7 April 2022
Disputes Quick Read – 93 of 93 Insights
If your business involves dealing in cryptocurrencies, you should be aware that if the legal status of a transaction is not clearly agreed, a counter party may claim that you hold those digital assets on trust for them.
This is a particular risk for cryptocurrencies that are rising in value as a counter party may seek to assert a proprietary claim (ie a right to beneficial ownership over the asset or their traceable proceeds) which may end up being higher in value than the consideration agreed under the contract. You should therefore ensure that you have a clearly drafted agreement for the nature of the transaction -ie, whether is it a loan, a sale and buy-back, a trust arrangement, or something else.
This issue arose in the recent case of Wang v Darby. The court had to determine the proper legal characterisation of two transactions between the parties - Mr Wang and Mr Darby - involving Tezos and Bitcoin. Mr Wang sought to argue that the transactions had given rise to a trust, entitling Mr Wang to a proprietary claim rather than just a personal one. Mr Darby on the other hand argued that the transactions were for the sale and buy-back of the cryptocurrency.
On an application brought by Mr Darby for Mr Wang's claim to be struck out and/or for the court to enter reverse summary judgment, the court held that while it was possible under English law for digital assets such as Tezos to be subject to an English law trust, no trust had been created under this transaction.
There was no formal contract entered into between the parties. The relevant contracts had been formed via the parties' discussion on Telegram. The key terms were as follows:
Following a disagreement between the parties, Mr Wang issued a formal demand for the return of his 400,000 Tezos. Mr Darby failed to return the Tezos, which gave to rise to these proceedings. Mr Wang's case was that the 400,000 Tezos, and/or their traceable proceeds, were held by Mr Darby on trust for him.
The court held that no trust had been created under English law because the contracts between the parties involved essential reciprocity; ie, in order for Mr Wang to become entitled to the return of the 400,000 Tezos, he had to return corresponding value in (or equivalent to) Bitcoins to Mr Darby. This transactional element was inimical to the concept of a trust.
And it was common ground between the parties that the transaction involved a sale of the Tezos to Mr Darby, which Mr Wang could repurchase on restoring the value to Mr Darby of the Bitcoins. Each sale/purchase in the transactions between the parties involved a transfer of ownership – which precluded the existence of a trust.
This is a different legal scenario to that reached of the High Court of New Zealand in Ruscoe & another v Cryptopia Limited (in Liquidation) [2020], in which the court held that a cryptocurrency trading exchange, known as Cryptopia, held the digital assets of its customers on express trust. In that case, the account holders (ie the beneficiaries) were held to have deposited, traded and owned their own cryptocurrency in return for certain fees.
21 March 2024
by Emma Allen, Amy Cheng
14 December 2023
13 December 2023
23 October 2023
by Multiple authors
17 October 2023
12 September 2023
by Tom Charnley
14 August 2023
by Multiple authors
4 August 2023
by Multiple authors
21 July 2023
10 July 2023
1 June 2023
by Multiple authors
3 May 2023
by James Bryden
20 April 2023
by James Bryden
8 March 2023
2 March 2023
14 February 2023
13 February 2023
8 February 2023
19 January 2023
3 October 2022
22 September 2022
by Ben Jones, Emma Allen
9 August 2022
by Nick Maday
25 July 2022
6 July 2022
by Emma Allen
Welcome news for those pursuing fraud claims in the English Courts
28 July 2022
27 July 2022
by Stuart Broom
29 July 2022
17 June 2022
13 June 2022
26 May 2022
31 May 2022
by Multiple authors
4 April 2022
5 April 2022
31 March 2022
by Multiple authors
21 September 2021
by Multiple authors
13 September 2021
6 September 2021
2 August 2021
21 July 2021
15 July 2021
26 May 2021
5 May 2021
21 April 2021
31 March 2021
26 February 2021
by Tim Strong
24 February 2021
20 January 2021
12 January 2021
by Tim Strong
23 November 2020
16 October 2020
23 September 2020
by Multiple authors
7 October 2020
by Nick Storrs
9 April 2020
by Multiple authors
15 April 2020
27 April 2020
by Multiple authors
21 April 2020
11 March 2020
by James Bryden
17 March 2020
by Stuart Broom
26 March 2020
by Multiple authors
26 February 2020
21 February 2020
2 June 2020
16 June 2020
9 July 2020
21 July 2020
3 December 2021
24 November 2021
by Stuart Broom
8 October 2021
10 January 2022
20 January 2022
22 March 2022
7 April 2022
by Multiple authors
by Emma Allen and Samantha Brendish
by Emma Allen and Georgina Jones