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  • #16
    Re: Pip's UE Diary

    Originally posted by Flowerpower
    Pip, that does sound like a dodgy recon, see excerpt below from Carey vs HSBC
    Thanks Flower!
    It is an address I've previously lived at, but spelled wrongly. As I say, not the address I was at when the card was taken out.
    Given all their Lady-Protesting-Too-Much guff in the covering letter, I'd be very surprised if it isn't found to be duff!
    The letter also says something a bit odd (and it's in this ghastly font that I detest):

    The balance of the account was charged off on xx/xx/xxxx [quite a few months ago] and the balance owing as of that date was £x,xxx,xxx.xx [a slightly odd amount that isn't massively far off what I was expecting, but different enough for me to want to query it and double-check*]

    *for what it's worth! Probably not worth bothering checking as it's almost certain to be UE. I'm not counting my chickens just yet though!

    As it is a formal response to the CCA request, i.e. an "agreement" in their eyes, I'll wait until after Niddy's return and then email it to his agreements address, just to keep everything consistent. I might have mentioned somewhere else, but it's slightly ironic that Lloyds TSB are the biggest b******s when it comes to their threatening letters (as far as OCs are concerned -- and I include all of their various in-house DCAs such as BULLSHIT Collections as original creditors)
    I mean if the bloody DCA has the same address on their letters as the OC ..! Yes, anyway Lloyds and their in-house Rent-a-Gobs have been by far and away the worst to deal with in terms of the reams of letters they send, yet their agreements by all accounts are @rsewipe! All mouth and no trousers?

    Still not sure what charged off means though ... not a term I've come across before!

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Pip's UE Diary

      CHARGE OFF Means the amount allegedly owing on your account has been removed and put on there losses book, this is so they can claim a tax exemption on the amount as a loss.

      This is what I was told in court during my MBNA case. It is quite a complicated area but in laymans terms that is the gist of it.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge_off

      Regards
      Last edited by pompeyfaith; 12 January 2012, 18:57.

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Pip's UE Diary

        Originally posted by Never-In-Doubt View Post
        I'd rather you went and got pissed or treated yourself
        Exactly how was Pip supposed to treat himself/herself?

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Pip's UE Diary

          Right PF. It is a"double entry" book keeping technique, the basic rules of company accounting required by the Companies Act 1986, to make sure a 2bad" debt does not appear in the annual profit and Loss account as an "asset" which all debts actually are. They can only be removed from the assets side of the accounts when the debt becomes "bad". That brings on the tax benefits so rightly quoted and an be used to offset other liabilities as well such as VAT accounts.

          Its all a bit surreal to me. I have lived all my life in a situation of reality where either the hole is big enough for the bolt to through it or it isn't.

          regards
          Garlok

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Pip's UE Diary

            Originally posted by pompeyfaith View Post
            CHARGE OFF Means the amount allegedly owing on your account has been removed and put on there losses book, this is so they can claim a tax exemption on the amount as a loss.
            If it were then to be paid off in full, would the bank then stump up that amount in tax?

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Pip's UE Diary

              Originally posted by CleverClogs View Post
              If it were then to be paid off in full, would the bank then stump up that amount in tax?

              CC I think you know the answer to that a big fat no

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Pip's UE Diary

                Originally posted by garlok View Post
                Right PF. It is a"double entry" book keeping technique, the basic rules of company accounting required by the Companies Act 1986, to make sure a 2bad" debt does not appear in the annual profit and Loss account as an "asset" which all debts actually are. They can only be removed from the assets side of the accounts when the debt becomes "bad". That brings on the tax benefits so rightly quoted and an be used to offset other liabilities as well such as VAT accounts.

                Its all a bit surreal to me. I have lived all my life in a situation of reality where either the hole is big enough for the bolt to through it or it isn't.
                Surreal indeed! Wonder what practical difference it makes, from our side of the "bargain" that they've somehow classed it as a "bad" debt? Yet they haven't yet sold the debt; it was still being paid towards until very recently, and I was still getting shight from in-house DCAs, (and still am).

                Makes an odd exception to the surreality by which banks show debtor's borrowings as ASSETS on the banks' balance sheets! I read that a few years ago and just goes to show what a load of La-La Land claptrap the whole money/banking system is! Smoke and Mirrors! Wizard of Oz!

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Pip's UE Diary

                  Originally posted by Flowerpower
                  All banks use in-house DCAs in the first instance, it's a way both to make you believe (and banks live in a make believe world!) that they've passed on the account and also to distance themselves from the proceedings, something F in$titution$ LOVE to do! They like to shrug off responsibility for anything that may tarnish their 'squaky clean' image, so if a debtor was to complain about the way he was treated, the bank could say "it wasn't me, really, it was that naughty DCA, bad, bad DCA! "

                  They often use more than one set of in-house puppets till they get fed up and call in the mercenaries . MBNA for example have never sent letters from anyone other than themselves and in-house puppets, despite defaulting 2 years ago. They'll probably wait another 3 years before selling it to someone like Lowlife!
                  Or a 'recovery specialist' such as MacKenzie Hall?

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Pip's UE Diary

                    Originally posted by Flowerpower
                    Did you move to the address they had shortly after you took out the card? or years later?
                    It was more than three years later that I moved from the initial address when I took out the card. They've plucked out one of my intervening addresses to bung on the random printout they sent!

                    All banks use in-house DCAs in the first instance
                    I've had Halifax pester me via Moorshight in the first instance -- but pester in a Ken Dodd tickling-stick-kind-of-way. They haven't even sold on the debt. So why the hell would I have stopped paying OC Halifax to just fart around and negotiate with Moor|twazzocks and pay through them?

