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    • I contacted Sanctury housing in August 2023 after informing them my father in law who had Dementia had moved into a Nursing home December 2022. We kept the flat for 8 months until such a time we could accomodate some of his furniture that my wife wanted to keep. I contacted them in August 2023 to let them know the situation by email as I was the named person that could speak on his behalf. I informed them that we had left it to late for POT and were seeing a solicitor for Deputyship of his financies. I asked them what information would they need in order to give notice on the flat and we could provide details of his condition and nursing home. This went ignored I left it a month and then called them October 2023. I was promised a call back from a manager over the next few days. This never happened and it was end of November when I contacted them again and they had no record of me calling them. I explained the email and again I was told the local manager to the area would call me. This never happened and I ended up emailing them in January 2024 with a copy of the email from August. Again this went ignored and I had explained to them that we couldn't just go to the bank and stop the DD as we had tried. This email again went ignored. I then had a letter written to our home address in February asking us to get in contact with them (local manager) as they were concerend nobody was living in the flat. He had an email address so I copied in the last 2 emails to say I had been trying to give notice since August 2023. I also stated that I would like the rent that was paid from August 2023 refunded back to his account as I had officially tried to give notice then and it went ignored. He replied to us about wanting to look at the flat then notice could be given once he had contacted the nursing home to confirm he was actually living there now. Notice was giving for the 22 March 2024 and this would be when rent would stop and no further payment would be taken by this point. The fact I asked to be back dated went ignored. I have since noticed on 2 banks statement for April and May that they are still taking Rent payments of £501 from his bank. Further to this which seems very strange. He was with Eon Next for his utility bill again we were having problems getting this stopped as they needed a named person on his account which there wasn't one despite me managing his online account for him. I didn't check the email address that often that I used to set it up and went to check as noticed the credit he had built up with not living there was all getting refunded in February. The email said £600 would be refunded to his account with a (sorry you are leaving us message) but how can he leave as nobody but himself had access to speak with them. I also noticed the lady in the flat above him had a letter from her bank sent to his address with his address details but his name which was dated 4th March well before we had given notice and it said (thank you for giving us your new address details) we have set all this up for your account.   So Sanctuary housing must have been aware he wasn't living there from the ignored emails for the lady above to start changing address details to move into his flat before the housing manager had even got in contact to ask if anyone was living there. What I basically want to know his do we have any legal standing to claim the rent back from when I first contacted them in August 2023? There is roughly £3000 to come back  
    • lowell letter = we've mugged you once - why are you not paying this other debt....😎
    • i see you are posting this all over the internet too. here you say it was returned by the safety camera dept UK, Wales Returned NIP Nov23 - Heard Nothing - Now It's been returned as refused and have SJPN Form. Help please? WWW.FTLA.UK UK, Wales Returned NIP Nov23 - Heard Nothing - Now It's been returned as refused and have SJPN Form. Help please?  
    • I see what you mean. I will wait till the 8 weeks is up and then take it up with FOS. Before I do will be on with some more details on the SAR. Thank you once again. 
    • Tagging @stu007 who's great with this. You should have at least 2 months notice with a Section 21 notice (Which Form 6A is used) For now, scan, redact and upload anything you think will be useful    
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Mortgage Securitisation - Preferred


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Quote [if the securities themselves default, the investor has no recourse to the originator for any shortfall. Secondly, separation allows the security to be rated independently of the originator. This is particularly important for those originators with a poor or no credit rating]unqote

 

Now I'm thinking indemnity principal

 

How so in relation to the borrower ?

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Hi Joncris,

 

if u go back a couple of pages and click on the photos ive uploaded you can read the full details. Basically it hands over responsibility to Capstone whilst retaining the right to claim it back in the future.

 

Smarterchick, it has been slightly confusing i have tried to post up a new thread but cant figure out how to do it.

 

I appreciate all the responses ive got although i have to say its all kinda mind boggling'.

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Sue I think it's clear they cannot meet their obligations under the codes which I think means the borrower was misled at the time of entering into the contract

 

I need to have a read and see exactly what those obligations are. I have edited my post and added some links

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Poor old uneverdid posted up those two letters and everyone's ignored the poor fellow whislt in the depths of this securitisation talk...sorry Uneverdid, but I personally do not know the answers to your question, just so you know I for one am not ignoring you.;).

