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  • Scrappy Coco
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by Never-In-Doubt View Post
    Just to clarify even with a lowly restriction you still need a solicitor / conveyancer that is on the ball. Last year we had a user here with a restriction but she had to settle prior to sale as her (and the buyers) solicitor(s) didn't understand process and wouldn't complete.

    Point is dont take anything for granted. You're assuming people know what they're doing which sadly isn't the case when you're talking about property conveyancing paralegals
    Cheers NID,

    That's why I put the following

    "If you do sell you house you need to find a solicitor that ACTUALLY KNOWS what he's doing as not to inform the creditor until AFTER you have sold, packed up the house and actually moved"

    As my solicitor pointed out to me NOT everyone is aware and it has to be pointed out to them

    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco

    Leave a comment:


  • Never-In-Doubt
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by Never-In-Doubt View Post
    Our formal e-Petition can be found here --> Change Charging Order Bankruptcy Thresholds - e-petitions
    We need to quote this once per new page

    Leave a comment:


  • Never-In-Doubt
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Just to clarify even with a lowly restriction you still need a solicitor / conveyancer that is on the ball. Last year we had a user here with a restriction but she had to settle prior to sale as her (and the buyers) solicitor(s) didn't understand process and wouldn't complete.

    Point is dont take anything for granted. You're assuming people know what they're doing which sadly isn't the case when you're talking about property conveyancing paralegals

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrappy Coco
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by Adinuff View Post
    Hey SC,
    just read the deeds and mine indeed says "no disposition of the registered estate is to be registered without a certificate signed by the applicant for registration or his conveyancer that written notice of the disposition was given to HFC Bank Ltd at care of weightmans LLP being the person with the beneifit of an interim charging order on the beneficial interest of xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx made by the xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx Court on xxxxxxxxxxx court reference xxxxxxx" This charging order was imposed on my debt against a joint property held by my wife and i. She is not a debtor, so technically we can sell as we please and they can go xxxx themselves i take it?? This has made my day if it is the case and i have understood it right?? has come early

    Adinuff
    Morning,

    As far as I am aware and what I have been advised by our solicitor that is correct.

    As long the as house is in joint names and the debt only belongs to one of you and not a joint debt, then it's a resriction all the way.

    If you do sell you house you need to find a solicitor that actually knows what he's doing as not to inform the creditor until AFTER you have sold, packed up the house and actually moved.

    So in effect it's happy days and another victory for us.

    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco

    Leave a comment:


  • Adinuff
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Hey SC,
    just read the deeds and mine indeed says "no disposition of the registered estate is to be registered without a certificate signed by the applicant for registration or his conveyancer that written notice of the disposition was given to HFC Bank Ltd at care of weightmans LLP being the person with the beneifit of an interim charging order on the beneficial interest of xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx made by the xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx Court on xxxxxxxxxxx court reference xxxxxxx" This charging order was imposed on my debt against a joint property held by my wife and i. She is not a debtor, so technically we can sell as we please and they can go xxxx themselves i take it?? This has made my day if it is the case and i have understood it right?? has come early

    Adinuff

    Leave a comment:


  • Adinuff
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by Scrappy Coco View Post
    Evening SnV and GM

    You are both correct in what you are saying. You just explained it better than me.

    This should clear it all up though.

    Just thought I should add this piece of information with regards to UE comments on "House Ownership" especially if it is owned in joint names.

    I have had a very indepth conversation on this subject with my solicitor before the bank allowed us to port our mortgage to our New Property even with all the shit on the CF. Happy fucking days

    According to my brief it is a myth that creditors can obtain CO against jointly owned propert owners.

    The creditor can only get what is called a restriction which if played right see's them never getting a bloody penny out of you.

