I have a loan with Natwest and I owe them £5,300, I missed a payment and they decided to take the whole loan away from me to make my account -£5,300, before my wages went in. I kicked-off and and told them I had missed one payment, and this was a disgrace so they credited the account with the £5,300 and took the loan payment of £170. Last Friday, I looked at my account and they had credited me another £5,300, which I transfered to other accounts and spent. I know, I shouldn't have but I'm struggling at the mo and I'm going to Orlando for New Year and bought the kids tickets for Disney and paid my mortgage arrears. Today, I checked my account and they have taken the £5,300 back. Wat can they do? If I say, I'm skint and thought it was my wages, as I don't get paid much less than that, but really wat can they do?
I'm struggling at the mo and I'm going to Orlando for New Year and bought the kids tickets for Disney
Eh? Is it just me or does that sentence not make sense?
I'm struggling at the mo and I'm going to Orlando for New Year and bought the kids tickets for DisneyEh? Is it just me or does that sentence not make sense?
My point is they had no problem in deducting the amount when I missed one payment, now they have paid me twice I will pay you double the amount on the loan.
My point is they had no problem in deducting the amount when I missed one payment, now they have paid me twice I will pay you double the amount on the loan.
got to be fishing... it didnt occur to you oh they have made an error i'll phone em and see whats up... no first reaction 5300 i've been given lets have that and spend it.
got to be fishing... it didnt occur to you oh they have made an error i'll phone em and see whats up... no first reaction 5300 i've been given lets have that and spend it.
Won holiday in a raffle, anyway they turned me over by taking £5,300 without a care. My bank charges over the years are fortunes, I will pay them the money if they want, but I'm not prepared to do it in one lump. If, they take £5,300 without any care then I'm prepared to double my load amount for the remaining whatever years...All I want to know is how will that stand, I'm willing to pay them back but not in one go.
Won holiday in a raffle, anyway they turned me over by taking £5,300 without a care.My bank charges over the years are fortunes, I will pay them the money if they want, but I'm not prepared to do it in one lump.If, they take £5,300 without any care
since you had the money since friday i would suggest you get a refund on tickets.... they are well within rights to take the money back as an obvious error has been made.
since you had the money since friday i would suggest you get a refund on tickets.... they are well within rights to take the money back as an obvious error has been made.
Here it it....3 weeks ago...Should of paid off the loan then IMO
charliegi 01 Nov 22:35
My biggest wvery winning day until today was about 4k
but won a bit on morning dogs, outside bias at Hove and then diecided to have a go.
American Football: £783.05 | Athletics: £959.00 | Football: £5,071.09 | Greyhound Racing: £1,230.12 | Horse Racing: £751.44 | Motor Sport: £2,547.94 | Rugby League: £2,216.52 Total P&L: £13,559.16
Here it it....3 weeks ago...Should of paid off the loan then IMOcharliegi 01 Nov 22:35 My biggest wvery winning day until today was about 4kbut won a bit on morning dogs, outside bias at Hove and then diecided to have a go.American Football: £783
I can pay the 5k, if needed but my point is the bank took 5.3k from me without a care, I could have been skint and they didn't think twice. Now they have over payed me, I will pay them double the loan for the remaininder of the course.
I can pay the 5k, if needed but my point is the bank took 5.3k from me without a care, I could have been skint and they didn't think twice. Now they have over payed me, I will pay them double the loan for the remaininder of the course.
charliegi 24 Nov 14:35 Won holiday in a raffle, anyway they turned me over by taking £5,300 without a care. My bank charges over the years are fortunes, I will pay them the money if they want, but I'm not prepared to do it in one lump. If, they take £5,300 without any care then I'm prepared to double my load amount for the remaining whatever years...All I want to know is how will that stand, I'm willing to pay them back but not in one go.
