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    • pdf's merged and properly named. thread title updated. word fine replaced by charge in post one....they are not fines mere speculative invoices. just type no need to keep hitting quote.   dx  
    • Nice work dx, much what I thought and glad to have it confirmed by the expert. Radio silence remains my game plan, I have been resident in Scotland since birth and although I had moved a couple of years prior to defaulting, all addresses were updated and I am confident all begging letters are coming to my current home address. I appreciate the info that they probably wouldn't get a claim in by Aug anyway - I think I'll hunt out my big box of badness in the next few days just to see if I can find any default notice letters so I can pin down some dates to satisfy my semi-OCD. Much obliged, and unlike some others i will look to update in the future as I certainly intend to send them the SB letter as I like to pull the chains of these types of cretins! Of course i'll be back to confirm the correct procedure if I get any "proper" legal letters other than the usual Overdales toilet paper type of scare tactic.  
    • statute barring in Scotland is 5yrs from last payment/use date or date of default Notice + 14 days, whichever is the later. dont confuse that with the 6yrs debts show on credit files (DN's 6th bday regardless to payment or not). they'd never get a claim raised by august in 99% of cases . as long all these debts were taken out whilst resident in scotland and you have not moved since taking them out but failed to inform the original creditor before the debt sale....... then stay radio silent until sb date is reached. then if you wish send our scottish sb letter. just remember unlike E&W in scotland debts are extinguished, dead , gone , parrot. once SB'd dx  
    • Hi all, Love this site and it's no nonsense advice, have dipped in and out of the consumer forums over the years, mostly to assure myself that what I was doing was the right thing when dealing with various businesses (almost 100% success rate, thanks in part to reading and more reading here.). Anyway, the time is almost approaching where I might need to ask for some specific help and I have a couple of queries that I can't see definitively answered. Due to financial mismanagement and severe anxiety issues I stopped paying all unsecured debt in December 2018 (one slipped to the first week in Jan 2019 when the last payment was made having rechecked my bank statement from that period - all my unsecured debt direct debits were cancelled in early Jan 2019). This has left half a dozen debts;  a couple of credit cards, a bank loan, Shop Direct and some Hitachi Finance stuff having been sold on and passing the rounds through the usual suspects, Lowells, Link, PRA Group, others related to them, and then back to them again. I have somehow successfully managed to maintain radio silence and avoided anything more worrying than their begging letters.  I have blocked their phone calls and texts, bumped all emails to the spambox and had a chuckle at their desperate letters.  I've never had anybody at the door.  I have been at the same address since before I defaulted and all correspondence comes to my current home address.  I have NEVER contacted them or admitted any debt. In anticipation of them perhaps ramping up action at the last minute I've had a look at my credit report on Credit Karma (rec'd from this very place) and I see that the default dates on these range from May 2019 to November 2019. Also in preperation I've been reading, reading and reading lots here as advised. Obviously being in Scotland there are a lot fewer posts relating to these matters and it's always quite annoying when OP's do not follow up with any outcome on their cases - how rude! This has also left me a bit confused of when I am able to finally breathe easy (although cancelling all the direct debits in Jan 2019 was the biggest sigh of relief as I knew it was all going to be unmanageable and, well, default one, default all.). I've been reading that defaults should be filed 3-6 months after the missed payment but one of my larger debts was defaulted on 27th August 2019 when the last payment I made was 10th December 2018, meaning the first missed payment was 10th Jan 2019.   My query for now is - when should I infer that these debts are prescribed?  From when the payment was missed, or taking the default date plus 5 years from the credit report? The three I have with the May date are moot anyway as either way they are gone  - some letters from Lowell offering me 90% off to settle is what got me thinking these must have been near SB status, however I have one big 10k+ with a July date and another 10k+ at the end of August I am feeling a bit anxious again, even though I know there is nothing to worry about with the begging letters.  Reading the various forums I am not sure why the OC's didn't take action against me when I read time and again the surprise that other posters haven't already been taken to court for lesser amounts - I'm also surprised I've avoided any action this long as there are plenty in this forum and sub forum who are whisked off to the court by the beggers minions after only a year or so after defaulting.  There are no CCJ/decrees listed on my credit report and I have not received any such judgements against me.  I still just regularly receive the begging emails to the spambox, the blocked phone calls and the letters from the they. I'm also reading that there is no need in Scotland to send an LBC so what should I be looking out for to know that the time has come to engage with CCA requests etc? I'm afraid in a fit I threw a lot of the paperwork out but I have a box of stuff I'm going to go through which may have the original letters from the OC's. Thanks in advance for any advice.  
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partial settlement v full and final


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Quote "he takes the 10% plus the 350)?/

 

I have not been to one of these meetings but let me guess at what is happening here:-

 

first he requires a copy of the agreement?

 

does he make a charge for obtaining it for you if you have not got it

 

Having got the agreement he ONLy agrees to buy those which are clearly defective?

 

if so then this would clearly be just a variation on the "we can get you debts written off" [problem]!

 

If this is the case he is probably relying on

 

a/ getting an upfront fee for checking out the agreement (like all the others)

 

 

b/ if his company buys the debt how do they buy it? if he prepared to actually give you cash up front for it (i very much doubt it) or do they agree simply to take a "cut" when it is disproved?

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from their website it appears that YOU pay them FEES" up front

 

oh yes- and WHEN and what does this outfit actually pay YOU

 

 

"The benefit to debt owners like you is that the transfer is almost immediate; as soon as the sale documents are signed and the administration and transfer fees are paid, within about two weeks you would have transferred your rights to us, and all rights will pass to us".

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"Through our personal experience (click here for proof), we can provide this service. There has been lots of talk in the past about loopholes which were incorrect; what we can guarantee is a vigorous legal challenge on your and our behalf."

 

if they have bought the debt and assumed the rights in it what is all this "on your and our behalf" crap

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they show this as their successes:-

 

Our Successes

 

Legally Unrecoverable...

 

Agreement

Amount Written-Off and Legally Unrecoverable

Date

HSBC Credit Card

£9,381

14 Apr 2005

Capital One Credit Card

£1,600

01 Jun 2005

Barclaycard Business

£5,308

03 Mar 2006

Halifax Credit Card

£11,046

19 Jan 2007

MBNA Credit Card - Court of Appeal

£5,296

14 Mar 2007

MBNA Credit Card - Court of Appeal

£4,161

14 Mar 2007

HSBC Overdraft

£2,422

Jan 2008

HSBC Flexi-loan

£2,087

Jan 2008

HSBC Credit Card

£1,850

04 Dec 2007

Bank of Scotland Credit Card - Default Charges

£150

06 Dec 2007

Halifax Credit Card - Default Charges

£505

06 Dec 2007

CapQuest Ltd (Egg) Credit Card

£3,205

06 Jun 2008

American Express Loan

£11,000

25 May 2007

American Express Credit Card

£10,350

13 May 2008

Car Finance

£9,940

03 Apr 2007

Egg Loan

£19,310

May 2008

Credit Card

£2,972

13 May 2008

Halifax Credit Card

£12,220

13 May 2008

Total

£112,803

 

 

pity they forgot to say that it cost them 120,000 to do so!!

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they show this as their successes:-

 

Our Successes

 

Legally Unrecoverable...

 

Not exactly impressive. :rolleyes:

 

What about a list like that for CAG? Achieved without any obviously false legal claims?

 

HOW many times longer would that be? :D

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Firstly they have the £350 upfront.

 

Then there is the 10% (I think it's 20% if you pay in installments)

 

Finally, they complete all the legal paperwork and buy your debt for £1.00

 

In most of the advertising I have seen they say it takes about 14 days, I believe, which straight away starts the alarm bells ringing.

 

The fact is that if they are only offering to buy unenforceable debts it is not much different to any other claims management company, except that they are more expensive than many.

 

I believe the main issue is that by encouraging people to stop paying at an early stage there will be more defaults issued to people with otherwise good credit records.

 

In addition, I agree with what has been said before and that is the lender is the person who needs to agree with the assignment as they are the ones who own the debt.

 

It appears to be just another twist to what we are doing here, but more expensive and probably under investigation from the OFT if their announcements can be relied upon.

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Yes - the have legal costs of £120k !!

 

This is what they do: They legally buy your debt for £1.00. They then charge you a transfer fee of 10%. It sounds really good. Clear your debts for 10% of the value - I would definately have some of that. My problem is that I don't trust them. How can I sell this product to my clients when I am pretty sure it is going to blow up in the very near future ?

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Yes - the have legal costs of £120k !!

 

This is what they do: They legally buy your debt for £1.00. They then charge you a transfer fee of 10%. It sounds really good. Clear your debts for 10% of the value - I would definately have some of that. My problem is that I don't trust them. How can I sell this product to my clients when I am pretty sure it is going to blow up in the very near future ?

 

the point being that they DONT legally buy your debt!! the purchase is not worth the paper it is printed on

 

but why should they care you have paid them 10% of your debt for a return of your quid and you STILL are the owner of the debt!