    Thought this might be helpful in case Marlin try this bollocks with any of you. Then you have something to go back with and really shut them up. Jointly owned remember

    The growth in personal debt, together with property prices, has meant that charging orders have become a popular debt recovery tool. A creditor obtains a judgment against a debtor and then a charging order on the debtor’s property. A number of creditors, particularly in the finance and
    debt purchase sectors, having converted an unsecured debt to one with some security, sit back and wait for the debtor to pay the debt off as and when the debtor tries to sell the property. Unfortunately, sitting back and waiting for payment carries a number of risks:

    A mortgagee with an earlier charge on the property might repossess and sell the property at a time when there is insufficient equity in the property to pay all or even part of the debt to the creditor.

    Property prices might go down, wiping out any equity in the property. If the original judgment does not attract interest – as could be the case for debts less than £5,000 or given in proceedings relating to the Consumer Credit Act 1974 – the value of the debt will be eroded over time by inflation.

    Some creditors will perhaps apply for an order to sell the property rather than wait and take the risks.
    However there is another, more fundamental, risk which creditors are beginning to come across in respect of charging orders obtained after April 2003. Where a debtor owns property with another person, for example husband and wife, the debtor and the other person can, despite the charging order, easily sell the property and pay nothing to the creditor.

    Before April 2003
    Once a charging order was obtained against a debtor over his interest in a property, whether he owned it solely or jointly, the charging order was registered as a caution at the Land Registry. This meant that the creditor or his solicitors would get 14 days’ notice from the Land Registry that the debtor and other
    owner or owners were trying to get rid of the caution, probably with the aim of selling the property.
    The fact that such notice had to be given meant that a debtor knew he could not sell the property before the creditor knew about it and took steps to prevent the sale. So the debtor would usually pay the creditor before selling the property.

    Cautions which were registered prior to April 2003 still remain effective and the creditor will get 14 days’ notice of any attempt to get rid of the caution.

    April 2003 and afterwards
    The Land Registration Act 2002 (LRA) and Land Registration Rules 2003 (LRR) introduced significant changes to land registration procedures. Cautions were no longer to be used. Instead when a creditor obtained a charging order against a debtor:

    If the property was solely owned by the debtor, or all owners of the property were debtors, for example husband and wife owning the property jointly and being joint debtors, then an ‘agreed
    notice’ was to be filed at the Land Registry by the creditor. Effectively this was almost as good as
    having a mortgage. The debtor could not realistically sell the property without repaying the debt to the creditor.

    However, if the property was jointly owned by the debtor with other nondebtors, for example husband and wife owning the property and only one of them being the actual debtor, the creditor was not entitled to enter an agreed notice. Instead the creditor could only file a ‘restriction’ at the Land Registry in the
    following terms: “No disposition of the registered estate is to be registered without a certificate signed by the applicant for registration or his conveyancer that written notice of the disposition was given to creditor...] being the person with the benefit of an interim/final charging order on the beneficial interest of [name of... debtor].”

    This restriction was, and remains, practically useless.

    The effect of the restriction
    The debtor and his joint owner’s freedom to sell the property is not affected by such a restriction. They could sell the property as if there was no charging order against the debtor. All that was required was that the new buyers or their solicitor write to the creditor informing them that they now owned the property and then confirm to the Land Registry that they had given that notice. Then the buyers could register the property with no further complications. The creditor, who is sitting back, waiting to get paid, instead just receives a letter confirming that a sale has already taken place, typically a week or two after
    the sale so there is little they can do to get the debt paid. In theory the creditor could apply for a freezing order against the debtor to try and obtain the cash from the sale proceeds. However, most creditors will
    never make such an application:

    The cost of applying for such a freezing order would run into thousands of pounds.
    The debtor might have spent the cash from the sale of the property before the freezing order was obtained, so there is little, if anything, for the freezing order to bite on.

