Having re-read this, it is clear they will not be able to enforce this in court so why not just stop the payments, demand clarity under CPUTR and then ignore them, await them taking action - at which point they would fail as they'd need the document to rely on in court and with something so old they'd struggle to provide satisfactory prescribed terms, plus the odds of them sending you a copy of the agreement back then would have been slim... as for a signed form, well we all know that means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I really don't see what Lloyds think they can achieve here - they do not have the agreement, so lets get some local terms and then SAR them and get a mis-match of data such as their quoted APR - loads of ways to catch them out and make them make a mistake - if we really want to push it....
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