Compliance
UK Regulator Triumphant In Land Bank Case

The regulator has secured a victory in the Supreme Court that it says sends a warning about "land banks" - a form of investment that has drawn its wrath in recent years.
The UK financial regulator has won a court case that it says
sends a clear warning against people operating “land banks”.
The Supreme Court has confirmed that Asset Land was
operating an unauthorised collective investment scheme in the
course of operating a land bank, which involved the selling of
small plots of land to investors at hugely inflated prices, the
Financial
Conduct Authority said yesterday.
The Supreme Court found that, although investors were the legal
owners of their individual plots of land, in reality the
arrangements of the scheme were that investors did not have
control over their investment and Asset Land was the central
operator of the scheme, the FCA said in a statement.
“This decision should sound a clear warning to those selling
dubious investments. We will do what it takes to shut down firms
trying to exploit loopholes and take advantage of consumers,”
said Mark Steward, director of enforcement and market
oversight at the FCA.
“However, while this is an important victory from a legal point
of view, we are acutely aware from experience, that the risk to
investors who deal with unauthorised firms is that most, if not
all, investors are likely only to get a fraction of their money
back,” he added.
Describing the case, the FCA said investors were persuaded
by Asset Land to buy individual plots of land for between £7,500
and £24,000 with the promise that the land would increase in
value if the land got planning permission or was re-zoned.
The regulator won its case against Asset Land in the High Court
in February 2013 when it found that David Banner-Eve, Start
Cohen, Asset Land Investments and Asset LI ran an
illegal land bank by operating a CIS without authorisation. Asset
Land and Banner-Eve appealed to the Court of Appeal, which
confirmed in April 2014 that Asset Land was operating a CIS.
“Today’s judgment provides further protection to consumers by
confirming that it is necessary to consider the substance of the
arrangements put in place by the operator when assessing if they
are operating a CIS. Operators of such schemes will not be able
to benefit by providing purely illusory rights to investors.
Operators need to ensure that investors have genuine control over
their investments to avoid being found to have operated a CIS,”
the FCA said.
The High Court made an order in March 2013 against Banner–Eve,
Cohen, Asset Land Investments and Asset LI to make a payment
of £21 million as part repayment for investors. That order
had been stayed pending the Supreme Court’s decision.
Yesterday’s decision opens the way for the interim payment order
to be enforced. The FCA said it considered it unlikely that Asset
Land and others will have the funds to pay the £21 million
ordered by the High Court.