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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Credit Agricole Corporation and Investment Bank v Papadimitriou (Gibraltar) [2015] UKPC 13 (24 March 2015)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2015/13.html
Cite as: [2015] 2 All ER 974, [2015] Lloyd's Rep FC 301, [2015] UKPC 13, [2015] 1 WLR 4265, [2015] WLR(D) 161, [2015] 2 All ER (Comm) 646

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Hilary Term

[2015] UKPC 13

Privy Council Appeal No 0023 of 2014

 

 

 

 

JUDGMENT

 

 

 

Crédit Agricole Corporation and Investment Bank (Appellant) v Papadimitriou (Respondent) (Gibraltar)

From the Court of Appeal of Gibraltar

 

before

 

Lord Neuberger

Lord Mance

Lord Clarke

Lord Sumption

Lord Toulson

 

JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY

LORD CLARKE

ON

 

 

24 March 2015

 

 

Heard on 20 October 2014

                   


 

 

Appellant

 

Respondent

Terence Mowschenson QC

 

Stephen Moverley Smith QC

John Restano QC

 

Charles Simpson

(Instructed by Myers Fletcher & Gordon)

 

(Instructed by Bird & Bird LLP)

 


LORD CLARKE:

The parties

1.                  This is an appeal from an order of the Court of Appeal in Gibraltar (Sir Paul Kennedy P, Sir William Aldous JA and Sir Mark Potter JA) dated 5 December 2013 allowing the respondent’s appeal from the order of Dudley CJ made on 27 February 2013 dismissing the respondent’s claim. The Court of Appeal entered judgment for the respondent in the sum of US$9.8m but stayed execution of it pending an appeal to the Privy Council.

2.                  The claim was originally put in three ways before the Chief Justice. It was based upon dishonest assistance, knowing receipt and a proprietary right to the proceeds of sale of a collection of art deco furniture known as the Eileen Gray Furniture Collection (“the Collection”). All three bases of claim failed before the Chief Justice. The respondent did not appeal against the dismissal of the claim based on dishonest assistance or knowing receipt. She did however appeal against the judge’s rejection of the proprietary claim. It was common ground that the appellant (“the Bank”) was in possession of the proceeds of sale of the Collection which the respondent could trace into the hands of the Bank, and that her claim would succeed unless the Bank could show that it was a bona fide purchaser without notice of the proceeds of sale of the Collection which had been deposited with its branch in Gibraltar. The central issue in the appeal is whether the Bank was on constructive notice of impropriety and whether the Court of Appeal applied the correct legal test.

The facts

3.                  The facts can be taken from various sources, in particular from two judgments given by the Chief Justice and from the judgment of the Court of Appeal. The first judgment given by the Chief Justice was on a number of preliminary issues and was given on 11 November 2011. His second judgment was the judgment which led to the appeal to the Court of Appeal and the appeal to the Board. The facts are set out by Sir William Aldous in paras 11 to 15 of his judgment in the Court of Appeal, with which Sir Paul Kennedy and Sir Mark Potter agreed. In para 12 he set out verbatim paras 11 to 27 of the second judgment given by the Chief Justice, in which he set out the facts in detail. The facts are not in dispute.

4.                  Alexandros Michailidis (“Alexandros”) was a wealthy man. He was married to Irene and they had two children, Despina Papadimitriou (“Despina”) and Christo Michailidis (“Christo”). Although it appears that Christo had played a significant part in building up the Collection, the Chief Justice held in his first judgment, which was dated 11 November 2011, that the Collection was built up by Alexandros and Irene and that, on the death of Alexandros in 1995, property in the whole Collection became vested in Irene on the basis that she already owned a half share and the other half share passed to Irene on the death of Alexandros. Christo died as a result of a tragic accident in July 1999. Until his death, and at least since 1972, for very many years he had, as the Chief Justice put it, shared a home and life with Mr Robin Symes at 1/3 Seymour Walk in London SW10. Mr Symes continued to live there after the death of Christo.

5.                 In his first judgment the Chief Justice described the fate of the Collection shortly in this way. In the spring of 2000, Mr Symes sold the Collection for US$15m through an art deco art dealer called Robert Vallois, although, as Sir William Aldous observed, he lied about the price to a court in England, saying that it had only been sold for about US$4m. Of the total price of US$15m, the sum of US$4m was paid to a Panamanian company, Xoilan Trader Inc (“Xoilan”), and US$10.4m was paid to another Panamanian Company, Tradesk Limited (“Tradesk”). Of the US$10.4m, the sum of US$10.3m was paid into an account at the Bank through a Liechstenstein foundation called Pataco Foundation (“Pataco”). The monies were deposited in the Gibraltar branch of the Bank and credited to the account of Lombardi Corporation (“Lombardi”), which was a British Virgin Islands Company incorporated at the request of Mr Symes. With the deposit in Gibraltar serving as a guarantee, the Bank’s London branch gave another Symes company, namely Robin Symes Limited (“RSL”), a facility for US$10.3m, which was drawn down and thereafter repaid in full in the sum of US$9,860,278.78 from the guarantee deposit held by Lombardi in Gibraltar. The balance was disbursed elsewhere for Mr Symes’ purposes. All these transactions were part of a fraudulent scheme devised by Mr Symes.

