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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Royal Bank Of Scotland Plc v Haughey & Ors [2008] ScotCS CSOH_142 (06 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_142.html Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_142, [2008] CSOH 142 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION [2008] CSOH 142 |
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OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE in the cause THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC Pursuers; against WILLIAM HAUGHEY First Defender; JOHN McGUINNESS Second Defender; and DOMINIC KEANE Third Defender: ннннннннннннннннн________________ |
Pursuers: Currie, Q.C.,
First
Defender: Ellis, Q.C., Hill; Balfour + Manson LLP
No
representation for Second and Third Defenders
6 October 2008
(1) At page 12, the first defender avers that there was no partnership as alleged. He explains that the documents relied upon by the pursuers were never consented to by him. He continues:
"The purported documents were prepared by Dominic Keane as part of interconnected fraudulent schemes to obtain money from the pursuers for his use. As part of those schemes he also fraudulently used the name of his brother Edmund Keane and Jimmy Jones to obtain funds from the pursuers."
(2) At page 13A-B, having averred that the pursuers had, on the instructions of Dominic Keane, opened an account in the name of the first defender and that funds amounting to г900,000 were transferred into it in September 1998 from Jimmy Jones, the first defender alleges that "Jimmy Jones was another party who was being defrauded by Dominic Keane".
(3) At page 15A-B, in referring to the background against which it was possible for Dominic Keane to put the fraudulent scheme into effect, the first defender says that:
"[Dominic Keane] removed money from accounts of his brother Edmund Keane and Jimmy Jones and borrowed on those accounts. He had mandates to use those accounts but only for the purposes of his brother and Mr Jones. He had a large number of facilities with the pursuers under the umbrella title of the Keane Connection."
(4) At page 16E, the defenders make averments that Dominic Keane had assistance from people within the pursuers, in particular a Mr Reid and a Mr Cavellini. Having averred that it was unlikely that Mr Cavellini would have assisted Dominic Keane without the knowledge and complicity of Mr Reid, the first defender says this:
"Further [Mr Reid] was aware that as part of obtaining finance for his various requirements Dominic Keane was using the accounts of Edmund Keane and Jimmy Jones without their knowledge. He assisted Dominic Keane in hiding transactions on the accounts from the account holders. He assisted Dominic Keane in obtaining a security for the pursuers over Dominic Keane's house without the knowledge of Dominic Keane's wife."
(5) At page 17A-E, the first defender makes averments which go to the likely motivation of Messrs Reid and Cavellini. In a passage which runs over a whole page, he avers that the pursuers appear to have allowed Dominic Keane to operate from many accounts with them and to borrow substantial sums across many accounts; that the pursuers appear to have treated their exposure to indebtedness in which Dominic Keane was involved as "to a large extent connected" and referred to it as the "Keane Connection"; that the Keane Connection was likely to have included an indebtedness fraudulently acquired by Dominic Keane in the name of his brother and Jimmy Jones; that the pursuers appear to have taken into account the wider exposure to the Keane Connection; that Messrs Reid and Cavellini had reason to wish to keep Dominic Keane's financial position afloat; that the frauds committed on the first defender were part of Dominic Keane's wider fraudulent schemes to fund his business and plans; and that Mr Cavellini assisted Dominic Keane in various respects in relation to the accounts of Edmund Keane and Jimmy Jones.
(6) At page 33B, having averred that the pursuers failed to comply with their internal policies and procedures, the first defender goes on to say this:
"It is believed and averred that many of the omissions were because of the involvement of [Mr Cavellini] and [Mr Reid] in Dominic Keane's scheme which was part of his wider fraudulent schemes involving parties other than the first defender and Mr McGuinness."
(7) At page 34D - 35C, the first defender makes averments designed, as I understand it, to enable him to seek recovery of internal reports that must, he contends, have been generated within the pursuers. To this end, the first defender avers that as the pursuers applied pressure to Dominic Keane in January and February 2004 to secure repayment of his indebtedness "across the Keane Connection", Mr Keane wrote to the pursuers' Chief Executive. This led to various meetings, at one of which Dominic Keane was told that his request would be considered "at the highest level" which, he says, must be a reference to the Chief Executive. The first defender avers that for some time thereafter the pressure on Dominic Keane was eased. The inference sought to be drawn is that the senior management of the pursuers must have been provided with reports on the indebtedness of the Keane Connection, including a report explaining that the Bank had not followed its own internal procedures, and why that was so.
(8) At p.35D-E, the first defender avers that "senior employees of the pursuers were at all material times aware that Dominic Keane was involved in fraudulent schemes to obtain funding for his home business interests."
(9) At p.36A-B, the first defender makes the following averment:
"On
(10) At page 37A-B, in the context of the records likely to have been kept by the pursuers, the first defender avers that:
"Several of the pursuers' exposures to the Keane Connection had been accorded 'amber' indicators which indicated that Dominic Keane of the three purported partners was under financial pressure."
