a full guide to unenforceability
This thread is designed to help you decide if a copy of a credit agreement sent to you by a creditor is enforceable or not. It has several sections that explain what the Consumer Credit Act 1974 means by a 'properly executed agreement', what sort of documents comply with a request by the debtor under sections 77, 78 and 79 of the Act and whether such a document is enforceable.
Sections include:
Properly Executed Agreements
This section defines what constitutes a properly executed agreement for loans, hire purchase agreements and credit cards. It also considers the particular case of electronic agreements entered into after 2004...
Copies of Agreements
This section describes requests under sections 77, 78 and 79 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and what the regulations allow as a valid response...
Improperly Executed Agreements
This section gives guidance as to whether an agreement is enforceable or not, including whether the creditor can enforce it directly or whether a court order is required. In the case of a court order being required, it describes the limitations placed on a Court by the Consumer Credit Act...
Multiple Agreements
This section explains Multiple Agreements, for instance if an agreement has more than one part (for example an agreement for a cash loan and for PPI), then under certain circumstances, the Consumer Credit Act places extra requirements for the agreement to be properly executed...
The Prescribed Terms
This section will explain the provisions of the Prescribed Terms.
Additional Information
This section offers basic advice on unenforceability, such as "what is it", "what does it mean" and "how do I start"...
---> The Consumer Credit Act 1974 (in its full context)
---> The Consumer Credit (EU Directive) Regulations 2010 (in its full context)
---> The Consumer Credit Act 1974 (Electronic Communications) Order 2004 (in its full context)
This thread is designed to help you decide if a copy of a credit agreement sent to you by a creditor is enforceable or not. It has several sections that explain what the Consumer Credit Act 1974 means by a 'properly executed agreement', what sort of documents comply with a request by the debtor under sections 77, 78 and 79 of the Act and whether such a document is enforceable.
Sections include:
Properly Executed Agreements
This section defines what constitutes a properly executed agreement for loans, hire purchase agreements and credit cards. It also considers the particular case of electronic agreements entered into after 2004...
Copies of Agreements
This section describes requests under sections 77, 78 and 79 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and what the regulations allow as a valid response...
Improperly Executed Agreements
This section gives guidance as to whether an agreement is enforceable or not, including whether the creditor can enforce it directly or whether a court order is required. In the case of a court order being required, it describes the limitations placed on a Court by the Consumer Credit Act...
Multiple Agreements
This section explains Multiple Agreements, for instance if an agreement has more than one part (for example an agreement for a cash loan and for PPI), then under certain circumstances, the Consumer Credit Act places extra requirements for the agreement to be properly executed...
The Prescribed Terms
This section will explain the provisions of the Prescribed Terms.
Additional Information
This section offers basic advice on unenforceability, such as "what is it", "what does it mean" and "how do I start"...
---> The Consumer Credit Act 1974 (in its full context)
---> The Consumer Credit (EU Directive) Regulations 2010 (in its full context)
---> The Consumer Credit Act 1974 (Electronic Communications) Order 2004 (in its full context)
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