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Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulated

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  • Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulated

    Lancashire Mortgage Corporation ( Blemain group) set me up to fail. With a unregulated loan agreement. Is there a common theme amongst sub-prime lenders. All they seem to be interested in is repossessing your home whilst making as much money out of you, whilst of causing as much misery along the way.
    Forums like this have years of repeating history of blatant abuse of the lending system.
    I have started this thread to explore the abuse of unregulated loans. I would really like to hear from anyone who believes they took out a loan they know or believe should have been regulated.

    Its easy to hang your head in shame thinking well i signed the agreement, I have found that when trying to get advice there are two different outlooks on this. Some people, particually those associated with lending tend to say, well you signed it! But the smarter ones ask a few more questions to get a bigger picture, then look at the whole story, its important to realise thousand's and thousand's of pounds are spent on training lenders to use mind games. It sounds odd but anyone who has been involved in sales will tell you, there are set plans to take you from A to B or to Z if they want to.

    When i took my loan out a lot of confusion was deliberatley caused in brief (very brief)
    Titles from the film THE STING
    Starring Marc Goldberg not Paul Newman

    THE PLAYERS
    I applied through a broker who arranged LMC for £45k loan to finish our family home (we had built 3 x houses two were complete) our house was last because we had to wait for plans to be passed to extend it.
    note; Brokers have direct access to LMC director Mark Goldberg they explain to him what the customer wants, their circumstances and he gets involved at a very early stage

    THE SET UP
    I was told it would be second charge, and if it was deemed a business loan, as it would speed things up, (at this stage i was'nt bothered what they called it ) there is no cooling off period, so the loan could be released in a couple of days.

    THE HOOK
    A loan was sent in principle £50k (why sign in principle?) then agreements and more in principle's £50k then £73k then £59k (its called price conditioning) i ageed to more than i originally wanted now at £59,000 including 3x months payments charges fees commissions etc the loan was ready to sign. all the messing up of paper work was a time wasting exercise because they know when you apply you need the money asap and if they drag it out the more desperate you become

    THE TALE
    Two LMC directors came to visit me(at a days notice) for a face to face meeting (fact finding so they are fully aware of my situation, and just how desperate i am) i had 3 x houses all on one title deed, so i had to offer all three as security, they asked loads of questions exposing how desperate i was etc.etc. I was told that LMC had stopped lending on new builds (liers they lend on anything of value) but they would make an exeption. I told them my proffession (it was'nt building houses niether have i ever been in the business of building houses this was a one off project to replace our home on 45% of the plot and two others) I was told to sign at the solicitors and the money would be released, i was ok to organise tradesmwen, i signed and it was sent to LMC

    THE WIRE
    A few days past and i phoned to ask why the funds had not been released. I was informed by Marc Goldberg that they had changed their mind ( gone back on his word and agreement) and now wanted first charge paying off my high street mortgage. with repayments over 6 x more than i had signed on a declaration of income stating what i could afford, our income could not pay over £6475 a month i was in a state of panic, frantic. but i was desperate and they knew it trades men were booked we was having to use a stand pipe for water etc. 6 weeks had passed and i was on my knees. He calmed my fears and talked me through his plan : low rate for 6x months / 4 months payments included in the loan (taking away fears of high repayments)

    THE STING
    The loans in principle and agreements were sent over including £14,000 of charges but it was realised it would only release £35k 4 more loans were sent over all wrong incorrect calculations etc and each one increasing,adding to the confusion but incorporating payments to lead us into a false sense of security. in a state of anxiaty,confusion and stressed to death, with emotions running high not really knowing what to do for the best. I signed ( not realising i signed away everthing i had, to a professional con artist ) I was now set up to fail

    And if that was not bad enough i am now realising exactly what a unregulated business loan really means no legal advice from anywhere unless you can pay dearly for it, ombudsman, FSA, OFT, Citizen advice all tell you they cannot help! Quoted £20,000 to fight it from two different Law Firms you cannot get legal aid for business (even when its not)



    So this is the clause added to the agreement
    DECLARATION FOR EXEMPTION RELATING TO BUSINESSES
    A declaration for the purposes of article 6 must have the following form and content—
    Declaration for exemption relating to businesses
    (sections 16B and 189(1) and (2) Consumer Credit Act 1974)
    I am/We are* entering this agreement wholly or predominantly for the purposes of a
    business carried on by me/us* or intended to be carried by me/us.*
    I/We* understand that I/we* will not have the benefit of the protection and remedies that
    would be available to me/us* under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 if this agreement were a
    regulated agreement under that Act.
    I/We* understand that this declaration does not affect the powers of the court to make an
    order under section 140B of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 in relation to a credit agreement
    where it determines that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor is unfair to the
    debtor.**
    I am/We are* aware that, if I am/we are* in any doubt as to the consequences of the
    agreement not being regulated by the Consumer Credit Act 1974 I/we should seek
    independent legal advice.”.
    *
    Delete as appropriate.


