Banking Law Notes 8
Banking Law Notes 8
Banking Law Notes 8
Lending activities
o Property loan
o Commercial loan
o Financial lease
This kind of relationship happens where the customer gives the banker a
mandate to do certain acts in connection with his account or to permit any
other person to do such act.
Bankers act as their customer’s agents when carrying out standing instructions
or orders, making remittances on their customer’s instructions and when
acting as an agent in collection of bills and other trade transactions. It also
happens when a banker collects the proceeds of cheques for his customer.
Lord Atkinson in the case of Westminster Bank Ltd v Hilton held that as
regards to the drawing and payment of cheques, the relationship between
banker and customer is that of principal and agent.
4. Fiduciary relationship
The bank has fiduciary duties, if the bank acts as advisor, or if the bank acts as
a trustee over trust funds.
Some funds may be the subject of an express trust whilst some may be of a
constructive trust.
Sometimes the court held that a banker owes a fiduciary duty towards its
customer.
An example is where equity imposes a duty on a bank not to take undue
advantage over a customer - Woods v Martins Bank Ltd & Anor,
One of the fiduciary duties applicable to ‘fiduciary’ relationships is the duty to
avoid conflict of interest.
Sometimes, and especially with the diversification of banking businesses, the
bank may act as agent, in which case the question of conflict of interest and
other duties of agents (avoiding secret profits, and so on) may arise.
Banker’s rights
2. Right to interest
Where a customer has an account, which is in credit but owes money to the
banker in respect of another account, the banker may have the right of set-off
or of combining accounts.
In other words, the banker may have the right to reduce his liability to repay
the customer by the amount which the customer owes him, or, to reduce the
amount which the customer owes to him by the credit balance in the
customer’s account.
The banker may exercise the right of set-off only when the money owed to
him is a sum certain, which is due, and where there is no agreement, express
or implied, to the contrary. As a general rule, a banker may only exercise the
right of set-off when all the relevant accounts are held ‘in the same right’.
Rahimah bte Abdullah v Bank Bumiputra Malaysia Bhd [1994] 1 MLJ 477,
High Court.
Banker’s duties
2. Duty to honour his customer’s cheques and not pay without valid authority
A banker has an implied duty to honour his customer’s cheques provided that:
If the banker wrongfully dishonours his customer’s cheques, the customer may
be able to sue him for damages in breach of contract. Where the customer is a
trader, he may be able to recover substantial damages for injury to his
commercial credit without having to prove any actual loss: Rolin v Steward.
If the customer is not a trader, he can recover substantial damages in breach of
contract only if he can prove actual loss: Gibbons v Westminster Bank.
Whether or not the customer is a trader, he or she may be able to recover
substantial damages without proving actual loss by bringing an action for libel
against a banker for wrongful dishonour of a cheque.
In an action for libel the customer must prove that the words used by the
banker when dishonouring the cheque tend to lower the customer ‘in the
estimation of right-thinking members of society generally’.
3. Duty of secrecy
5. Code of conduct
Prohibited conduct
The following conducts are prohibited under the Financial Services Act 2013
and Islamic Financial Services Act 2013: (1) market manipulation; (2)
misinformation and rumour; and (3) insider dealing;
I. Market manipulation
(1) the person does not exercise due care whether the statement
or information is true or false; or
(2) the person knows, or ought reasonably to have known, the
statement or information is false or is materially misleading.
Without limiting the generality of the scope of the Financial
Services Act 2013, the following amounts to making of
statement or dissemination of information which is false or
misleading in a material way and constitutes offences under
section 141(1) (c) of the Financial Services Act 2013:
(a) start and spread rumours to move markets or to deceive
other market participants; and
(b) discuss with any other person without care, unsubstantiated
information which is suspected to be false or materially
misleading and damaging to third parties.
IV. Whistleblowing
Customer’s rights
The customers’ rights are generally three-fold, namely: (1) right to repayment;
(2) right to draw cheques; (3) right to interest.
It is an implied term of the contract between the banker and his customer that
the banker promises to repay the customer ‘a sum equivalent to that paid into
his hands’.
Customer’s duties
Customers have two main duties: (1) duty of taking reasonable care in drawing
cheques; (2) duty to disclose forgeries once he is aware of it.
The customer has an implied duty ‘to exercise reasonable care in executing his
written orders so as not to mislead the bank or facilitate forgery’: Joachimson
v Swiss Bank Corporation; London Join Stock Bank v Macmillan and Arthur,
Lord Haldane in London Joint said that the customer contracts that ‘in drawing
his cheques he will draw them in such a form as will enable the banker to fulfil
his obligations and therefore in a form which is clear and free from
ambiguity’.
In Greenwood v Martins Bank, it was held that the customer has an implied
duty to inform the bank if he discovers that cheques purporting to have been
signed by him have been forged.
United Asian Bank Bhd v Tai Soon Heng Construction Sdn Bhd [1993] 1 MLJ
182, Supreme Court
Proven Development Sdn Bhd v Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp
[1998] 6 MLJ 150, High Court
It is incumbent upon a customer to inform the bank of any irregularity in the
customer’s account as soon as he became aware of it. Failure to do so gives
rise to estoppel. Proven Development Sdn Bhd v Hongkong and Shanghai
Banking Corp [1998] 6 MLJ 150, High Court
1. Attachment
Lord Denning MR explained the nature of attachment proceedings under
English law in Choice Investments Ltd v Jeromnimon
2. Mareva Injuction
4. Unclaimed money
1. Termination by parties
The banker-customer relationship may be terminated by the parties in any one
of the following ways: (1) by mutual agreement; (2) by unilateral act, as where
the customer or the banker gives notice to terminate.
If a customer maintains a current account which is in credit or if he maintains
deposit accounts, he may close the accounts by demanding repayment of the
balance due or standing in the accounts.
If the customer’s current account is overdrawn, he may close his account by
repaying the overdraft. A banker who wants to close his customer’s account
must give that customer reasonable notice.
The period of notice must be long enough to enable the customer, having
regard to all the surrounding circumstances, to make alternative arrangements.
Written notice to close the customer’s account must be given by the bank -
Cheng Kiat v Overseas Union Bank [1984] 2 MLJ 140, High Court.