Out of curiosity, what do you think should happen? Do you think the bank should forgive the debt in part or in its entirety even though your friend borrowed the money? If they were willing to take the house back voluntarily and forgive the capital, would this be "fair" in your eyes?
The borrower has gone through hell worrying about financial matters as a result of taking out the loan she should never have applied for
or been approved for. She is a caring person, finance is not her area of expertise. She has lost a sizeable deposit, almost €200,000 she paid in generous variable interest rates, she has spent a 5 figure sum maintaining the house, she is willing to surrender the house and even pay more to the bank. I told her to get her file and to see a PIP, she has arranged a second meeting with him. I told her she should get expert opinion and double check it. When the banker and the bank tell the truth of what happened, a fair outcome may be obtained.
I am not sure what is "fair" in her eyes, I gather she has been advised to have the banker and valuer investigated by the Garda National Economic Crime Bureau (GNECB). She thinks people should be better warned, and bankers who do wrongdoing properly investigated and punished accordingly, so it does not happen again. She thinks that would be "fair".
Her life has been destroyed, she accepts she should not have taken out the loan. She expected when she submitted her p60 and payslips for the bank, as they requested, to assess if she "could afford the mortgage" as they said, they would do so honestly. She does not want the bank doing the same to others as they did to her. Especially when the bank still claims they will check the borrower will be comfortably able to afford their mortgage repayments, with enough money left over to live their lives in comfort! That is adding insult to injury.
You're being very coy about the figures involved. You could state the amount borrowed to the nearest €10,000 or €20,000 ...
I do not want to risk identifying the individual, I have already stated lots of details about her. However as you say yourself the figures I gave allow you to calculate the approximate size of the loan amount. Somewhere between say 400k and 550k, it does not really matter the exact amount.
I have no idea how normal or abnormal this practice was. Bankers who were falsifying internal documents wouldn't be likely to broadcast this fact too widely. As I have already said, I can only speak for myself and the firm that I have run for the past twenty years.
But in your considerable experience in the mortgage industry, you did not come across borrowers who were approved for loans 10 or 15 times their salary, so clearly something out of the ordinary happened in this case.
I asked you already, if someone falsified the loan report by adding over 60k to the borrowers salary, so they could borrow the money, would you consider that a criminal act?
A homeless person could go in to a Mercedes showroom and ask for a loan for a €100,000 Mercedes, but the relevant people should not give him a loan if he cannot pay it back. Especially if they advertise that they get his P60, payslips etc to assess his ability to repay the loan, and then they falsify documentation and give him the car anyway. Whose fault is that? Entirely the homeless person?