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    • Hi Baldilocks. Welcome to CAG. I've done some minor formatting edits to your post to make it easier to read for people on mobile. Try to keep to 1 or 2 sentences max before creating a line break in your post. It's the Consumer Rights Act 2015, not the Sale of Goods Act 2015. The Consumer Rights Act 2015 superseded The Sale Of Goods Act 1979 and the latter does not apply as I imagine this purchase was made after 1st October 2015. Can you confirm the make and model of the vehicle? Some vehicles have their service history stored within the on board computers now or have it available to view online at any point. How did you pay for the vehicle? Finance (what type), Debit/Credit Card etc? I would argue, that should the above points not be correct, you would be right to claim that the goods are not as described under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.  
    • Thanks everyone for all your help, but unfortunately my case was dismissed. This is the 2nd time I've had this happen now so I doubt ill be taking on any parking firms in future sadly. The judge said I lost it on the grounds that the sign said I had 28 days to declare who the owner of the vehicle was, and said I should have complied with this.  My costs are Judgment for the claimant £133.33 Issue fee Hearing fee Solicitors costs - total £265 grand total £398.33 Do those costs look about right?
    • In that case I don't think you'd have any grounds for a claim against the receiver, short of anything actually criminal. The receiver was appointed by the lender so any claim you make should be aginst them. How much equity do you reckon there was when they took possession? Realistic value less outstanding balance (including arrears).  This messing around makes me wonder even more if the property was wildly over valued. Normally a lender would sell and not really care if they got the best price so long as they covered the balance plus their costs. 
    • Hey @lookinforinfo I'm not sure, I don't believe he told them he's the driver. He must have selected an option saying that he's appealing on behalf of the driver or something of the sort. In more news, however, these wannabe thugs are back at it again. Honestly, what a joke. In the letter they sent before this it said they had made "2 attempts" and in this letter they said "4 attempts", I wonder what happened to the "3rd attempt" lol.  WhatsApp Image 2024-04-18 at 14.06.07_44abc9c8.pdf
    • Google sacked 28 staff members for taking part in protests against a contract with the Israeli government.View the full article
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Prescribed terms in fixed sum variable rate agreements.Yorkshire Bank


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Also you would make case law and the banks would move heaven and earth to stop this, can you imagine if all unenforceable agreements could be reclaimed.

There is already case law and the precedent of Wilson v first county.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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This gets better by the day.

 

The bank has supplied two agreements, one has signatures but isn't the original as this has been lost and they claim they are not required to hold the original. the other later agreement with the correct payments, interest etc is not signed. It is claimed the signature has been lifted off an old agreement. Ive only just found out that the signed document is not the original after reading correspondence to the old dears MP.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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My email last night to the chap who refuses to speak with me.

 

 

Dear Mr X

 

I have recently been contacted by Mrs X regarding her now protracted dispute with your organisation. I am now privy to all the documentation that has been hitherto provided to her. Of particular interest are the two regulated agreements, the first one dated Jan 2007 appears to contain Mrs Xs late husbands signature, however, the bank has conceded the original document does not exist and that what has been provided is a copy. The second regulated agreement dated Feb 2007 is referred to by the bank as an “amendment” document, this agreement was never signed by Mrs Xs late husband and the bank concede this as well. The second agreement refered to as an “amendment” document is in fact an agreement regulated by Consumer Credit Act 1974. As the agreement was entered into prior to April 2007 it MUST conform to the 1983 regulations thereunder and therefore, be in the proscribed form, containing the proscribed terms and signed by the borrower, failure to obtain a signature precludes a court from enforcing the same. The regulated agreement the bank rely on is the latter.

 

I am not in a position to comment on whether the signature contained on the first agreement is genuine or not as this would require a specialists opinion, however, I’ve noted that Mrs X believes it may have been added to the agreement without her husbands knowledge or consent.

 

I`m informed that you have “urgently"emailed Mrs X advising her that you will not discuss her complaint with me even though she as given her authority for this. I suspect it`s because you prefer to discuss Mrs Xs matter with individuals that are not aware of the law on this subject and therefore able to control and dictate the content.

 

I have today spoken with a solicitor and informed a journalist of the situation Mrs X finds herself in, I’ve spoken with the RH MP Sir X about the case and understand he`ll be writing to you and the FOS again shortly. I also understand the bank are withholding a significant PPI amount that was mis-sold to her late husband.

