Debtors & Recovery | |
Debtors & Recovery | |
3519 VIEWS | |
![]() |
Saturday, September 21,
2019 / 12:39PM / Contributed by Aluko and Oyebode to ILO / Header Image Credit: Business-Review EU
Introduction
It is common
practice for Nigerian banks to grant loan facilities to customers in need of
funds for the purpose of executing a project, to serve as working capital or
for the acquisition of assets and for some loan facilities to be denominated in
foreign currency.
However, a recent
Federal High Court decision has raised doubt as to the legality of foreign
currency-denominated facilities.(1)
In 2007 the plaintiff (a Nigerian company) obtained a credit facility denominated in dollars from the defendant (a Nigerian commercial bank) to finance the completion of an office complex in Lagos. Unable to repay the loan, the plaintiff instituted a suit seeking declarations that:
CBN
Act and CBN Circular
The CBN Act provides that the
naira(4) and the kobo are Nigeria's unit
of currency and that currency notes issued by the CBN are legal tender in
Nigeria at their face value for the payment of any amount.(5) The CBN Act goes further to
criminalise a person's refusal to accept the naira as a payment method.(6)
As such, in 2015 the CBN issued
a circular(7) to Nigerian banks reiterating the
relevant provisions of the CBN Act and warning the general public that it is
illegal to price or denominate the cost of any product or service in foreign
currency. The circular also stated that no agreement between Nigerian persons
should be consummated in any currency other than the naira.
The plaintiff purported to rely
on the CBN Act and the circular and argued that the transaction between the
plaintiff and the bank had contravened the CBN Act, as the transaction was
between two Nigerian entities for the construction of a building complex in
Lagos and, as such, had no cross-border implications. Further, the plaintiff
earned its revenues in naira.
The bank argued that the CBN
Act does not prohibit the grant of dollar-denominated loans. Rather, the CBN
Act prohibits the refusal of the naira as a medium of exchange or payment
method for goods and services in domestic transactions in Nigeria.(8)
The bank
distinguished between the grant of a foreign currency loan in Nigeria and the
use of foreign currency as the legal tender or a medium of exchange for the
payment of goods and services. This distinction is fundamental, as the former
is permissible under Nigerian law while the latter is prohibited.
The bank urged the court to:
Decision
The court held that:
Analysis
of CBN Act, CBN Circular and decision
The CBN Act makes it clear that
the naira is the currency of payment for the domestic supply of goods and
services in Nigeria. However, the designation of the naira as legal tender in
Nigeria does not in itself prohibit the use of any other currency as a medium
of exchange within Nigeria. The designation of a currency as legal tender only
makes such currency the default and predominant medium of exchange. As such,
the CBN Act renders it illegal to refuse the naira as a payment method for
goods and services in Nigeria but does not prohibit parties from mutually
agreeing to denominate the currency of payment for their contract in foreign
currency.
In addition, the
court failed to consider the provisions of other statutes which permit the
conduct of transactions in foreign currency in Nigeria - for example, the
Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) (FEMM) Act, which is
the primary legislation that regulates foreign currency transactions in
Nigeria. The FEMM Act establishes an autonomous foreign exchange market for the
buying and selling of foreign currency in Nigeria, consisting of authorised
dealers (including commercial banks) authorised buyers and the public. The FEMM
Act also provides that any transaction adequately supported by appropriate
documentation is eligible for the purchase of foreign exchange in the market.(9)
The FEMM Act
provides that any person may open, maintain and operate a domiciliary account
designated in foreign currency with an authorised dealer.(10) In addition, the CBN is
empowered by the FEMM Act to authorise a bank to transact banking business,
including the provision of financing,(11) in any foreign currency
deposited with the bank.(12) Thus, it could be argued that
the court erred by failing to consider the FEMM Act in its decision.
In 2015 the CBN
issued a circular(13) prohibiting Nigerian banks from
granting foreign currency loans to customers that solely generate revenues that
are denominated in the naira. Pursuant to this circular, Nigerian companies
that have both naira and foreign currency receivables, or solely foreign
currency receivables, may obtain foreign currency facilities from Nigerian
banks. Therefore, it is obvious that the CBN circular did not place a blanket
ban on Nigerian banks from granting foreign currency-denominated facilities to
Nigerian companies.
