Combining Accounts - Final
Combining Accounts - Final
Combining Accounts - Final
Presented by:
Ayebare John Vianny
David Baryehuki Mwesigye
Overview:
- Introduction
- Legal meaning of combining accounts
- When accounts could be combined
- Combining accounts and insolvency
- Combination of accounts in customers’ interests.
Introduction
The relationship between the banker and customer involves mutual
obligations and duties. The duties and obligations are largely implied
from unwritten contract between the parties. The contractual relationship
was summarized by Paget in his book, Paget’s law of Banking, 8th Edn
and in Sudan Commercial Bank v El Sadiq Mohammed El Sadiq,
1967(1) A.L.R.Com 35, Woods v Martins Bank Ltd (1959) 1 Q.B.
55…..(p124). It is a contract which is undefined and unwritten by the
parties. It is only implied. In other words it is a quasi-contract. The
contents of the contract cannot be stated with certainty and may contain
elements which may not be in the contemplation of the customer
according to Paget (supra). But he doubted whether the reverse applied
because the banker must be presumed to be aware of obligations
imposed on it in its own business. Can it be said then, that one of the
terms of this unwritten contract, which may not be in the contemplation
of the customer, is that the banker has an automatic right to combine or
consolidate its customers’ accounts? Is there an obligation on the
banker to keep its customers’ accounts separate?
Lord Denning has given an emphatic positive answer to the first
question and therefore by implication a negative one to the second
question, in Halesowen Presswork and Assemblies Ltd v Westminster
Bank Ltd (1970) 3 W.L.R. 625.
Brief Facts:
The Plaintiff company had an account with the defendant bank which was
overdrawn. The Bank informed the company that such an account was
unacceptable. So the company agreed with the bank to open account
number two which would be kept in credit balance such that the company is
sold as a going concern. However, the company letter invited the meeting
of the creditors who consequently resolved to wind up the company. But
before the winding up, the bank received a cheque which was paid to the
second account of the company. The liquidator brought a suit contending
that the company was not in any better position than other creditors, and
thus could not use the credit on the second account to cover part of the
overdraft.
Held: Lord Denning said that suppose a customer has one account in
credit and another in debt, does the banker have the right to combine
accounts so that he can set-off the debt against the credit and be liable
only for the balance? The answer to this question is, yes. The banker has
a right to combine the two accounts whenever it pleases and to set-off
one against the other unless it has made some agreement, express or
implied, to keep them separate.
However, Swift J. in Greenhalgh v Union Bank of Manchester (1924)
2 K.B. 153,
Brief facts:
The Plaintiffs who were cotton brokers sold to Winson and Company, who
were cotton merchants in Manchester, cotton to be in turn sold to certain
firms of spinners, and received bills from them in payment. Winson and
Company then paid the bills into the defendant bank. The plaintiff alleged
that the bills had been specifically appropriated to meet their own bills
which Winson and Company had accepted from them. The bank denied
that such communication had been made and that indeed, on maturity, the
proceeds were paid to Winsons Account and were swallowed by an
existing overdraft.
Held:
Swift J. took the opposite view stating that if a banker agrees with its
customer to open two or more accounts, it has not, without the assent of
customer, any right to move either assets or liabilities from the one to the
other, the very basis of its agreement with its customer is that the
account shall be kept separate.
According to the Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Edn, Vol 2; Under
the heading –Combining different Accounts-the authors state that
unless precluded by agreement express or implied from the course of
business the banker is entitled to combine different accounts kept by the
customer in his own right, even though at different branches of the same
bank and to treat the balance as the only amount really standing to his
or her, if any, credit. Under the heading Set-off or lien on Deposit and
Current Accounts, the authors say that unless precluded by agreement or
course of business, a banker is entitled to combine all accounts kept in
the same right by the customer whether at the same branch or different
branches and to exercises its lien or set or set-off for the resulting
balances.