 

Yours Sincerely

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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What do you take as the precedent of Wilson V First County

 

After having a read it seems that the major argument is that the agreement was unenforceable because the £250 was not credit and was added to the loan and therefore the agreement was not correctly executed. Although it does say that the APR was incorrect - this would have been substantially incorrect .

 

Assuming the interest rate charged in Wilson was 50% , the difference in APR was substantially over the 0.1% allowed

If it was say 10% the difference would still be substantially over the 0.1% allowed

 

 

The other problem you have is that if, and it is a big if, you had the agreement ruled as unenforceable , there is no provision for getting the money back. In Wilson, no money had been repaid from what I can see.

Any opinion I give is from personal experience .

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I would love it if you were right but I think you are wrong.

 

 

I stand corrected about Mrs Wilson not paying anything but then of course she was paying to redeem her car as this was in effect a secured loan

 

So have you got as far as issuing claims yet?

 

I assume it will be multitrack

 

I still do not think that the interest rate is enough out to make any difference but ...

 

I really hope your friend has some proper legal advice otherwise she could lose pretty much everything if she loses

 

Yes i know that in a capitalist world, this fear of losing everything is what stops people standing up for their rights but does anyone else, with any credibility agree with you?

Any opinion I give is from personal experience .

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What do you take as the precedent of Wilson V First County

 

After having a read it seems that the major argument is that the agreement was unenforceable because the £250 was not credit and was added to the loan and therefore the agreement was not correctly executed. Although it does say that the APR was incorrect - this would have been substantially incorrect .

 

Assuming the interest rate charged in Wilson was 50% , the difference in APR was substantially over the 0.1% allowed

If it was say 10% the difference would still be substantially over the 0.1% allowed

 

 

The other problem you have is that if, and it is a big if, you had the agreement ruled as unenforceable , there is no provision for getting the money back. In Wilson, no money had been repaid from what I can see.

 

In Wilson the agreement was unenforceable because the credit was incorrect. the prescribed terms of a loan (there are exceptions) are credit and how the credit will be repaid and in addition the document must contain a signature.

 

The issue here is whether the agreement is enforceable. Im waiting on a legal opinion on this, but I believe its unenforceable from years of experience.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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I think you may be behind the times

 

For a CCA request there is no obligation to provide a signature as per Carey

 

Even for a pre 2007 agreement there is no obligation to provide a signed document

 

The question a judge will ask is

'On the balance of probabilities, was an agreement containing the PT's signed'

 

The basis of this is several fold but one is that it would be unfair on the creditor to have to provide an original signed agreement in situations such as the Iron Mountain fire

 

An example where this was held, although granted only at county court level is Arrow Global v Frost

 

Even if the account is found to be UE, I doubt the chances of reclaiming the cash, if this is the case then many many people who hold UE agreements would be able to reclaim cash.

 

As I said, I truly hope you can succeed but can you do it in the next 15 months so I can reclaim myself before they go SB

Any opinion I give is from personal experience .

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I think you may be behind the times

 

For a CCA request there is no obligation to provide a signature as per Carey

 

This has always been the case as the regs permit this HH Judge Waxman just confirmed this.

 

Even for a pre 2007 agreement there is no obligation to provide a signed document

 

Agree see above.

 

The question a judge will ask is

'On the balance of probabilities, was an agreement containing the PT's signed'

 

The Judge cannot enforce if the PTs were incorrect and a signature was not obtained. The bank has admitted the document wasn't signed.

 

The basis of this is several fold but one is that it would be unfair on the creditor to have to provide an original signed agreement in situations such as the Iron Mountain fire

 

An example where this was held, although granted only at county court level is Arrow Global v Frost

 

Even if the account is found to be UE, I doubt the chances of reclaiming the cash, if this is the case then many many people who hold UE agreements would be able to reclaim cash.

 

Ive never mentioned reclaiming payments. The application would be to determine rights as per the CCA 1974.

 

As I said, I truly hope you can succeed but can you do it in the next 15 months so I can reclaim myself before they go SB

 

The case isn't about reclaiming payments, however, there is a substantial amount of PPI involved from several other loans.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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  • 1 month later...

Development today. The banks CCA lawyers are in agreement with my opinion that the agreements are unenforceable.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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Development today. The banks CCA lawyers are in agreement with my opinion that the agreements are unenforceable.

 

Do you care to expand, what have they said?

 

It may help others

Any opinion I give is from personal experience .

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Do you care to expand, what have they said?

 

It may help others

 

I'll post the agreement up and update for members once this is sorted.

An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last. <br />

Winston Churchill

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