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The Courts

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The Courts involvement in the Regulation of Financial Markets Timothy Dutton QC & James McClelland (Fountain Court Chambers) Part I: the PPI judicial review – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Courts


1
The Courts involvement in the Regulation of
Financial MarketsTimothy Dutton QC James
McClelland (Fountain Court Chambers)Part I the
PPI judicial review its wider regulatory
significance
2
The Decision
  • R. (on the application of British Bankers
    Association) v Financial Services Authority
    2011 EWHC 999 (Admin) (Ouseley J).
  • Court rejected the BBAs claim to quash an FSA
    Policy Statement (PS 10/12) and FOS online
    guidance.
  • The Policy Statement had introduced amendments to
    the DISP section of the FSA Handbook which
    provided for the handling of PPI complaints.

3
Why it matters
  • Now the leading authority on how the Courts will
    approach the relationship between high-level
    rules and specific rules within a regulatory
    system.
  • Its relevance is not limited to PPI.
  • Not even limited to FSMA regulation.

4
Structure of this Presentation
  • Part I Regulatory framework
  • Part II The dispute
  • Part III Conclusions wider significance

5
Part I Regulatory framework
6
The different categories of Rules (R)
  • High-level Standards
  • e.g. the Principles of Business.
  • Business Standards
  • e.g. the Conduct of Business Rules.

7
Principles of Business (PRIN)
  • Types of Rule (R), expressed as being
  • a general statement of the fundamental
    obligations of firms under the regulatory system
    (PRIN 1.1.2G).
  • Eleven in total (cf Ten Commandments).
  • 1. Integrity A firm must conduct its business
    with integrity.
  • 6. Customers interests A firm must pay due
    regard to the interests of its customers and
    treat them fairly.
  • 7. Communications with clients A firm must pay
    due regard to the information needs of its
    clients, and communicate information to them in a
    way which is clear, fair and not misleading.

8
The Principles are not actionable by private
persons
  • s.150 FSMA.
  • (1) A contravention by an authorised person of a
    rule is actionable at the suit of a private
    person who suffers loss as a result of the
    contravention, subject to the defences and other
    incidents applying to actions for breach of
    statutory duty.
  • (2) If rules so provide, subsection (1) does not
    apply to contravention of a specified provision
    of those rules. .
  • PRIN 3.4.4R
  • A contravention of the rules in PRIN does not
    give rise to a right of action by a private
    person under section 150 of the Act (and each of
    those rules is specified under section 150(2) of
    the Act as a provision giving rise to no such
    right of action).

9
Conduct of Business Rules COB
  • For insurance ICOBS (previously ICOB).
  • Granular rules specifying particular
    requirements.
  • Detailed rather than general.
  • Prescriptive rather than normative.
  • For example
  • Chapter 4 of ICOB Advising and selling
    standards.
  • Chapter 5 of ICOB Product disclosure.

10
DISP Complaints Handling under the Handbook
  • DISP Dispute Resolution Complaints.
  • Two limbs
  • Firms obligations to handle and determine
    complaints by customers (DISP Chapter 1)
  • FOS jurisdiction to make binding determinations
    where complaints not resolved by firms (DISP
    Chapter 2).

11
Complaints handling by firms(a) The Core
Obligation
  • Core obligation under DISP 1.4.1R, whereby a firm
    must investigate complaints
  • competently, diligently and impartially assess
    fairlywhether the complaint should be upheld
    and what redress may be appropriate
    taking into account all relevant factors .
  • re. fairly is this procedural or substantive?
    (see below).

