Stupid banker cases

Revision as of 08:13, 12 March 2021 by Amwelladmin (talk | contribs)

There is a series of what we can only describe as the “stupid banker” cases, which involve bankers negligently paying money to people they didn’t mean to, who then refuse to give it back.

Case Where When Customer’ Instructions Was there indebtedness? When due? Authority? Outcome
Banque Worms New York 1989 Do NOT pay Yes, but disputed because payee insolvent. Immediately Not relevant to restitutionary defence. Payee kept the money
Citibank v Brigade New York 2021 No instructions Yes Not till 2023 Ostensible, but not relevant to restitutionary defence. Payee kept the money
Barclays v Simms UK 1979 Do NOT pay Yes Trade invoice Ostensible, not actual Payee returned the money
Lloyds v Independent Insurance UK 1998 Do pay, as soon as I have cleared funds Yes Immediately Actual Payee kept the money.
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The cases are all quite similar in facts — the boil down to, well, bankers paying money on their customers’ behalves to creditors and later regretting it, but the courts come to wildly different conclusions, and it is quite the epistemological struggle to hold all of them in your head at once. So here is our handy cut-out-and-keep guide.

The following factual variables:

  • Where did this happen? Possible answers: New York or the United Kingdom;
  • What were the customer’s instructions? Possible answers: do pay the money; definitely do not pay the money; and no particular instruction (so prima facie, do not pay the money, but room for that presumption to be rebutted)
  • Did the customer actually owe the payee anything? Possible answers: yes and no;
  • If the customer did own the payee, when was the debt due? Possible answers: On the day it was actually paid; at some point in the next month at the customer’s discretion (i.e., a normal trade invoice); at a specified date in the future (such as a loan repayment date)