Hello
Please could someone give me some advice please?
My husband and I had a joint account with Nationwide BS with overdraft of £1050.
I took advice from CCCS and wrote to them advising of our financial situation and enclosed budget and other creditors.
They wrote back (May 2008 and I have procrastinated on the letter) thanking me for my letter.
"In order to protect you and your account details with Nationwide, we have an obligation under Data Protection to check your signature carefully. When we opened your letter today and checked it against our central system, we could not find a sample of your signature on our records.
Also please note that as this account is a joint account, we require the signatures of both account holders before we can deal with your enquiry ecen if only one party is the client of the CCCS" (which we are not - we just took advice at the time.
They then go on to advise that they need to capture our signature and ask her to take the letter along with acceptable ID to nearest branch.
On reading through information on this site, I believe we would be rather foolish to send our signatures off - if this is the case, how do we go about sorting it all out. They are still putting interest on the overdraft (we have moved banks now) and I would like to challenge their charges, but also we need to begin paying back some of their monies. Any thoughts please?
Kind regards.
HLG43
Please could someone give me some advice please?
My husband and I had a joint account with Nationwide BS with overdraft of £1050.
I took advice from CCCS and wrote to them advising of our financial situation and enclosed budget and other creditors.
They wrote back (May 2008 and I have procrastinated on the letter) thanking me for my letter.
"In order to protect you and your account details with Nationwide, we have an obligation under Data Protection to check your signature carefully. When we opened your letter today and checked it against our central system, we could not find a sample of your signature on our records.
Also please note that as this account is a joint account, we require the signatures of both account holders before we can deal with your enquiry ecen if only one party is the client of the CCCS" (which we are not - we just took advice at the time.
They then go on to advise that they need to capture our signature and ask her to take the letter along with acceptable ID to nearest branch.
On reading through information on this site, I believe we would be rather foolish to send our signatures off - if this is the case, how do we go about sorting it all out. They are still putting interest on the overdraft (we have moved banks now) and I would like to challenge their charges, but also we need to begin paying back some of their monies. Any thoughts please?
Kind regards.
HLG43
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