12
Complaints handling by firms (b) Root cause
analysis
  • a respondent must put in place
    appropriate management controls and take
    reasonable steps to ensure that in handling
    complaints it identifies and remedies any
    recurring or systemic problems, for example, by
  • analysing the causes of individual complaints so
    as to identify root causes common to types of
    complaint
  • considering whether such root causes may also
    affect other processes or products, including
    those not directly complained of and
  • correcting, where reasonable to do so, such root
    causes. (DISP 1.3.3R)

13
Complaints handling by firms - reaching out to
non-consumers -
  • Guidance indicates that firms should consider
    reaching out to non-complainants
  • A firm should have regard to Principle 6
    (Customers' interests) when it identifies
    problems, root causes or compliance failures and
    consider whether it ought to act on its own
    initiative with regard to the position of
    customers who may have suffered detriment from,
    or been potentially disadvantaged by such
    factors, but who have not complained. (DISP
    1.3.5G)
  • Deleted on 1 September 2011 but v. similar
    provision in new DISP 1.3.6G.

14
Part II The Dispute
15
Background to the Dispute
  • By mid-2008 tens of thousands of complaints being
    presented to FOS.
  • Those complaints were, necessarily, first
    considered and rejected by firms.
  • The overwhelming majority were then upheld by
    FOS.
  • Serious concern (on both sides) that firms and
    the FOS were approaching complaints differently
  • FOS was overtly assessing compliance with both
    the ICOB/ICOBS and the Principles.
  • Banks (it appears)were applying ICOB/ICOBS alone.

16
FSA Policy Statement 10/12(August 2010)
  • Amended DISP, by inserting a new Appendix 3,
    entitled Handling Payment Protection Insurance
    complaints.
  • The amendments may be sub-divided into five main
    elements
  • Guidance on the assessment of complaints in order
    to identify whether a breach or failing had
    occurred (DISP App 3.2).
  • Guidance on the approach to considering evidence
    (DISP App 3.3).
  • Guidance on root cause analysis (DISP App 3.4).
  • Evidential provisions on determining the effect
    of a breach or failing (DISP App 3.6).
  • Evidential provisions on the approach to redress
    (DISP App 3.7).
  • The most controversial were (1) and (3).

17
Re. (1) Guidance on the assessment of
complaints
  • FSA annexed to the Policy Statement an Open
    Letter.
  • This purported to remind firms of the appropriate
    standards by setting out a list of 15 common
    failings which occurred in the sale of PPI
    policies.
  • In formulating these common failings (which the
    banks characterised as standards) the FSA
    relied not just upon ICOB/ICOBS but also the
    Principles.

18
Re. (3) Guidance on root cause analysis
  • Amplified the guidance provided at DISP 1.3.3R.
  • Provided that a firm should consider whether the
    complaints disclosed a root cause and if so,
  • consider whether it ought to act with regard to
    the position of non-complainants and
  • If so, take appropriate and proportionate
    measures to ensure that those customers were
    given appropriate redress or a proper opportunity
    to obtain it
  • In particular by considering whether it was fair
    and reasonable to undertake proactively a redress
    or remediation exercise, which might include
    contacting customers who have not complained.

19
BBAs Grounds of Review
  • Can be distilled into three grounds
  • The s.404 argument (against FSA only)
  • The no obligations argument
  • The exhaustion argument.

20
(1) The s.404 argument
  • A challenge to the root cause analysis
    component of the PS.
  • s.404 FSMA provided a statutory procedure for
    ordering past business reviews and the payment of
    redress to non-complainants.
  • This was hedged in by protections for industry
    in particular
  • it required Treasury consent and
  • it was limited to requiring redress for legally
    actionable failures (and therefore not breaches
    of Principles).
  • BBA argued that by the Guidance on root cause
    analysis, the PS was seeking to circumvent
    statutory limitations on s.404.
  • Rejected - Guidance was non-mandatory.

21
(2) The no obligations argument
  • Alleged an error of law because, when formulating
    the common failings, the FSA treated the
    Principles as giving rise to obligations towards
    customers.
  • The effect of PRIN 3.4.4R and s.150(2) FSMA was
    to prevent the Principles imposing any
    obligations as between firms and customers.
  • s.150(2) was therefore
  • not just a procedural bar on court proceedings,
    but
  • a substantive limitation upon obligations being
    owed to consumers.

