Hi, I am new to this forum and have a couple of questions relating to the way FOS works. I have seen a couple of links on the forums to sites which provide a lot of rather surprising information - (to me at least).
Reason I ask is that I have a dispute with a loan company (with regards to a family member) and referred the complaint to FOS a couple of years ago. There are 2 cases open as the PPI side has to be dealt with separately. There has been a lot of communication between myself and FOS Adjudicators. They have made an assessment (mostly in favour of the debt company), although I am trying to get through to them that quite a few of the criteria they based it on is wrong (due to their misunderstanding of the facts OR due to them taking the debt company's word without asking for evidence to back it up). I naively thought I was dealing with trained financial experts, but since reading the links I mentioned above (which refer to things like the (lack of) qualifications required to be an adjudicator, blindly accepting some facts and ignoring others), I am not so sure. I am trying to remain objective with regard to the claims but, for example, when a company's own complaints dept ADMITS in writing that they failed to cancel insurances as requested to do so (ie within the cooling off period), the adjudicator does NOT uphold my complaint that the company acted wrongly (stating that they cannot be sure the request was actually made)!! In fact this letter of admission only came to light when the FOS themselves asked the company for documentation and the FOS actually provided me with a copy of this letter! Another comment, when I asked a question about the company's limited offer, and backed it up with facts from the company's documentation regarding an amount that appears to have not been considered, the response from the adjudicator was that they would "pass this to the company for their comments, but I am led to believe it will not change their offer". Methinks minds have been made up already and I felt the need to remind them of their job role at this point, so am guessing that my future interaction could be a bit strained!!
Due to this, I am getting close to asking for the cases to be passed up to the Ombudsman. Just wondering if anyone has similar experience or knowledge of the FOS internal workings. The questions I have are:
1) Do I need to continue thrashing out every last detail with the adjudicators BEFORE I can request it goes to an actual Ombudsman - I really am getting weary of responding to their 6 page letters with yet another reply pointing out the errors of their previous one, only to have them come back saying their decisions remain the same anyway?
2) As well as making a case to the Ombudsman about the facts, do I state that I have escalated because I am unhappy with the adjudicators findings and/or competence?
3) I have a fear that the Ombudsman will tend to side with his/her adjudicators and that I could actually end up being worse off by escalating (their decision is final etc) - is this an unrational fear??
4) Any other advice that may help get a proper resolution.
Many thanks in advance...
Reason I ask is that I have a dispute with a loan company (with regards to a family member) and referred the complaint to FOS a couple of years ago. There are 2 cases open as the PPI side has to be dealt with separately. There has been a lot of communication between myself and FOS Adjudicators. They have made an assessment (mostly in favour of the debt company), although I am trying to get through to them that quite a few of the criteria they based it on is wrong (due to their misunderstanding of the facts OR due to them taking the debt company's word without asking for evidence to back it up). I naively thought I was dealing with trained financial experts, but since reading the links I mentioned above (which refer to things like the (lack of) qualifications required to be an adjudicator, blindly accepting some facts and ignoring others), I am not so sure. I am trying to remain objective with regard to the claims but, for example, when a company's own complaints dept ADMITS in writing that they failed to cancel insurances as requested to do so (ie within the cooling off period), the adjudicator does NOT uphold my complaint that the company acted wrongly (stating that they cannot be sure the request was actually made)!! In fact this letter of admission only came to light when the FOS themselves asked the company for documentation and the FOS actually provided me with a copy of this letter! Another comment, when I asked a question about the company's limited offer, and backed it up with facts from the company's documentation regarding an amount that appears to have not been considered, the response from the adjudicator was that they would "pass this to the company for their comments, but I am led to believe it will not change their offer". Methinks minds have been made up already and I felt the need to remind them of their job role at this point, so am guessing that my future interaction could be a bit strained!!
Due to this, I am getting close to asking for the cases to be passed up to the Ombudsman. Just wondering if anyone has similar experience or knowledge of the FOS internal workings. The questions I have are:
1) Do I need to continue thrashing out every last detail with the adjudicators BEFORE I can request it goes to an actual Ombudsman - I really am getting weary of responding to their 6 page letters with yet another reply pointing out the errors of their previous one, only to have them come back saying their decisions remain the same anyway?
2) As well as making a case to the Ombudsman about the facts, do I state that I have escalated because I am unhappy with the adjudicators findings and/or competence?
3) I have a fear that the Ombudsman will tend to side with his/her adjudicators and that I could actually end up being worse off by escalating (their decision is final etc) - is this an unrational fear??
4) Any other advice that may help get a proper resolution.
Many thanks in advance...
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