Wrong funds in your account? What can you and your bank do with the funds?
 
“I recently had the situation where a third party accidentally paid a
 sum of money into our business account. Our banker saw the amount and 
asked whether it could be used to settle some of our company’s debt with
 the bank. When informed that it was not our money, the re-transfer to 
the third party was arranged. However, I was wondering what would have 
happened if we had used the money or the bank had taken it to settle our
 debt with it.”
As a rule of thumb, when money is deposited 
into a bank account, it becomes the property of the bank, irrespective 
of who deposits the money, and the bank acquires a real right of 
ownership to the money deposited. The bank however owes the client a 
personal obligation to make payment of the credit balance with interest 
if agreed between the bank and the client.
The bank may discharge
 this personal obligation, owed to the client, by making payment to the 
client or by making payment to other persons designated by the client, 
or the bank can set-off a debt owed by the client to the bank. Set-off 
occurs when two parties are mutually indebted to each other and both 
parties’ debts are due and payable. Set-off operates automatically and 
once set-off is established, the debts are regarded as having been 
extinguished.
Accordingly, if a bank being entitled thereto, 
applies set-off against the credit reflected in a client’s bank account 
of a debt owing to the bank by the client, the bank is not regarded as 
having made a payment from the credit reflected in the client’s bank 
account. Rather it is seen that through the application of set-off the 
debt was extinguished reciprocally. 
However, it may happen that a
 client has no entitlement to money deposited into its account for 
example where money is deposited in error or stolen money is paid into 
the bank account of the client, or the client, a third party and the 
bank enter into an agreement in terms of which the bank is obliged to 
make payment of the credit in the client’s bank account to third party 
and not the client.
In these instances, the person to whom the 
money in fact belongs retains a claim against the bank for payment of 
the credit reflected as a result of the deposit made. The client into 
whose bank account the money was paid and appropriates such funds 
knowing he has no claim thereto, commits theft. 
Where an 
agreement exists between the bank, client and third party in terms of 
which the bank is obliged to make payment of funds in the client’s 
account to the third party, the bank can be held liable if it allowed 
its client to appropriate funds knowing that the client had no claim to 
such funds. The bank also has a duty to take steps to prevent harm to 
the third party through misappropriation of such funds by its client. 
Our courts have also confirmed that a bank cannot itself appropriate 
funds in a client’s bank account intended for a third party by way of 
set-off to discharge the client’s debt towards the bank.
You and your bank accordingly acted correctly in respect of the incorrectly paid funds. 
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