Hi everyone. I'm hoping someone will be brave enough to wade into this lot and help me sort it out.
OH and me got married in August last year - very happy thank you!
When we met 4 years ago he had recently separated and was divorcing previous missus.
Their joint account (RBS) was in mess, with an overdraft of £2,200.
They also had a loan with the same bank with approximately £5,000 left to pay.
Hubby needed own account, and cos of poor credit couldn't get one anywhere else. RBS agreed to facilitate this, but on the understanding that they would consolidate the overdraft and previous loan (even though that was in joint names) into a personal loan for £10,558 incl interest. He doesn't remember getting a credit agreement to sign. To add insult to injury the account they opened was a Royalties Gold, costing £10 a month.
So his personal account (no overdraft facility) was now paying £175.98 per month into the loan account.
By October 04 he was paying approx £700 in total against this and other loans/debts arising from his marriage - and then his earnings dropped £5,000. He got into severe difficulty by the end of October 2004.
To try and get on top of this, he arranged a Consumer Credit Counselling Service payment plan with all his creditors and opened a parachute account with Lloyds to regain control of his outgoing payments. While this was being arranged and paid at £10 per month to pay off the overdraft and £85.97 per month to pay off the loan, the bank carried on attempting to pay standing orders into the loan from the already overdrawn (no agreed overdraft) Royalties Gold account. You can imagine how the charges began stacking up. Most months this totalled approximately £98 per month.
Early in 2005 he wrote and offered to pay each of his creditors as much as he could afford to settle his debts but this was unanimously rejected. So he continued to pay an amount each month to each account as a contribution.
So from charges (which were the first thing to take him overdrawn in October 2004) of £30 and all the subsequent charges, he now apparently is overdrawn £1,258.33. He has been informed of this in recent letter from a DCA (first correspondence since he had statement at end of Dec 05) requesting immediate payment of full outstanding balance.
We thought that the CCCS had arranged for his creditors to stop adding interest to outstanding debts, but this turns out not to be the case with RBS. We had no idea this was going on.
Hubby is now in 2nd year of struggling small business, self employed and no proof of earnings.
I've now obtained the rest of the information re this account from RBS. I've also sent letters saying that the account(s) are in dispute.
I now need to make a decision whether these claims are better dealt with separately or together. Either way some of them will be outside the small claims track. I'd like to send a simple word document to someone so that they can appreciate the 'big picture'.
So if you're up for a challenge, please 'come back y'all'
OH and me got married in August last year - very happy thank you!
When we met 4 years ago he had recently separated and was divorcing previous missus.
Their joint account (RBS) was in mess, with an overdraft of £2,200.
They also had a loan with the same bank with approximately £5,000 left to pay.
Hubby needed own account, and cos of poor credit couldn't get one anywhere else. RBS agreed to facilitate this, but on the understanding that they would consolidate the overdraft and previous loan (even though that was in joint names) into a personal loan for £10,558 incl interest. He doesn't remember getting a credit agreement to sign. To add insult to injury the account they opened was a Royalties Gold, costing £10 a month.
So his personal account (no overdraft facility) was now paying £175.98 per month into the loan account.
By October 04 he was paying approx £700 in total against this and other loans/debts arising from his marriage - and then his earnings dropped £5,000. He got into severe difficulty by the end of October 2004.
To try and get on top of this, he arranged a Consumer Credit Counselling Service payment plan with all his creditors and opened a parachute account with Lloyds to regain control of his outgoing payments. While this was being arranged and paid at £10 per month to pay off the overdraft and £85.97 per month to pay off the loan, the bank carried on attempting to pay standing orders into the loan from the already overdrawn (no agreed overdraft) Royalties Gold account. You can imagine how the charges began stacking up. Most months this totalled approximately £98 per month.
Early in 2005 he wrote and offered to pay each of his creditors as much as he could afford to settle his debts but this was unanimously rejected. So he continued to pay an amount each month to each account as a contribution.
So from charges (which were the first thing to take him overdrawn in October 2004) of £30 and all the subsequent charges, he now apparently is overdrawn £1,258.33. He has been informed of this in recent letter from a DCA (first correspondence since he had statement at end of Dec 05) requesting immediate payment of full outstanding balance.
We thought that the CCCS had arranged for his creditors to stop adding interest to outstanding debts, but this turns out not to be the case with RBS. We had no idea this was going on.
Hubby is now in 2nd year of struggling small business, self employed and no proof of earnings.
I've now obtained the rest of the information re this account from RBS. I've also sent letters saying that the account(s) are in dispute.
I now need to make a decision whether these claims are better dealt with separately or together. Either way some of them will be outside the small claims track. I'd like to send a simple word document to someone so that they can appreciate the 'big picture'.
So if you're up for a challenge, please 'come back y'all'
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