Bank charges: it's not over!

The banks may have won the case before the Supreme Court, but the battle's not over yet. Neil Faulkner explains what has to happen next before you can get your money back.
Since the evening after publishing last week's write-up of the bank charges court case, I've been chomping at the bit for a follow-up. As I read last week's judgment I realised I was rusty on the tactics for reclaiming, because it has been a long while since I wrote my guide to reclaiming charges and almost as long since I've had to refer to it, what with small claims being on hold for two years whilst the Office of Fair Trading battled the banks. That's why I had forgotten something important.
I spoke with Marc Gander of the Consumer Action Group who reminded me that the majority of the small claims that we've been making are not based on the same arguments that the Office of Fair Trading has been using. This means that the Supreme Court's decision doesn't directly affect most claimants.
As I said in my last piece, there were openings left by the judgment that the court emphasised more than once, revealing that, whilst the judges ruled in the banks' favour, they believe there is a case for claimants to argue on other grounds.
Look to different small print
Financial companies get to both write the small print and interpret it in a way that best suits them. This means many deals are usually hugely one-sided. Not any more. Now, with bank charges, consumers are finding different ways to use small print and different regulations to quote in their favour.
The Office of Fair Trading has been focusing on regulation six of a piece of a legislation called the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations. However, the judges strongly hinted in their judgment that regulation five should be the focus.
Regulation five states: 'A contractual term which has not been individually negotiated shall be regarded as unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the contract, to the detriment of the consumer.'
Marc Gander reckons this means that: 'Any clause allowing a bank to impose repressive charges, and increase and change those charges at its own discretion, would be extremely likely to put the bank in a dominant position - and therefore the term should not be allowed to stand.'
This supports a possibility I outlined last week: 'By not allowing the customers to have a say in whether the bank should accept transactions that take them beyond their unauthorised overdraft limit, for example, the banks could be said to be in breach of this regulation.'
That's two possibilities straight off. The good news is that many claimaints are already using regulation five as the basis and those who aren't will have an opportunity to amend their claims.
One more possibility
One point I didn't have space for in my piece last week was also that the judgment (deliberately) gave another hint of an angle that should be explored. The Office of Fair Trading's use of regulation six was faulty, but the judgment hints that if the OFT may be able to get in and provide support on the basis of it, if it expands to further arguments. Whether we really want the OFT to take this case back to court and risk another FSA waiver is a different matter.
How claimants should proceed from here
The campaign has become rather more professional since I, with limited legal training, hammered out my guide with a solicitor's help three and-a-half years ago. Now, some campaigners are hiring senior barristers - QCs - to help them adjust the claims since the judgment. The Consumer Action Group is working with a QC over the next ten days or so to check over the arguments, to re-write the template letters and to work out how those people with claims already on hold in the courts should re-submit their cases.
I'm no longer able to speak with the solicitor who helped me in the first place, but I'm sure she'd advise that we just wait to see what the QCs come up with. We've waited two years for the OFT case, so we can wait two more weeks! I'll report back to you then, after lovemoney.com updates its current guide to reclaiming charges. For now, we wait.
Get help from lovemoney.com
If you need a bit of help to save , we can help.
First, adopt this goal: Cut your food bills
Next, watch this video: How to slash the cost of your mortgage payments
And finally, why not have a wander over to Q&A and ask other lovemoney.com members for hints and tips about what worked best for them?
Earn 3% AER with a savings account from lovemoney.com
More: A cold wind blows on energy prices | 305 compelling reasons to compare car insurance
Most Recent
Comments
-
The bottom line is that the UK is no longer a place for hard-working, honest people. The rich get richer (eg the bankers) and the "less fortunate" are increasingly being subsidised by benefits funded by the "easy targets" (ie the hard-working, non-complaining working classes). No wonder kids are all striving to be X-Factor stars when they witness their parents who have strived so hard end up on the scrap heap (no better off than if they spent their formative years playing pool or football and gettig drunk). Why bother? If I had my time again, I would not have studied hard to qualify as a chartered engineer and work 16-18 hour days to provide for my family - No, I would "invest" in learning to sing/dance/play football/tennis/snooker, enjoy myself, claim benefits and be no worse off at the very least - and maybe (just maybe) could have been a "Beckham" or "Rooney" or "Russell Brandt" by now"!! ie a complete NON-Producer getting paid an exorbitant rate and having millions of stupid fans/sheep adoring me!! - I dont know what the answer is, but I can tell you that the UK has no idea at all
REPORT This comment has been reported. -
Hi londonben The answer is mid-2006 on The Motley Fool. Neil
REPORT This comment has been reported. -
I've been reading both sides of this argument lately and I have to say that as much there is a strong point of view for both cases, when I read comments like that of MrRee (second one down) who says "It gets right on my nerves when people these days seem to want to blame someone else, anyone, for their failings and expect no consequenses to their actions"....well MrRee, Do you think the taxpayer was consulted when the bailout was agreed? A bailout needed by the BANKS because of mistakes THEY made resulting from gross 'mismanagement', greed, arrogance etc...Who did THEY blame...the markets! - The conditions for which THEY created to play with YOUR money and make THEMSELVES a lot wealthier, and you?....well people like you and I plod along believing honesty is the best policy! Really? Do you think if the banks were honest and had your interests at heart any of this mess would have happened? Think about it for a second. And then think about all the money going in bonuses this year....where does it end?. Now what really gets on 'my nerves', is that the banks, which it seems dictate policy and have done for some time have manipulated people like you to such an extent that they have you believing that if THEY rip YOU off it's actually YOUR fault...HAHA, what a stroke of GENIUS! Look, it is no longer a question of whether we should get our money back because of this or that or whatever...it's the bigger picture...if we blame ourselves nothing ever changes! Banking institutions get bigger, even more powerful then they are today and believe me you do not want that to happen. If the future of our world becomes the remit of the World World Banking Corporation, then we're all going to hell in a bucket my friend, and this beautiful world we call our planet ceases to be ours. We need to keep them on their toes otherwise they will run rough shod over everyone and everything - it's just the way things work and besides, let's face it, it's only now that a few banks are restructuring the way their penalise account holders for going overdrawn because of everything that has happened up to now. If as a collective, we stand together and make them aware we have no intention of backing down, they will have no choice other than to watch their step and provide support to businesses, and a fair and competitve service to customers who, frankly enable them to make 6,7,8 28 Billion pounds of profit every month or six months or year!
REPORT This comment has been reported.
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature
07 December 2009