Hi there - hope everyone is well.
I am looking to get a mortgage soon, and I have a default on my credit file that dates back to Oct 2014 from Minicredit, which is now under the name of Kapama. It's incredibly frustrating as I'm stuck in the renting cycle as this is destroying an otherwise good and healthy credit history as far as I can see.
The story so far...
I foolishly took out 3 loans with Minicredit over the course of Oct 13 - May '14. Unfortunately, at the time I was unable to afford this loan yet despite providing this information to Minicredit they still approved me. I then get further into debt having to re-borrow to repay. On the final loan, I couldn't meet the extended payment + interest on time, so I wrote to Minicredit to arrange a reduced payment plan. Unfortunately, Minicredit were not the most trustworthy company and decided to go ahead and charge my debit card x 7 times and took the money anyway. The CEO's pa of Natwest later got involved and the bank charge-backed the money. I was really angry at this point.
Then Minicredit towards the tail end of 2014 ceased to trade. They were supposed to write in the post and also email to assign the debt to Kapama. I believe Kapama is a company owned by OPOS who also owned Minicredit. The terms of the wind down were pretty clear and explicit laid out by the FCA. I never received anything in either medium on the assignment. In the FCA guidance if this didnt happen in a certain time frame and in the above ways the debt would be obsolete and unenforceable.
Unfortunately early 2017 I checked my credit file to find that Equifax has a default notice placed in October 2014 by Minicredit, but now being upheld by Kapama. I have written to Kapama citing the lack of checks of creditworthiness originally by Minicredit, and also on the bank issue but they gave a final response saying they would do nothing. I then also wrote to both the ICO and the Financial Ombudsman. Kapama basically has washed their hands of any wrongdoing and say the debt is valid and pointing to Minicredit as the original company. The original loan was for £220. The amount defaulted on the credit file is £467 (made up of additional charges).
The ICO has written to me to say that they can see no wrongdoing since Kapama just the middle man and purchased the debt. The adjudicator and now Financial Ombudsman (since it was escalated) has now also made the decision that they cannot agree and get the default and credit entry removed or amended.
So my question is, what do I do next? Can anybody give me any guidance about next steps for taking this through the courts?
Does a debt collecting company not have some duty of care when purchasing and attempting to enforce a debt to actually check the account and the information around it is correct? I've still never seen a default notice provided by Minicredit or Kapama in any of the many correspondences, and neither received anything from either company around the re-assignment of debt either.
It just feels like Kapama think they can get away with this by hiding behind the original sister companies practices. I don't think this is right and I do believe that the court system is now the way to go.
Has anybody else been succesful in having a debt collection agent who pursues a bogus debt from a company that doesn't exist now wind their neck in? Would be good to hear from you....
Thanks in advance for taking the time to read this fully.
I am looking to get a mortgage soon, and I have a default on my credit file that dates back to Oct 2014 from Minicredit, which is now under the name of Kapama. It's incredibly frustrating as I'm stuck in the renting cycle as this is destroying an otherwise good and healthy credit history as far as I can see.
The story so far...
I foolishly took out 3 loans with Minicredit over the course of Oct 13 - May '14. Unfortunately, at the time I was unable to afford this loan yet despite providing this information to Minicredit they still approved me. I then get further into debt having to re-borrow to repay. On the final loan, I couldn't meet the extended payment + interest on time, so I wrote to Minicredit to arrange a reduced payment plan. Unfortunately, Minicredit were not the most trustworthy company and decided to go ahead and charge my debit card x 7 times and took the money anyway. The CEO's pa of Natwest later got involved and the bank charge-backed the money. I was really angry at this point.
Then Minicredit towards the tail end of 2014 ceased to trade. They were supposed to write in the post and also email to assign the debt to Kapama. I believe Kapama is a company owned by OPOS who also owned Minicredit. The terms of the wind down were pretty clear and explicit laid out by the FCA. I never received anything in either medium on the assignment. In the FCA guidance if this didnt happen in a certain time frame and in the above ways the debt would be obsolete and unenforceable.
Unfortunately early 2017 I checked my credit file to find that Equifax has a default notice placed in October 2014 by Minicredit, but now being upheld by Kapama. I have written to Kapama citing the lack of checks of creditworthiness originally by Minicredit, and also on the bank issue but they gave a final response saying they would do nothing. I then also wrote to both the ICO and the Financial Ombudsman. Kapama basically has washed their hands of any wrongdoing and say the debt is valid and pointing to Minicredit as the original company. The original loan was for £220. The amount defaulted on the credit file is £467 (made up of additional charges).
The ICO has written to me to say that they can see no wrongdoing since Kapama just the middle man and purchased the debt. The adjudicator and now Financial Ombudsman (since it was escalated) has now also made the decision that they cannot agree and get the default and credit entry removed or amended.
So my question is, what do I do next? Can anybody give me any guidance about next steps for taking this through the courts?
Does a debt collecting company not have some duty of care when purchasing and attempting to enforce a debt to actually check the account and the information around it is correct? I've still never seen a default notice provided by Minicredit or Kapama in any of the many correspondences, and neither received anything from either company around the re-assignment of debt either.
It just feels like Kapama think they can get away with this by hiding behind the original sister companies practices. I don't think this is right and I do believe that the court system is now the way to go.
Has anybody else been succesful in having a debt collection agent who pursues a bogus debt from a company that doesn't exist now wind their neck in? Would be good to hear from you....
Thanks in advance for taking the time to read this fully.
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