Re: Contracts, Termination, Repudiation and Rescission
that has been my view- however PT and PB are of the opinion that the creditor in a CCA agreement cannot repudiate- or terminate outside of s87 even unlawfully (unlike every other contract in the land) and therefore the performing party then cannot elect
BUT the debtor in the same agreement can !
Pt has case law to back it up
PB has - well, what he has!!
The creditor apparently can even accidentally or deliberately mislead the consumer with false information and then use the innocent consumers response to terminate the agreement without the need of s87- with no fear of reprisal from the court and no fear of breaching OFT guidelines as to misleading consumers and getting them to take transactional decisions they would not otherwise take
hell, they can even LIE in a statutory instrument in order to achieve this aim~
they can rack up costs (contrary to the whole principle of the taylor reforms and the subsequent CPR and overriding objectives) - by deliberately witholding any copy of the credit agreement until the day in court........even provide several contradicting copies of an alleged agreement on the way just to confuse the consumer even further
they can fail to comply with s78 until "well into the trial"
and if they screw up and shouldn't actually have got to court in the first place- well, no matter..... they can remedy the DN which didn't allow them a cause of action whilst the judge halts the trial and then carry on when they have served a proper DN
now called me an old cynic- but that doesn't sound like an act for the protection of consumers to me ! how about you?
it seems to me that based on these perverse interpretations of the CCA- we would be better off with no CCA at all and borrow under common law principles!
Originally posted by basa48
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BUT the debtor in the same agreement can !
Pt has case law to back it up
PB has - well, what he has!!
The creditor apparently can even accidentally or deliberately mislead the consumer with false information and then use the innocent consumers response to terminate the agreement without the need of s87- with no fear of reprisal from the court and no fear of breaching OFT guidelines as to misleading consumers and getting them to take transactional decisions they would not otherwise take
hell, they can even LIE in a statutory instrument in order to achieve this aim~
they can rack up costs (contrary to the whole principle of the taylor reforms and the subsequent CPR and overriding objectives) - by deliberately witholding any copy of the credit agreement until the day in court........even provide several contradicting copies of an alleged agreement on the way just to confuse the consumer even further
they can fail to comply with s78 until "well into the trial"
and if they screw up and shouldn't actually have got to court in the first place- well, no matter..... they can remedy the DN which didn't allow them a cause of action whilst the judge halts the trial and then carry on when they have served a proper DN
now called me an old cynic- but that doesn't sound like an act for the protection of consumers to me ! how about you?
it seems to me that based on these perverse interpretations of the CCA- we would be better off with no CCA at all and borrow under common law principles!
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