Irish courts have no jurisdiction on a bankruptcy declared and discharged in another state - proving your COMI is integral to show that you are now a taxable person in that jurisdiction. Depending on the individual merits of the case, a person may be able to return to Ireland in one year or less with the bankruptcy discharged, and as hard as it may be to imagine, no court or creditor in Ireland can do anything about it.#
It's a fairly common practice now, not only from Irish people going to the UK, German citizens would also do this in numbers, as would any country's citizens within the EU, where bankruptcy legislation in the respective country could be considered 'draconian'
w w w . f r o s t . i e
Gekko, what sort of help do you think should be given and to what categories of people?
I'd be inclined to think that the Irish lender would probably proceed with their claim in the Irish courts and would probably obtain a default judgement (due to absence of the borrower) which would be enforced in Ireland, and abroad where possible, regardless of what the borrower did in the UK. I'm not sure that the law in the UK is clear cut enough that their bankruptcy applies to Irish debts incurred by a borrower who was permanently resident in Ireland at the time the debts occured. I'm fairly sure that you'd have to stay out of Ireland for a very very long time - essentially have to emigrate permanently with little chance of ever returning - which is a very high price to pay. And always with the risk that the Irish bank may decide to start proceedings in the UK if it feels that it would be worthwhile and that the bankruptcy rules were being abused.
Yep, people seem to forget this. The bank took a risk with their capital to lend money to people with the expectation of a profitable return. If the banks exercises poor judgment, they should shoulder the losses. This is how the banking system has always worked.Yes THEY borrowed the money to purchase the property and THE BANK lent the money to the borrower.
It was quite unclear to me that your claim related to home-related debt over a limited time period, as opposed to the broad general nature of your claim as you wrote it.As you can see from the above posts, I've always been referring to "home related debt". It was you that alluded to more traditional property speculators.
You are overplaying the 'luck' factor. I know of two young couple who purchased property during the boom years and are now in negative equity - one an apartment and one a duplex. Both took a fairly cautious approach - one guy specifically said to me that they chose a property that they could still continue to pay the mortgage of one or other lost their job or had to give up work for family reasons. Both are continuing their lives without any 'utter devestation'. The apartment owner have rented their apartment out to Dublin City Council under the RAS scheme while renting another property for themselves and planning a self-build. The townhouse owners are continuing to pay their -ve equity mortgage without any major difficulty.Like it or not, historically we've had a culture of home ownership in this country. Purely for chronological reasons, a large group of people have been devastated by the collapse in property prices. Had they been a little older or a little younger, they wouldn't have been. Luck has played a big part in this. I won't get any help but I acknowledge that we should do something to help such people. I agree that property speculators (e.g. people who invested in property other than their PPR) don't deserve similar levels of assistance.
Im in the same boat , I would suggest getting professional advise here.But i cant find anybody working in this area day in day out ....who can give practical advise ..
Please pass on any details if you find such a person.
Whilst the majority of what you say I agree with I cannot agree withI agree that property speculators (e.g. people who
invested in property other than their PPR) don't deserve similar levels of
assistance.
I know of two young couple who purchased property during the boom years and
are now in negative equity - one an apartment and one a duplex. Both took a
fairly cautious approach - one guy specifically said to me that they chose
a property that they could still continue to pay the mortgage of one or
other lost their job or had to give up work for family reasons. Both are
continuing their lives without any 'utter devestation'. The apartment owner
have rented their apartment out to Dublin City Council under the RAS scheme
while renting another property for themselves and planning a self-build.
The townhouse owners are continuing to pay their -ve equity mortgage
without any major difficulty.
It's not just about luck - those who were cautious have minimised the
impact of the property crash for themselves.
It's our government to blame, in my opinion.
Of course the banks displayed incredibly poor judgement, in relation to
mortgages. (But they did sell their own property, didn't they, and lease it
back?). So of course the banks should have gone bust, and been allowed to
do so. ragardless of the consequences.
But the banks were facialited by the Fin. Reg. who was asleep at his post.
He is part of the government, so ultimatally the blame lies at Fianna
Fail's door. (They even have 'fail' in their name!)
Of course private banks will break the law if allowed to do so. But they
haven't broken laws,.. they broke guidelines. The governments fault again,
that they issued guidelines, instead of laws. (Is a single person in prison
for financial mismanagement?)
The government failed again by bailing out the banks.. they should have
taken a stronger stance and allowed the banks to fail, even if that
destroyed out economy (in the short term). (they could have created a
credible government bank, as opposed to zombie banks dragging it out for
years)
Now we have a situation where everybody wants to be bailed out, and those
who were cautious don't want to pay any more taxes to see them wasted. The
balck economy is rampant.. as our government appears incompetent, and so
what's the point in paying taxes to semi-criminals, who will either waste
it, or enrich themselves? (That's an opinion)
The country is destroyed, and I'd happily cede sovereignty to the
Germans, .. at least we'd be rid of the Healey Rays and their ilk.
I'd also happily cede soveriegnity to a monkey throwing darts at policy
documents hung on the wall by civil servents. Why don't we try the dart
throwing monkey approach?, could it be worse?
Hello on the edge. I am happy to give you and anybody else some free advice if it would help you.
Steve
Hi Steve, do you belong to one of those UK based debt consolidation or debt dealing agencies?
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