6.                  When, in about the beginning of 2001, Christo's family found out about the sale of the Collection by Mr Symes, they took the view that he had no right to sell it. Proceedings were started in England, Greece and Gibraltar but, like Sir William Aldous, the Board can concentrate on the proceedings in Gibraltar. In about March 2004, the family discovered that part of the proceeds of sale of the Collection had been deposited with the Bank in Gibraltar. On 7 April 2004, proceedings were started against the Bank seeking payment of the amount deposited upon a number of grounds. Two main issues arose, both denied, namely whether the Collection was owned by the claimants and, if that was established, whether the Bank was liable to pay back the money.

7.                  In paras 8 and 9 of his judgment Sir William Aldous describes interlocutory skirmishing between the parties, including one before the Privy Council, which resulted in the two trials before the Chief Justice. In his first judgment, dated 11 November, the Chief Justice gave judgment on three preliminary issues. The first was ownership of the Collection. The original claimant was Irene, claiming as the Board understands it on her own behalf and/or as Alexandros’ heir. In the course of the proceedings before the Chief Justice gave his first judgment, it was suggested that Christo may have owned the Collection and his administrators were joined as second and third claimants. The Chief Justice held that the Collection was owned by Alexandros and Irene and that upon his death his interest passed to Irene, whereafter the administrators of the estate were removed from the action, which continued in the name of Irene until she died, when she was replaced by Despina who is the present respondent. For the purposes of this appeal nothing turns on the various changes of claimant parties.

8.                  The Chief Justice held that the US$10.3m transferred to Lombardi’s account with the Bank’s Gibraltar branch was part of the proceeds of the Collection and that Mr Symes had failed to account for the proceeds of sale. The trial which led to this appeal took place before the Chief Justice between 19 and 29 June 2012 and judgment was given on 22 February 2013.

The judgment of the Chief Justice

9.                  As indicated above, the Chief Justice dismissed the claims in so far as they were based on alleged dishonest assistance and knowing assistance. There is no appeal on those issues, so that the Board is not concerned with them save in so far as they throw light on the question for decision, namely whether the Bank established that when it received the relevant monies it was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice.

10.             The Chief Justice set out the facts in paras 11 to 27 of his judgment. They were reproduced in para 12 of the judgment of Sir William Aldous because they were not disputed in the Court of Appeal. Rather than attempt to summarise them, it is convenient to set them out again here because they are not in dispute. In his judgment, in which the Bank was referred to as CACI, the Chief Justice concluded as follows:

“11.     In March 2000 Symes misappropriated the collection and sold it for US$15m. Also in March 2000 Mr Tavernier a Swiss lawyer, at the time and still, a non- executive board member of Credit Agricole (Switzerland) SA, (a distinct legal entity to CACI) introduced Symes to CACI. According to Mr Tavernier's witness statement tendered pursuant to a hearsay notice he made the introduction qua Symes' lawyer as Symes had informed him that he wished to set up a back to back facility in respect of US$10m which Symes was to receive.

12.       On the 10 March 2000 Despina agreed to temporarily increase by US$3m (until 30 June 2000) her guarantee of RSL indebtedness to Citibank on top of the US$14m and US$1m guarantee she had already given.

13.       At about that time Mr Tavernier introduced Symes to the then head of Private Banking of CACI London, Guillaume de la Borde Caumont (‘Mr de la Borde Caumont’). A letter from Symes to Mr de la Borde Caumont dated 25th April 2000 shows that they met on that day and that Symes sent him an RSL catalogue for an exhibition held in New York.

14.       On the 3 May 2000 Lombardi was incorporated with Mr Johann Jakob and Ms Nina Frittita both of Audina appointed as directors and with Audina as shareholder.

15.       On the 4 May 2000 US$10.4m of the proceeds of sale of the Collection was paid into an account in the name of Tradesk at LGT bank Liechtenstein. On the 8 May 2000 the entire US$10.4m was withdrawn in cash and paid into an account in the name of Pataco, a Liechtenstein foundation acquired by Symes that spring.

16.       On the 6 June 2000 CACI Gibraltar begun completing its Know Your Client (‘KYC’) procedures in relation to Lombardi and on the 7 June Alix de Monspey (‘Ms de Monspey’) an account manager at CACI London sent Ms Frittita account opening forms for Lombardi requesting that they be returned to Mr James Canepa (‘Mr Canepa’) at CACI Gibraltar who amongst other functions was the Legal and Compliance Manager at that branch. These were returned by fax on the same day and hard copies followed by courier. Copies of the passports of the two directors were also supplied together with a confirmation dated 7th June 2000 that Symes was the beneficial owner of the funds held by Lombardi. Lombardi's KYC form which shows Symes as its beneficial owner and giving the UK as his country of origin and residence and reflecting his total net worth as US$50m was finally approved by James Canepa on the 29 August 2000.

17.       On the 8 June 2000 CACI London prepared a credit analysis in respect of a facility of US$11,300,000 in favour of RSL for the purposes of repaying an existing facility with Citibank. The collateral is described as a guarantee of US$10.3m given by CACI Gibraltar and charge over antiques valued at US$6m. The documentation stated to be required includes ‘Guarantee from CAI Gibraltar’ and the recommendation ‘approval is recommended’ was endorsed by Christopher Leonard (‘Mr Leonard’), a Credit Manager at CACI London. The form also contains the comment:

‘... it is envisaged that within a year, the reliance on the antiques will be reduced to nil and we will have a fully guaranteed facility, within standard guidelines.’