    An effective restriction
    A restriction worded as follows would provide a creditor with sufficient protection: “No disposition of the
    registered estate is to be completed by registration without a certificate signed by [name the creditor with the benefit of the charging order and their address], being the person with the benefit of an interim/final charging order on the beneficial interest of [name of judgment debtor], or his solicitor that he was given written notice of the disposition at least 14 days prior to the disposition or without an order of the court which granted the interim/final charging order.”
    If the wording suggested above were to be allowed, a creditor would have the right to be notified before a sale. The fact that such notice has to be given would mean that a debtor will know he cannot sell the property before the creditor finds out about the potential sale – and of course takes steps to prevent the sale until the debt is paid.
    So the debtor will pay the creditor before selling the property. Perhaps at some stage, the LRA will
    be amended to allow such an effectively worded restriction. In the meantime, a creditor which obtains a charging order against a debtor who owns property jointly could try to persuade the Land Registry to allow the more effectively worded restriction set out above. If that attempt fails then the creditor could apply to the court for an order that the Land Registry must allow that wording.

    Application to the Land Registry
    The Land Registry may approve an application to allow a restriction in non-standard wording if it appears:

    That the terms of the proposed restriction are reasonable, and That applying the proposed restriction would be straightforward, and not place an unreasonable burden on him. In our view, the Land Registry should allow a restriction which actually gives some protection to creditors. However,
    we have yet to make such an application and suspect that the Land Registry will not readily allow such non-standard wording.

    Applications to the court
    If the Land Registry refuses to allow a non-standard word restriction, then a creditor may wish to consider making an application to the court. Inevitably there are risks with this:
    Creditors should bear in mind that if the application is unsuccessful then they will have wasted the costs of making the application.
    So far as we can ascertain, an application along the lines suggested has not yet been made. A court may adopt a restrictive view and state that a creditor may have nothing other than the standard-worded restriction set out in the LRA.

    Conclusion
    The current protection afforded to creditors who have a charging order on property owned jointly by a debtor with others is useless.
    Unless the creditor can persuade the Land Registry or the courts to allow a more effectively worded restriction, the creditor must look at other ways of recovering the debt.


    Hope that sort of helps anyone who is worried about this sort of thing


    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco
    Holy Shmoley ,
    Thx SC. That was one heck of a explanation. Still trying to digest. Im trying to upload a copy of our Land Registy title deeds and its not working. comes up with "Database error" Please refresh. try and refresh and still nothing. Anyone help please?

    Adinuff

    Leave a comment:


  • nanna58
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    off to do it now then cheers pomp xx

    Leave a comment:


  • pompeyfaith
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Yes they remain secure on the .gov.uk petition site and cannot be viewed

    Leave a comment:


  • nanna58
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    i deffo want to sign petition can you confirm that our details remain secure ?many thanx xx

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrappy Coco
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by greymatter View Post
    Many thanks Scrappy Coco,most enlightening.
    Our laws are at best,complicated and in many cases totally confusing,so its very much appreciated having problems such as the CO stuff being rolled out in such a clear manner.Thanks
    GM
    No worries. Hope it can help in some way either now or in the future.

    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrappy Coco
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Originally posted by pompeyfaith View Post
    Thanks Scrappy Coco very informative will now have to get my CO papers out from the land registry and check the wording as our home is jointly owned between me and the wife and her mum although she pays nothing but had to be on the mortgage as a joint owner because it was an ex council purchase using mums 60% discount.

    Thank You.
    No worries PF.

    I hope it helps.

    I had to do my homework and quickly a few months before we sold our house as I had Cabot banging on my door threatening all sorts but mainly a CO.

    It started with we can send you a recon which will forefill your request. I said be my guest and accidently on purpose let slip I happened to actually have the original. Cheeky sods asked to see a copy to which I told them I'd happily show them in court.

    Then I recieved a letter from the ICO slamming Barclays for failing to forefill my request and selling the account.

    Cabot then backed off and I got a letter from them advising it was unrecoverable blah blah blah at a later date etc etc.