22
Court rejected the no obligations argument
  • S.150(2) did no more than provide that rules
    could disapply s.150(1). (If rules so provide,
    subsection (1) does not apply to contravention of
    a specified provision of those rules.)
  • And s.150(1) itself merely provided consumers
    with a statutory right of action. (A
    contravention by an authorised person of a rule
    is actionable at the suit of a private person who
    suffers loss as a result of the contravention,
    subject to the defences and other incidents
    applying to actions for breach of statutory
    duty.)
  • The effect of PRIN 3.4.4R was therefore simply
    to disapply a statutory right of action that
    would otherwise arise. It had no wider effect.

23
Wider significance of the rejection of the no
obligations argument
  • Three points.
  • Reasoning logically applies not just to
    Principles but to all Handbook Rules that are
    non-actionable - they remain relevant to DISP.
  • Whenever complaints under DISP are considered,
    the Principles need to be brought into account.
  • Firms must apply the same approach when assessing
    complaints internally under DISP 1.4R, as the FOS
    would under its compulsory jurisdiction.

24
Wider significance of the rejection of the no
obligations argument (contd)
  • Firms had argued that DISP 1.4.1R was merely
    procedural and did not identify standards by
    which to assess complaints.
  • (NB DISP 1.4.1R competently, diligently and
    impartially assess fairlywhether the complaint
    should be upheld and what redress may be
    appropriate taking into account all relevant
    factors ).
  • However, Judge held that
  • when firms have to decide complaints, before
    they can go to the Ombudsman, they have to apply
    in reality and for fair complaints handling, the
    same approach as the Ombudsman would.
  • Significant because, if firms fail to do so, they
    will not only be rejecting a complaint which FOS
    will uphold but be in breach of their own
    regulatory obligations.

25
(3) The exhaustion argument
  • Even if Principles could be treated as creating
    obligations to customers, they could not be
    relied upon to augment or contradict ICOB/ICOBS.
  • This was because ICOB/ICOBS were promulgated by
    the FSA to occupy the field and to crystallise
    the Principles in insurance sales.
  • The FSA could not then resort to the Principles
    to amplify and extend ICOB/ICOBS.

26
The exhaustion argument in practice ICOB
5.3.1R vs Common Failing 15ICOB 5.3.1R
  • ICOB 5.3.1R required that in an oral sale, firms
    had to provide the customer with a Policy
    Summary containing (amongst other things) notice
    of any significant and unusual exclusions or
    limitations.
  • And
  • draw the attention of the retail customer
    orally to the importance of reading the policy
    summary, and in particular the section of the
    policy summary on significant and unusual
    exclusions or limitations.

27
ICOB 5.3.1R vs Common Failing 15Common Failing 15
  • In sales primarily conducted orally, it was
    not enough just to provide important information
    in writing. So, we have found it to be a failing
    where there was not a fair presentation of the
    information during the sales discussion, by, for
    example
  • giving an oral explanation or
  • specifically drawing the customers attention to
    the information on a computer screen or in a
    document and giving the customer time to read and
    consider it.
  • In addition, the requirement to pay due regard to
    a customers information needs and communicate
    information in a clear, fair and not misleading
    way required the firm to provide balanced
    information when making reference to a policys
    main characteristics (whether orally or in
    writing). So, we have found it to be a failing
    if, where the firm described the benefits of the
    policy orally, it did not also provide an
    adequate description of the corresponding
    limitations and exclusions in a way that was
    clear, fair and not misleading, for example
    orally. Further, ICOBS requires that, if a firm
    provides information orally during a sales
    dialogue with a customer on a main characteristic
    of a policy, it must do so for all the policys
    main characteristics.

