Success for the CMA’s COVID-19 Taskforce

Following on from the Competition and Market Authority’s (CMA) statement in May 2020, holiday accommodation provider, Vacation Rentals, has voluntarily changed its policy after originally failing to offer refunds to all customers whose trips were cancelled.

Vacation Rentals (who operates sites including Hoseasons and Cottages.com) is just one holiday accommodation provider which was reported to the CMA’s COVID-19 Taskforce. Vacation Rentals has now given the CMA a formal commitment that customers will have the option of a full refund if a booking has been cancelled because of restrictions associated with the coronavirus outbreak.

The CMA says some other providers have not yet agreed to follow the approach of Vacation Rental and the CMA continues to investigate.

Read the full update here.

Voluntary terminations for regulated hire purchase and conditional sale agreements – does a customer have to take care of the vehicle whilst collection arrangements are being made?

The current COVID-19 restrictions mean asset and motor finance lenders are unable to collect vehicles as quickly as they’d like when a customer voluntary terminates a hire purchase or conditional sale agreement under Section 99(1) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. Can you ask your customer to carry on taking care of the vehicle whilst you make arrangements to collect it?

After an agreement has been voluntarily terminated, the customer is likely to be a gratuitous bailee of the vehicle.  This type of bailment is known as a ‘deposit’ because the customer keeps possession of the vehicle without payment.

It’s likely there is two possible types of bailments: (a) involuntary deposit or (b) necessary deposit.

Involuntary deposit – this is where the vehicle is left with the customer against her wishes. In most cases, the customer will need to take reasonable care of the vehicle. But the customer will normally need to make good any damage caused deliberately but not negligently.

Necessary deposit – this is where the vehicle is left with a customer because of a peculiar stress or set of circumstances such as an unforeseen disaster (which the Covid-19 pandemic and lockdown arguably could fall into). The customer is likely to be responsible in negligence or bad faith whilst she has the vehicle.

So how do you protect your position and the vehicle? Talk to your customer. Ask if they’re willing to hold on to the vehicle whilst you make your collection arrangements. And talk to them about insurance, and who is going to pay for it.

Financial Conduct Authority imposes first fine on a claims management company

The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published a final notice fining a claims management firm, Professional Personal Claims Limited (PPC), £70,000 for misleading information published on its website and in printed materials. 

In summary, PPC:

– had used the logo of five major banks which the FCA said was likely to mislead its customers into believing they were submitting claims directly to the banks; and

– was sending generic and factually identical complaints to the banks when evidence specific to each client should have been presented.

The FCA has also published a press release.

Judicial Review of PPI Ombudsman Decision Dismissed

On 13 November 2019, the High Court dismissed a customer’s judicial review of an Ombudsman’s decision not to uphold a PPI complaint in R (Critchley) v Bank of Scotland (t/a Halifax) & Another EWHC 3036 (Admin).  This is a welcome decision that supports the long standing view that the duty of utmost good faith does not apply to the simple lender and borrower relationship.

Background

The Claimant complained her bank had mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI).  The bank rejected her complaint so she referred it to the Financial Ombudsman Service.  After rejecting an adjudicator’s decision that the PPI had not been mis-sold, the complaint was referred to an ombudsman.

The Ombudsman’s decision

The ombudsman decided the bank had (a) not acted fairly or reasonably with the Claimant and (b) failed to sufficiently advise her on the PPI.  However, the ombudsman also decided the PPI had been suitable for the Claimant, and even if she had been properly advised, she would have still have bought it.

The Claimant’s application for judicial review

The Claimant applied for a judicial review of the Ombudsman’s decision.  Her grounds of challenge were that the Ombudsman:

– had misinterpreted DISP Appendix 3, or had failed to apply it correctly (particularly the presumption in DISP App 3.6.2R);

– failed to have proper regard to all of the evidence and erred in concluding that the policy had been suitable for the Claimant;

– erred in failing to find a breach of the duty of utmost good faith because of the bank’s failure to disclose the policy’s limitations and poor value; and

– failed to give adequate reasons.

Decision

The Claimant’s application was dismissed. The judge gave the following reasons:

– There was nothing to suggest the ombudsman had misinterpreted DISP App 3.   He had fully referred to it in his decision and, given his experience, he was well aware of its provisions.  The Ombudsman considered his approach and his findings were consistent with DISP App 3.  The Ombudsman did find significant failings with the sale of the PPI and, in consequence, it was substantially flawed in accordance with DISP App 3.6.2R.  However, he found there was evidence to rebut the presumption and decided it was likely the Claimant would have still purchased the PPI despite the flaws.

– The Ombudsman found the bank had recommended the PPI to the Claimant and did not act with reasonable care and skill in establishing whether the PPI was suitable for her.  However, the ombudsman found the PPI was suitable for her.  The judge concluded the ombudsman was entitled, after his careful analysis of the PPI’s costs and his detailed reasons for his decision, to decide (a) the PPI had been suitable for the Claimant, (b) it had not been poor value and (c) the Claimant would have purchased the PPI anyway.

