The price of silence: Mizuho’s inaction comes into focus of MtGox case

Maria Nikolova

The bank insists its silence and inaction cannot render it culpable for any damage caused to US customers of MtGox who could not get their money back after the Exchange got into trouble.

Mizuho Bank, which has been accused of creating transaction difficulties for MtGox’s customers, is stepping up its defense in the United States by using a rather unconventional argument which centers around its inaction and silence.

Let’s recall what the case is about. When MtGox’s head Mark Karpeles refused to close Mt. Gox’s account at Mizuho, the bank instituted a series of policies it kept secret from the public that were designed to frustrate Mizuho’s relationship with Mt. Gox. Thus, Mizuho limited and ultimately stopped processing international wire withdrawals from Mt.Gox’s Mizuho account. Mizuho, however, continued to accept international cash deposits into the Mt. Gox account.

In January 2014, plaintiff Joseph Lack, a resident of California, joined Mt. Gox. Upon joining, Lack wired $40,000 to Mt.Gox’s Mizuho account. Mizuho accepted the transfer and collected the transaction fee. On February 24, 2014, the website of the exchange went dark. Lack waited in vain for his deposit to appear in his Mt Gox account. He did not succeed in getting his money back.

Accordingly, Lack brought an action against Karpeles and Mizuho. Lack alleges that Mizuho had a duty to disclose material information to him and the other depositors. Also, the plaintiff accuses Mizuho of intentionally defrauding him by concealing that the bank was no longer accepting withdrawal requests. Furthermore, the plaintiff alleges that Mizuho caused him damage.

Mizuho has earlier tried to rebut the claims but the California Central District Court sided with the plaintiff  and denied the bank’s motion to dismiss.

Now, Mizuho aims to appeal from that Court’s decision. It filed the respective motion on Monday, July 23rd.

The official question that Mizuho raises is the following:

May a foreign bank defendant’s passive acceptance of wire transfers, coupled with an allegedly wrongful silence or inaction pursuant to the bank’s generally applicable worldwide policy, subject a bank to personal jurisdiction in each forum state in which a wire transfer originates, consistent with the requirements of the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution?

The issue at hand is of wide applicability: whether a foreign bank’s alleged silence or inaction pursuant to the bank’s generally applicable worldwide policy creates a substantial connection with the forum state (in this case, California) so as to support personal jurisdiction. Foreign banks indeed accept wire transfers from their customers’ customers all the time.

Mizuho then goes on to explain how wires are something pretty much unrelated to it. Here is the precise wording:

“To accept a wire transfer is passive conduct, especially because, by its nature, a wire transfer is not a communication between people, but just a transmission of information electronically from a machine at one bank to a machine at another. Indeed, Lack is not alleged to have had any direct contact with Mizuho”.

Mizuho is alleged to have simply remained silent – which is to say, it said (and did) nothing. In substance, according to the bank, the transaction was between Lack and Mt. Gox, whereas Mizuho played no substantive role.

Mizuho does not dispute that Mt. Gox customers reside in 175 countries, and at least 30,000 of them live in the United States. The bank also concedes that if a court in California may exercise personal jurisdiction over Mizuho based solely on Mizuho’s receipt of wire transfers without disclosing to the sender the alleged change in Mizuho’s relationship with its customer, then so can courts in all other jurisdictions in the United States where Mt. Gox customers reside.

The defendant bank insists that its “inaction” was not targeted at California-based clients of MtGox. The damage caused to Lack is dubbed by the bank to be incidental.

The case, captioned Joseph Lack v. Mizuho Bank, Ltd., et al (2:18-cv-00617), continues at the California Central District Court.

Read this next

Digital Assets

Masa Announces Comprehensive AI Developer Ecosystem with 13 Dynamic Partners Focused on Leveraging Decentralized Data and Large Language Models

In a groundbreaking development, Masa, the global leader in decentralized AI and Large Language Models (LLMs), proudly announces the launch of its AI Developer Ecosystem, partnering with 13 visionary projects.

Financewire

Kinesis Mint becomes the official partner for the House of Mandela

Kinesis Mint, the certified independent precious metals mint and refinery of Kinesis, the monetary system backed by 1:1 allocated gold and silver, has been appointed the exclusive coin producer for the House of Mandela.

Chainwire

Kadena Announces Annelise Osborne as Chief Business Officer

Kadena, the only scalable Layer-1 Proof-of-Work blockchain, expands its leadership team by onboarding Annelise Osborne as Kadena’s new Chief Business Officer (CBO).

Fintech

TNS brings full-stack market data management to EMEA

“We are also delighted to have Ben Myers join our London-based TNS Financial Markets team as Head of Strategic Sales for EMEA, to bolster our presence in the region.”

Chainwire

Velocity Labs and Ramp Network facilitate fiat to crypto onramp on Polkadot via Asset Hub support

Velocity Labs is proud to announce a fiat to crypto onramp using Ramp Network through the integration of Asset Hub. Through it, Ramp will be able to service any parachain in the Polkadot ecosystem.

Executive Moves

INFINOX hires Mayne Ayliffe as Global Head of HR

“I look forward to working with our teams around the world to develop a strategic HR agenda that supports high performance and is centred on human motivation.”

Fintech

Sterling to provide risk and margin support for fixed income

“Firms must have the tools to effectively manage their risk across all asset classes. As yields rise, we see more exposure from clients in the fixed income space. We understand their need to measure and mitigate risk in a highly regulated environment.”

Retail FX

FXOpen launches HK share CFDs: Tencent, Alibaba, Xiaomi, Baidu

Hong Kong share CFDs will be commission-free for a limited period of time.

Retail FX

IronFX Celebrates an Award-Winning Start to 2024 with a Series of Industry Recognitions

IronFX, a global leader in online trading, has embarked on 2024 with a spectacular display of accolades that highlight its commitment to excellence and innovation in the competitive financial services sector.

<