Good Afternoon,
I have another thread up here for a separate issue, which has inspired me to sort the rest of my affairs out. But I would be grateful for some advice as to the legality of Moneybarn's conduct.
I voluntarily terminated an agreement with Moneybarn and there was £7k left to pay to reach half the agreement.
I was 3 months in arrears when I took the Voluntary Termination option and no payment has been made to the account since December 2019. However they have not defaulted the debt. They have sent no default notice and they are currently chasing through Moorcroft.
After checking my credit record they have updated it as "no payment due/u" for the past 19 months.
Now I don't have an issue with this per se. Although I am not sure if this is against the ICO guidelines for accurate reporting.
However I now want to enter into a repayment arrangement with them. This is likely going to take about 5 years to pay off, and they are obviously then going to start adding "AP" markers to my file, which is as bad as a default I understand in the eyes of other lenders, but this will drag on for much much longer than 6 years from the date of default. I have written to them and asked them to default the account. But they refused. Saying that they have their own internal processes for when an account is in default.
So is it legal for a company to continue to report "no payment due/unclassified" to the CRA's for several years and then add a default whenever they feel like? Probably just before it becomes statute barred for maximum damage to the debtor.
Have you any suggestion as to how I would go about getting this resolved? I have told them I am not making any payments to the account until they add a correctly dated default to my credit file, and instead will put a token payment in a savings account each month.
Would be grateful for your advice.
I have another thread up here for a separate issue, which has inspired me to sort the rest of my affairs out. But I would be grateful for some advice as to the legality of Moneybarn's conduct.
I voluntarily terminated an agreement with Moneybarn and there was £7k left to pay to reach half the agreement.
I was 3 months in arrears when I took the Voluntary Termination option and no payment has been made to the account since December 2019. However they have not defaulted the debt. They have sent no default notice and they are currently chasing through Moorcroft.
After checking my credit record they have updated it as "no payment due/u" for the past 19 months.
Now I don't have an issue with this per se. Although I am not sure if this is against the ICO guidelines for accurate reporting.
However I now want to enter into a repayment arrangement with them. This is likely going to take about 5 years to pay off, and they are obviously then going to start adding "AP" markers to my file, which is as bad as a default I understand in the eyes of other lenders, but this will drag on for much much longer than 6 years from the date of default. I have written to them and asked them to default the account. But they refused. Saying that they have their own internal processes for when an account is in default.
So is it legal for a company to continue to report "no payment due/unclassified" to the CRA's for several years and then add a default whenever they feel like? Probably just before it becomes statute barred for maximum damage to the debtor.
Have you any suggestion as to how I would go about getting this resolved? I have told them I am not making any payments to the account until they add a correctly dated default to my credit file, and instead will put a token payment in a savings account each month.
Would be grateful for your advice.
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