Further, the CBN has since issued several guidelines which have endorsed the denomination of domestic transactions in foreign currency.(14) The CBN is statutorily charged with:
To the extent that the CBN has
continued to regulate the provision of foreign currency loans by Nigerian
banks, it arguably recognises the validity and enforceability of such loans.
On the court's decision that
enforcing the terms of the facility would be contrary to public policy on the
non-dollarisation of the Nigerian economy, any public policy must follow the
dictates of the law to be enforceable.(15) As such, to the extent that
Nigerian law permits the grant of foreign currency facilities, any contrary
public policy ought not to be enforced by the courts.
3. Licence to lend in foreign currency
The court also erroneously
interpreted offshore banking activities to include the provision of foreign
currency loans within Nigeria and held that the bank's banking licence did not
permit it to do either. Offshore banking involves the conduct of banking
business outside Nigeria and it is believed that extending foreign currency
facilities to a Nigerian borrower will not amount to conducting business
outside Nigeria.
As such, it can be
argued that the court was wrong to hold that the provision of a foreign
currency-denominated facility by the bank was illegal and unenforceable.
Rather, the court ought to have granted Sections 15, 20(1) and 20(5) of the CBN
Act their ordinary literal meaning and upheld its duty to enforce a contract
duly entered into by the parties. As set out above, because the facility was
not illegal or contrary to public policy, the court ought to have held that a
facility denominated in foreign currency would be enforceable in the currency
in which the obligation was expressed.
Comment
This decision - pending its
being overturned either on appeal or by another court of appropriate
jurisdiction - has unnecessarily created confusion and concern among Nigerian
banks and could affect the disposition of banks to provide financing in foreign
currency in order to assist customers' businesses and projects.
It is hoped that the Nigerian
judiciary will, when faced with a similar matter in future, carefully interpret
the circular, the CBN Act and the FEMM Act so as to reveal the true intention
of the drafters, which may not have been to prohibit the grant of foreign
currency-denominated credit facilities by Nigerian banks.
Footnotes / References
For
further information on this topic please contact Funmilayo Otsemobor,
Mutiat Adeyemo
or Oluwatamilore
Oluwalaiye at Aluko & Oyebode by email (funmilayo.otsemobor@aluko-oyebode.com,
mutiat.adeyemo@aluko-oyebode.com or oluwatamilore.oluwalaiye@aluko-oyebode.com).
Credits
The article Legality
of foreign currency-denominated loans by Nigerian banks first
appeared in ILO Banking on Jul 26, 2019.
Related News
1.
AMCON V Shebah E and P: Parties Meet To Resolve
Issues
2.
Understanding The AMCON And Shebah Loan Dispute
And A Guarantor's Dilemma
3.
CBN Directive On Loan Defaulters: GTB CEO, Segun
Agbaje Shares Perspective
4.
Henceforth, Loan Defaults Will Be Settled With
Deposits From Other Banks
5.
P and ID vs. Nigeria: A Review by Reuben Abati
6.
UK Court Rules In Favour of Pand ID To Seize
$9bn FGN Assets, Nigeria To Appeal Decision
7.
PMB Signs Into Law AMCON (amendment) Act, 2019
That Empowers It Access Financial Details Of Debtors
8.
FG To Enforce Recovery Of N5trn AMCON Debts
9.
ETI Specialized Resolution Company To Appeal
Court Judgment On Honeywell Suit
10.
AMCON and The Burden of Debt Recovery in Nigeria
- Case Study of 4 Debtors
11.
The Evolution Of Business Rescue In Nigeria
12.
AMCON, AMPs and Debt Recovery Turnaround – First
Glance
13.
CBN Publishes Q1 2019 Credit Conditions Survey
Report
14.
CBN, NJI Hold Workshop for Judges on Collateral
Registry
15.
UK's Financial Conduct Authority: Registering As
A Credit Rating Agency Post Brexit
16.
Dissecting the CBNs Real Sector Support Facility
(RSSF) Guidelines
17.
Demand for Secured Lending for House Purchase
Increased in Q2 2018
18.
A Look at Nigeria's' Credit Economy
19.
What Every Borrower Should Know
20.
Bank Credit
Increases in Q1 2018