18.       By fax dated 9 June 2000 Mr Tavernier provided Mr de la Borde Caumont with a list of assets said to be worth US$12m capable of being pledged as collateral for the facility to be granted to RSL, including an ‘over life-size bronze figure’ stated to be worth US$6m.

19.       Of some significance two further documents generated for the purposes of the facility. Namely, a credit application entitled ‘Credit Application No 872. Data Input Request Branch London Code signed by Ms de Monspey as account manager; Mr Leonard for the Credit Division; Mr de la Borde Caumont qua Local Management and signed and dated 13 June by Andrew Tripanis (‘Mr Tripanis’) the Senior Manager Risk at CACI London and endorsed by him ‘see comments’. The second document is the accompanying typed document in which Mr Tripanis' manuscript comments are to be found. The Credit Application shows RSL as the applicant with Robin Symes stated to be the shareholder. With residence and nationality stated to be UK, which given the layout of the form appears to be a reference to Symes. Noteworthy that in contrast to unsigned drafts of the Credit Application where the net worth of Symes is stated to be $100m+, in the signed form that entry is crossed out. The loan is stated to be for US$11.3m for the purpose of reducing an existing loan with Citibank and the security to be provided is stated to be:

Guarantee by CAI Gibraltar for $10.3m (to remain silent)

Charge over antiques

Unlimited guarantee from Robin Symes’

Flesh is then put on the bones in the Detailed Description of the Proposal attached:

‘INTRODUCTION

Robin Symes commenced as an art dealer in 1960 and has specialised in Ancient Art from 1967 on. His most notable clients have included J Paul Getty, Norton Simon and Maurice Tempelsman. He has formed private collections, often in their entirety, and supplied most major Museums with important acquisitions many of which are now world famous. Robert Symes Ltd is one of the top three European galleries. Amongst recent publications the Ortiz, Leon Levy and Fleischman catalogues all contain material from the gallery in St James's, as do many major institutional exhibitions.

The premises from which the firm has operated since 1971 consists of an entire building of three floors in St James's (Duke of York Street) which was originally founded in 1820. It retains much of its period charm and functions both as a show room and office for the firm.

The client has been introduced by Maitre Tavernier (who is on the board of CAI Geneva) and we are in the process of opening the account. An account in the name of Lombardier (sic) Corp (BVI Company of which Robert Symes is ultimately the beneficial owner) is being opened in CAI Gibraltar and we are to receive a silent guarantee for $10.3m to support this application. The other $1m will be secured by various antiques, details of which will follow including valuations, proof of ownership and insurance. It is envisaged that they will be held in New York and be under the control of the Bank (or an agent). Legal dept have requested assistance/advice from NY lawyers in respect of the taking of the pledge/charge and the findings will be discussed once details are available.

REQUIREMENTS

Mr Symes is requiring a loan of $11.3m to reduce an existing loan at Citibank. All that will remain at Citibank will be a loan of approximately $5m will be secured by a cash deposit of similar amount and other assets in Geneva. From the 1998 accounts it appears that there [are] other bank facilities totalling over £10m (see attached). As security for these facilities, various charges including Debentures and Chattel Mortgages have been given. The charges register have revealed several charges in favour of Citibank NA, Hill Samuel Bank and Field Fisher Waterhouse and these must be fully satisfied prior to drawing of any funds. Confirmation that the antiques being offered to support this application are unencumbered and that they are the personal property of the client will be required.

REPAYMENT

Interests and capital will be repaid by the trading of his stock of antiques.

Repayment: Capital reduction will take place once assets are sold though (sic) normal trading (these assets to be separate from those pledged to us). A repayment schedule of $2m per year will appear in the legal documentation, although it is suggested that the loan will be repaid prior to the final maturity date.

SECURITY

Guarantee by CAI Gibraltar for $10.3m (to remain silent)

Various scheduled items from his collection (see attached schedule).

Personal guarantee of Robin Symes to be supported by one antique (the first item on the schedule) to be under the control of the bank (value $6m) and not to be released until loan has been fully repaid.

FEES

Our margin would be 1.5% over libor.

Arrangement fees: $20.000 (sic)

Five years, fixed for period of three months, although it is envisaged that the repayment will occur before the end of the term.

RECOMMENDATION

The facility is recommended given the security and the very interesting return overall on the relationship for both CAI London and CAI Gibraltar. This is a well known client, who has been a longstanding private banking client of Citibank and will be a good source of introduction to potential clients for PBK. Once the loan has been repaid, the cash deposit will remain in CAI Gibraltar.

[Recommendation is based on documentation satisfactory to our legal department, and furthermore credit dept must be satisfied on the control that we have over the statue, the valuation and the quality of the valuer. The insurance policy on the statue must be for an amount of not less than $6m. Finally we must be satisfied on the provenance of the statue.