 

Edit: and as I type up this about uneverdid - suetonius jumps in and answers - typical :p

 

Now, reading littledotty's wonderful finds, it again makes clear that the originators have to be legally remote from the SPV's, but then this Stewart Makura reference says that they may be subsidiaries of the originators to benefit from stamp duty relief. Holmes Financial, the Abbey National SPV has its office in Abbey's headquarters Triton Hse- I haven't been able to check out the directors, but that doesn't sound legally remote to me other than it may be a seperate Ltd company which, perhaps may be enough to make it 'legally remote'. What difference does this make?

 

I think you'll find the reason for remoteness is tax avoidance

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seu Still the codes covering mortgages & arrears cannot be met by the manager because of securitization therefore the original bargain has been radically altered to the detriment of the borrower without either their consent or knowledge

 

You are most likely correct. However, we would have to say which specific duties under these codes could not be met and why they could not be met.

 

I will have a read through them tomorrow, as we would have to comply a list of the relevent sections

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My English is improving rapidly

 

Latin too, if you take note from suetonius :-D

Any knowledge I possess or advice I proffer is based solely on my experiences in the University of Life. Please make your own assessment of legality, risks & costs before taking any action.

 

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How so in relation to the borrower ?

 

According to the securitizarion bargain the original owner suffers no loss even if the borrower defaults................ hence the collapse of AIG;) ........No loss NO liability

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Sue, Jon and every other mad person on here I have been having night mares about this and woke up last night and just had a though silly I know back please just think,

 

If the mortgages are put into a securitisation pool and the lender gets the full value which they do,

because the bond holders only get some of the interest we pay ie, 7% they get say 3%,

THEN and this is the part, the ERC can NOT be any loss to the lender or the bond holder as they have NOT lost any money in the deal

 

Now I have a letter saying its for there adverts, staff, paperwork etc but nothing about there lost with regard to interest?

 

Or may be I am going the wrong way??? lol.

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Sue, Jon and every other mad person

 

:confused:

 

Here is a book I think you seriously need to buy..

 

Please don't throw another series of tantrums if I don't answer your question. ;)

 

ANSWER THE QUESTION WHAT GUARANTEE DOES THE BOND HOLDER HAVE?

by the way I note that you never answered what security the bond holders have?

but I notice you have not answered the question of how or what security the bond holders

JonCirs,

well no one has answered the post above

But You Have Not Answered The Question What Do The Bond Holders Get For There Millions????

So if your right and the bond holders have nothing for there money, no title, no rights,what do they have?

 

I personally find it a lot more satisfying to find the answer to my questions myself. If you bother to SEARCH ERC's on this very site as previously suggested by Smarterchick, you will find all the information about ERC's that you desire.

 

Yes they are unfair, Yes they are excessive. I am sure no one will disagree.

 

Oh what they hell, I know this will be just like before, so I will post the link for you..(just remember that search option is a wonderful thing;))

 

It was not one case it was four - details here - http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/mortgage-companies/62003-important-mortgage-claimants-please.html

 

It was not 'only a county court decision' and the claimant ended up with

£7.5K costs -

 

Judge Kaye QC, in the High Court (Smith v Mortgage Express), addressed the matter as follows (in a case concerning a mortgage early redemption charge) –

 

“In my judgment, looking at the contract as a whole, I have no doubt that this is merely a provision as to what should happen, not if the borrower broke the contract, but if the borrower elected a right to redeem the mortgage at an early stage. It was, after all, part of the package that was being offered to him.”

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According to the securitizarion bargain the original owner suffers no loss even if the borrower defaults................ hence the collapse of AIG;) ........No loss NO liability

 

Hello Joncris, sorry I took a day off yesterday.

 

I was under the understanding (more likely misunderstanding) that the indemnity principle was in relation to costs.

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Again it states that all legal rights have been transferred though.

 

Hello Littledotty, if I am reading it correctly it states that legal rights are transferred as part of a "pure secondary market transaction" and not as part of "securitisation".

 

A "pure secondary market transaction", is similar to the previously mentioned wholesale loan. This is when an actual mortgage (mortgage book) is sold from one lender to another lender. (think Woolwich / Barclays)

 

(for some reason, I can't copy and paste from that document)

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