28
ICOB 5.3.1R vs Common Failing 15The BBAs
argument
  • BBA said that the requirements of ICOB 5 were
    only that significant terms appear in the Policy
    Summary and there be an oral signpost
  • Common failing 15 required firms to specifically
    draw customers attention to the significant
    terms (e.g. refund terms) and give them consumer
    time to read them.
  • This created inconsistency with the ICOB
    requirements.

29
Judges reasoning on the exhaustion argument
in general
  • The Principles were best understood as the ever
    present substrata to which the specific rules are
    added
  • The Principles always had to be complied with.
  • Specific rules did not supplant them and could
    not contradict them.
  • They were but specific applications of the
    Principles to the particular requirements they
    cover.
  • The general notion that the specific rules can
    exhaust the application of the Principles is
    inappropriate. It cannot be an error of law for
    the Principles to augment specific rules. (para.
    162).
  • The real question was not whether specific rules
    exhausted general ones, but whether they excluded
    them
  • This would require the Court to accept that a
    breach of the Principles might go un-redressed,
    even though a specific rule has been complied
    with.
  • The FSA had not, by ICOB/ICOBS, created a
    comprehensive code.
  • Such a code could be circumvented unfairly, or
    contain provisions which were not apt for the
    many and varied sales circumstances which could
    arise.

30
Judges specific reasoning on Common Failing 15
  • Ouseley J. accepted that it went further than the
    specific rules.
  • But it did not contradict them note why he
    concluded that there was no contradiction
  • it requires nothing to be done that specific
    rules forbid, or omitted which they require.
    para. 174
  • The specific rules are silent on the topic of
    how oral presentations should be conducted
    para. 176
  • There can be no contradiction of the specific
    rules unless they are construed as the exhaustive
    expression of all obligations. There is no
    justification for such a construction in the
    absence of clear wording giving effect to a clear
    purpose or intention of such an outcome. The
    overarching or underlying Principles are simply
    being applied where the rules do not cover the
    point. para. 176

31
Part III Conclusions Wider Significance
32
What conclusions can be drawn from the Judges
reasoning on Exhaustion?
  • There appear to be only 3 circumstances in which
    specific rules will limit the application of the
    Principles
  • If the Principles are said to require something
    to be done which the rules actually forbid.
  • Conversely, if the Principles are said to require
    something to be omitted which the rules require
    must be done.
  • If the Principles contain an additional
    requirement in circumstances in which the
    specific rules should be construed as the
    exhaustive expression of all obligations but
    such a construction will only be justified if
    there is clear wording giving effect to a clear
    purpose or intention of such an outcome.

33
Direct Consequences for industry
  • Upstream consequences (when planning their
    systems and operations)
  • Firms cannot treat the specific rules as
    reflecting the limits of their duties to
    customers.
  • This remains true even if they are operating in
    an area governed by detailed and highly
    prescriptive rules.
  • The open-textured provisions require a degree of
    flexibility and responsiveness (rather than a
    tick box mentality).
  • Given that firms engaged in selling mass consumer
    products target economies of scale and
    consistency of customer-treatment through
    tick-box operations, this creates tensions (and
    costs) in implementation.
  • Downstream consequences (when handling
    complaints)
  • Firms must consider the Principles and apply the
    same assessment of reasonableness as the FOS.
  • They cannot take refuge in asking whether or not
    the customer has a cause of action.

34
Wider Regulatory Significance
  • This is a judicial vindication of the Principles
    based approach to regulation which the FSA had
    been pursuing for a number of years.
  • The FSA has emphasised that it expects that
    principles of fairness, to be embedded throughout
    a firms operations and within its culture.
  • In firms with tens of thousands of employees
    (Lloyds Banking Group has over 100,000), this is
    easier said than done.
  • The development within FSMA Regulation of the
    sorts of expectations of professional
    responsibility and client (as opposed to
    customer) care historically associated with the
    professional disciplines (cf medicine and law).
  • The tension is to what extent these requirements
    are scaleable.
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