Jamaica Gleaner

Court clears NCB of responsibi­lity for bank employee’s bad advice

- Tanesha Mundle Gleaner Writer

NATIONAL COMMERCIAL Bank Jamaica Limited, NCB, has won an appeal against a former customer who had previously successful­ly sued the institutio­n after unknowingl­y investing in an unregulate­d scheme on the advice of her personal banker, and suffering losses as a result.

The ex-customer, Sylvia Steens, claimed she lost $2 million, plus interest, after she borrowed $6 million from the bank, a portion of which was placed in the Higgins Warner investment scheme, a now-defunct Argentina-based foreign investment trading club, which at the time was not licensed or registered to offer investment products in Jamaica.

Steens said she was advised by her personal banker and childhood friend, Sandra Cunningham, that she could earn more on her savings of over €100,000 that was then invested with NCB Capital Markets, by putting it into an “investment programme”. She was not told the name of the programme then and was not aware that Cunningham was referring to the Higgins Warner scheme, and had not authorised the investment, she said.

Later, having tried unsuccessf­ully to recoup her funds in the scheme, which collapsed months after she learned of it, Steens sued NCB in the Supreme Court and was awarded damages for what she had lost, plus interest, in August 2013.

The funds and interest covering the period December 18, 2008, to August 5, 2013, at a rate of 7.5 per cent, plus $750,000 for court costs, were placed in escrow in an account at NCB, pending the appeal.

Steens’ argument was that the bank was liable for the negligent investment advice she received from its employee, now ex-employee.

However, NCB was successful in getting the three-judge panel at the Court of Appeal, consisting of Justices Hillary Phillips, Carol Edwards and Marva McDonald-Bishop, to set aside the lower court’s ruling. The panel also ordered that the funds held in escrow be turned over to the bank.

NCB, in its defence, argued that as a licensed commercial bank its services did not include the dispensati­on of investment advice, and that the personal banker was only authorised to convey informatio­n

about its services and to conduct commercial banking transactio­ns for the client.

The bank argued that Steens was aware that the personal banker had no authority to give investment advice, and that Cunningham had dispensed advice to Steens in her personal capacity.

NCB further noted that it was written in the loan applicatio­n that the requested funds was for personal expenses and property purchase and that if Steens suffered any loss or damage, the bank was not responsibl­e.

As part of its evidence, the bank submitted documents, including two signed in May and June of 2007 by Steens for US$4,000 and US$40,000, respective­ly, for investment in the scheme; as well as the loan agreement.

NCB also tendered an undated letter from the personal banker , signed by both parties, in which it was stated that Cunningham would return US$40,000 from the loan, which was invested in the scheme, to Steens.

But Steens countered that at the time when she took out the loan, she had not seen the document outlining the purpose of the loan; and that those were not the reasons for the loans; nor had she given the personal banker permission to utilise any of the loan funds.

She also stated that she had signed the documents without reading them; that she was never informed that Cunningham could not give investment advice to her clients, and trusted her to give advice about money matters.

Steens also maintained that she did not know about the investment scheme or that it was unregulate­d, and that the first time she heard about the company was in November 2007, when she

 ??  ?? NCB Atrium, Trafalgar Road.
NCB Atrium, Trafalgar Road.

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