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    • Thank you for that "read me", It's a lot to digest, lots of legal procedure. There was one thing that I was going to mention to you,  but in one of the conversations in that thread it was mentioned that there may be spies on the Forum,  this is something that I've read quite some time ago in a previous thread. What I had in mind was to wait for the thirty days after their reply to my CCA request and then send the unenforceable letter. I was hoping that an absence of signature could be the Silver Bullet but it seems that there are lot of layers to peel on this Onion.  
    • love the extra £1000 charge for confidentialy there BF   Also OP even if they don't offer OOC it doesn't mean your claim isn't good. I had 3 against EVRi that were heard over the last 3 weeks. They sent me emails asking me to discontinue as I wouldn't win. Went infront of a judge and won all 3.    Just remember the law is on your side. The judges will be aware of this.   Where you can its important to try to point out at the hearing the specific part of the contract they breached. I found this was very helpful and the Judge made reference to it when they gave their judgements and it seemed this was pretty important as once you have identified a specific breach the matter turns straight to liability. From there its a case of pointing out the unlawfullness of their insurance and then that should be it.
    • I know dx and thanks again for yours and others help. I was 99.999% certain last payment was over six years ago if not longer.  👍
    • Paragraph 23 – "standard industry practice" – put this in bold type. They are stupid to rely on this and we might as well carry on emphasising how stupid they are. I wonder why they could even have begun to think some kind of compelling argument – "the other boys do it so I do it as well…" Same with paragraph 26   Paragraph 45 – The Defendants have so far been unable to produce any judgements at any level which disagree with the three judgements…  …court, but I would respectfully request…   Just the few amendments above – and I think it's fine. I think you should stick to the format that you are using. This has been used lots of times and has even been applauded by judges for being meticulous and clear. You aren't a professional. Nobody is expecting professional standards and although it's important that you understand exactly what you are doing – you don't really want to come over to the judge that you have done this kind of thing before. As a litigant in person you get a certain licence/leeway from judges and that is helpful to you – especially if you are facing a professional advocate. The way this is laid out is far clearer than the mess that you will get from EVRi. Quite frankly they undermine their own credibility by trying to say that they should win simply because it is "standard industry practice". It wouldn't at all surprise me if EVRi make you a last moment offer of the entire value of your claim partly to avoid judgement and also partly to avoid the embarrassment of having this kind of rubbish exposed in court. If they do happen to do that, then you should make sure that they pay everything. If they suddenly make you an out-of-court offer and this means that they are worried that they are going to lose and so you must make sure that you get every penny – interest, costs – everything you claimed. Finally, if they do make you an out-of-court offer they will try to sign you up to a confidentiality agreement. The answer to that is absolutely – No. It's not part of the claim and if they want to settle then they settle the claim as it stands and don't try add anything on. If they want confidentiality then that will cost an extra £1000. If they don't like it then they can go do the other thing. Once you have made the amendments suggested above – it should be the final version. court,. I don't think we are going to make any more changes. Your next job good to make sure that you are completely familiar with it all. That you understand the arguments. Have you made a court familiarisation visit?
    • just type no need to keep hitting quote... as has already been said, they use their own criteria. if a person is not stated as linked to you on your file then no cant hurt you. not all creditors use every CRA provider, there are only 3 main credit file providers mind, the rest are just 3rd party data sharers. if you already have revolving credit on your file there is no need to apply for anything just 'because' you need to show you can handle money. if you have bank account(s) and a mortgage which you are servicing (paying) then nothing more can improve your score, despite what these 'scam' sites claiml  its all a CON!!  
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A New Way of Looking at Interest- 1st successful Claim - N'wide


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I've been thinking for sometime about this question of interest. 8% seems a bit niggardly to me particularly when you think that the banks typically make 16% on overdrafts and far more on unauthorised borrowing.

 

I hadn't brought it up before but actually where a contract makes provision for a rate of interest to be paid on outstanding money, one does have the choice either of claiming that contractual rate of interest or merely claiming the 8% under the County Court act 1984.

 

So far we have been suggesting to everyone that they claimed the 8% because there is no express provision in the contract for a contractual rate of interest. However it seems to me to be quite arguable that there is an implied term in the bank contract based on the principle of "mutuality" or "reciprocity" -- in other words what is sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander.