    This declaration should not have been part of the contract because of the following reasons;
    Two Blemain LMC directors knew the loan was not predominantly for business purposes this was within their actual knowledge following their home / site visit
    The loan was 95% to finish our family home

    Now read section 2 & 3. below (this is the piece lenders do not want you to know)



    Consumer Credit Act 1974
    You are here:
    1974 c. 39
    Part II
    Section 16B

    [F116BExemption relating to businessesE+W+S+N.I.
    (1)This Act does not regulate—
    (a)a consumer credit agreement by which the creditor provides the debtor with credit exceeding £25,000, or
    (b)a consumer hire agreement that requires the hirer to make payments exceeding £25,000,
    if the agreement is entered into by the debtor or hirer wholly or predominantly for the purposes of a business carried on, or intended to be carried on, by him.
    (2)If an agreement includes a declaration made by the debtor or hirer to the effect that the agreement is entered into by him wholly or predominantly for the purposes of a business carried on, or intended to be carried on, by him, the agreement shall be presumed to have been entered into by him wholly or predominantly for such purposes.
    (3)But that presumption does not apply if, when the agreement is entered into—
    (a)the creditor or owner, or
    (b)any person who has acted on his behalf in connection with the entering into of the agreement,
    knows, or has reasonable cause to suspect, that the agreement is not entered into by the debtor or hirer wholly or predominantly for the purposes of a business carried on, or intended to be carried on, by him.
    (4)The Secretary of State may by order make provision about the form, content and signing of declarations for the purposes of subsection (2).
    (5)Where an agreement has two or more creditors or owners, in subsection (3) references to the creditor or owner are references to any one or more of them.
    (6)Nothing in this section affects the application of sections 140A to 140C.]
    Last edited by Tools; 21st October 2013, 10:52:AM. Reason: Removed broken links
    Tags: None

  • #2
    Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

    Suffering you have touched on a raw nerve! I do not personally have any dealings with Blemain however I do with another two sub-crime lenders. I would like as many people to start 'kicking off' about their secured charges (unregulated) to the relevant authorities and hopefully with the power of numbers, the likes of the FSA/OFT MANY just sit up and listen and then act on these corrupt organisations. I have most recently submitted all the information I have (including my credit agreement) to the FSA unfair contracts team. The FSA/OFT have a responsibility to the public to keep them 'safe' from loan sharks and they have FAILED so far. The LIBOR, etc ..... the FSA have been fast asleep but are (hopefully) stirring from their slumber!

    No wonder this country is in the financial mess its in. Banks/sub-crime lenders have been 'bending' the rules and are now starting to get bitten by their greed.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

      From the way the OP's post reads, it sounds very much that the mortgage lender has engaged in some elaborate sort of fraud. Why the regulatory bodies are only just waking up to this is beyond comprehension. They need to get their backsides into gear and start hitting these sub-human lenders.
      Life is a journey on which we all travel, sometimes together, but never alone.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

        Originally posted by bluebottle View Post
        From the way the OP's post reads, it sounds very much that the mortgage lender has engaged in some elaborate sort of fraud. Why the regulatory bodies are only just waking up to this is beyond comprehension. They need to get their backsides into gear and start hitting these sub-human lenders.
        It is hardly difficult to understand why a little action now seems to be happening - it's all the result of the so-called "bonfire of the quangos" announced when the toffs and the twerps took over.

        Some of the more useful bodies, brought in by Labour, effectively disappeared. For example, there was Consumer Direct, which usually gave cogent advice on consumer matters whilst also passing on more serious matters to a Trading Standards department or the OFT. It's now run and staffed by the CAB; it may be less expensive, but the advice given depends on what the operator can read from a help screen and their links to any means of law enforcement seem, at best, to be tenuous.

        Another quango to be scrapped was the Fundamentally Supine Authority, largely because it was seen as having fiddled (with itself?) as the London banks burned. Instead of it merely being scrapped, however, it was to be replaced by two bigger and brighter, shiny, new quangos - the Prudential Regulation Authority (link) and the Financial Conduct Authority (link).

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

          ""A loan was sent in principle £50k (why sign in principle?)""


          They ask you to sign a loan in principle and then you have to sign the 'actual' loan agreement that you complete the loan on.

          This way they get a couple of copies of your 'wet' signature and then in some cases they use the extra 'wet' copy to take out a higher loan than the one you think you have and keep the money for themselves and then try to repo your properties.

          Example:

          You apply for a £50K loan that is secured against your property.

          They do a survey that reveals the property to be worth say, double, what you borrow.

          They send you a copy of a survey that basically says the property has enough equity to cover the loan.

          They issue the £50K loan agreement in principle to you, you sign and send back.

          They issue the 'actual' loan agreement for £50K, you sign and send back.

          They then take out a loan of say 85% of the actual value, double your £50K, and give you the £50K you asked for and they keep the rest(35%).