(11) At p.38E - 40A there is a passage, running to about a page and a half which seeks, as I understand it, by way of similar fact evidence, to lay the basis for establishing that the pursuers' failure to act in accordance with the ordinary practice of a reasonably prudent banker was a feature not only of the particular account with which this action is concerned but also of accounts in the name of Edmund Keane and of Jimmy Jones.
(12) At p.40C, in support of his averment that the pursuers were not in good faith in relying upon obligations purportedly undertaken by him towards them, the first defender makes a number of points about the pursuers' employees' knowledge of Dominic Keane's fraudulent scheme involving him, and their awareness that he knew nothing of the purported partnership and its purported liabilities. He seeks to rely upon
"the knowledge of the pursuers' senior employees that Dominic Keane was involved in fraudulent schemes together with the other factors averred above and in Answer 4 and [in light of that knowledge] the pursuers' failure to follow normal banking practices".
In so far as this goes further than what has already been averred concerning their knowledge of Dominic Keane's fraud in relation to the first defender, this appears to be an averment relating to the pursuers' knowledge of Dominic Keane's fraud in relation to Edmund Keane and Jimmy Jones.
Where I have quoted verbatim from passages in the Record, I have italicised those parts which the pursuers sought to exclude from probation.
[7] Mr Currie referred me to a number of authorities in support of his submissions, namely Inglis v National Bank of Scotland 1909 SC 1038, Swan v Bowie 1948 S.C. 46, Alexander v Dundee Corporation 1950 S.C. 123 and Strathmore Group Limited v Credit Lyonnais 1994 S.L.T. 1023. In his submissions, Mr Ellis, Q.C., for the first defender, referred in addition to Hart v Royal London Mutual Insurance Co Limited 1956 S.L.T. (Notes) 55, Gallacher v Paton 1909 S.C. (J.) 50, Bark v Scott 1954 S.C. 72 and O'Brien v Chief Constable of South Wales Police [2005] 2 AC 534 at paras.56 and 77.
"it is not evidence against a party of having committed a delict to shew that he has committed delicts of the like description against other persons on other occasions."
The position may not always be
clear cut (c.f. the passage referred to below from the Opinion of Lord Sorn in Swan v
"Now, at first sight, this looks like an attempt on the part of the pursuer to help out his proof by proving that the defender had done the same kind of thing on other occasions to other people and, in that way, to lend probability to his own case. If that were the only significance of the averments I should undoubtedly have to hold them irrelevant, because it is well settled that the Court will not allow a pursuer, who sets out to prove that the defender has perpetrated a certain act against him, to facilitate that proof by proving that the defender has perpetrated similar acts against other people. It is not that such evidence, if allowed, would be without bearing or weight but because, with the object of setting some limit to the scope of proofs and trials, the rule has been adopted that that enquiry into collateral issues is not permissible."
He added (at p.49) the following:
"... when the Court is asked to allow investigation into apparently collateral issues, there is a duty to scrutinise with great care the averments by which such issues are incorporated into the main issue and to be reasonably satisfied that the investigation is necessary in order to give the pursuer a fair chance of proving his case."
A reclaiming motion to the Inner House was refused. Lord President Cooper put the matter thus (at p.51):
"In the ordinary case it is of course well settled - not perhaps so much on grounds of strict relevance as on grounds of convenience and expediency - that 'collateral issues' will not be allowed to be investigated."
"First, the ultimate test of the relevancy of averment or evidence is whether the material in question has a reasonably direct bearing on the subject under investigation. In any particular case, there could come a point at which it would be possible for the court to say that the bearing of some fact was too indirect and too remote properly to assist in deciding the issue in question. Secondly, in my opinion, it is apparent that expediency has a part to play in reaching a decision as to what averment or evidence may be held to be relevant, and what not. Accordingly, judicial discretion is involved to that extent in deciding upon the point at which averments or evidence must properly be excluded as irrelevant. Thirdly, it is unhelpful and possibly misleading to focus attention on the word 'collateral' in the consideration of this kind of question. That aspect of the matter was emphasised by Lord President Cooper in Bark v Scott, 1954 S.C., p.76 ... where he said:
'and I take it, therefore, that the question is one of degree in each case, the determining factor being whether the matters averred are, in a reasonable sense, pertinent and relevant and whether they have a reasonably direct bearing on the subject under investigation, or whether on the other hand they fall to be rejected as being too indirect or too remote'."
I accept Lord Osborne's qualification that it is perhaps unhelpful and possibly misleading to focus attention on the word "collateral"; it is better to ask whether in the particular case the matters averred are "in a reasonable sense, pertinent and relevant and whether they have a reasonably direct bearing on the subject under investigation". I suspect that the difference is more one of terminology than of substance.