 

If this is correct then I think it is entirely reasonable to argue that where penalties have been unlawfully taken that this is the equivalent of borrowing by the bank and therefore the sum borrowed should attract a contractual rate of interest e.g. 16% - or if one wanted to say that the levying of penalties was unauthorised -- which of course it is -- then one could say that the contractual rate of interest was the unauthorised borrowing rate.

 

Maybe this latter rate is going a bit too far for the moment. However it seems to me that the bank's ordinary overdraft rate is entirely reasonable way to excercies mutuality.

 

 

An advantage of charging the contractual interest rate is that you can apply this even if the case does not go to court. The 8% is only available once the money is being claimed.

 

I can't see that this approach creates any risks for anyone unless it brings the amount claimed over the £5,000 limit. But if it doesn't then there is no problem. If the matter went to court then I would suggest that the N1 was worded to claim the contractual rate of interest or in the alternative, 8% pursuant to section 69 blah blah blah.

 

Of course if a claimant is attempting to recover the contractual rate of interest then the term (the implied term) has to be alleged in the particulars of claim.

 

 

 

Anyway there's the idea. Anyone got any comments?

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It sounds completely reasonable to me, but do you think any bank could successfully argue that you are only entitled to 8% by law? (section 69 etc etc), and even if they did, would it then simply be a case that you get the claim plus 8% rather than the 16% you wanted?

 

I am only at the DPA stage with Yorkshire bank but I will be more than willing to try it out with those parasites if no-one else is willing to before then.

Bank of Scotland: Claiming £699.47, SETTLED IN FULL at moneyclaim stage

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GF Natwest - claiming £749.33, moneyclaim filed - SETTLED IN FULL 04/08

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I didn't have an authorised overdraft facility at all, so when I went overdrawn, it was always the higher rate I was charged. I expect many people here are in the same boat. Would there be a case in that situation for charging the bank the unauthorised rate do you think?

 

Charging either rate is an interesting thought. I look forward to seeing what people think. I've just sent off my prelim letter to Barclays for £750, it would be nice to be able to add 16% interest to that!

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There is no doubt that in law if the rate of interest is specified in the contract then you are entitled to claim that rate. That is the "contractual rate" of interest. It is only a question of arguing to the judge that there is an implied term which permits a contractual rate. In any other type of contract which interest is not referred to at all this would probably be impossible and you have to rely only on the 8% in court. However because you are dealing with a financial institution and there is an express rate of interest in the contract for the benefit of the bank when it lends money, in my view it now becomes possible to say that there is an equivalent term which benefits the customer when the bank owes the customer money.

 

I certainly don't see any risk. You simply have to claim the 8% under the County Court act in the alternative. You'll get one of them. Hopefully it will be the higher implied contractual rate.

 

Charging the unauthorised rate is of course much more attractive. The arguments are exactly the same and in theory if you could win on the basis of one being you could succeed on the faces of the other. The principle of mutuality is identical. It is simply that it seems a little bold to me. I would want to feel my way on this. But go ahead if you want. However you would have to start introducing the idea of this implied contractual rate in your preliminary letter. If you have already sent preliminary letter but you would like to increase your claim by the implied contractual rate of interest, then you should send another preliminary letter with the adjusted amount and explain how you arrived at that new total.

 

I think that it is worth trying. There is nothing to lose. It can't hurt.

 

If anybody tries this please keep me informed. It will be useful for others to know about

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It is my intention to apply for 16.9% on my Abbey claim - and have included that on my prelim letter which is due to be posted tomorrow.

 

Just to clarify - assuming that it gets to the court claim stage - which with Abbey seems to be the norm, would this do for additional wording on the Particulars of Claim:

 

"The Claimant also claims interest at a rate of xx% as set out in the attached list of charges. The Claimant believes this rate to be justified under the principle of mutuality and reciprocity, and is based on the Defendants overdraft interest rate that would be applied under the terms of the above mentioned account.

Should the court find that this interest rate is not applicable, then as an alternative the Claimant wishes to claim interest pursuant to section 69........"

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I fear Bankfodder that you have opened a can of worms.

