Re: WON !! Richard Durkin v HFC / PC World supreme court judgment 26/03/14
I wonder if this is the meat of the matter;
35. "There may be cases in which a creditor, having made enquiries, acts reasonably in reaching the view that the debtor's assertions are unfounded."
Which follows on from the description of how HFC failed to make the enquiries necessary to establish the facts and so observe its duty of care when reporting data.
A default notified to a debtor that is substantially wrong in the sum stated could, I suppose, be considered in the same way as an unenforceable agreement in that the money claimed is not owed and that the creditor is under a duty to ensure that it is owed when the debtor says that it isn't. But by threatening the registration of a default, the creditor is setting out to injure the debtor's creditworthiness and subsequently carries those threats out.
The article on the Compass Chambers website makes the point - "The judgment is a major victory for consumers which restores power to the consumers which was intended when the 1974 Act was passed, but eroded by creditors using threats to extract sums without resorting to litigation" [my underlining]
Extrapolating further, if a debtor disputes any sum demanded then the creditor needs to establish the debt in court or between the parties before reporting adverse data - if the creditor doesn't, then it fails in its duty of care.
This might be utter drivel - just thinking aloud - please pull apart accordingly...
I wonder if this is the meat of the matter;
35. "There may be cases in which a creditor, having made enquiries, acts reasonably in reaching the view that the debtor's assertions are unfounded."
Which follows on from the description of how HFC failed to make the enquiries necessary to establish the facts and so observe its duty of care when reporting data.
A default notified to a debtor that is substantially wrong in the sum stated could, I suppose, be considered in the same way as an unenforceable agreement in that the money claimed is not owed and that the creditor is under a duty to ensure that it is owed when the debtor says that it isn't. But by threatening the registration of a default, the creditor is setting out to injure the debtor's creditworthiness and subsequently carries those threats out.
The article on the Compass Chambers website makes the point - "The judgment is a major victory for consumers which restores power to the consumers which was intended when the 1974 Act was passed, but eroded by creditors using threats to extract sums without resorting to litigation" [my underlining]
Extrapolating further, if a debtor disputes any sum demanded then the creditor needs to establish the debt in court or between the parties before reporting adverse data - if the creditor doesn't, then it fails in its duty of care.
This might be utter drivel - just thinking aloud - please pull apart accordingly...
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