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by CPLX 2796 days ago
It’s not like having someone come into your office at night if it’s a spoofed email. It’s just someone figuring out what your letterhead looks like.

Either way though the client owes the original payment. That’s not in dispute. Legal issues don’t work in some holistic “who do you think should have the money” way, there are specific causes of action.

The first thing a court would ask is does the client owe the money, and is the obligation satisfied. The first answer is yes the second one is no, the client never sent the supplier the money. Nobody claims they did. Period.

Then the client would have a cause of action for negligence, due to someone else spoofing their email. Who wins that one? I don’t know but you’d have to look for some precedent and claim that the supplier was actually the proximate cause for some third party defrauding you. Maybe but it’s a pretty tenuous argument and you’d have to demonstrate clear causality.