Singapore High Court rules crypto personal property, compares it to fiat money

Cryptocurrency is deemed property capable of being held on trust, Judge Philip Jeyaretnam of the High Court of Singapore decided in a ruling on July 25. The Judge said he didnโ€™t see any difference between crypto, fiat money or shells, as long as all those objects, physical or not, share value, created by mutual faith in it.ย 

Judge Jeyaretnam handed down his rulingย in a case brought byย ByBit against its former employee, Ho Kai Xin. ByBit claimed the staff-member transferred around 4.2 million of USDT from the crypto exchange to her private accounts. The court has now ordered Ho, whoโ€™s been accusing a non-present cousin of controlling the relevant accounts, to return all the money back to ByBit.

While the decision may seem obvious, it contains some formulations, important for the juridical status of digital assets. Judge Jeyaretnam calls the stolen USDT, as well as cryptocurrencies in general, a property. Even though they donโ€™t have any physical presence, the Judge believes that:

โ€œWe identify what is going on as a particular digital token, somewhat like how we give a name to a river even though the water contained within its banks is constantly changing.โ€

He rebukes the common suspicion of crypto not having any โ€œrealโ€ value, reminding that value is โ€œa judgment made by an aggregate of human mindsโ€. Jeyaretnam also classifies crypto in the category of โ€œthings in actionโ€. In British common law, that means a type of property, personal rights over which could be claimed or enforced by legal action, and not by taking physical possession.ย 

Related: Singapore to require crypto firms to put user assets into trusts by year-end

In his decision, the Judge cited the consultation paper by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) that will implement segregation and custody requirements for digital payment tokens. If it is possible in practice to identify and segregate such digital assets, it should be legally possible to hold them on trust, the Judge notes.

The decision mentions Order 22 of Singaporeโ€™s Rules of Court 2021, which defines โ€œmovable propertyโ€ to include โ€œcash, debt, deposits of money, bonds, shares or other securities, membership in clubs or societies, and cryptocurrency or other digital currency.โ€

In May 2022, the High Court of Justice in London ruled that nonfungible tokens (NFT) represent โ€œprivate property.โ€ The experts called the decision a โ€œgreat precedentโ€ for people investing in NFTs, who might hope that the British courts would protect their property rights.

Collect this article as an NFT to preserve this moment in history and show your support for independent journalism in the crypto space.

Magazine: Experts want to give AI human โ€˜soulsโ€™ so they donโ€™t kill us all

CryptoX Portal

Spread the love

Related posts

Leave a Comment