About secrets and suspicion
Dr. Dimitrios Karathanassis
In: ContraLegem 2018/2, S. 76ff.
- Mandate content in legal advice and the claim of a bank to be informed about the legal concerns of its customers.
- Under the pretext of due diligence, banks are increasingly demanding information concerning the legal interests of their customers. The following applies: legal professional privilege and the right to privacy must be respected.
Trust and secrets as basic elements of a liberal order
«There is nothing makes a man suspect much, more than to know little» schreibt Francis Bacon und gibt gleich selber den Rat, wie dieser Argwohn zu beheben sei: «and therefore, men should remedy suspicion by procuring to know more» («Suspicion», in: The Works of Francis Bacon, Vol. 1, Philadelphia 1844).
It has not been created and, to the author’s knowledge, has never been the subject of a research project as to whether Francis Bacon’s works belong to the reading canon of the compliance departments of banks. However, it seems that the banks, consciously following Francis Bacon or unconsciously confirming him, try to follow his advice strictly.
A few days ago, as always at this time of year, invoices were sent to clients in my office. As with many other law firms, billing is done quarterly. Bound by the lawyer’s code of conduct, every service from a mandate is recorded. The client has the choice whether he wants these services described in detail and listed as an attachment at the end of the invoice, or the invoice from the list of the individual services wants to receive separately.
Mr. X, a client, received the invoice without details because he wanted it that way . After a few days had passed, Mr. X called somewhat perplexed. He had ordered the payment from his bank in Zurich , but his account manager had contacted him immediately that the payment could only be triggered if the payment had been made. would receive the corresponding lawyer’s invoice. The compliance department had asked for it.
Even before it could be explained to Mr X that he was neither contractually nor legally obliged to do so, he stated that he had already sent the invoice to the bank, but that the compliance The department would still not be prepared to approve the initiation of the payment because it first had to “know” the content of the invoiced services.
It doesn’t happen often, but with this answer, the phone receiver almost fell off. In order to be absolutely sure, the client was asked in writing whether he had really been correctly understood, that the bank would have to know the content of the mandate before it fulfils its contractual obligation to trigger payment. The client confirmed this and was surprised himself. Shortly thereafter, a telephone conversation took place with the bank’s account manager, in which the latter confirmed that the bank needed this information, actually meaning that the bank had it wanted.
Later, when I got home, I dug out my old edition of Bacon . And lo and behold, in the Meditationes Sacrae (1597) 77 the Latin saying “ipsa scientia potestas est” appears, which his secretary at the time, Thomas Hobbes, later described in Leviathan as ” scientia potentia est” (albeit with less conviction). It is this quote by Bacon that has been quoted again and again since then and is a popular subject of PowerPoint presentations and hobby state philosophers sometimes more, sometimes less taken out of context. .
So, according to Bacon, knowledge is power. Consequently, power can be protected by protecting the knowledge that constitutes power. This elementary task falls to the mystery. From the biblical beginning, in which God deliberately does not reveal to Adam and Eve the knowledge of the world, to the priestly castes of ancient Babylon and Egypt, to the medieval monasteries , about the emergence of state secrets parallel to the emergence of nation states and continuing to this day, secrecy has a power-establishing task. In the context of the rule of law, however, this power-establishing task changes to a power-limiting function: secrets apply not only to the powerful, but above all to the powerful. state power. The individual is protected by the state power by providing him with secrets materially (e.g.: personal rights, informational self-determination, banking secrecy), but also formally (e.g. Prohibition of torture) and granted as part of his rights. The concession of the state to its citizens to have secrets is the consensual foundation of the rulers with the governed in a constitutional state. . The omniscient and thus omnipotent state is rejected, because without omniknowledge and without the right to omniknowledge there is no omnipotence . The possibility of secrets then allows a distinction to be made between public and private life. While in the former everyone can see and participate, the latter forms a protection of the individual from his fellow human beings. Between these two pillars, protection from the state and protection from fellow human beings, lies the breeding ground for individual freedom in a liberal constitutional state. Crucially, this area protected by secrets must not arouse suspicion. If he does do so for reasons of curiosity or the desire for power, which is all too human and should not be preventable, the law intervenes and protects over the Mystery through the individual. The individual is thus shielded against the suspicion of the state and his fellow human beings.
Back to the bank and its compliance department. One could now go on for pages about the impudence of a Swiss bank to want to see the bill of a Swiss law firm, about the lack of a contractual or legal The fact that if the bank’s request had gone directly to the lawyers, it would have been an incitement to violate attorney-client privilege The fact that this generates costs for the customer, the fact that it is not the bank’s task to prevent the execution of payment orders from the receipt of payment orders other information that does not affect the customer-bank relationship dependent on 78. However, there is enough literature available on all this, the position of legal professional privilege in a constitutional state has been dealt with in detail and the mania of the banks, with which they carry out their supposed duties of care is now also well known.
