blog post, we briefly consider this decision’s potential implication to Hong Kong’s legal position on Quincecare duty. For a detailed summary of the judgment and the Privy Council’s reasoning, please refer to an earlier blog post written by our London team here.

Background: Privy Council decision

Under an investment scheme, the appellant investment fund (the “Fund“) provided funds from its own account in the Cayman Islands to an account (the”Account“) held with the respondent bank (the”Bank“). The account was opened in the name of another Isle of Man company (the”Customer“). The Customer was responsible for the disposition and investment of the Funds’ moneys held in the Account under an investment scheme. However, it transpired that the two directors of the Customer had been diverting the funds in the Account to various unrelated third party bank accounts that were ultimately controlled by these directors.

After discovering the misappropriation of funds, the Fund brought an action against the Bank for breach of its
Quincecare duty of care, claiming for losses it had allegedly suffered as a result of the fraud.

As a reminder, under the Quincecare duty of care, a bank ought to refrain from processing payments requested by a customer, if the bank is “put on inquiry”, meaning if there are circumstances suggesting that the order or instruction is an attempt to misappropriate the customer’s funds. This situation often arises where a corporate customer’s bank account is operated by “rogue” authorized signatories. The Quincecare duty of care has been recognized by Hong Kong Courts. See our previous blog posts on the topic here and here.

It was argued that the Bank owed the Fund a Quincecareduty of care by reason of the Bank’s actual or constructive knowledge that the Fund was the beneficial owner of the monies held in the Account.

Upholding the decision of the Court of Appeal of the Isle of Man, the Privy Council ruled that the Bank did not owe such duty to the Fund. The Privy Council emphasized that the purpose of the
Quincecare The duty of care was to protect the bank’s customer, and there was no hint in previous decisions that the duty might be owed to anyone else other than the bank’s customer. Extending the Quincecare duty of care to the Fund in this case would be an incremental development, which would place an unacceptable burden on banks in having to go beyond their contractual obligations with their customers.

Comments

The approach taken by the Privy Council in this judgment is consistent with the narrow approach taken so far by the Hong Kong court. The duty, as currently established in Hong Kong, attempts to strike a balance between protecting bank customers and avoiding to place a duty too cumbersome on banks and financial institutions at the expense of banking efficiency.

Although the claim was not brought by a third party beneficiary, Coleman J’s reasoning in Luk Wing Yan v CMB Wing Lung Bank Ltd [2021] HKCFI 279 (see our earlier blog post here) against finding a Quincecareduty of care (in that case) seems to shed light on how the Hong Kong Courts may rule on this issue and why. Coleman J, in that case, was against finding a Quincecare duty of care whenever a bank has reasonable grounds for believing that a payment instruction forms part of a scheme perpetrated by a person to defraud the customer in any way, because this “would require the bank to be potentially alert to factual circumstances of a very different nature than, and often if not usually wholly unconnected with, the relationship between the bank and its customer.“.

In any event, a refusal to extend the duty does not mean banks can take it easy. For one thing, the Privy Council observed in
JP SPC 4 that the customer itself could well have a claim against the bank if the underlying facts could be established. Banks should continue to be mindful of the obligations to their customers arising from the Quincecare duty of care when processing payment instructions to avoid claims by their customers.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

POPULAR ARTICLES ON: Finance and Banking from Hong Kong

Private Investment Funds In Guernsey

Collas Crill

Guernsey’s Private Investment Fund (PIF) regime recognizes that for some promoters, the nature of the target investors warrants a more flexible, cost-effective and timely approach to regulation and fund launch …

.

Law Tags:Finance and Banking, Financial Services, Fund Management/ REITs, Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration, mondaq, Privy Council Refuses To Extend The Quincecare Duty To Protect Third Party Beneficiaries Of Funds Held In A Bank Account, Trials & amp; Appeals & amp; Compensation

Post navigation

Previous Post: HHS Issues HIPAA Guidance on Remote Communication Technologies for Audio-Only Telehealth
Next Post: Fifth Circuit Finds The COVID-19 Pandemic Is Not A Natural Disaster Under The WARN Act

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022

Categories

  • Finance
  • Law
  • Music
  • Sports

Recent Posts

  • Personal Injury Attorney in Toledo: What All You Need to Know?
  • Best 2022 WordPress Themes For Business
  • Vulnerable House Democrats won’t say if they plan to vote for Manchin Inflation Reduction Act – Halla Back
  • Goddess Molecule Complex Reviews
  • Finau’s celebration, Mcilroy throws shade and Judge Freeman’s decision

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and conditions

Copyright © 2022 purabalela.

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme