In December 2006 a friend purchased some goods in a shop advertising Interest Free purchase. When the goods were selected he asked about the Interest Free offer. The people did not really seem to know about it but asked around the shop.
Eventually he was told that the offer was for 1 year interest free credit. A form was found and completed and the shop assistant went through a credit check with the credit supplier . A 20% deposit was required and he was told that the goods would not be order/delivered until the request for credit had been approved, and that could take 2 weeks. No interest would be payable until 12 months+1 from the day of purchase.
A couple of weeks later the contract was approved by the return of the signed form. The payment period was over 84 months, not what was expected and the cost for credit was almost the cost of the goods. (£2500 +£2300 approx.). Payments were to be made by direct debit starting when the interest payment ended. The contract stated that it was not subject to the CCA and that it could not be cancelled.
All was well-ish as he expected to pay off the debt before expiry of the interest free period. Unfortunately this did not happen and payments began to come out of the account 14 months after the purchase dare and 11 months after the delivery of the goods.
After some trouble the loan was sold onto Apex who have registered it on the CRA files with a start date of June 2008 and a default date of 2011 which was after it was dropped by Hitachi as a personal loan. They have not done anything except send an occasional reminder saying they are not currently demanding it.
This seems very strange ie
- no right to cancel when the loan was not approved until two weeks after the deposit on the goods was paid and its approval formalised
- imposition of the 84 month repayment which was expected to be 24 months max
- dates of default is in 2011 although Hitachi sold it in 2010
- supposed 2008 date of start of loan which is months after the interest free period ended
I have said stay quiet if nothing is happening, but I would be grateful of the reason why it would not be covered by CCA.
Eventually he was told that the offer was for 1 year interest free credit. A form was found and completed and the shop assistant went through a credit check with the credit supplier . A 20% deposit was required and he was told that the goods would not be order/delivered until the request for credit had been approved, and that could take 2 weeks. No interest would be payable until 12 months+1 from the day of purchase.
A couple of weeks later the contract was approved by the return of the signed form. The payment period was over 84 months, not what was expected and the cost for credit was almost the cost of the goods. (£2500 +£2300 approx.). Payments were to be made by direct debit starting when the interest payment ended. The contract stated that it was not subject to the CCA and that it could not be cancelled.
All was well-ish as he expected to pay off the debt before expiry of the interest free period. Unfortunately this did not happen and payments began to come out of the account 14 months after the purchase dare and 11 months after the delivery of the goods.
After some trouble the loan was sold onto Apex who have registered it on the CRA files with a start date of June 2008 and a default date of 2011 which was after it was dropped by Hitachi as a personal loan. They have not done anything except send an occasional reminder saying they are not currently demanding it.
This seems very strange ie
- no right to cancel when the loan was not approved until two weeks after the deposit on the goods was paid and its approval formalised
- imposition of the 84 month repayment which was expected to be 24 months max
- dates of default is in 2011 although Hitachi sold it in 2010
- supposed 2008 date of start of loan which is months after the interest free period ended
I have said stay quiet if nothing is happening, but I would be grateful of the reason why it would not be covered by CCA.
Comment