(Signed)

Andrew Tripanis

13/6/2000] [In manuscript]’

20.       On the 15 June 2000 approval was obtained from the Credit Committee in Paris subject to ‘DGCR Conditions, and presentation and approval of audit for the Gibraltar side of the transaction’. The person with responsibility for DGCR endorsed the relevant document on the 19 June, from which it may be readily inferred that such approval was given and confirmation of this conveyed to Mr de la Borde Caumont and Mr Leonard in CACI London whilst a post-it attached to the fax marked ‘FAO James Canepa’ evidences that the approval was forwarded to James Canepa at CACI Gibraltar.

21.       CACI London was provided with corporate documentation, resolutions, register of charges and accounts of RSL. Not in dispute that RSL's financial position as reflected in those accounts as at 31 December 1998, are as pleaded and showed:

‘a) A profit for the year of £132,130 (as against a prior year loss of £941,545)

b) net assets of just £517,706

c) amounts falling due to creditors within the year of £10.2m, and

d) stock of 9.4m.

22.       Not in issue that the £10.2m due to creditors included the loan from Citibank which amounted to £9.4m and which would in the normal course of events have been rolled over.

23.       For the purposes of Lombardi opening its account with CACI Gibraltar Mr de la Borde Caumont provided a duly completed standard ‘Letter of Introduction dated 26 June 2000 in which he states that he has known Symes for three months which is defined as ‘the Term’. The relevant passages of the letter then state:

I/We certify that the customer, who informs me/us that he wishes to open an account and commence a business relationship with you, has been known to me/us for the Term. I/We also confirm that the above is his true name and address which correspond to his identity as verified by us. I am/We are in possession of full details regarding the Customer's background and business operations. I/We confirm that the Customer has throughout the Term been honest, respectable and trustworthy in his business dealings with me/us.

I/We further certify to you that I/We are satisfied of the legitimacy of the funds to be held or dealt with by you for the Customer. I/We can confirm that no information is in our possession relating to the source of those funds that would result in me/us making any report under internationally recognised money laundering measures ...’

24.       On or about the 28 June 2000 US$10,299,85 was remitted by LGT Bank in Liechtenstein to CACI Gibraltar via Bankers Trust Company New York endorsed as being sent by ‘one of our clients’.

25.       Notwithstanding the request for US$11.3m in the event, as documented in the facility letter dated 30 June 2000 and signed for RSL on the 13 July 2000, the facility given was for US$10.3m. From email exchanges between Mr Leonard and Mr Tripanis one can surmise that the difficulties in obtaining a ‘good charge over a statue led Symes to request the reduction in the facility to US$10.3 in respect of which sum CACI London was fully secured by virtue of the CACI Gibraltar ‘guarantee’. Also on the 30 June 2000 a board meeting of RSL resolved to open an account with CACI for the purposes of a loan facility for the maximum of US$10.3m; RSL executed a security agreement in favour of CACI London granting a security interest over works of art owned or to be acquired by it and executed a deposit agreement as well as a chattel mortgage over certain antiquities. Although dated 30 June 2000 in the heading, Symes gave a personal guarantee in respect of RSL's indebtedness to CACI on the 13 July 2000. The Chattel Mortgage was subsequently discharged in December 2000 when it emerged that RSL had a similar earlier and subsisting charge in favour of Citibank.

26.       Albeit undated, by virtue of the fax transmission date on the document it appears that, also on the 30 June Lombardi executed a charge over securities and cash in favour of CACI Gibraltar, having executed the previous day a letter of counter indemnity in favour of CACI Gibraltar in the sum of US$10.3m.

27.       Evidently consequent upon completion of the transaction US$3m was on 30 June paid by CACI London to RSL's account with Citibank. It was however not until the 6 July that a shareholders meeting and thereafter a board meeting of Lombardi was held in which it was resolved to approve the transaction documents affording CACI Gibraltar a counter indemnity for it to give the ‘guarantee’ with the directors recording that they had been so instructed by the shareholders and that the same shareholders held shares in both RSL and Lombardi and thereafter resolving that it was in the ‘commercial interests’ of Lombardi for the purposes of its business and within the express objects of the memorandum of association.”

11.             As Sir William Aldous noted in para 13, between 30 June 2000 and the end of January 2001 RSL used the facility in London and on 13 August 2001 the Bank transferred US$9,860,278.78 to London. RSL’s London account was closed on 29 August 2001. Sir William identified the witnesses called on either side in his paras 14 and 15 and concluded that the evidence of Mr Canepa, who was the compliance manager of the Bank, could not be accepted unless supported by the documents but that the other witnesses of fact were honest witnesses. As to the experts, he preferred the evidence of the Bank’s expert, Mr Palette, to that of the respondents’ expert, Mr Hopton.

The issue

12.             Both in the courts below and before the Board the parties accepted that the relevant test was that stated by Lord Neuberger MR in Sinclair Investments (UK) Ltd v Versailles Trade Finance Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 347, [2012] Ch 453 at para 100, which must of course be considered in its context. That context includes paras 97 to 100 of his judgment as follows:

“97.     … the issue is simply whether on the facts known to the banks at the time at which they received the payments in question they had notice of TPL's proprietary right to the money so paid.

98.       In Barclays Bank plc v O'Brien [1994] 1 AC 180, 195-196 Lord Browne-Wilkinson explained:

‘The doctrine of notice lies at the heart of equity. Given that there are two innocent parties, each enjoying rights, the earlier right prevails against the later right if the acquirer of the later right knows of the earlier right (actual notice) or would have discovered it had he taken proper steps (constructive notice). In particular, if the party asserting that he takes free of the earlier rights of another knows of certain facts which put him on inquiry as to the possible existence of the rights of that other and he fails to make such inquiry or take such other steps as are reasonable to verify whether such earlier right does or does not exist, he will have constructive notice of the earlier right and take subject to it.’

