In my opinion these kinds of cases will keep reoccurring with regards to Spreadbetting and CFD’s.
As I’ve stated before, on several threads, I cannot see how many of the T&C’s of a Customer Agreement can be enforced by the firms if these terms attempt to break or alter the effects of other laws (such as contract law).
In an earlier post someone referred to the discovery of an old violin in a shop. If it was marked at £5 and you took it to the till there is absolutely no obligation for the shop keeper to sell it for £5.
HOWEVER... if the shop keep accepts your offer of £5 (based on his ‘Invitation To Treat’ ie marking it £5) then a contract is formed and the violin is yours. Transfer of ownership occurs, in law, at that point. There is nothing in law which allows the shop keeper to somehow reverse the contract and claim back ownership if he subsequently finds out that there was a pricing error – the shop keeper must consider the price which he is contracting at PRIOR to accepting the clients offer.
Now, correct me if I am wrong, doesn’t a spreadbet become enforceable from the moment that it is entered into? It is, in the eyes of the law, a contract like any other. This puts the spreadbetting firms in a particularly difficult situation if they have already issued a contract note which specifies that a clients bet (to open or close) has been accepted – legal title to that contract has passed to the client.
The firms obviously place certain T&C’s in the Customer Agreements to circumvent such basic contract law – my feeling is that this is not allowed. If it was allowed then every shop in the land would write such a caveat into its terms and conditions of sale – this would effectively allow every charity shop / antique dealer to claim back ownership of any item which it deemed that it had wrongly valued prior to selling. Implicitly this does not happen.
Why is the law any different for a Spreadbetting or CFD Firm?
Steve.