Yes. Normally such a person is trained to negotiate settlements without the involvement of the customer.Bond 007 - by negotiator do you mean a solicitor or maybe an accountant ??
I would certainly not meet them alone. I would bring someone along and pick a neutral venue. Have the witness take notes.I am certainly wary of meeting with them as I somehow feel that they will have the advantage over me as they are a big organisation with plenty of advisors etc.
"(Amount involved is approx 20k)."
By all means negotiate the method of repayment but "a "good" advisor will make it work." is just a nonsense statement.
mf
"
Try that in front of a judge.
mf
I don't understand where you are coming from in legal terms with that comment. Can you point to precedent in the area of which I may be unaware?
I think its called the difference between right and wrong?
Clever talk is all very well but I believe that the OP
1. Admits the error - albeit by the bank and not themselves
2. Admits having had the use of the money
3. Would love to find a way of not paying it back immediately or, having been goaded on on this board, at all.
4. Is falling back on the old "oh, they are so big, and I'm so ickle........" line of reasoning.
The money is due. OP may be able to negotiate settlement terms but if OP ends up playing silly buggers, he does not stand a rats ass chance in hell in a court situation.
mf
They are greedy feckers and I would have no problem stiffing them
They are greedy feckers and I would have no problem stiffing them - That's my slide. However, I would speak to a solicitor and find out exactly where you stand legally and then decide. I would not meet them before that. It may cost you a few quid but well worth it.. then at least you are meeting them (maybe with a negiotator) and you are well informed.
Very interesting thread ....
Saddened a little by the second last posting - what would we all say if the Bank took this approach (if they had overcharged the Op three years ago) ...?
Bear in mind there may be some bank offiical currently losing sleep over this issue if they were the one to make the original mistake, not a nice place to be I can assure you ...
My advice to original poster (I'm assuming the bank did make an error three years ago and somehow undercharged the OP by c. E20k) - find it amazing that it took this length of time to discover - can't come up with a logical explanation for that ... I believe whatever bank it is will be very happy to recover their loss, and should be more than willing to negotiate either a lump sum settlement (even with some element of discount) or may as suggested by another poster be willing to provide an interest free loan over a period of time to facilitate the OP...
As for the morality of the situation (I'm obviously biased, so I'll leave others to discuss that issue ...).
Best of luck whatever you decide to do.
Regards,
BM
Do you remember all the over-charging issues the last few years by some of the main banks in ireland, never mind their greed when it came to horsing out mortgages to people who can't afford them - look at the whole sub-prime market mess in US and the impact it has had.
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