Dazzler123
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Where do you get that idea from? If mortgage interest rates where excluded from the outset from being assessed as unfair, then why do terms which have the object and effect of being unfair under schedule 3 of S.I. 27/1995 (j) and (l) exist?
Look at schedule 3 (2) b). It specifically limits j) and l) in the context of interest rates set by mortgage providers.
The provision of interest is NOT a main term of a mortgage loan contract as some contributors on this site have suggested (indeed some Irish High Court Judges have also erred in this regard). This matter was settled in the Supreme Court legal case Pepper v Cannon (para 129 refers), where Justice O’Malley outlined what the main terms of a mortgage loan agreement are: the obligation to repay the loan and to provide security for it, and the lender’s right to take possession of the security in the event that the loan is not repaid. Price variation clauses are not part of the main terms of a mortgage loan agreement.
The obligation to pay interest has to be a main term. How does consideration for the contract pass from borrower to bank on an interest free loan? Where there is only one clause dealing with interest rates, it must be considered as a main term.
The supreme court sidestepped that issue as it relied on the exception for interest rates for mortgage providers. The SC list i dont think could be viewed as an exhaustive list of main terms, particularly as you say, the high court has held that interest rate clauses are main terms. The SC decision in cannon does not overturn that.
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