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ah so they pay £1.00 for a debt of say £1000

 

ok then that cannot work as it would fall foul of the Pinnels case and also Foakes and Beer which was a House of Lords decision which held that payment of a smaller sum in satisfaction of a larger sum is not good consideration

 

so on that basis, payment of a smaller sum to satisfy a larger sum in my view fails straight away. unless of course im missing something here

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In my opinion you are not missing something pt2537

 

In fact I think you have just put the final piece in the jigsaw. The agreement is unenforceable so no debt. No debt = no value + £1.00 would make it legal.

 

Diddydicky appears correct and you are still the owner of the debt. The lender may agree to the sale in the end as part of a settlement but whats the point at that stage.

 

However, the post by ploni2007 regarding clearing your debts for 10% is different and I have mixed feelings. Firstly although I agree that clearing your debts for 10% sounds really good the reality is that if your debt is £5000 it costs 17% (£350 + 10%) and £10,000 costs 13.5% which is not cheap to do what can be done a lot cheaper, by yourself or using other companies.

 

Regarding selling the product to clients you can only look at the information readily available. It appears unproven, only one company seem to be taking this route, the OFT have warned that it does not work and from what I have seen of the Matrix website it blatantly breaks the MOJ rules.

 

What they are doing appears complicated but I was always taught KISS - Keep It Simple Stupid.

 

Time will tell.

Pedross

Edited by pedross
misleading calculation error
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In my opinion you are not missing something pt2537

 

In fact I think you have just put the final piece in the jigsaw. The agreement is unenforceable so no debt. No debt = no value + £1.00 would make it legal.

 

incorrect,

there is still a debt, the House of Lords confirmed this point in Wilson and First County Trust

 

so there is still a value, the debt is unenforceable, not void or voidable, there is a serious difference between the them

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Firstly although I agree that clearing your debts for 10% sounds really good the reality is that if your debt is £5000 it costs 27% (£350 + 10%) and £10,000 costs 13.5% which is not cheap to do what can be done a lot cheaper, by yourself or using other companies.

 

Pedross

 

Call me stupid, but I don't follow your maths. 10% of £5000 = £500 + £350 = £850 = 17% of the loan (not 27%).

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On no I am really having a bad day. More haste less speed comes to mind.

 

You are right 17% but it's still not cheap. I will now edit the post to avoid any further confusion.

 

Some people may think I have just made 2 mistakes, others may think I am just testing people. Me, I think I am cracking up.

Pedross

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ok then that cannot work as it would fall foul of the Pinnels case and also Foakes and Beer which was a House of Lords decision which held that payment of a smaller sum in satisfaction of a larger sum is not good consideration

 

so on that basis, payment of a smaller sum to satisfy a larger sum in my view fails straight away. unless of course im missing something here

 

isn't this what DCA's do when they buy our 'debt' from the bank? i.e. pay a smaller sum to satisfy a larger sum? Why is it acceptable for them?

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isn't this what DCA's do when they buy our 'debt' from the bank? i.e. pay a smaller sum to satisfy a larger sum? Why is it acceptable for them?

 

I assume because the Law of Property Act allows them to do that, but does not provide any provision to do it the other way.

 

If the OFT is prepared to publically label this a "[problem]" than says a lot really.;-)

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I assume because the Law of Property Act allows them to do that, but does not provide any provision to do it the other way.

 

I meant about the cases referred to in the post, in that a smaller sum in satisfaction of a larger sum is not good consideration, which is exactly what DCA's do when they buy a debt. Do the cases specifically say they do not apply to a debt assigned under LoP?

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i would say that although i see pt's point the fact that the transaction itself is incapable of being fulfilled (ie it is an illegal contract ) then there can be no sale and therefore no question of consideration since the whole thing is pie in the sky nonsence

 

it would be rather like me selling my mortgage to the rankines- the only people that would beleive i had just sold the mortgage would be me and the rankines!!

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Let’s see if I can get something right before the day ends.

The way I see it is that as pt says there is a debt, whether it is enforceable or not is another matter. The debt is owed to the credit card company who is the creditor. If they choose to sell it to a DCA at a lower value then they are allowed to do so as the debt belongs to them. It does not satisfy the debt but the money is now owed to the DCA

Again pt has the answers with the case law and I believe the point is well made.

This is different. The debt is £1000 and they buy the liability for it for £1. This does not satisfy the debt because the debt is still £1000 but they are claiming that legally it is now owed by Rankine or whoever.

The million dollar question is: have they found a legal loophole to transfer the debt and I don’t believe that they have. Nor do the OFT by the look of it.

Time will tell

Pedross

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but the debt is satisfied with the bank, you can only have one debt ....

It's not though, is it? The Rankines or whoever don't pay off the debt do they?

 

I think Pedross' summary is fairly accurate.

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