Hi All,
It is not without considerable dismay, that I write this message.
My stepson is at University in Scotland and doing rather well on his degree - thank goodness !.
Last September (at a time when he was in UNI) a letter arrived at our home in Shropshire - addressed to him. The envelope had 'Amigo Loans' on it, so out of concern, we opened it. The letter thanked him for being a guarantor, for a loan that a 'friend' of his had taken out for £4,000 - to be repaid at £200 per month, over 3 years. His 'friend' is not a student, but someone that he met in Edinburgh - which is where the 'friend' lives and works.
We immediately contacted Amigo and told them that our son did not own a house, did not have a job or income and is a full-time student. Unfortunately, Amigo would not discuss the matter with us - understandable, as the loan did not directly relate to us. We found the loan had gone to our son as guarantor and that he'd promptly transferred the money to his 'friends' account - with no regard to any possible consequences.
You might imagine how angry we were, when our son told us that he had lied to Amigo - telling them that he had a full-time job and worst of all, that he owned our house. Amigo checked to find that he is a resident at this address, and took as fact, his statement (made over the telephone) that he owned our property. I'm amazed, that the checks weren't much more thorough, but it would appear that they carried out the (minimum) requirements. He had worked (very recently prior to the loan) in the Summer (part-time) at a local supermarket, which suggested that he was in regular employment and that he would be able to make the statutory minimum repayments - if required.
Of course, his friend made the first payment, but has defaulted on the rest. We sent a letter - a kind of 'plea for help', to the 'friend's' parents, to see if they might intercede, following which, they made two monthly payments - but these then stopped. Our son has made two payments, but no further payments have been made since March. Accordingly, Amigo have sent letters threatening legal action and with regard to this, I'm sure that they'd win, especially as our son was such a feckwit to lie to get the loan.
Of course, we've ranted and raged at our son, but this is pretty futile and does nothing constructive to address the situation - ultimately, he is liable as guarantor, for the full amount owed.
We appear to have two choices - either my son defaults his responsibility as guarantor and almost certainly has a CCJ against his name, or the loan is repaid.
I've thought long and hard about the situation; we really don't want the lad to have a CCJ against him - that could really jeopardise his prospects of getting a job and home in the future.
In my opinion (and I'm willing to take advice on this), it would be better to pay off the debt in full - asap. The problem being, that the loan is (and will continue) to accrue interest at an extortionate rate - currently, it would cost about £4,000 to pay off the loan - the loan amount is what it was originally, as payments have been missed. If it were paid off over the next three years (or longer), the total of the repayments would be significantly higher than the £4,000 that might be paid now - especially as quite a few payments have been missed.
Although it would be very 'painful' to pay off the lot in full, it would clear the debt and hopefully, we (and our son) would be able to put the matter behind us - better than paying off the loan on a monthly basis for the next few years.
Now we are getting to the part where I'd really appreciate your help - if our son pays off the loan (with family help), that will be the matter 'done & dusted'. It rather 'narks' me, that his 'friend' will get off, having made only one payment - and his credit history will be unaffected. Is there any form of action that we could take against the smug little b@st@rd ?
It'll have to be some form of legal action .
Is there a Scottish system which equates to MoneyClaim, by which our son be able to make some claim against his friend ? This may sound vindictive to some and it probably is, but I'd happily spend a few hundred quid if we could get a CCJ against the friend. Yes, I'm feeling embittered and I'd really like to inflict some similar pain on the 'friend' - a merciful beheading sounds tempting , but whatever you might suggest must be legal and above board.
'Thank you !' for any suggestions made.
It is not without considerable dismay, that I write this message.
My stepson is at University in Scotland and doing rather well on his degree - thank goodness !.
Last September (at a time when he was in UNI) a letter arrived at our home in Shropshire - addressed to him. The envelope had 'Amigo Loans' on it, so out of concern, we opened it. The letter thanked him for being a guarantor, for a loan that a 'friend' of his had taken out for £4,000 - to be repaid at £200 per month, over 3 years. His 'friend' is not a student, but someone that he met in Edinburgh - which is where the 'friend' lives and works.
We immediately contacted Amigo and told them that our son did not own a house, did not have a job or income and is a full-time student. Unfortunately, Amigo would not discuss the matter with us - understandable, as the loan did not directly relate to us. We found the loan had gone to our son as guarantor and that he'd promptly transferred the money to his 'friends' account - with no regard to any possible consequences.
You might imagine how angry we were, when our son told us that he had lied to Amigo - telling them that he had a full-time job and worst of all, that he owned our house. Amigo checked to find that he is a resident at this address, and took as fact, his statement (made over the telephone) that he owned our property. I'm amazed, that the checks weren't much more thorough, but it would appear that they carried out the (minimum) requirements. He had worked (very recently prior to the loan) in the Summer (part-time) at a local supermarket, which suggested that he was in regular employment and that he would be able to make the statutory minimum repayments - if required.
Of course, his friend made the first payment, but has defaulted on the rest. We sent a letter - a kind of 'plea for help', to the 'friend's' parents, to see if they might intercede, following which, they made two monthly payments - but these then stopped. Our son has made two payments, but no further payments have been made since March. Accordingly, Amigo have sent letters threatening legal action and with regard to this, I'm sure that they'd win, especially as our son was such a feckwit to lie to get the loan.
Of course, we've ranted and raged at our son, but this is pretty futile and does nothing constructive to address the situation - ultimately, he is liable as guarantor, for the full amount owed.
We appear to have two choices - either my son defaults his responsibility as guarantor and almost certainly has a CCJ against his name, or the loan is repaid.
I've thought long and hard about the situation; we really don't want the lad to have a CCJ against him - that could really jeopardise his prospects of getting a job and home in the future.
In my opinion (and I'm willing to take advice on this), it would be better to pay off the debt in full - asap. The problem being, that the loan is (and will continue) to accrue interest at an extortionate rate - currently, it would cost about £4,000 to pay off the loan - the loan amount is what it was originally, as payments have been missed. If it were paid off over the next three years (or longer), the total of the repayments would be significantly higher than the £4,000 that might be paid now - especially as quite a few payments have been missed.
Although it would be very 'painful' to pay off the lot in full, it would clear the debt and hopefully, we (and our son) would be able to put the matter behind us - better than paying off the loan on a monthly basis for the next few years.
Now we are getting to the part where I'd really appreciate your help - if our son pays off the loan (with family help), that will be the matter 'done & dusted'. It rather 'narks' me, that his 'friend' will get off, having made only one payment - and his credit history will be unaffected. Is there any form of action that we could take against the smug little b@st@rd ?
It'll have to be some form of legal action .
Is there a Scottish system which equates to MoneyClaim, by which our son be able to make some claim against his friend ? This may sound vindictive to some and it probably is, but I'd happily spend a few hundred quid if we could get a CCJ against the friend. Yes, I'm feeling embittered and I'd really like to inflict some similar pain on the 'friend' - a merciful beheading sounds tempting , but whatever you might suggest must be legal and above board.
'Thank you !' for any suggestions made.
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