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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> American Express Services Europe Ltd v Al-Shabrakah [2015] EWHC 3004 (QB) (22 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/3004.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3004 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
American Express Services Europe Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Talib Jafar K Al-Shabrakah |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr David Rosen (representing Darlingtons Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20-21 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Whipple :
INTRODUCTION
PRELIMINARY ISSUES
Application to vacate trial
Defendant's Application re hearsay evidence
Defendant's application to rely on affidavit evidence
THE CLAIM
"a. At clause 2.1 that the customer consented to charges being applied to his account inter alia where the customer signed a paper slip issued by a merchant or concluded an agreement with a merchant and consented to the merchant charging his account or the customer verbally consented or confirmed his agreement to all or part of a charge after a charge had been submitted.
b. At clause 2.2 that the customer agreed that he could not cancel charges once he consented to charges being applied to his account.
c. At clause 2.3 that to prevent misuse of his account, the customer would sign the card in ink as soon as he received it and keep the card secure at all times.
d. At clause 5.2 that the customer should check his statements for accuracy promptly upon receipt and contact AESEL as soon as possible if he needed more information or had a question about or a concern about any charge on the statement. This was expected to be done within one month of receipt of the statement and if the customer did not question a charge that he believed to be unauthorised or inaccurate within this period, or up to 13 months in exceptional circumstances, he would be liable for the unauthorised charge.
e. At clause 5.2, that if AESEL requested, the customer would promptly provide AESEL with written confirmation of his question or concern about a charge and any information that AESEL required in relation to the question or concern.
f. At clause 6.1, a late payment fee would be payable in the event that the customer delayed or omitted the payment of any charges due in respect of his account. The late payment fee would be payable in the event that the customer still owed payment after 30 days from the statement date (at 3% or USD25 whichever is higher); then 60 days from the statement date if the customer still owed payment (at 1.5% or USD15 whichever is higher) and each month thereafter (at 1.5% or USD 15 whichever is higher) until the customer paid AESEL in full all amounts outstanding on the account.
g. At clause 6.2, if AESEL referred the account to a collection agency (including a firm of solicitors), AESEL was entitled to charge the customer for any actual and necessary costs which AESEL or the agency might reasonably incur in recovering any outstanding amount owed to AESEL. Late payment fees would continue to accrue until the amount owed was paid by the customer including after judgment if the case was taken to court.
h. At clause 8 that the customer was required to pay AESEL all amounts outstanding on his account when due including charges on all cards issued to the customer even if there was no signature or card presented.
i. At clause 20.1, the customer must tell AESEL immediately by telephone if he suspects his account is being misused or a transaction is unauthorised.
j. At clause 20.3, that the customer's maximum liability for any unauthorised charges was USD50 unless he did not comply with this agreement intentionally or because he was grossly negligent or contributed to, was involved in or benefitted from the misuse, in which case he would be liable for the full amount of the unauthorised charge.
k. At clause 20.4, provided the customer notified AESEL in accordance with clause 20.1 and the customer did not contribute to and was not in any way involved in or did not benefit from misuse of the card, then the customer would not be liable to AESEL for any unauthorised charges once he had notified AESEL.
l. At clause 20.5, the customer agreed to cooperate with AESEL including giving AESEL a declaration, affidavit, or copy of an official police report, if AESEL asked.
m. At clause 20.7 if, upon contacting AESEL, the customer provides AESEL with grounds for disputing a transaction, AESEL would initiate an enquiry and place a temporary credit on the account in the amount of the transaction. Once investigations are complete, AESEL will adjust the account accordingly."
The Gold Account
The Centurion Account
No. | Card used | Date | Amount (USD) |
1 | Card 2 | 01/10/12 | 15,110.69 |
2 | Card 2 | 14/10/12 | 30,221.39 |
3 | Card 2 | 04/11/12 | 34,891.97 |
4 | Card 2 | 10/11/12 | 6,106.09 |
5 | Card 2 | 12/11/12 | 12,212.19 |
6 | Card 2 | 12/11/12 | 2,747.40 |
7 | Card 2 | 20/11/12 | 4,579.09 |
8 | Card 2 | 28/11/12 | 108,371.16 |
9 | Card 2 | 02/12/12 | 486.29 |
10 | Card 2 | 02/12/12 | 4,882.12 |
11 | Card 2 | 12/12/12 | 265,948.25 |
12 | Card 2 | 18/12/12 | 93,411.57 |
13 | Card 2 | 18/12/12 | 13,736.99 |
14 | Card 2 | 19/12/12 | 30,221.39 |
15 | Card 2 | 19/12/12 | 30,770.86 |
16 | Card 2 | 20/12/12 | 10,989.59 |
17 | Card 1 | 20/12/12 | 13,736.99 |
18 | Card 1 | 20/12/12 | 30,221.39 |
19 | Card 2 | 21/12/12 | 13,736.99 |
20 | Card 1 | 21/12/12 | 10,989.59 |
(Transaction 9 has since been dropped from this claim, it is conceded to be a mistake by the Claimant.)
Admitted transactions
Disputed transactions - contractual claim
Transactions 8 and 10
Transactions 1-8 inclusive
"Pls note that I did not receive the goods/services pls I need
Urgently to dispute the charge of USD 108,371.16 also to
Dispute any further charges from Al-Tayar effective immediately
Pls dispute from beginning up to date and bring the account in credit after disbute
All al-Tayar transactions from date 1/10/12
N.b Al-Tayar are using manual machine and he rent it to others
Unless he proof all these purchases and received
The goods by us and provide the pictures and serial numbers of
The goods and authenticated by our official signature
Dispute it all
N.b
Pls rectify the account before 25/1/2013"
The 16 disputed Al-Tayyar transactions
"Pls note that we provide dgt dispute dept with all the information they need
Thru secure messages
All confidential information provide it to dgt dispute dept
Mr John Hassan he is account security not his jop dispute solution if he need any information let him refer to dispute dept I do not need conflict in the investigation
If they try to reverse the credit I will raise the issue to my lawyer and high Authorities and might effect Amex reputation" [sic]
Conclusion on the basis of the Contract
Disputed transactions – evidence of fraud
a) Although he asserts in his defence (paragraph 2), that he never did any business with Mr Al-Tayyar, that is manifestly untrue. The Defendant accepts transactions 17, 18 and 20, all of which were with Mr Al- Tayyar.
b) The Defendant originally accepted transactions 8 and 10, which were also with Mr Al-Tayyar. He did so because he was asked by the Claimant to confirm them and explicitly did so, in writing, on 5 December 2012. He would not have accepted those transactions – which were for a substantial sum – unless they were genuine. In my judgment, his initial acceptance represents the truth. His subsequent denial of those transactions is a fabrication. In relation to those transactions also, he had dealings with Mr Al-Tayyar. His assertion to the contrary is yet further devalued.
c) I have already rejected the suggestion that the Defendant's lack of understanding of English caused him to misunderstand at any stage what was going on. His reliance on poor language skills is therefore a further lie.
d) I have already rejected the suggestion that the Defendant can have misunderstood the need for him to sign the Fraud Declaration form: in light of the emails to him which set out clearly why the form was required, his arguments are untenable and are a further fabrication in this case.
e) I have already concluded that the defence put forward in relation to the Gold Account is based on the mistruth that the Claimant had "accepted the position". That was not so.
f) I have already concluded that the Defendant refused to sign the Fraud Declaration form because he knew the various transactions were in fact genuine, and he did not want to get himself into trouble by making a false accusation of fraud.
CONCLUSION