                    MBNA for example have never sent letters from anyone other than themselves and in-house puppets, despite defaulting 2 years ago.
                    It's a while since I've had direct dealings with MBNA -- once the stopped payment registers on their system they might unleash their muppets on me --------->>

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Pip's UE Diary

                      Originally posted by Pip View Post
                      The address on the "copy" agreement isn't my current address, but then neither is it the address where I was living when I first got the card ...

                      The snotty covering letter did reveal where that mysterious BX1 1XB or whatever postcode ends up -- Andover in Hampshire ... hmm. How Lloyds TSB managed to bribe Royal Mail into getting their own postcode prefix -- even the DVLA with their megatons of mail are happy with a humble Swansea postcode![/FONT]
                      No email with the Lloyds stuff mate - only have HBOS stuff here to go through....?
                      I'm the forum administrator and I look after the theme & features, our volunteers & users and also look after any complaints or Data Protection queries that pass through the forum or main website. I am extremely busy so if you do contact me or need a reply to a forum post then use the email or PM features offered because I do miss things and get tied up for days at a time!

                      If you spot any spammers, AE's, abusive or libellous posts or anything else that just doesn't feel right then please report them to me as soon as you spot them at: webmaster@all-about-debt.co.uk

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Pip's UE Diary

                        Originally posted by Pip View Post
                        Pip's account no. 7
                        Sainsbury's
                        Start date: June 2004
                        Balance as of Dec 2011: approx. £7,000
                        Last "full" payment (i.e. within their stipulated minimum): Sep 2010 (approx).
                        Last DMP payment via CCCS: Dec 2011
                        Default notice issued Feb 2011.
                        Status: Last payment in Dec 2011 (smaller amount in Dec 2011 than the regular DMP payment had been up to that month)


                        2012
                        Jan CCA request sent to Sainsbury's Bank (Royal Mail delivery conf. printed)

                        Jan CCA received-- emailed Niddy
                        Hmmm, one does wonder why the application form was 'created' in 2003 but the terms for that product were dated 08/2002.

                        I suspect they are not the same ones, but irrespective they were not the same ones that you should have seen when you allegedly signed the agreement - that much we know.

                        So they've sent the actual agreement, fine, they've sent current terms, fine but they are missing the actual terms as at inception and thus this is temporarily unenforceable (easy for them to remedy)...

                        I would send this back to Moorcroft: ---> Our Templates | Unenforceability Templates | CCA Query - Missing Prescribed Terms

                        I'm the forum administrator and I look after the theme & features, our volunteers & users and also look after any complaints or Data Protection queries that pass through the forum or main website. I am extremely busy so if you do contact me or need a reply to a forum post then use the email or PM features offered because I do miss things and get tied up for days at a time!

                        If you spot any spammers, AE's, abusive or libellous posts or anything else that just doesn't feel right then please report them to me as soon as you spot them at: webmaster@all-about-debt.co.uk

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Pip's UE Diary

                          Originally posted by Pip View Post
                          Pip's account no. 2
                          Halifax
                          Start date: Oct 2005
                          Balance as of Dec 2011: approx. £7,000
                          Last "full" payment (i.e. within their stipulated minimum): Sep 2010 (approx).
                          Last DMP payment via CCCS: Dec 2011
                          Default notice issued April 2011.
                          Status: Last payment in Dec 2011 (smaller amount in Dec 2011 than the regular DMP payment had been up to that month)


                          Jan CCA received -- emailed Niddy
                          This is enforceable, if you check the terms and the agreement both clearly show 06/05 meaning that as all the PT's are present then this account is enforceable.

                          I would do nothing just yet, just ignore this for the moment and see what else comes back from other lenders....

                          I'm the forum administrator and I look after the theme & features, our volunteers & users and also look after any complaints or Data Protection queries that pass through the forum or main website. I am extremely busy so if you do contact me or need a reply to a forum post then use the email or PM features offered because I do miss things and get tied up for days at a time!

                          If you spot any spammers, AE's, abusive or libellous posts or anything else that just doesn't feel right then please report them to me as soon as you spot them at: webmaster@all-about-debt.co.uk

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Pip's UE Diary

                            Originally posted by Never-In-Doubt View Post
                            So they've sent the actual agreement, fine, they've sent current terms, fine but they are missing the actual terms as at inception and thus this is temporarily unenforceable (easy for them to remedy)...
                            They'd first have to stop the blood flow to their brains being impeded by their anal sphincters.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Pip's UE Diary

                              Originally posted by Never-In-Doubt View Post
                              So they've sent the actual agreement, fine, they've sent current terms, fine but they are missing the actual terms as at inception and thus this is temporarily unenforceable (easy for them to remedy)...

                              I would send this back to Moorcroft: ---> Our Templates | Unenforceability Templates | CCA Query - Missing Prescribed Terms
                              Many thanks Niddy!

                              In sending this back, near the top of the Missing Prescribed Terms letter it says
                              In response to this request I was supplied a document, a copy of which is attached, that did not comply with the requirements of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (CCA1974), primarily as it does not contain all the necessary prescribed terms.
                              Do I just enclose a copy of the front and back of the application form, or a copy of absolutely everything that they sent in response to the CCA request?

                              Thanks again!

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: Pip's UE Diary

                                Originally posted by Pip View Post
                                Pip's account no. 3
                                Lloyds TSB

                                2012
                                Jan Reply to CCA request received from Lloyds TSB Holding off on emailing it to Niddy until after his return. Even to my untrained eye it looks like a lot (or not very much) codswallop, a good chunk of it sanctimonious and hectoring ...
                                Now emailed to Niddy(!)

                                Comment

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