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But an offer of a mortgage lasts 6 months, had she drawn down after the 6 month was up they could have varied the rate in the 'new offer' .Sunny said:But if fixed rates were cheaper when she came to drawdown would be entitled to the cheaper rate if she had already agreed to the higher rate??? The answer is yes in reality but no if we follow your argument! It works both ways.
Fair point. The killer though is the 45 day clause in the paperwork. Should have been explained but it wasn't. Sloppy work but not mis-selling. Don't get me wrong. I think AIB should pay up for being unable to train their front line staff properly!2Pack said:But an offer of a mortgage lasts 6 months, had she drawn down after the 6 month was up they could have varied the rate in the 'new offer' .
Not at all. The product was a 45 day fix misrepresented as a 1 year fix. When did you ever hear of a sale being agreed, closed, contracts out and signed and dusted and money drawn down in 45 days.Sunny said:Fair point. The killer though is the 45 day clause in the paperwork. Should have been explained but it wasn't. Sloppy work but not mis-selling. Don't get me wrong. I think AIB should pay up for being unable to train their front line staff properly!
...When interest rates dropped and borrowers ended up with lower rates on drawdown than they had been quoted, I don't remember hearing anyone complain about misselling
Normally you get 6 Months in an offer too.
2Pack said:This is mis selling pure and simple.
You can prove this actually happened? False pretensions? Training staff as such? Pretty serious allegations pulled out of thin air.2Pack said:They trained their staff perfectly and got their mis sale under false pretensions is what happened
.The product was a 45 day fix misrepresented as a 1 year fix
but the loan docs may not have issued in 45 days so the solicitor may not be to blame
In that case "the offer" effectively lasts 45 days not 6 months so its still a Mis Sell IMO and I am not blaming her solicitor as much as AIB .....as ye may have guessedMugsGame said:2pack, the fixed rate lasts for a year from drawdown, not from application. This isn't peculiar to AIB.
How is it possible in the wild to avail of the offer within 45 days , from the minute she leaves the bank with the offer she has to have all contracts issued, checked , queried , reissued snags done, surveys , valuations, fixes, haggles signing of contracts and drawdown.MugsGame said:The offer lasts 45-days, the rate lasts a year.
.Molly and Hel_n, it seems to be your contention that misselling by an institution can only arise where misrepresentation arises out of a systematic institution-wide policy, rather than errors by individual staff. I don't think this is true in general, and I don't think small-print protects institutions from verbal errors staff may make
MugsGame said:2pack, your continued allegation of deliberate misselling seems groundless given the facts outlined by the OP.
The rate offer lasts 45-days, the offer to lend the principal lasts 6 months, the rate lasts a year from draw-down. This is standard. There is no money market AIB can borrow from now to fulfill fixed rates they offered 11 or even 5 months ago.
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