Re: OFT v Foxtons
The Times report on the first day of the hearing:
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle6194619.ece
Landlords letting properties through Foxtons, the estate agent, are given confusing and unfair contracts, the High Court was told yesterday at the start of a test case that could shake up the residential lettings industry.
The Office of Fair Trading (OFT), which is bringing the case, asked the High Court to force Foxtons, one of Britain’s largest lettings agents, to alter its terms and conditions because they are detrimental to clients.
Foxtons, founded by Jon Hunt with a single branch in Notting Hill in 1981, has frequently been the focus of criticism of its practices in the estate agency industry. In a 2007 television documentary, the BBC alleged that Foxtons’ agents lied to buyers to inflate prices and faked signatures on landlords’ contracts. The company denied the allegations and has since implemented a new training regime.
Mr Hunt received more than £300 million when he sold Foxtons to BC Partners, a private equity firm, for £360 million before the credit crunch took hold. BC Partners has since conceded that the acquisition was a mistake and Foxtons has breached its banking covenants.
In court, Nicholas Green, QC, for the OFT, said the regulator objects to Foxtons’ contracts because “they are not written in plain and legible English” and some of the conditions they impose on landlords are “plainly unfair”.
He said a typical consumer would be “profoundly confused” by Foxtons’ terms and conditions because “nothing tells you what you are letting yourself in for”.
Explaining that the contracts were also unfair, Mr Green highlighted a clause that requires landlords whose initial tenants are introduced by Foxtons to continue paying commission to the agency for as long as the tenants remain in the property.
Foxtons’ right to continued commission remained, regardless of whether the agency still managed the property on behalf of the landlord or had any role in persuading the tenants to stay beyond the initial rental period, Mr Green said.
“There is not necessarily any connection between an original introduction and a tenant’s decision to renew their lease,” Mr Green said. “Where there is a link and the agent plays a part, we say it is fair for them to earn further commission. But what we object to is an automatic right to commission for forever and a day.”
The OFT is relying on the same set of consumer protection laws that it is using to fight with the high street banks over unauthorised overdraft fees.
The Unfair Terms and Conditions Consumer Contract Regulations (1999) state that contracts must be clear and that some commercial agreements are fundamentally unfair and illegal, even if the consumer knows what they are getting in to upfront and does so willingly.
The OFT, which brought its case after receiving numerous complaints against Foxtons, believes the practices are “widespread” in the industry and plans to pursue other agents if successful.
Foxtons, which has previously said the OFT’s claims are “fundamentally misconceived” declined to comment.
The case continues.
The Times report on the first day of the hearing:
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle6194619.ece
Landlords letting properties through Foxtons, the estate agent, are given confusing and unfair contracts, the High Court was told yesterday at the start of a test case that could shake up the residential lettings industry.
The Office of Fair Trading (OFT), which is bringing the case, asked the High Court to force Foxtons, one of Britain’s largest lettings agents, to alter its terms and conditions because they are detrimental to clients.
Foxtons, founded by Jon Hunt with a single branch in Notting Hill in 1981, has frequently been the focus of criticism of its practices in the estate agency industry. In a 2007 television documentary, the BBC alleged that Foxtons’ agents lied to buyers to inflate prices and faked signatures on landlords’ contracts. The company denied the allegations and has since implemented a new training regime.
Mr Hunt received more than £300 million when he sold Foxtons to BC Partners, a private equity firm, for £360 million before the credit crunch took hold. BC Partners has since conceded that the acquisition was a mistake and Foxtons has breached its banking covenants.
In court, Nicholas Green, QC, for the OFT, said the regulator objects to Foxtons’ contracts because “they are not written in plain and legible English” and some of the conditions they impose on landlords are “plainly unfair”.
He said a typical consumer would be “profoundly confused” by Foxtons’ terms and conditions because “nothing tells you what you are letting yourself in for”.
Explaining that the contracts were also unfair, Mr Green highlighted a clause that requires landlords whose initial tenants are introduced by Foxtons to continue paying commission to the agency for as long as the tenants remain in the property.
Foxtons’ right to continued commission remained, regardless of whether the agency still managed the property on behalf of the landlord or had any role in persuading the tenants to stay beyond the initial rental period, Mr Green said.
“There is not necessarily any connection between an original introduction and a tenant’s decision to renew their lease,” Mr Green said. “Where there is a link and the agent plays a part, we say it is fair for them to earn further commission. But what we object to is an automatic right to commission for forever and a day.”
The OFT is relying on the same set of consumer protection laws that it is using to fight with the high street banks over unauthorised overdraft fees.
The Unfair Terms and Conditions Consumer Contract Regulations (1999) state that contracts must be clear and that some commercial agreements are fundamentally unfair and illegal, even if the consumer knows what they are getting in to upfront and does so willingly.
The OFT, which brought its case after receiving numerous complaints against Foxtons, believes the practices are “widespread” in the industry and plans to pursue other agents if successful.
Foxtons, which has previously said the OFT’s claims are “fundamentally misconceived” declined to comment.
The case continues.
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