usernameinuse
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Then why does it claim, according to their own publicity, to look for"proof that you have the earnings and self-discipline to repay your mortgage not just for the first year but long into the future." As said before they advertise and claim to check the borrower (quote) "will be comfortably able to afford your mortgage repayments with enough money left over to live your life in comfort."A lender owes no duty of care to a borrower.
Since you've repeated this several times.As said before they advertise and claim to check the borrower (quote) "will be comfortably able to afford your mortgage repayments with enough money left over to live your life in comfort."
Again, for the umpteenth time, a bank will look for that documentation for its own benefit - not for the benefit of the borrower.Then why does it claim, according to their own publicity, to look for"proof that you have the earnings and self-discipline to repay your mortgage not just for the first year but long into the future." As said before they advertise and claim to check the borrower (quote) "will be comfortably able to afford your mortgage repayments with enough money left over to live your life in comfort."
You keep making that allegation but a bank obviously cannot defraud itself.And why did the bank seemingly fraudulently alter the loan report and valuation, upon which the loan agreement was based?
Then why does it claim, according to their own publicity, to look for"proof that you have the earnings and self-discipline to repay your mortgage not just for the first year but long into the future." As said before they advertise and claim to check the borrower (quote) "will be comfortably able to afford your mortgage repayments with enough money left over to live your life in comfort."
And why did the bank seemingly fraudulently alter the loan report and valuation, upon which the loan agreement was based?
Because oldish 3 bedroom houses in a nice area was what she was quite happy to settle for, buy, and live in. And oldish 3 bedroom houses were not costing a million in rural areas , even in 2007.
Great, I hope you gave better advice that the banker who advised the nurse. However you did not answer the question. "Did you ever see any mortgages being sold at say 10 or 15 times the borrowers salary, and if so, did the banker who sold them ever expect them to be repaid, or did he know it would end in tears for the borrower? Decades of tears?"
Then why does it claim, according to their own publicity, to look for"proof that you have the earnings and self-discipline to repay your mortgage not just for the first year but long into the future." As said before they advertise and claim to check the borrower (quote) "will be comfortably able to afford your mortgage repayments with enough money left over to live your life in comfort."
I did not say it was over half a million. I did say her own bank refused her the loan for the 3 bedroom house and would not lend her anything like the amount she would have needed to buy it.You've said that the first mortgage application she made offered her a far lower amount. Evidently this wasn't enough for her. So she went off to a different bank and applied again. Because she wanted to buy for over half a million in a rural area in Ireland.
The banker defrauded those higher up in the bank,that is the difference. The borrower submitted the correct P60, payslips etc. Whoever read the loan report assumed she was on a salary over 60k more than she really was.You keep making that allegation but a bank obviously cannot defraud itself.
If you were arranging a mortgage and it was obvious to you that the borrower was borrowing 10 to 15 times their salary, would you have falsified the loan report by adding over 60k to the borrowers salary, so they could borrow the money? If you did that, would you consider that a criminal act?Part of my job was arranging mortgages and giving advice.
Well seeing as you worked in the mortgage industry, clearly the banker did something very abnormal in this loan so, to say the least.I would not have come across salary multiples of 10 - 15 times the borrower's salary.
They sought proof of earnings but they falsified the loan report and were not interested in getting the money back, as few borrowers could ever repay a loan 10 or 15 times their salary. The house is worth less now than the loan amount. The bank did not "protect their interest" as you say, in approving the loan.As stated a number of times by a number of people...they seek proof of earnings to protect their interest, they want to know that they'll get their money back. They didn't care back then or now how many holidays you get to go on, or how nice a car you drive, they're just interested in getting their money back and earning interest in the process.
I did not say it was over half a million. I did say her own bank refused her the loan for the 3 bedroom house and would not lend her anything like the amount she would have needed to buy it.
Well seeing as you worked in the mortgage industry, clearly the banker did something very abnormal in this loan so, to say the least.
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?
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.You're being very coy about the figures involved. You could state the amount borrowed to the nearest €10,000 or €20,000 ...
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 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.
They sought proof of earnings but they falsified the loan report and were not interested in getting the money back,
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?
In this case, due to the banker defrauding his superiors about the borrowers true salary, they gave out money which the borrower could never repay. Who could repay a loan 10 or 15 times their income? That does not make the bank a charity, it makes the bank a possible victim of fraud by whoever ignored the P60, payslips etc and who made out the false loan report and valuation.So now the bank were a charity, giving out money to all who asked with no interest in getting a return..
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So you think no blame, not even 1 or 2%, should be attributable to the banker who gave the homeless person the loan, after fraudulently deceiving his superiors in the bank in to thinking that the homeless person was really on 60k a year more than he was, and the car was a different specification? Bonus for that banker in fact?In this scenario, the homeless person is entirely to blame for taking out a loan and purchasing something the could not afford.
It's like this: if you come to me looking for a loan, that loan is expected to be paid back in full. It doesn't matter where I got the money you borrowed, even if I stole it, and it doesn't matter how or if I planned to make a profit on the transaction. So your question might be of interest to the bank. It is of no relevance or concern to the borrower. As an adult legally able to enter into a contract their decision to borrow and the responsibility to be fully informed of what they were getting into was theirs alone. And no, anything they were told by the lender does not affect this unless it was written into a contract.So you think no blame, not even 1 or 2%, should be attributable to the banker who gave the homeless person the loan.
... which has precisely nothing to do with the borrower....the employee of the business has a responsibility to that business and to the shareholders of that business not to lend the money.
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.
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.
As a broker running my own business, the people I came across were my own clients. And I wouldn't have advised them to borrow such high multiples, or entertained altering documents in order that someone would qualify for more than what their bank had offered them.
It has everything to do with the lender though. In the scenario we discussed, the employee of the business has a responsibility to that business and to the shareholders of that business not to lend the money. If every homeless person who went in to a Mercedes dealership and asked could he buy a €100,000 car was lent the money to buy one after the lender fraudulently deceived his superiors in the bank in to thinking that the homeless person was really on 60k a year more than he was, and the car was a different specification, then the lender would not last long.... which has precisely nothing to do with the borrower.
Indeed but you originally asked whether a lender had a duty of care towards a borrower.It has everything to do with the lender though.
Incorrect. Originally I asked Should the bank have had a duty of care to behave honestly to its customers? Big difference.Indeed but you originally asked whether a lender had a duty of care towards a borrower.
Incidentally, a mortgage of anywhere between €400,000 and €550,000, plus a "sizeable deposit", would have bought one hell of a three-bed house in rural Ireland in 2007.
The average price paid for a house nationally at that time was only around €300,000.
The borrower was asked to pay for a valuation by a particular valuer, and had no choice in the valuer. She was entitled to a copy of the valuation at the time of the mortgage, not many years later. The bank failed in its duty there (s125). When even basic facts are incorrect in the valuation, she is entitled to ask the bank for an explanation. She paid for a service and is due an explanation at the very least.If a lender has an issue with an ex-employee or valuer, that's a matter for the lender. Nothing to do with the borrower.
Not if it was in a nice scenic location, on a site with a lovely coastal view, for example. Such houses were always expensive..something very strange about the price paid for a run down 3 bed in rural Ireland.
The fact that the buyers own bank would not give the loan and then they went elsewhere, shows that they already had the figure they wanted and that the loan did not cause them to higher their expectation.
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