You are suggesting, I think, that we should attempt to reclaim that part of interest

that is applied to the unlawful charges of our debt at the same rate as the bank

levy it on us, rather than at 8%.

 

Easy to say but much more difficult to work out in practice, even assuming that

the Court would agree that the banks were indeed borrowing from us if that is the argument you would use.

 

To digress for a moment, when one pays a monthly credit card bill [assuming one doesn't redeem it all], then it is clearly stated in the T&C's how that money is applied. EG cash advances, current purchases, balances from other cards etc.-

which takes precedence.

 

Bank account T&C's do not have this provision. Therefore if you take as an example a £500 overdraft facility which now stands at £750 including £135 of unlawful charges and you then pay in £150, would the Bank, the Court or you take the

position that the £150 pays off the unlawful charge first? Or would the view be that

the charges would be the last to be paid? It is further complicated by the fact that if my bank account is anything to go by, that the balance is changing up

and down quite often, so the calculations can become extremely tricky and time

consuming. Not that that is a reason for not doing it, but the more complex it becomes, the easier it may be for the bank to query part of ones claim at least.

 

I am not against claiming the interest, in fact I think that 30% is bordering on

usury. And I fail to understand the logic behind the idea that someone who is

already in financial trouble should be subject to extra punitive interest rates and charges. it's hardly a system designed to get the debtor into anything but deeper debt.

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Therefore if you take as an example a £500 overdraft facility which now stands at £750 including £135 of unlawful charges and you then pay in £150, would the Bank, the Court or you take the

position that the £150 pays off the unlawful charge first? Or would the view be that

the charges would be the last to be paid?

 

That is irrelevant, since the bank is indebted to the customer for the amount they have unlawfully taken - from they day they took it, to the day they repay it. That means the day the charge was levied, to the day of final settlement.

 

It makes no difference in this case what the balance of the account is - indeed the interest applied on the charge by the bank would still need to be added, and 16% (for instance) applied to that also.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Alan I think you missed the point of my argument. The thread is about interest on

unlawful charges not the actual charge. Bankfodder is suggesting that we claim back the interest levied on the unlawful charges not the interest on the whole amount.

We can only claim back interest that the bank has charged us on the unlawful charges. Thus in my example, we could only try and reclaim the interest on £135

of the overdraft, and if we paid off the whole overdraft the following day, then the

interest on the unlawful charge may only have been for two or three days and that is all we can claim for, regardless of how long before the unlawful charge is actually paid back to us by the bank. And no matter how many times we exceed our overdraft in the future, we

cannot claim for any more interest on that previous £135. We may claim interest on further unlawful charges but not on that £135.

I hope you can all see that. However the point I was trying to make was where

the amount paid in, while more than the unlawful charge, was less than the

unauthorized overdraft. And it was why I drew the analogy with credit cards as they stipulate in which order money paid in, reduces the outstanding amount on the card. ie what gets paid off first-I think that cash withdrawals for example are paid off last, so that if you keep a running balance each month, you can still be paying interest on a £20 cash withdrawal two years later despite not missing a monthly payment.

So back to my example £500 overdraft- £750 overdrawn, £135 in unlawful charges

and £150 paid in.

WE have to establish before making a claim how much interest we are being charged on our unlawful charges. My question was how will the Courts and

Banks treat the £150 payment? Will they say that the £150 pays off the £135

unlawful charge, in which case we cannot claim any interest on our overdraft from then on. Or will they take the view that the last thing to be paid off will be the bank charges, in which case we can claim interest from then until the overdraft is completely paid off.

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Hi Looking,

 

I think Alan has picked up on the other, rather more compelling argument. Cumulative penalty charges over the years have put him in the position that he is being charged interest on his account (an unnecessary overdraft) as well as on penalty charges. In this it could well be argued that he can claim the higher rate on ALL interest charges, not just the pro-rata penalty element.

 

Again, this argument is discussed elsewhere, and again, the application of the formulae will depend on the unique nature of each account. For example, this argument will not work on immature accounts (those that are less than six years old)

 

It really is a case of applying dilligence to whatever calculations you use, being able to explain and justify your calculations, and then letting the bank argue the toss. If they believe the calculations to be wrong, then the onus will be on them to demonstrate where your calculations are in error.

