Brendan Burgess
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The court heard the couple took out a mortgage for €395,000 with the lender in 2007 with the interest rate fixed for the first three years, after which the rate would revert to a tracker rate following ECB rates.
In January 2009, they contacted Permanent TSB’s Lucan branch concerning whether there was an exit fee for the fixed-rate mortgage. They said they were told there was “no penalty” and the couple then switched rates.
The ombudsman upheld their complaint in February last and the lender has challenged that decision in proceedings which opened yesterday before Mr Justice Michael White. Permanent TSB claims there were “significant errors” in the ombudsman’s findings, including his finding that the bank had a “fiduciary relationship” with the couple.
The ombudsman has been directed to reconsider the matter in accordance with the court’s findings.
In his decision, Mr Justice White found the ombudsman made serious and significant errors in his finding upholding the couple’s complaint.
The ombudsman, in considering the complaint, should have applied the provisions of the 2006 Consumer Protection Code, the lender’s obligations under its own rules, regulations and code of conduct, and general consumer law.
The ombudsman had failed to address a conflict of evidence between the couple and the lender as to what was said by it to them concerning switching from the tracker rate, he found.
The ombudsman had also incorrectly ruled there was a fiduciary relationship between the lender and the couple, he said. The parties were not in a fiduciary relationship with each other as, in law, the lender was entitled to have regard to its own financial interest. Any change in the interest rate had consequences for the couple and the lender, he noted.
The responsibilities placed on the lender were in accordance with the Consumer Protection Code, rather than any duty as a fiduciary, he said, insofar as there was any finding by the ombudsman the bank had misrepresented matters by silence because of a fiduciary relationship that was not correct in law.
I've been onto PTSB regarding breaking the fixed rate (1 year left). I'm fixed at 4.85, they offered me 4.65 varibale rate and no penalties. So I asked them if I wait till fixed rate expires will I go back onto my original tracker and they said yes i will fall onto the tracker available at the time my fixed rate expires. I have to do some calculating, but I'm pretty certain I'll be better off sitting out the year and falling back onto a tracker rather than going on a variable now.
PS: We were on fixed rate 5.35%, switched to 4.9% as wife was going on maternity leave. 6 months of fixed left at the time!
I think that you guys need to get together and form some type of campaign.
PTSB is charging a 6% standard variable rate, so if you lose your Ombudsmans cases, this will be very expensive for you.
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