The issue of whether a claim from a confirmed hardship case should not be affected by the waiver has often been 'misinterpreted' by the banks . Also, the issue of whether a hardship court claim should remain stayed a has been even more cloudy.
The waiver conditions state that the banks must successfully apply for stays on the vast majority of cases in the County Courts, but not all. If hardship claims do not come under the waiver then logic would suggest that stays sought by the banks - based on the waiver - should not be granted or should be lifted - see bullet point dealing with conditions 10 to 15 in PDF doc below.
I came across some FSA correspondence from last year that unambiguously states that hardship claims are ''not relevant to the waiver''. It may be useful to use this letter to support any hardship claim or stay lift application.
Thanks to PKea for editing the letter.
The waiver conditions state that the banks must successfully apply for stays on the vast majority of cases in the County Courts, but not all. If hardship claims do not come under the waiver then logic would suggest that stays sought by the banks - based on the waiver - should not be granted or should be lifted - see bullet point dealing with conditions 10 to 15 in PDF doc below.
I came across some FSA correspondence from last year that unambiguously states that hardship claims are ''not relevant to the waiver''. It may be useful to use this letter to support any hardship claim or stay lift application.
Thanks to PKea for editing the letter.
Comment