LOOK FORWARD TO SOME HEFTY BANK CHARGES COMING YOUR WAY, YOU DESERVE EVERY ONE OF THEM.
charliegi 24 Nov 14:35 Won holiday in a raffle, anyway they turned me over by taking £5,300 without a care.My bank charges over the years are fortunes, I will pay them the money if they want, but I'm not prepared to do it in one lump.If, the
tell them they gave you the money. ask them to provide proof that you owe them the money. proof, ie some form of agreement or contract wherein you agreed that on receipt of these funds you would repay it. do this with a letter. of course they will try their best, but they have no proof of debt, because there is no paperwork proving a debt exists. you may want to set up a bank account with someone else though and start using that instead from now on, because they will do their best to make thigns awkward for you.
tell them they gave you the money. ask them to provide proof that you owe them the money. proof, ie some form of agreement or contract wherein you agreed that on receipt of these funds you would repay it. do this with a letter. of course they will t
...and advise them they should be more careful in future, for you cannot be held responsible for their mistakes, and you are not obliged to check that monies in YOUR account are actually YOURS.
...and advise them they should be more careful in future, for you cannot be held responsible for their mistakes, and you are not obliged to check that monies in YOUR account are actually YOURS.
DonWarro 24 Nov 15:00 tell them they gave you the money. ask them to provide proof that you owe them the money. proof, ie some form of agreement or contract wherein you agreed that on receipt of these funds you would repay it. do this with a letter. of course they will try their best, but they have no proof of debt, because there is no paperwork proving a debt exists. you may want to set up a bank account with someone else though and start using that instead from now on, because they will do their best to make thigns awkward for you.
NO WONDER THE BANKS ARE IN DEBT AND NEEDED BAILING OUT WITH TAXPAYERS MONEY. its theft, he knows it aswell and most on here knows it.
DonWarro 24 Nov 15:00 tell them they gave you the money. ask them to provide proof that you owe them the money. proof, ie some form of agreement or contract wherein you agreed that on receipt of these funds you would repay it. do this with a l
lol. why you think they will accept an offer of repayment over x years that you stipulate.
it likely cost the bank ZERO anyway. learn where money comes from, check the unenforceable credit agreements thread on the financials forum board.
there is nothing wrong ethically or morally with not repaying this. regrettably your peers will tell you otherwise because they have been fooled by the system like everyone else and have no idea how it works.
lol. why you think they will accept an offer of repayment over x years that you stipulate.it likely cost the bank ZERO anyway. learn where money comes from, check the unenforceable credit agreements thread on the financials forum board.there is no
THEFT is what the banks are doing. theyve no money to lend. your loan application is a promissory note, ie it is money to a bank, no different to a pile of tenners.
you give them a loan application for £5000 - their books will record this as £5000 received/credited. then they "loan" it back to you (ie give you back you money but in note form so you can use it) and expect you to pay interest on your own money. this shows up as a debit on their accounts so their books are balanced. then you start making payments, everyone of which is profit to the bank.
the banking system is a scam you pleb. its going down because people are realising. the law is on our side and not theirs.
THEFT is what the banks are doing. theyve no money to lend. your loan application is a promissory note, ie it is money to a bank, no different to a pile of tenners.you give them a loan application for £5000 - their books will record this as £5000
Many credit agreements are unenforceable, which has precisely f*ck all to do with this situation.
Credit agreements of a certain kind are subject to the consumer credit act. If such a loan was made and errors were made in the paper work, it is possible in some of the cases to have them declared uneforceable.
A bank error is entirely different. You hold the money on trust for the bank, and it is returnable on demand. You are entitled to any interest earned in the mean time.
Many credit agreements are unenforceable, which has precisely f*ck all to do with this situation.Credit agreements of a certain kind are subject to the consumer credit act. If such a loan was made and errors were made in the paper work, it is possib
A promissory note, referred to as a note payable in accounting, or commonly as just a "note", is a contract where one party (the maker or issuer) makes an unconditional promise in writing to pay a sum of money to the other (the payee), either at a fixed or determinable future time or on demand of the payee, under specific terms. They differ from IOUs in that they contain a specific promise to pay, rather than simply acknowledging that a debt exists.