99.       In Macmillan Inc v Bishopsgate Investment Trust plc (No 3) [1995] 1 WLR 978, 1014, Millett J, albeit in an addendum to his judgment, touched on the question of the nature of constructive notice in these terms:

‘[the plaintiff] attempted to establish constructive notice on the part of each of the defendants by a meticulous and detailed examination of every document, letter, record or minute to see whether it threw any light on the true ownership of the [relevant] shares which a careful reader - with instant recall of the whole of the contents of his files - ought to have detected. That is not the proper approach. Account officers are not detectives. Unless and until they are alerted to the possibility of wrongdoing, they proceed, and are entitled to proceed, on the assumption that they are dealing with honest men. In order to establish constructive notice it is necessary to prove that the facts known to the defendant made it imperative for him to seek an explanation, because in the absence of an explanation it was obvious that the transaction was probably improper.’

100.    In the present case, as at the three dates identified in para 95 above, TPL's case is that the banks ought to have appreciated that the transfers of money effected on, or as at, those dates was ‘probably improper’ on the ground that the money was beneficially owned by TPL, or at least that the banks ought to have made inquiries before accepting the money. It is accepted by both TPL and the defendants that the issue is to be determined by asking what the banks actually knew, and what further inquiries, if any, a reasonable person, with the knowledge and experience of the banks, would have made, and, in the light of that, whether it was, or should have been, obvious to the banks that the transaction was probably improper.”

13.             In para 109 Lord Neuberger summarised his conclusion as to how the question should be put. He said that the question was whether, on the facts known to the banks on the three dates,

“a reasonable person with their attributes (ie those of a responsible large bank with the benefit of highly experienced insolvency practitioners as their appointed administrative receivers) should either have appreciated that a proprietary claim probably existed or should have made inquiries or sought advice, which would have revealed the probable existence of such a claim.”

14.             The approaches of Lord Browne-Wilkinson and Millett J do not seem to the Board to be entirely consistent. The position has however been resolved in Lord Neuberger’s para 109. As he indicates, it is important for these purposes to distinguish between three different circumstances. The first is where the bank in fact appreciates that a proprietary right in the property probably exists, so that the bank has actual notice of the right. That is not this case. The second is where a reasonable person with the attributes of the bank should have appreciated based on facts already available to it that the right probably existed, in which case the bank has constructive notice of the existence of the right.

15.             The third is where the bank should have made inquiries or sought advice which would have revealed the probable existence of such a right. Here too, the bank would have constructive notice of the right. The question is in what circumstances and to what extent it can properly be said that the bank should have made inquiries or sought advice. The cases suggest various possible approaches. So, for example, Lord Browne-Wilkinson said in the passage quoted in para 12 above:

“In particular, if the party asserting that he takes free of the earlier rights of another knows of certain facts which put him on inquiry as to the possible existence of the rights of that other and he fails to make such inquiry or take such other steps as are reasonable to verify whether such earlier right does or does not exist, he will have constructive notice of the earlier right and take subject to it.”

The suggestion there is that the bank must make inquiries if the bank is on notice as to the possible existence of such a right.

16.             What then is meant by possible? The Board does not think that Lord Browne-Wilkinson can have intended to refer to the mere possibility of the existence of a proprietary right. Although Lord Browne-Wilkinson referred more than once to possibility, he also referred in a similar context to there being “a substantial risk” (at p 196E). As the quotation at para 12 above shows, Millett J also referred to “the possibility of wrongdoing”. After correctly referring to the fact that a bank’s account officers are not detectives, he said that, unless and until they

“are alerted to the possibility of wrongdoing, they proceed, and are entitled to proceed, on the assumption that they are dealing with honest men. In order to establish constructive notice it is necessary to prove that the facts known to the defendant made it imperative for him to seek an explanation, because in the absence of an explanation it was obvious that the transaction was probably improper.”

17.             With respect to Millett J, it is not absolutely clear what he meant. He was correct to say that the starting point is the assumption that the bank is dealing with honest men but it appears to the Board that there is some confusion between the first stage, at which the bank is alerted to “the possibility of wrongdoing” which it appears prompts an inquiry, and the second stage after the inquiries have taken place. If he intended to say that it was only necessary to carry out inquiries if it was obvious that, absent inquiries, the transaction was probably improper, the Board regards that as too high a test. The purpose of any such inquiries is to ascertain whether the transaction was improper. If the facts already known to the bank show that the transaction was probably improper without further inquiries, it appears to the Board that the bank would have had constructive knowledge of that impropriety without further inquiry.

18.             As the Board sees it, the problem is largely resolved by Lord Neuberger’s approach in his para 109. He identifies the relevant persons at the bank and says that the bank will have constructive notice where they should either have appreciated that a proprietary claim probably existed or have made inquiries or sought advice, which would have revealed the probable existence of such a claim. However, the Board thinks that by “proprietary claim” Lord Neuberger must have meant “proprietary right”. In the context of knowing receipt, in Carl Zeiss Stiftung v Herbert Smith & Co (No 2) [1969] 2 Ch 276 Danckwerts LJ said this at p 290:

“In my view, knowledge of a claim being made against the solicitor's client by the other party is not sufficient to amount to notice of a trust or notice of misapplication of the moneys. In the present case, which involves unsolved questions of fact, and difficult questions of German and English law, I have no doubt that knowledge of the plaintiffs’ claim is not notice of the trusts alleged by the plaintiffs.”

