FHR was significant in several respects: :* The view that an agent should not hold a bribe or commission on trust, because he could not have acquired it on behalf of his principal, is inconsistent with several long-standing English decisions. :*
Tyrrell v Bank of London (upon which
Heiron and
Lister were based) was disapproved, as it failed to consider the previous decision in
Fawcett v Whitehouse, and therefore should not be followed, and :* any subsequent decisions, at least in so far as they relied on or followed
Heiron and
Lister, should be treated as overruled.
Consequences While
Reid was concerned with a criminal situation,
FHR arose from a commercial one. It is argued that a proprietary remedy for bribes and secret commissions can thus be awarded in a variety of situations: :*payments as disguised fees or loans by vendors or landlords to agents, and :*transfers of shares, or payments to a trustee, in order to induce a desired action. The practical implications have been asserted as extending over a broad range: • It encompasses all manner of fiduciary relationships, including employer-employee, company-director, some categories of public official, and trustee-beneficiary. • While the proprietary remedy will allow tracing into the assets of the agent and any relevant third parties in order to claim any fruits of the fraud, a personal claim is still available where it may yield greater value. • The proprietary remedy also attracts ancillary measures, including
freezing injunctions and
Chabra relief. • Under English law, proprietary claims to bribes and secret commissions may not be time-barred under the
Limitation Act 1980, as it may amount to a claim to recover trust property. • As the ruling will allow civil cases to conduct more factual enquiries into the circumstances surrounding secret payments, it will be necessary for agents to disclose such activities more extensively and to obtain appropriate approval from their principals. • As claimant-principals will now be able to assert title to bribes and secret commissions in their agent’s hands, unsecured creditors may lose out in any connected insolvency proceedings. In its judgment, the Supreme Court addressed the divergence of opinions arising in the various
common law jurisdictions: It also gave guidance in assessing the relevance of prior jurisprudence: ==See also==