The finger was therefore placed on suspicion. It is this suspicion, together with the now almost hysterical fear, that is most likely to shake the foundations of the liberal constitutional state. Should suspicion of the state and the citizens among themselves (again) increasingly be legally permitted and should the suspicious be given further “rights of intervention” vis-à-vis the secret bearers, then The legal seed, always understood as a construct of defensive rights, which create spaces of freedom, should quickly face its end . The image of man on which our legal system is based is based on an individual who is not accountable for his actions, as long as they take place within the legally permissible framework. Neither to the state nor to its fellow human beings.
The much-heard formula “I have nothing to hide”, which understands the call for state intervention rights, especially after terrorist attacks, is the gateway for individual restrictions. . Apart from the fact that everyone has something to hide (and sometimes just shame), this formula admits to the suspicion of having a legal justification. The sufficient suspicion in criminal law, without which no coercive measure may be ordered, is symbolic of the fact that it takes more than suspicion to uphold the right to Keeping secrets.
However, while the suspicion of the state has been increasingly reduced since the beginning of the Enlightenment (admittedly with major relapses in the 20th century). Voices are becoming louder who loosen these barriers for fear of terror and catastrophes. want. This conflict is far from over and its outcome is likely to be groundbreaking for the continued existence of the liberal constitutional state of Western character. The fact that things can be done differently is shown by the bonus system now implemented in China, which evaluates every private and public action of individuals in relation to state doctrine and consequently rewards or sanctions them with bonus points.
In the shadow of this conflict, however, increasing requirements on banks and financial intermediaries have led to state control mechanisms, with all their restrictions, now being transferred to private individuals. . The verification of incoming and outgoing money has become mandatory for banks and is understood as a measure against terrorism and money laundering. However, the fines and the negative consequences in the form of image losses due to media crucifixion, which threaten in the event of failed due diligence obligations, lead to banks becoming more and more cautious and so that they become more and more suspicious. Under the umbrella of compliance, they assume state control tasks and become state implementing agents. However, while the state can only become active in the event of a concrete suspicion, banks also refuse harmless and completely legal transactions if they themselves would, nota bene at its own discretion, take risks. As a result, the ” chilling effect” achieved extends control by the state and, in fact, by private individuals in areas protected by secrets. Incidentally, private individuals themselves have discovered the possibility of playing off the suspicion (especially of the banks) against the law: in another case, a private law dispute of another client a London court a world wide freezing order (WFO) against his assets. Of course, this instrument cannot be used directly in Switzerland, 79 requires exequatur. However, the other side threatened to send the WFO and all documentation directly to the banks in order to bypass the state courts. enforce. These account freezes would not have been carried out by state courts or public prosecutor’s orders, but by the intervention of the banks at their own discretion. The result , however , would be the same and it shows the results to which the increasing suspicion can lead. Only the indication that such an approach would trigger criminal consequences prevented the other side from doing so in this case. How the banks, on the other hand, would react if they were “only” informed about the ruling by telephone and without presenting the WFO remains to be seen.
Finally, the “side effect” should be mentioned that the information, which is demanded and obtained out of suspicion, itself has a value per se. This is particularly evident in this specific case. The mandate content required by the bank is unrelated to the statutory due diligence obligations. Rather, the bank demanded additional information to which it was not entitled in order to generate more knowledge about its customer. But if knowledge is indeed power and Bacon is right, then it quickly becomes clear how this knowledge puts the bank in a privileged, i.e. more powerful position . It may freeze the client’s funds and refuse payments without consultation and without being requested by the courts, for example in the case listed here only hypothetically, that the content of the mandate contains advice in criminal proceedings and that this fact alone is uncomfortable for the bank . The customer can defend himself against this approach, but this defense is costly and time-consuming and even a victory in court does not guarantee the It is not possible to survive the facts of the case unscathed.
So it remains the case : If suspicion is allowed, it unfolds a power-protecting function, because in order to (supposedly) counter it, the abandonment of secrets is required, which actually should have a power-limiting effect. Francis Bacon himself wanted to combat suspicion with more knowledge. For historical reasons, however, he has not been able to recognize the elementary necessity of secrets for the existence of the constitutional state . And yet, in the introduction to his text on suspicion, he seems to have sensed that sooner or later the suspicion of the state restricts freedom and leads to dictatorship. leads: “They [suspicions] dispose kings to tyranny [… ].»
Incidentally, the bank paid after being emphatically informed that the content of the mandate was legally protected and that it had no claim to know it.