In Sinclair Lord Neuberger said at para 108 that he agreed with the judge in that case that the reasoning in the Carl Zeiss case supported the proposition that notice of a claim was not the same as notice of a right. In these circumstances the Board considers that in his next para (109) Lord Neuberger must have intended to refer to the existence of a proprietary right and not a claim.

19.             In para 109, Lord Neuberger identifies two alternative cases in which the bank would have constructive notice of a propriety right. The first is where the bank should have appreciated that a propriety right probably existed. Lord Neuberger does not suggest that further inquiries or advice would be needed in that event, because the bank would have constructive notice of the right. The second is where the bank should have made inquiries or sought advice which would have revealed the probable existence of such a right. He does not identify the state of mind which should have led the bank to make such inquires or sought such advice. It appears to the Board that Lord Neuberger did not intend to contradict Lord Browne-Wilkinson’s approach at the earlier stage.

20.             Thus, on the one hand, the bank’s knowledge of facts indicating the mere possibility of a third party having a proprietary right would not be enough to put the bank on inquiry but, on the other hand, it is not necessary for the bank to conclude that it probably had such a right. The test is somewhere in between. It may be formulated in this way. The bank must make inquiries if there is a serious possibility of a third party having such a right or, put in another way, if the facts known to the bank would give a reasonable banker in the position of the particular banker serious cause to question the propriety of the transaction. This approach seems to the Board to be consistent with that expressed in Lewin on Trusts, 19th ed, 2015, at para 41-134 in connection with commercial transactions. They say that in some commercial contexts a purchaser may be fixed with notice in the absence of actual knowledge, but

“only where in the particular commercial contract involved he has failed to draw inferences which ought reasonably have been drawn in that context or has been put upon inquiry by knowledge of suspicious circumstances indicative of wrongdoing on the part of the transferor, but has failed to make inquiries that are reasonable in the circumstances.”

21.             In the opinion of the Board the principles set out above apply here, subject to this. As stated in para 2 above, it was common ground before the Board (as it was in the courts below) that the respondent is entitled to trace the proceeds of sale of the Collection into the hands of the Bank unless it establishes that it was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice. In short, as Sir William Aldous said at para 33 (quoted below) it was for the Bank to show that it lacked constructive notice of the impropriety of the relevant arrangements. This approach is consistent with that noted in a not dissimilar context in the well known statement of Collins MR in In re Nisbet and Potts’ Contract [1906] 1 Ch 386, 404.

The critical conclusions of the judge

22.             As Sir William Aldous said at para 20, the Chief Justice concluded that, although there could be legitimate argument as to whether or not there should have been more scrutiny, the Bank did not consider that there was anything untoward with the transaction and that putting a structure in place to obtain a facility for the purposes of repaying another bank with an internal guarantee was standard. The fee charged did not raise a red flag and the size of the transaction would not have raised suspicion.

23.             The Chief Justice summarised his conclusions as to dishonest assistance and knowing receipt on the one hand and as to the proprietary claim on the other as follows:

“98.     I am of the view that in principle it was perfectly proper for CACI to rely upon Mr Tavernier as an introducer of substance and given his directorship in CACI Suisse to attach significant weight to his introduction. That said there is substance in the criticism that too much stock was placed upon it and allied to that, there was a somewhat lax approach to KYC, including insufficient inquiry into Symes' wealth. The bank also failed to comply with some of its own internal regulations and no doubt because the transaction was structured through three different branches it did not have a comprehensive overview of it. However, the standards by which the claimant would have had CACI scrutinise the transaction are, when viewed in the context of 2000, the counsel of perfection. It is clear from the evidence that the approach then was very different from what it is now and the level of scrutiny to which transactions were exposed far less stringent. Evident from my review of the evidence that I agree with the opinion of both experts that there was no dishonesty on the part of any individual within CACI. Nor do I find any evidence to adequately support the proposition that any individual within the bank was aware that they had been drawn into a dishonest scheme and then turned a blind eye to it. Indeed the fact that this was a transaction which was structured in two different jurisdictions and was then sanctioned by head office in a third jurisdiction strongly militates in support of my finding that there was no awareness of any wrong doing or unconscionable conduct by CACI staff. Therefore to the extent that the claim is framed in terms of dishonest assistance and knowing receipt it fails.

99.       The proprietary claim requires somewhat distinct consideration. The bank’s defence to that claim is that it was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice. Evident from the foregoing that I accept that the bank acted bona fide, however, the issue remains as to whether it was on notice and what further inquiries, if any, it should have made and whether following such inquiries it would have become apparent that the transaction was improper. The single most serious failing which the Claimant's expert can ascribe to CACI is its failure to make full inquiry from LGT Bank as to the source of the funds. If such inquiries had been made from LGT Bank and it had replied in line with the evidence before me, CACI would have been told that the monies had been transferred by the Pataco foundation of which Symes was the beneficiary. The proceeds of sale of the Collection were laundered at or by the time it was paid into Pataco and further inquiries by CACI as to their source would have disclosed nothing material which would have put them on notice that the transaction was probably improper. The proprietary claim also fails.”

