I have recently seen a regulated credit agreement which contains a clause stating that, in the event of recovery action, a fee will be charged.
This is expressed as a substantial percentage of the outstanding amount payable under the agreement.
So, if person A owes, say, £2000, & person B owes £1000, then, by virtue of this clause, A will pay twice as much as B for what must be the same amount of 'work' necessary to recover the debt.
To decide whether this is unfair to A, or to both A & B (given the high percentage), I guess the questions would be
i) Is it an unfair term
ii) Is there any evidence to help calculate what a 'reasonable' charge would be, bearing in mind that there is a duty to mitigate the 'loss'
This is expressed as a substantial percentage of the outstanding amount payable under the agreement.
So, if person A owes, say, £2000, & person B owes £1000, then, by virtue of this clause, A will pay twice as much as B for what must be the same amount of 'work' necessary to recover the debt.
To decide whether this is unfair to A, or to both A & B (given the high percentage), I guess the questions would be
i) Is it an unfair term
ii) Is there any evidence to help calculate what a 'reasonable' charge would be, bearing in mind that there is a duty to mitigate the 'loss'
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