Hi all
I have been in dispute with Co-op Visa (credit card) for the last few months over what I say is an unenforceable agreement under CCA 1974. the amount in question is £4,900.00.
The agreement was taken out in 1993 but when I requested a copy of the original agreement including the Prescribed Terms (as required under the CCA), all they sent back was a barely legible copy of the original credit card application form. The only records they have date back to 2005 - there is nothing beyond that.
The original application form does not detail any of the prescribed terms (as required by law), so I deemed it as not properly executed under s127(3) of CCA 1974 and therefore unenforceable.
I have informed the bank that the agreement is not enforceable and cannot be made so quoting House of Lords in Wilson-v- FCT [2003] All ER (D) 187 (Jul). I also informed the bank that as the original agreement was not properly executed, it has never been a legally valid agreement, and therefore I would be counter-claiming charges and interest levied by them (plus statutory interest) dating back to the date when the account was opened and which currently amounts to £22,586.00.
I have been going to and fro with the bank and the usual threats by them of debt recovery action, civil court etc., but today they wrote threatening a Statutory Demand and personal bankruptcy proceedings.
I've looked through these forums and I can't see anything much about SD being used to try and enforce these types of debt.
It seems to me that if they do file for an SD, my response needs to be that it is a disputed debt and also that the bank has tried to side-step the civil courts (as the law has already been decided in the House of Lords); as such any ruling would likely not be in the bank's favour, in terms, it's an abuse of process.
Has anyone else had the threat of an SD and if so, what was the outcome?
Cheers
Nick
I have been in dispute with Co-op Visa (credit card) for the last few months over what I say is an unenforceable agreement under CCA 1974. the amount in question is £4,900.00.
The agreement was taken out in 1993 but when I requested a copy of the original agreement including the Prescribed Terms (as required under the CCA), all they sent back was a barely legible copy of the original credit card application form. The only records they have date back to 2005 - there is nothing beyond that.
The original application form does not detail any of the prescribed terms (as required by law), so I deemed it as not properly executed under s127(3) of CCA 1974 and therefore unenforceable.
I have informed the bank that the agreement is not enforceable and cannot be made so quoting House of Lords in Wilson-v- FCT [2003] All ER (D) 187 (Jul). I also informed the bank that as the original agreement was not properly executed, it has never been a legally valid agreement, and therefore I would be counter-claiming charges and interest levied by them (plus statutory interest) dating back to the date when the account was opened and which currently amounts to £22,586.00.
I have been going to and fro with the bank and the usual threats by them of debt recovery action, civil court etc., but today they wrote threatening a Statutory Demand and personal bankruptcy proceedings.
I've looked through these forums and I can't see anything much about SD being used to try and enforce these types of debt.
It seems to me that if they do file for an SD, my response needs to be that it is a disputed debt and also that the bank has tried to side-step the civil courts (as the law has already been decided in the House of Lords); as such any ruling would likely not be in the bank's favour, in terms, it's an abuse of process.
Has anyone else had the threat of an SD and if so, what was the outcome?
Cheers
Nick
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