The appeal to the Court of Appeal and this appeal

24.             The Court of Appeal allowed the respondent’s appeal on the basis that there was ample evidence that the bank should have considered the commercial purpose of the scheme before entering into the transaction, that the Chief Justice did not address the commercial purpose and that, if he had done so, he would have concluded that the Bank would have concluded that it was improper. The bank challenges those conclusions in this appeal.

25.             It is submitted on behalf of the bank that the Chief Justice did consider the relevant question. However, the Board is unable to accept that submission. In para 99 (quoted in para 23 above) the Chief Justice considered the questions what further inquiries, if any, should have been made by the Bank and whether, following such inquiries, it would have become apparent that the transaction was improper. Those were correct questions to have asked. However, the Chief Justice then said that the most serious failing which Mr Hopton, the respondent’s expert, could ascribe to the Bank was its failure to make full inquiry from LGT Bank as to the source of the funds. It was submitted to the Court of Appeal (and is submitted to the Board) that the focus of the inquiry should not have been confined to the source of the funds but should have extended, in particular, to the commercial purpose of the transaction.

26.             The Court of Appeal accepted that submission and so does the Board. The Court of Appeal held in para 24 of Sir William Aldous’ judgment that there was ample evidence that at the relevant time a bank which was contemplating entering into a transaction of the type that took place should and would inquire as to the commercial purpose. It focused upon just some of the evidence. Thus Sir William observed that the Gibraltar Credit Application Form of 20 June 2000 contained this comment:

We have been advised by Credit Agricole Indosuez London that they are to establish the Commercial Benefit of the operation of the parties concerned.”

The Gibraltar Credit Committee added the manuscript comment:

“We assume that CAI London has requested the B/O to seek independent fiscal advice - I suggest that the existence of the Business Benefit of the operation be well established prior to the issue of our guarantee ...”

27.             In para 25 Sir William further noted the following. Mr Bertrand de Margerie agreed in cross examination that he would want to understand the purpose of the credit application. On being shown the credit application form, Ms Alix de Monspey agreed that to approve a transaction it needed to be understood what its purpose was. Ms Margaret Garner agreed in cross examination that financial institutions should pay special attention to all complex unusual patterns of transactions which have no apparent economic or visible lawful purpose. Mr Trypanis believed that without obtaining the full information, the transaction left one in a suspicious situation that should have been reported to the MLRO for further investigation. Finally in para 25, Sir William noted that the bank’s expert, Mr Palette, supported the evidence given and summarised above. He agreed that where a client was seeking to open a new account and enter into a transaction, the economic and commercial purpose of the transaction would be part of the overall check. A summary of the evidence on this aspect of the case is attached to the respondent’s case. In the opinion of the Board it supports the conclusions of the Court of Appeal.

28.             The critical conclusion of the Court of Appeal is in para 26, namely that the Chief Justice concentrated on the source of the funds and not what was the commercial purpose of the transaction. The Board agrees with the Court of Appeal that that is indeed what the Chief Justice did. In these circumstances it was open to the Court of Appeal to reach its own conclusions. If the Chief Justice had focused on the commercial purpose of the transaction, he would have had to decide whether the result of a reasonable inquiry into the commercial purpose of the transaction, as opposed to into beneficial ownership, would have made it obvious that the transaction was probably improper.

29.             In para 27 Sir William Aldous noted the submission made on behalf of the bank that appropriate inquiry would not have alerted the bank to anything improper. In short it was submitted (as it was submitted to the Board) that Mr Symes had been introduced to the bank by a distinguished lawyer who was a director of an associated bank. He was thought to be a wealthy art dealer. At the time, the bank had not heard of the Collection and there was no apparent dispute between him and the Michailidis family. The amount of money involved was not extraordinary and the back to back guarantee was quite normal at the time. The judge found there was no dishonesty. There was, it was submitted, nothing suspicious about the transaction. The respondent was not on notice of any impropriety which would suggest further inquiry. In any case further inquiry would not have rendered it obvious that the transaction was improper. The commercial purpose was clear, namely to repay an existing loan from Citibank using funds that belonged to Mr Symes.

30.             The Court of Appeal considered those points in para 27 but concluded in paras 28 to 33 that they were insufficient to rebut the inference it drew that, if the bank had given adequate consideration to the commercial purpose of the transaction, it would have concluded that the purpose of the arrangement was improper. Sir William Aldous said:

“28.     The appellant accepted that the perceived purpose was to [re]pay the Citibank's loan. But that could have been done by a simple money transfer. What actually happened was that Mr Symes had the money paid from Liechtenstein into two Panamanian companies. The money was then withdrawn from Panama accounts and transferred to a Liechtenstein foundation. On 7 June Mr Symes opened a deposit guarantee account in Gibraltar in the name of Lombardi Corporation which had been incorporated on 3 May 2000 and on 28 June the money was remitted to that account. That enabled the bank in London to grant Robin Symes Limited a term loan facility which was used to pay Mr Symes' debts. The web of companies used for the transaction would have involved expense and create doubt as to the commercial purpose. The agreement with the bank was expensive. It required an annual fee of $51,500 over the five year term and a $1,000 arrangement fee. Also an arrangement fee of $20,000 was charged to Robin Symes Limited. The difference between the interest earned on the deposit and the interest payable by Robin Symes Limited was calculated at around £180,000. No doubt the bank had not overcharged, but that did not mean that there was a commercial purpose other than to launder money.