Alecto, Magaera et Tisiphone: Nemesis on Earth is come.

 

All advice and opinions given by Spiceskull are personal, and are not endorsed by Consumer Action Group or Bank Action Group. Your decisions and actions are your own, and should you be in any doubt, you are advised to seek the opinion of a qualified professional.

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I think Alan has picked up on the other, rather more compelling argument. Cumulative penalty charges over the years have put him in the position that he is being charged interest on his account (an unnecessary overdraft) as well as on penalty charges. In this it could well be argued that he can claim the higher rate on ALL interest charges, not just the pro-rata penalty element.

 

No, my account is not in overdraft, all charges that have been levied have been effectively paid. The argument is that the bank has had my money in their possession.

 

If I wanted an overdraft, the bank would charge me 16.9%

 

Effectively, they have unlawfully "borrowed" those charges from me for whatever period may apply for each individual charge.

 

If their contract says I should pay 16.9% when I borrow money off them - why shouldn't they pay 16.9% when they borrow money off me?

 

That is my understanding from Bankfodders original post on this thread.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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that's what I understood to be the meaning of Bankfodder's post too. And I think the bank should have to pay the same sort of interest they charge us for borrowing.

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Barclays:claiming £908. Defence filed

Simply Be: settled in full

Abbey: Claim issued for DPA compliance order

GE Capital: Claim issued for DPA compliance order

Aktiv Kapital: Failed to comply with CCA disclosure. Debt unenforceable.

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I agree that calcualting the correct figure is difficult.

I means that you have to add up your charges.

Then add the actuall interest which the bank has levied each month on those charges.

Then you have to apply an interest rate equivalents to the bank's own rate at the time each charge was unlawfully taken.

 

However, as has been said, the bank charges you 16% when they lend to you. It seems quite just that you should be able to charge the same rate when you lend to the bank.

 

If the bank sued you for the total owing they could ask for their contractual rate of 16% rather than the s.69 rate of 8% - so why shouldn't you be able to do the same.

 

I agree that it is a lot of work - but financially it may be worth it. You still won't be making as much as the banks would because they would go on to their higher unauthorised rate which I don't recommend [lus they would be charging interest on interest - which would be for to tricky for most of us - except for Vampiress who I know could run up a stunning spreadsheet to take care of it all.

 

And of course, you don't need to do it. You can just fallback to the 8% if you want.

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I presume that this can definitely be used agianst credit and store card companies then, as a contractual agreement is held stating rates?

 

Also finance agreements with companies such a G(rab) E(veryones) Money?

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£350 partial payment received 18/12/2006.

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Prelim sent 3/2/07

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I agree that calcualting the correct figure is difficult.

I means that you have to add up your charges.

Then add the actuall interest which the bank has levied each month on those charges.

Then you have to apply an interest rate equivalents to the bank's own rate at the time each charge was unlawfully taken.

I think that there should be a case for the bank to be made to restore the charges to your account retrospectively, so that they put back a charge on the day it was taken and recalculate the balance forwards based on the interest rates as they changed from that date forwards. Only then would you be in a position that you had suffered no loss. This also wouldn't affect the value of the claim (as far as I can see) as you are just having your financial position restored by the sum of the charges taken.

 

There is still an argument for the 8% court interest on top of the charges (but not the restored interest) reclaimed for loss of that money over the period.

 

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Alan,

 

Whats the full wording of your claim, i've got a claim starting tomorrow and i'd like to use this method of calculating interest but i can't get the wording to fit the allocation given by money claim.

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I have been trying for the past hour to get the extra text to fit into the moneyclaim form - unfortunately I have to admit defeat.

 

I would also suggest a rework of the text I used earlier in this thread, as it is important to quantify the interest element on a daily basis in monitory terms. This is the text I have come up with:

 

"The Claimant also claims interest at a rate of xx%, from the date of each transaction to (date of claim) of £xxxxxx, as set out in the attached list of charges. The claimant further claims interest at the same rate up to the date of judgment or earlier payment, at a daily rate of £xxxxx per day.