    No doubt I will hear from them about 6 months from SB as its for a serious amount of money. High 5 figures so watch this space in about 18 months.

    Once we had sold I spoke to our solicitor to make sure what I had investigated was true and he confirmed every word of it.

    He did say that not alot of solicitors or judges are aware and it has to be pointed out in plan simple english

    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco

    Leave a comment:


  • greymatter
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Many thanks Scrappy Coco,most enlightening.
    Our laws are at best,complicated and in many cases totally confusing,so its very much appreciated having problems such as the CO stuff being rolled out in such a clear manner.Thanks
    GM

    Leave a comment:


  • pompeyfaith
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Maybe a good idea to remove personal info then scan and upload them for the benefit of others.

    Ill do that in the morning.

    Leave a comment:


  • pompeyfaith
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Thanks Scrappy Coco very informative will now have to get my CO papers out from the land registry and check the wording as our home is jointly owned between me and the wife and her mum although she pays nothing but had to be on the mortgage as a joint owner because it was an ex council purchase using mums 60% discount.

    Thank You.

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrappy Coco
    replied
    Re: Threshold introduced for charging orders

    Evening SnV and GM

    You are both correct in what you are saying. You just explained it better than me.

    This should clear it all up though.

    Just thought I should add this piece of information with regards to UE comments on "House Ownership" especially if it is owned in joint names.

    I have had a very indepth conversation on this subject with my solicitor before the bank allowed us to port our mortgage to our New Property even with all the shit on the CF. Happy fucking days

    According to my brief it is a myth that creditors can obtain CO against jointly owned propert owners.

    The creditor can only get what is called a restriction which if played right see's them never getting a bloody penny out of you.

    Thought this might be helpful in case Marlin try this bollocks with any of you. Then you have something to go back with and really shut them up. Jointly owned remember

    The growth in personal debt, together with property prices, has meant that charging orders have become a popular debt recovery tool. A creditor obtains a judgment against a debtor and then a charging order on the debtor’s property. A number of creditors, particularly in the finance and
    debt purchase sectors, having converted an unsecured debt to one with some security, sit back and wait for the debtor to pay the debt off as and when the debtor tries to sell the property. Unfortunately, sitting back and waiting for payment carries a number of risks:

    A mortgagee with an earlier charge on the property might repossess and sell the property at a time when there is insufficient equity in the property to pay all or even part of the debt to the creditor.

    Property prices might go down, wiping out any equity in the property. If the original judgment does not attract interest – as could be the case for debts less than £5,000 or given in proceedings relating to the Consumer Credit Act 1974 – the value of the debt will be eroded over time by inflation.

    Some creditors will perhaps apply for an order to sell the property rather than wait and take the risks.
    However there is another, more fundamental, risk which creditors are beginning to come across in respect of charging orders obtained after April 2003. Where a debtor owns property with another person, for example husband and wife, the debtor and the other person can, despite the charging order, easily sell the property and pay nothing to the creditor.

    Before April 2003
    Once a charging order was obtained against a debtor over his interest in a property, whether he owned it solely or jointly, the charging order was registered as a caution at the Land Registry. This meant that the creditor or his solicitors would get 14 days’ notice from the Land Registry that the debtor and other
    owner or owners were trying to get rid of the caution, probably with the aim of selling the property.
    The fact that such notice had to be given meant that a debtor knew he could not sell the property before the creditor knew about it and took steps to prevent the sale. So the debtor would usually pay the creditor before selling the property.

    Cautions which were registered prior to April 2003 still remain effective and the creditor will get 14 days’ notice of any attempt to get rid of the caution.

    April 2003 and afterwards
    The Land Registration Act 2002 (LRA) and Land Registration Rules 2003 (LRR) introduced significant changes to land registration procedures. Cautions were no longer to be used. Instead when a creditor obtained a charging order against a debtor:

    If the property was solely owned by the debtor, or all owners of the property were debtors, for example husband and wife owning the property jointly and being joint debtors, then an ‘agreed
    notice’ was to be filed at the Land Registry by the creditor. Effectively this was almost as good as
    having a mortgage. The debtor could not realistically sell the property without repaying the debt to the creditor.

