FOS decision on contributory negligence quashed
December 17, 2025
FOS decision on contributory negligence quashedDecember 17, 2025 Why should I read this?On 29 October 2025, the Court of Appeal issued its decision in Linear Investments Ltd v Financial Ombudsman Service Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 1369 (the “Judgment”). The Judgment is particularly notable, as the Court of Appeal found that the Financial Ombudsman Service (“FOS”) had erred in law in its analysis of causation, when FOS had concluded that an investor that provided inaccurate information which led to his miscategorisation as an elective professional client had not contributed to his own loss. The Judgment also provides commentary on the requirements for firms in categorising clients as elective professional clients under COBS 3.5.3 R, the Court of Appeal upholding FOS’s decision that the requirements had not been satisfied in this case. What are the facts?Via Linear Investments Limited (“Linear”), an investor (the “Investor”), invested £100,000 in a high-risk, computer-driven trading strategy for contracts for differences (“CFDs”), which was intended for professional investors. The Investor applied to be treated as an “elective professional client”. When completing Linear’s account opening form (“AOF”) the Investor stated that he had experience in trading CFDs (when he did not), but also made contradictory statements, defining his trading experience as relating to “blue chip stocks” without reference to CFDs; failing to provide an explanation of his CFD experience where invited to do so in the AOF; and failing to provide documentation to support his categorisation where invited to do so in the AOF. When completing an application form for the CFD product, the Investor had stated that he had worked in the financial sector for at least one year in a professional position that required knowledge of the nature and risk of the type of trading that he intended to carry out – a statement which ostensibly conflicted with his stated employment on the AOF as an academic for the last 12 years. The Investor completed tick boxes on the AOF to indicate that he had traded in CFDs with an average transaction size of “20+” lots per transaction. The AOF did not require the Investor to specify the CFD market they had previously traded on, or the lot size. After losing approximately half of the value of his investment on short term CFD trades in a 12 month period between February 2018 and 2019, the Investor complained to the FOS. Broadly, the Ombudsman found that:
Linear challenged the Ombudsman’s decision via Judicial Review, the key arguments being that:
FOS succeeded in its defence of the Judicial Review application in the High Court before Stacey J. Linear appealed to the Court of Appeal, where the Court of appeal found for FOS on the issues of Categorisation and the Measure of Loss, but for Linear on Contributory Negligence. What did the Court of Appeal decide?Categorisation: Linear’s defence of estoppel by representation failed. For the defence to apply, the representation needed to be clear and the representee’s reliance on it must have been reasonable. If the representation was unclear or incomplete, or if there were circumstances which suggested that it may not be accurate and called for further clarification or inquiry, the representee would not be able to hold the representor to it. That was the case in this instance. The contradictory statements in the AOF and lack of supporting explanations and documentation supported that conclusion. There was nothing irrational about the Ombudsman’s findings relating to Linear’s breach of COBS 3.5.3 R. Measure of Loss: Linear had not conducted a proper assessment to satisfy itself that the Investor was capable of understanding high risk investments and it followed that the Ombudsman was not irrational in choosing a benchmark FTSE portfolio (the sort that would be suitable for a medium risk investor) to assess loss. Contributory Negligence: The Ombudsman’s approach to causation and contributory negligence was legally flawed, the decision on quantum was quashed and the issue was remitted to the Ombudsman to make such reduction to the award as would be fair and reasonable. Further:
Key takeawaysContributory Negligence:
Client categorisation:
In conclusionOn 8 December 2025, the FCA published its consultation CP25/36 regarding reform of the rules for elective professional clients, The proposals include: an “Alternative Wealth Assessment” for individuals with investable assets of at least £10 million to opt out of retail protections; removing the COBS 3.5.3R(2) quantitative assessment; introducing an enhanced qualitative assessment; and improving other safeguards to prevent clients from being incentivised, pressured or misled into opting out of retail protections. HM Treasury and joint FCA and FOS consultations on reform of the redress system closed on 8 October 2025 (for further details see our article here). Further proposals for reform are expected to be published in H1 2026. Latest Insights
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