– The Claimant said the bank was in breach of its duty of utmost good faith because (a) the exclusions and limitations of the PPI were not drawn to her attention and (b) the low claims ratio should have been disclosed as a matter of reasonableness and commercial decency.  The Ombudsman was not persuaded by the Claimant’s views of what the duty of utmost good faith required and the judge agreed.  The judge said the Claimant’s case on the scope of an insurer’s pre-contractual duty of utmost good faith was misconceived.  The duty was contrary to the underlying basis for the Court’s decision in Plevin v Paragon Personal Finance Limited [2014] UKSC 61.  The only duty was to disclose ‘circumstances which decrease the risk to the assured’.

Summary 

This is a welcome well-reasoned and detailed decision.  We have recently seen a resurrection of the allegations of the duty of utmost good faith in Claimant’s statements of case.  This decision reaffirms our view that this duty (a) applies to contracts of insurance between the insurer and the insured (and not a simple relationship of creditor and borrower) and (b) the disclosure is limited to matters material to the risk being insured or the recoverability of a claim under the policy. 

FCA Credit Information Review

On 27 June 2019, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) launched its market study into the credit information market. It’s been launched because of the FCA’s concerns about the coverage and quality of credit information, the effectiveness of competition between credit reference agencies and the extent of consumer engagement.

The FCA’s aim is to get a better understanding of how the credit information market now works and how it may develop in the future by making it work more effectively for credit information user and consumers (where appropriate). 

The market study will focus on: 

  • the purpose, quality and accessibility of credit information
  • market structure, business models and competition
  • consumers’ engagement and understanding of credit information and how it impacts their behaviour

The FCA’s market study is not unsurprising.  Consumers are becoming much more aware of their credit report and rating (with a little help from comedian Marcus Brigstocke) and how this affects their ability to obtain credit.  A simple search of the Financial Ombudsman Service’s decision for May 2019 reports 324 decisions for consumers complaining about their credit reports. 

The FCA will report on its preliminary conclusions in Spring 2020 including, if appropriate, a discussion of potential remedies. 

https://www.fca.org.uk/news/press-releases/fca-launches-review-credit-information-market

The Financial Ombudsman Service Annual Review

On 15 May 2019, the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) published its annual review 2018/2019.  FOS reported (among other complaints) an 89% rise in complaints about consumer credit.

The high-cost short-term lending (HCSTL) sector remains on FOS’s radar.  It continues to hear from customers, who it says, have had trouble after being lent money and who’ve been left to struggle with unsustainable and persistent debt.  

FOS is concerned that businesses are still failing to assess a customer’s affordability and aren’t learning enough from the complaints its resolved.  To help businesses, FOS is publishing its decisions (https://www.ombudsman-decisions.org.uk) setting out its thinking on these types of complaints. Of particular note, is complaints arising out of loans taken out a long time ago. FOS says it’s taking the time to explain to lenders the questions they should ask before telling customers it’s too late to complain.

Given the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent interventions and FOS’s concerns, the HCSTL sector remains high on the agenda for now.

The Annual Review: https://annualreview.financial-ombudsman.org.uk

Financial Services Consumer Panel’s Consultation Response: High-Cost Credit

The Financial Services Consumer Panel (the Panel) has responded to two consultations on high-cost credit by the Financial Conduct Authority (the FCA): (a) overdrafts and (b) ‘buy now, pay later’ offers.

Overdrafts

Commending the FCA’s analysis, the Panel agrees with the FCA that ‘fundamental change’ is needed in the overdraft market. The Panel’s key points and recommendations seek to build on the FCA’s proposals to ensure the protection of consumers, by making overdrafts simpler, fairer and easier to manage.

‘Buy Now, Pay Later’

The Panel notes the consultation, on paper, makes proposals that better protect customers. However, it remains concerned about the likely effectiveness of information disclosure remedies given what it claims to know about firms’ exploitation of consumer behavioural biases.

The Panel

The Panel was established under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 by the FCA.  The Panel represents the interests of consumers in the development of policy by the FCA for the regulation of financial services.

Midnight deadline? The Court of Appeal has just confirmed your cause of action accrues at midnight and not on the next day.

Matthew and others v Sedman and others [2019] EWCA Civ 475 (20 March 2019)

The appeal concerned the calculation of the limitation period for a negligence claim against trustees under a scheme of arrangement.  The scheme allowed claims to be submitted before the ‘bar date’. Claims could be made up until midnight on the ‘bar date’.  

The Court of Appeal decided the cause of action accrues at midnight, not after.

Irwin LJ noted, and Underhill LJ agreed, midnight deadline cases differed from others because a midnight deadline provides a categorical indication of when the cause of action accrues (ie midnight). There were no questions of fractions of a day which, there may have been if the deadline stipulated, say 9am or 3pm. 

The Court of Appeal’s decision is a must read for anyone dealing with litigation issued at or near the expiry of the limitation period.