 

The Claimant believes this rate to be justified under the principle of mutuality and reciprocity, and is based on the Defendants overdraft interest rate that would be applied under the terms of the above mentioned account.

 

Should the court find that this interest rate is not applicable, then as an alternative the Claimant wishes to claim interest pursuant to section 69........"

 

Unfortunately this has even less chance of fitting onto a moneyclaim form!

 

Sorry!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Thanks for trying, looks like i'll have to take a trip to my local court instead, since i want to calculate the interest as suggested by BF.

 

Do you know if I can print of the form and post it with a cheque to my local court?

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Alan, I thought that you and Bankfodder were beating from the same drum, but now I am not so sure.

I can accept that when the bank charge their standard rate of interest on their

unlawful charges, that we should be able to reclaim them. However to try and

claim that rate of interest, indeed any rate of interes,t on the lifetime of the

charges, seems to be really pushing the envelope, especially claiming that the charges represent borrowing by the bank.

 

The banks could rightly claim that at no time did they consider their charges were repayable, nor was there a loan agreement, a specified payback time, or specified interest rate. And on those grounds, I think the claim would fail in Court. And if you

did succeed, would you not then run the risk of seriously falling foul of the FSA and the Data Protection Act, and having to pay tax on it as well.

 

However as both Bankfodder and Dave have pointed out on other posts, the banks

have deliberately concealed their actual costs viz a viz returned cheque costs etc.

And so while I cannot see the borrowing claim being successful, there is surely a

greater chance using theft or fraud as the keyword. They didn't borrow our money- they xxxxx it. They never intended to pay us back. They xxxx about their costs of running the operation. [We can see that by how much German and Italian banks

charge their customers-and then adding a factor for our sky high property prices

that so distort comparisons with other countries-not to mention our government's policy of over charging/ taxing energy resources].

 

I do realise that there is little point in going that route since the present one is already successful, and we still will not gain any extra financially.

 

On the other hand, Alan, as banks are notoriously loth to contest cases in Court,

[their record in Court is not good- they lost one a few years ago, not on charges,

which I would have bet my house on that they would have won[ perhaps if you go for your claim, they will not challenge it.

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Of course, as you say this has to be tested through the courts - if the banks have the stomach for the fight. However, don't forget that the County Court allows 8% for the life of each charge anyway.

 

The contention is that whilst 8% is reasonable where no contract exists - where a contractual interest figure is applied by one party, why shouldn't that not apply to the other.

 

Yes, I would agree with the taxation point, as that could be seen as "unearned income on investment", and would have to be considered carefully. However, would that apply to the 8% as well?

 

Theft? I think if you could prove that they took it under those circumstances, then that would increase the likelihood of the interest argument being accepted anyway.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The banks could rightly claim that at no time did they consider their charges were repayable, nor was there a loan agreement, a specified payback time, or specified interest rate.

 

This is the point of the "mutuality" and "reciprocity" issue. Their contract to the customer does put these responsibilities onto the customer - the argument is that it should apply in reverse.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Alan is big enough to defend himself, but my understanding of this is that we are allowed to claim 8% by the courts, on any money we are claiming once it gets to that stage.

 

However if there is a contractual interest rate already then we can use that, I'm not claiming the bank borrowed my money, I'm claiming they took it unlawfully, and since they charge me 16%, i can charge them 16%.

 

The courts may not even allow us to claim at this higher rate, but if they do the banks can hardly complain since this is the rate they are charging us.

 

I will not be entering into this without having first done some research and i'm confident that i can argue my case.

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This is the point of the "mutuality" and "reciprocity" issue. Their contract to the customer does put these responsibilities onto the customer - the argument is that it should apply in reverse.
I agree with this point entirely - in taking the money they are effectively borrowing the money as unauthorised. Therefore the unauthorised borrowing rate should apply. However, only charging the bank the authorised borrowing rate is an excellent way of demonstrating 'goodwill...'

Alecto, Magaera et Tisiphone: Nemesis on Earth is come.

 

All advice and opinions given by Spiceskull are personal, and are not endorsed by Consumer Action Group or Bank Action Group. Your decisions and actions are your own, and should you be in any doubt, you are advised to seek the opinion of a qualified professional.

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