Friday, 17 July 2020

DUTY TO REPORT TO POLICE UNAUTHORIZED/FRAUDULENT TRANSFERS ON CUSTOMERS' ACCOUNTS


INTRODUCTION

Sometimes when bank customers in Nigeria suffer from fraudulent or unauthorized withdrawal of funds from their bank accounts, they are told by their banks to report the incident to the Police. For instance, in the case of IORPUU KELVIN MSUGHTER v. UNITED BANK FOR AFRICA (UBA) PLC, Suit No. MHC/302/18, decided by the Benue State High Court of Justice, Makurdi, Mr. Iorpuu, while at home received several debit alerts on his phone. He rushed to make a complaint to the bank the following day and after about a month the bank informed him that it was someone that transferred funds from his account and that he should make a complaint to the Police.

Is it really the duty of the customer to report such cases of fraudulent withdrawals to the Police or that of the bank? In order to answer this question, it is crucial to briefly examine the nature of the banker/customer relationship.

THE NATURE OF THE BANKER/CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP

The account balance on your bank account is known as a demand deposit in banking parlance. The deposits are used by the banks to leverage lending. Many people mistakenly believe that their account balance shows how much they own. This is not so. Instead, it shows what the bank owes you. You merely hold a claim on cash. Therefore, bank deposits are actually loans.

Your cash forms the foundation for a banking system that loans out your account balance with the promise that they will keep some of it on hand and return all of it if you ask for it. This is called fractional reserve lending and this is what all banks do.

The old English case of FOLEY v. HILL (1848) established the legal precedent, for fractional reserve banking. In that case the court held that:
"Money, when paid into a bank, ceases altogether to be the money of the principal; it is then the money of the banker, who is bound to an equivalent by paying a similar sum to that deposited with him when he is asked for it…The money placed in the custody of a banker is, to all intents and purposes, the money of the banker, to do with it as he pleases; he is guilty of no breach of trust in employing it; he is not answerable to the principal if he puts it into jeopardy, if he engages in a hazardous speculation; he is not bound to keep it or deal with it as the property of his principal; but he is, of course, answerable for the amount, because he has contracted, having received that money, to repay to the principal, when demanded, a sum equivalent to that paid into his hands."
In the Nigerian case of WEMA BANK PLC v. ALHAJI IDOWU FASASI SOLARIN OSILARU (2007) 5 iLAW/CA/I/168/2004 it was held Per OKORO, J.C.A. (Pp. 16-17, paras. F-F) that:
“It is now settled that the relationship between a banker and customer where a bank accepts money either in current or deposit account from its customer, is a relationship of debtor and creditor. The relationship is essentially contractual. See Balogun v. National Bank of Nigeria Ltd (1978) 11 NSCC,35, Afribank Nig Plc v. A.I. Investment Ltd (2002) 7 NWLR (pt 765), 40. Now, in view of the nature of relationship between the banker and its customer and of the contract that exists between them, the customer has neither the “custody” nor “the control” of monies standing in his credit in an account with the bank. What the customer has is a contractual right to demand repayment of such monies. See Purification Tech. Nig. Ltd. v. A.G. Lagos State & 31 0rs (2004) 9 NWLR (pt 879), 665; Yusuf v. A.C.B. (1981) 1 SC 74, (1981) 12 NSCC 36. It seems to me therefore that the customer’s monies in the hands of the banker are not in the custody or under the control of the customer. Such monies remain the property in the custody and control of the banker, and payable to the customer when a demand is made. This is so because if anything happens to the money thereafter e.g. theft of the money, it is the banker and not the customer that bears the loss. Where the customer makes a demand e.g. by issuing a cheque and the banker refuses to pay, it is my view that the customer’s cause of action is in damages under their contractual relationship. See Afribank (Nig) Plc v. A.I. investment Ltd (supra).”
In a nutshell, when you deposit funds in a bank account, those funds are no longer yours!

CONCLUSION

Having briefly examined the nature of the relationship between the bank and the customer it is submitted in conclusion that money in the bank remains the property of the bank and when there is a case of its theft through fraudulent withdrawals or unauthorized withdrawals or transfers, the duty falls on the bank and not the customer, to report such theft or unauthorized withdrawal/transfer to the Police. More so, that the bank, has more information and facts regarding the movement of such funds and would therefore be in a better position to make a complaint to the Police or law enforcement agencies.

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