    However, if the property was jointly owned by the debtor with other nondebtors, for example husband and wife owning the property and only one of them being the actual debtor, the creditor was not entitled to enter an agreed notice. Instead the creditor could only file a ‘restriction’ at the Land Registry in the
    following terms: “No disposition of the registered estate is to be registered without a certificate signed by the applicant for registration or his conveyancer that written notice of the disposition was given to creditor...] being the person with the benefit of an interim/final charging order on the beneficial interest of [name of... debtor].”

    This restriction was, and remains, practically useless.

    The effect of the restriction
    The debtor and his joint owner’s freedom to sell the property is not affected by such a restriction. They could sell the property as if there was no charging order against the debtor. All that was required was that the new buyers or their solicitor write to the creditor informing them that they now owned the property and then confirm to the Land Registry that they had given that notice. Then the buyers could register the property with no further complications. The creditor, who is sitting back, waiting to get paid, instead just receives a letter confirming that a sale has already taken place, typically a week or two after
    the sale so there is little they can do to get the debt paid. In theory the creditor could apply for a freezing order against the debtor to try and obtain the cash from the sale proceeds. However, most creditors will
    never make such an application:

    The cost of applying for such a freezing order would run into thousands of pounds.
    The debtor might have spent the cash from the sale of the property before the freezing order was obtained, so there is little, if anything, for the freezing order to bite on.

    An effective restriction
    A restriction worded as follows would provide a creditor with sufficient protection: “No disposition of the
    registered estate is to be completed by registration without a certificate signed by [name the creditor with the benefit of the charging order and their address], being the person with the benefit of an interim/final charging order on the beneficial interest of [name of judgment debtor], or his solicitor that he was given written notice of the disposition at least 14 days prior to the disposition or without an order of the court which granted the interim/final charging order.”
    If the wording suggested above were to be allowed, a creditor would have the right to be notified before a sale. The fact that such notice has to be given would mean that a debtor will know he cannot sell the property before the creditor finds out about the potential sale – and of course takes steps to prevent the sale until the debt is paid.
    So the debtor will pay the creditor before selling the property. Perhaps at some stage, the LRA will
    be amended to allow such an effectively worded restriction. In the meantime, a creditor which obtains a charging order against a debtor who owns property jointly could try to persuade the Land Registry to allow the more effectively worded restriction set out above. If that attempt fails then the creditor could apply to the court for an order that the Land Registry must allow that wording.

    Application to the Land Registry
    The Land Registry may approve an application to allow a restriction in non-standard wording if it appears:

    That the terms of the proposed restriction are reasonable, and That applying the proposed restriction would be straightforward, and not place an unreasonable burden on him. In our view, the Land Registry should allow a restriction which actually gives some protection to creditors. However,
    we have yet to make such an application and suspect that the Land Registry will not readily allow such non-standard wording.

    Applications to the court
    If the Land Registry refuses to allow a non-standard word restriction, then a creditor may wish to consider making an application to the court. Inevitably there are risks with this:
    Creditors should bear in mind that if the application is unsuccessful then they will have wasted the costs of making the application.
    So far as we can ascertain, an application along the lines suggested has not yet been made. A court may adopt a restrictive view and state that a creditor may have nothing other than the standard-worded restriction set out in the LRA.

    Conclusion
    The current protection afforded to creditors who have a charging order on property owned jointly by a debtor with others is useless.
    Unless the creditor can persuade the Land Registry or the courts to allow a more effectively worded restriction, the creditor must look at other ways of recovering the debt.


    Hope that sort of helps anyone who is worried about this sort of thing


    Thanks as always

    Scrappy Coco

    Leave a comment:

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