29.       The appellant rightly submitted that the arrangement could not have any commercial purpose other than money laundering. No doubt it was arranged to pay Mr Symes' debt to Citibank, but the use of a web of legal entities and the cost would have alerted a reasonable bank to the improper motive namely to launder the money.

30.       It was suggested that the arrangement could have been perceived to have been carried out for tax purposes. That did not stand analysis as Mr Symes was for tax purposes resident in the United Kingdom. Thus the suggested scheme could only be designed to avoid tax that was payable. It was also suggested that the commercial purpose was or could have been connected with Mr Symes' proposed move to Switzerland. How that could have been was not explained and I can see no reason for the web of legal entities nor the cost unless there was an improper motive. The other reason advanced was that Mr Symes simply wanted to change banks. One look at the commercial purpose would have shown that to be wrong. The change could have been made without the web of legal entities and at no cost.

31.       Counsel reminded the court that anti-money laundering requirements were not as advanced in 2000 as they are today. In this case they were dealing with a client who appeared reputable and rich. They knew the funds belonged to Mr Symes and there was nothing to suggest that he did not have a good commercial reason for the arrangement. But the evidence was clear that in 2000 a bank should satisfy itself that there was a proper commercial reason for the arrangement. That the bank did not do. If it had considered the arrangement, it must in my view have concluded that it was improper (see para 29 above).

32.       Mr Palette suggested in his evidence that the premium fee was relatively normal in banking. That may be the reason why no attempt was made to ascertain the commercial purpose of the arrangement. However it does not address the need of the bank to ascertain the commercial purpose.

33.       The judge should have concluded that the bank should have inquired as to the commercial purpose of the arrangement. If it had done so, it would have realised that such arrangement was improper. That being so, the bank did not establish that it lacked constructive notice of the impropriety of the arrangement and the absence of any right or entitlement on Mr Symes' part to deal with the fund in question. I conclude that the respondent is not able to defeat the appellant's claim.”

31.             Subject to the following, the Board agrees with these conclusions. It was common ground before the Board that in his judgment in the Court of Appeal, Sir William Aldous overstated the position in so far as he referred to the Bank’s knowledge of the so-called “web of companies” used by Mr Symes for the transaction. The Chief Justice found as a fact (at para 87 of his second judgment) that, if the Bank had made enquiries as to the source of the money being paid into Lombardi’s account with the Bank’s Gibraltar branch, it would have been told that the money was transferred by Pataco and that Mr Symes was the beneficial owner; it would not have learned of the existence of Tradesk, which was the company which first received the Appropriated Proceeds. It was accepted on behalf of the respondent that the Bank would not have had knowledge of Tradesk. However, the Board notes that, following enquiries, the Bank would still have known of the existence of several other members of the “web”: Pataco, Lombardi, and RSL. The Board therefore accepts the submission made on behalf of the respondent in her case that this overstatement on the part of Sir William Aldous does not detract in any significant way from the correctness of his overall conclusions.

32.             The Board will accordingly humbly advise Her Majesty that the appeal be dismissed.

LORD SUMPTION:

33.             I agree that this appeal should be dismissed for the reasons given by Lord Clarke. Whether a person claims to be a bona fide purchaser of assets without notice of a prior interest in them, or disputes a claim to make him accountable as a constructive trustee on the footing of knowing receipt, the question what constitutes notice or knowledge is the same. It is a question which has taxed judges for many years. In particular they have been much exercised by the question in what circumstances a person is under a duty to make inquiries before he can claim to be without notice of the prior interest in question. Ultimately there is little to be gained from a fine analysis of the precise turns of phrase which judges have employed in answering these questions. They are often highly sensitive to their legal and factual context. The principle is, I think clear. We are in the realm of property rights, and are not concerned with an actionable duty to investigate. The hypothesis is that the claimant has established a proprietary interest in the asset, and the question is whether the defendant has established such absence of notice as entitles him to assume that there are no adverse interests. The mere possibility that such interests exist cannot be enough to warrant inquiries. There must be something which the defendant actually knows (or would actually know if he had a reasonable appreciation of the meaning of the information in his hands) which calls for inquiry. The rule is that the defendant in this position cannot say that there might well have been an honest explanation, if he has not made the inquiries suggested by the facts at his disposal with a view to ascertaining whether there really is. I would eschew words like “possible”, which set the bar too low, or “probable” which suggest something that would justify a forensic finding of fact. If even without inquiry or explanation the transaction appears to be a proper one, then there is no justification for requiring the defendants to make inquiries. He is without notice. But if there are features of the transaction such that if left unexplained they are indicative of wrongdoing, then an explanation must be sought before it can be assumed that there is none. In the present case, on the facts actually known to the bank, there was no apparent explanation of the interposition of the Panamanian and Liechtenstein entities unless it was to conceal the origin of funds derived from third parties. That was why the bank had to make inquiries before proceeding as if there was an innocent explanation.


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