Skip to content

有緊急法律疑難?請立即致電 (852) 3416 1711 與本行聯繫。

BC&C wins US$2.1m fraud recovery case

Hong Kong, 6 September 2024: BC&C’s expertise in dealing with fraud recovery claims has been further underlined recently in a High Court judgment in favour of our client, a US-incorporated company that fell victim to an elaborate trading scam.

Our client (the “Plaintiff”) paid some US$8.3 million for the shipping of fertilisers from a Russian supplier, of which around US$2.1 million was transferred in three payments to the bank account of a Hong Kong registered company (the second defendant, “D2”). It was then discovered that the agreement was fraudulent and that transportation documents had been forged, hence the shipments never arrived. The US firm immediately reported the deception to the police.

The legal team, led by our Partner Arthur Chan and Associate Jasmine Kwong, assisted the Plaintiff in commencing legal action against D2. Our firm successfully applied for an interim injunction to restrain D2 from removing the funds from Hong Kong. Riding the wave of this initial success, we assisted the Plaintiff to apply for summary judgment under O.14 of the Rules of the High Court to recover the funds and obtain a declaration that the funds were held in trust for the Plaintiff.

D2 resisted this application and attempted to rely on the bona fide (ie genuine) purchaser defence, claiming that the funds had come from a payment agent in Mainland China as a result of business conducted with a Filipino customer. However, Deputy High Court Judge Phoebe Man, in her judgment (which can be found here), reinforces a crucial legal principle for the reliance on the bona fide defence: the normal rule of nemo dat (ie no one can give what they do not have) applies and there is no scope for relying on the bona fide purchaser defence when he or she is direct recipient of the enrichment from the Plaintiff (who has good title) under this specific set of facts, even if D2’s beliefs were credible.

The judge further stated that even if the defence were applicable, D2’s claim was unbelievable and lacked good faith. Consequently, she ordered D2 to repay the US$2.1 million with interest and awarded costs to our client.

Says Arthur Chan, who specialises in criminal litigation and cyber fraud recovery claim: “Deciding whether to apply for a summary judgment requires meticulous planning and consideration due to the high threshold required for the application to succeed. We are pleased that we were able to secure a satisfactory outcome for our client.”

BC&C instructed counsel Adrian Kwan of Temple Chambers for the case.

按此了解本行逾39年的專業法律經驗。

本行的律師團隊友好親切、平易近人,樂於解答您的疑問,並為您提供合理的建議。

聯繫我們

BC&C-contact-us

新聞及知識

了解更多關於本行的工作和其他資訊。訂閱本行的企業通訊,以確保您收到我們的最新消息。

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Beauticians and their duty of care

By Teresa Leung Hong Kong, 20 November 2024: Can you su […]

Read more

Carrian saga provides a trip back in time

Hong Kong, 19 November 2024: The biggest corporate corr […]

Read more

Old habits and an escalating problem

Hong Kong, 13 November 2024: In a fast-moving world, Ak […]

Read more

Focus on AI at Gold Coast gathering

Hong Kong, 11 November 2024: The impact of artificial i […]

Read more

Window of opportunity for insurers

By Jeffrey Chan, Leann Au and Waverly Chan Hong Kong, 7 […]

Read more