The terms of a note typically include the principal amount, the interest rate if any, the parties, the date, the terms of repayment (which could include interest) and the maturity date. Sometimes, provisions are included concerning the payee's rights in the event of a default, which may include foreclosure of the maker's assets. Demand promissory notes are notes that do not carry a specific maturity date, but are due on demand of the lender. Usually the lender will only give the borrower a few days notice before the payment is due. For loans between individuals, writing and signing a promissory note are often instrumental for tax and record keeping. In the United States, a promissory note that meets certain conditions is a negotiable instrument regulated by article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Negotiable promissory notes are used extensively in combination with mortgages in the financing of real estate transactions. Promissory notes, or commercial papers, are also issued to provide capital to businesses.
Historically, promissory notes have acted as a form of privately issued currency. In many jurisdictions today, bearer negotiable promissory notes are illegal because they can act as an alternative currency.
DonWarro 21 Oct 12:55
those 3 paragraphs are direct quote btw.
now think about what a loan application is
DonWarro 21 Oct 13:01
now think about what a £10 note is. it is a promissory note (and privately issued too by BofE, as is a loan application by yourself)
from wiki fyi A promissory note, referred to as a note payable in accounting, or commonly as just a "note", is a contract where one party (the maker or issuer) makes an unconditional promise in writing to pay a sum of money to the other (the payee),
my mate took notice of a thread on here about MBNA and has now not had to repay around £30,000 in credit card debt as they were not allowed to enforce the debt; i think its terrible as it cost us in the long run, but the system seems to allow it,
my mate took notice of a thread on here about MBNA and has now not had to repay around £30,000 in credit card debt as they were not allowed to enforce the debt; i think its terrible as it cost us in the long run, but the system seems to allow it,
Credit agreements of a certain kind are subject to the consumer credit act. If such a loan was made and errors were made in the paper work, it is possible in some of the cases to have them declared uneforceable.
And all are subject to the common law. the consumer credit act is simply the rules within the game - the game is built upon common law rules. the credit consumer act has nothing to do with the situation the OP is in.
A bank error is entirely different. You hold the money on trust for the bank, and it is returnable on demand. You are entitled to any interest earned in the mean time.
you hold the money on trust? really? lmao sib. what trust? what agreement?
Credit agreements of a certain kind are subject to the consumer credit act. If such a loan was made and errors were made in the paper work, it is possible in some of the cases to have them declared uneforceable.And all are subject to the common law.
budapest - the system is robbing all of us. people are taking back what is there's.
what i have talked about IS relevant to the situation, because from that angle it's all about the SOURCE of the funds - which is YOU, not the bank.
budapest - the system is robbing all of us. people are taking back what is there's.what i have talked about IS relevant to the situation, because from that angle it's all about the SOURCE of the funds - which is YOU, not the bank.
of course the claims will work sib if they have not met requriements of the credit consumer act. but that act is only their to fool us some more anyway. it legitimises the practice of banks stealing from it's customers. under common law it is fraud because they are telling you they're loaning you something when they are not, whether they meet the conditiond of the CCA or not.
of course the claims will work sib if they have not met requriements of the credit consumer act. but that act is only their to fool us some more anyway. it legitimises the practice of banks stealing from it's customers. under common law it is fraud
sib - i know people that have beaten mortgages with this stuff. and i should add, that they received the advice from some very respected individuals on the international finance/government scene. these people lend money to banks mate. they are creditors, while the rest of the population are debtors, regadless of whether what you see as your bank account is overdrawn or has a balance of $1million.
sib - i know people that have beaten mortgages with this stuff. and i should add, that they received the advice from some very respected individuals on the international finance/government scene. these people lend money to banks mate. they are cred
"implied constructive trust" is the phrase you are looking for.
banks do not always win in court, (they usually do) but I can 100% assure you that no-one ever beat them using the arguments you are throwing around. The very idea that only a couple of people know it, and they win with it in acourt and it doesn't get out to the whole community, is just sheer absolute b*llocks. Just as the arguments themsleves are.
"implied constructive trust" is the phrase you are looking for.banks do not always win in court, (they usually do) but I can 100% assure you that no-one ever beat them using the arguments you are throwing around. The very idea that only a couple of
DonWarro 24 Nov 15:21 sib - i know people that have beaten mortgages with this stuff. and i should add, that they received the advice from some very respected individuals on the international finance/government scene. these people lend money to banks mate. they are creditors, while the rest of the population are debtors, regadless of whether what you see as your bank account is overdrawn or has a balance of $1million.