          They then sit back and wait until you get into arrears and do everything they can to repo your property so they can process it till they get to pocket the 35% or more without questions being asked.

          They repo the property and 'sell' it to a third party to cover the money you owe them, hardly ever for the true value, and then 6 months later, the third party sells it to a 4th party, then the 4th party sells it back to the person that took the 35% originally and then they sell it for its true value at a later date for a massive profit.


          Make sure you get copies of any files from any source that you can, dig deep!

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

            I think i get it now. The inprinciple letter is used to get the lenders money agreed (or promise of money) its also used or mis-used to add to the CONfusion when sent in multipule,s

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

              I am in the middle of a horrendous court case with a sub prime lender and what is clear that they have absolutely no scruples and will destroy anybody and take everything they can off the most vulnerable people and do it in the name of a business contract, everyone be clear they only exist because people do not know how to or for reasons of funding afford to stand up to them. Their business model depends largely on people not being able to defend their position in court. There so called contracts when challenged are certainly not watertight and in many cases they are so arrogant they run roughshod over the law as though it doesn't apply to them.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                IanM has summed up, very succinctly, how these sub-human lenders operate. IMHO, what they are doing amounts to Fraud by False Misrepresentation per se, not only against the borrower, but against whoever lends the money to the sub-human lenders, also.

                This would need to be dealt with by specialist police officers, trained in the investigation of fraud.

                As for the arrogant manner in which these sub-human lenders behave, that does not surprise me. They don't see what they are doing as a crime. The only crime, as far as they are concerned, is getting caught.
                Life is a journey on which we all travel, sometimes together, but never alone.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                  Kanine, the very best of luck!!! Could you keep us updated? Corrupt lenders must absolutely HATE sites likes these .........

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                    I just thought i would update this The ombudsmans decision was unbelievable, i signed the agreement as a unregulated business loan therefore he did not consider it reasonable to claim that LMC should or could have been aware that this was not intended to be a commercial loan. Therefore as an unregulated loan the rules mean they cannot look into my complaint
                    So your alright to keep conning people out of ther homes Blemain just pretend you hav'ent carried out checks to see if a loan should of been regulated and the ombudsman will think it reasonable, those terrible lenders how dare they make such claims!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                      So the Ombudsman is saying that he cant look at unregulated business loans, have I got this right????

                      A few years ago the Ombudsman substantially upheld my complaint even though it was an unregulated business loan.

                      The fact that I rejected the recommended compensation is another matter

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                        I have had a knock back from the Ombudman today too!! Please check my threads. Are the FOS smoking illegal substances these days?? How can they side with these sub-crime bandits and come out with things like arrears fees of £58 per month being 'fair' in their eyes. This blatantly goes against what the OFT ruled just a few short years ago. This was only one small part of my complaint but the whole thing was rejected by them. I am very upset and disheartened by the financial authorities. They don't care and encourage abuse!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                          Lenders like Blemain abuse the system because they can its as simple as that!
                          The FOS did make it clear that they could not look into unregulated loans but they had agreed to look into whether the loan should have been regulated or not. but they chose not to. I think this is an important issue because if they had looked into it i genuinely believe that this loan should of been regulated.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                            Why did they chose not to look at whether the loan should have been regulated? Is it because they could not be bothered to do a decent day's work?! In my case I have been passed from one authority to another so often that I now feel like a tennis ball!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Lenders are abusing exemption clauses to make loan agreements fit into unregulat

                              The Financial Ombudsman Service is not fit for purpose! They cannot cope with the work load, and drag their feet, working at a snails pace. Its not rocket science they have a hand book that sets out the rules and guidlines and its frustrating when they refuse to follow their own hand book. When someone takes out a loan they trust the lender to follow the rules because they know the rules and the borrower does not. If they are regulated you are lead to believe you will be safe from rouge lending practices, but instead the lenders know how weak the system is and get away with distroying peoples lives. The same goes for the unfair relationship law 140 its a joke no-body has had any real success because the judges are not prepared to implement the full force of law just one solid case would sort the mobsters and lawless loan sharks out. Instead they are running riot taking the p*ss out of the system. The Aussies are leading the way and threaten to lock up offending lenders that do not follow the rules and cannot show they have carried out the correct procedures. The lenders like Blemain group know, if someone is desperate enough they will sign just about anything, they get around it by having you sign at a solicitor's that suposed to advise you in about half an hour about the Law of Property Act / what Unregulated loans really mean / what a business loan really is / that all the small print is worded to protect the lender / that sub-prime lenders have a hidden agender to take your home / that you should under no circumstances sign the agreement because it is so one sided you will lose everything and there will be nothing you can do about it because they know how to work the system./ When they do decide to reposess your home you will end-up paying for their barrister whilst struggling to get legal representation for yourself.
                              Last edited by suffering; 22nd April 2013, 04:42:AM.

                              Comment

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