Hello, I have a debt with Lloyds which was for an overdraft on an account that has now been closed. Lowell is currently chasing and I've decided to confront it (after three years of dodging the bullet). They sent me a "letter" from Lloyds saying they had handed over the debt to Lowell (even though it was very dodgy and had the same references and markings as the Lowell Letter) I then duly sent off a CCA request and my postal order. I've had a letter back today saying the following and im a bit confused "the account relates to a bank account that you held with Lloyds. We would advise you, however, that a bank overdraft is a running credit account and is such exempt from Part V of the CCA 1974 relating to the form and content of regulated agreements. There is, therefore, no statutory requirement to enter into a credit agreement for the overdraft. We have requested statements from the original creditor to show how the outstanding balance was accrued. These will be forwarded to you upon receipt. When Lowell Portfolio purchases a debt from a client we issue a letter of assignment to the customer which fulfils the legal obligations under the law of property. This letter was sent to you. We would not normally issue a specific deed of assignment unless the matter had progressed to court action (not sure if this bit is in there just to scare me but if anyone could explain that would be great) Please be assured your account is on hold until which point we are in receipt of your statements" I get that its on hold but my questions are 1) Once I get these "statements" is the debt legally enforceable 2)can anyone explain the second part about the deeds and C) Can they legally and actually get a hold of my personal bank statements? seems against data protection or does that not exist once the account goes into debt? Any help would really really be appreciated. Apologies to the whole bit of text im not sure how you goto another line? Return doesn't work. Thanks in advance....the confused!
Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Originally posted by tomflurbs View PostHello, I have a debt with Lloyds which was for an overdraft on an account that has now been closed. Lowell is currently chasing and I've decided to confront it (after three years of dodging the bullet). They sent me a "letter" from Lloyds saying they had handed over the debt to Lowell (even though it was very dodgy and had the same references and markings as the Lowell Letter) I then duly sent off a CCA request and my postal order. I've had a letter back today saying the following and im a bit confused "the account relates to a bank account that you held with Lloyds. We would advise you, however, that a bank overdraft is a running credit account and is such exempt from Part V of the CCA 1974 relating to the form and content of regulated agreements. There is, therefore, no statutory requirement to enter into a credit agreement for the overdraft. We have requested statements from the original creditor to show how the outstanding balance was accrued. These will be forwarded to you upon receipt.
Originally posted by tomflurbs View PostWhen Lowell Portfolio purchases a debt from a client we issue a letter of assignment to the customer which fulfils the legal obligations under the law of property. This letter was sent to you. We would not normally issue a specific deed of assignment unless the matter had progressed to court action (not sure if this bit is in there just to scare me but if anyone could explain that would be great) Please be assured your account is on hold until which point we are in receipt of your statements" I get that its on hold but my questions are 1) Once I get these "statements" is the debt legally enforceable
Originally posted by tomflurbs View Post2)can anyone explain the second part about the deeds
Originally posted by tomflurbs View Postand C) Can they legally and actually get a hold of my personal bank statements? seems against data protection or does that not exist once the account goes into debt? Any help would really really be appreciated. Apologies to the whole bit of text im not sure how you goto another line? Return doesn't work. Thanks in advance....the confused!
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Hi Tom,
I cant answer all your questions but I can tell you my experience with an overdraft. I had an O/D with a bank account I had had for over 25 years and they sold it on to Cabot. Cabot said the same thing about the CCA and O/D being such exempt from Part V of the CCA 1974, blah blah... But, before I could do anything Cabot had a County Court Claim thrown at me and I had to settle part of the monies.
Did you send the CCA to Lowell? Have you had a Letter of Assignment from Lowell to say they have bought the account, or a letter from your bank to say the account has been assigned to Lowell? They can only get hold of your bank statements if the debt has been assigned? or as the DCA requested by your bank to act for them. Lowell would then have to request your statements from Lloyds. In my experience I thought it would then be Lloyds that sent the bank statements to you! (?)
What I do know about Lowell as I have learnt this week is that they dont play fair, normally go straight for Statutory Demands or other ways to scare people into paying, harass them with calls and basically lie!
I am sure someone more experience will come along shortly to help you with the legal side of the O/D.
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Lowell are a debt purchaser and will have bought the debt outright from Lloyds for a fraction of its face value, but can/will enforce the whole amount. Lloyds will have now written your debt off and gained tax relief from it. Nice system huh?
As FP explained a CCA request is pretty pointless on an old overdraft, therefore it is quite likely you will need to address this debt.
However, you can only pay what you can actually afford. If however, you can offer a lump sum partial settlement, they will be highly likely to rip your arm off. Start as low as 20% and haggle!
Keep an eye on your credit file. When was the original Lloyds default date? Make sure Lowell don't add anything themselves."Although scalar fields are Lorentz scalars, they may transform nontrivially under other symmetries, such as flavour or isospin. For example, the pion is invariant under the restricted Lorentz group, but is an isospin triplet (meaning it transforms like a three component vector under the SU(2) isospin symmetry). Furthermore, it picks up a negative phase under parity inversion, so it transforms nontrivially under the full Lorentz group; such particles are called pseudoscalar rather than scalar. Most mesons are pseudoscalar particles." (finally explained to a captivated Celestine by Professor Brian Cox on Wednesday 27th June 2012 )
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Originally posted by Celestine View PostLowell are a debt purchaser and will have bought the debt outright from Lloyds for a fraction of its face value, but can/will enforce the whole amount. Lloyds will have now written your debt off and gained tax relief from it. Nice system huh?
As FP explained a CCA request is pretty pointless on an old overdraft, therefore it is quite likely you will need to address this debt.
However, you can only pay what you can actually afford. If however, you can offer a lump sum partial settlement, they will be highly likely to rip your arm off. Start as low as 20% and haggle!
Keep an eye on your credit file. When was the original Lloyds default date? Make sure Lowell don't add anything themselves.
Thanks for the help so far. This website really is a shining light in what can be a dark world
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Originally posted by CleverClogs View PostTom or Trixie, was the overdraft more than or less than £750?
Do you rent or own your home?
I just want to know if they can enforce this without sending the statements? The account is on hold but I don't want that to change if I don't get a copy of the statements I'm not paying it, but is that stance legally right?
thanks
Tom
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Re: Lowells - Credit Agreement Request
Originally posted by CleverClogs View PostAs you rent, the low-lifes at Lowells are less likely to try sending you a Statutory Demand or even trying to make you bankrupt.
As for your legal stance, I rather doubt that it would satisfy a court.
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