SO WOT YOU ARE SAYING THEN THAT THE BANKS DONT NEED TO PAY THEM CREDITORS THEN WHO THEY BORROW MONEY OFF THEN.so all this money the gov has lent to the banks the banks could say f off then we aint paying it back
DonWarro 24 Nov 15:21 sib - i know people that have beaten mortgages with this stuff. and i should add, that they received the advice from some very respected individuals on the international finance/government scene. these people lend money
no, the banks have to pay creditors if they have actually LOANED them the money. and the banks creditors are not silly. therefore they create the money by promissory note out of jurisdiction first so that they have it to lend.
no, the banks have to pay creditors if they have actually LOANED them the money. and the banks creditors are not silly. therefore they create the money by promissory note out of jurisdiction first so that they have it to lend.
read the whole thread dan. it's not their money. they never had it to loan him in the first place. he gave it to them , and then they gave it back but fked up because they didnt get a loan agreement in place
read the whole thread dan. it's not their money. they never had it to loan him in the first place. he gave it to them , and then they gave it back but fked up because they didnt get a loan agreement in place
"implied constructive trust" is the phrase you are looking for.
banks do not always win in court, (they usually do) but I can 100% assure you that no-one ever beat them using the arguments you are throwing around. The very idea that only a couple of people know it, and they win with it in acourt and it doesn't get out to the whole community, is just sheer absolute b*llocks. Just as the arguments themsleves are.
banks win against people who do not understand. this includes most solicitors, who are intentionally schooled to only understand the more superficial levels of law, ie statutory.
it is not just a couple of people that know, there are loads. but since the majority are busy financing everything so that you can work for them they choose not to say.
"implied constructive trust" is the phrase you are looking for.banks do not always win in court, (they usually do) but I can 100% assure you that no-one ever beat them using the arguments you are throwing around. The very idea that only a couple of p
that's why no one has told you. and it's not easy to make a free loan, it is a fairly complicated process to get the money in your hand.
and why you think they dont want you all to know, for the very reason that it would mean free money and therefore people wouldnt work. they need people to work for them, produce stuff, run the services, so that those who do know can enjoy their lives at the expense of the rest.
it's called a 2 class system. all this upper/middle/lower class stuff is rubbish. you're either a creditor, or you're a debtor.
that's why no one has told you. and it's not easy to make a free loan, it is a fairly complicated process to get the money in your hand.and why you think they dont want you all to know, for the very reason that it would mean free money and therefore
it certainly is the person's money who applied for the loan. the only thing of value going into the arrangement is that person's signature. the signature is the money.
it certainly is the person's money who applied for the loan. the only thing of value going into the arrangement is that person's signature. the signature is the money.
got to go now. plus bf might ban me again if i say too much :)
suggest investigating this matter yourselves, if you can be bothered, and you wish to be free both financially and politically (ie not subject to statutory "laws", which are not law at all).
gl.
got to go now. plus bf might ban me again if i say too much :)suggest investigating this matter yourselves, if you can be bothered, and you wish to be free both financially and politically (ie not subject to statutory "laws", which are not law at al
Don, it won't make any difference telling you this, but any way.
There are a large number of people, myself included, making good money writing off Consumer Credit Acts loans. (It is a small part of my practise). Some, not including me, are making millions.
These people would be very happy indeed to do the same thing with any vehicle they can find. And they are looking, and they are clever, and they don't give two shiny sh*tes about the effect on the banks.
You are, plain and simple, living in a fantasy conspiracy world.
Don, it won't make any difference telling you this, but any way.There are a large number of people, myself included, making good money writing off Consumer Credit Acts loans. (It is a small part of my practise). Some, not including me, are making mi
well even more reason you should investigate then. i have spoken with a few reps from credit card cartel or whatever they're called, and a couple of them fully understood and are proceeding with a few cases on this basis.
widen your view.
im off to take my son to the park :)
well even more reason you should investigate then. i have spoken with a few reps from credit card cartel or whatever they're called, and a couple of them fully understood and are proceeding with a few cases on this basis.widen your view.im off to ta