Mark Robert Alexander vs West Bromwich Mortgage Company High Court Judgement

Mark Robert Alexander vs West Bromwich Mortgage Company High Court Judgement

10:59 AM, 29th January 2015, About 9 years ago 390

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Today was Judgement Day in the case of Mark Robert Alexander (me) vs the West Bromwich Mortgage Company. I was representing a group of 360 affected borrowers, who between them contributed nearly £500,000 to fund the legal action. I am extremely disappointed to report that we didn’t get the News we were so desperately hoping to receive. West Brom Tracker Judgement

 

Could this be the end of tracker mortgages as we know them for up to 1 million people in the UK?

The Judge, Mr Justice Teare ruled that the mortgage company were within their rights to increase the premium (margin) on the rate they charge above the Bank of England base rate. He also ruled that West Bromwich Mortgage Company had the right to call in mortgages with 30 days notice. Clearly we are shocked at his decision and we anticipate outrage from the general public too.

The special conditions in my OFFER OF LOAN state (I’ve added bold capitalisation for emphasis) ….

“After 30th June 2010 your loan reverts to a variable rate which is the same as the Bank of England Base Rate with a premium of 1.99% UNTIL THE TERM END.”

NOTE the words “until the term end”, which I have always understood to mean that the premium of 1.99% over the Bank of England Base Rate would apply to the remainder of my 25 year mortgage after the initial 4 year fixed rate period was completed. The Bank of England Base rate today is 0.5% so you would be forgiven for thinking that I should be paying a rate of 2.49%. However, the West Bromwich Mortgage Company have added another 1.5%, meaning that I’m now paying them 3.99%. When they first increased the rate, the margin they added on was 1.99%. Should I be thankful they reduced it? What’s to stop them putting it up to 10% tomorrow? Well according to the Judge, Mr Justice Teare, apparently very little!

The Special Conditions, which the mortgage company are relying upon to vary the premium (margin), are generic to all of their mortgage products and come in the form of a booklet. It is very obvious that the Special Conditions booklet is generic to their entire mortgage range because in one section it says the property cannot be let, which is clearly inconsistent with a Buy To Let Mortgage.

To deal with issues of inconsistency between the OFFER OF LOAN and the Special Conditions booklet the mortgage company also has the following condition in the very same Standard Conditions booklet it has been allowed to justify the increase in the premium charged ….

“These Mortgage Conditions incorporate any terms contained in the OFFER OF LOAN. If there are any INCONSISTENCIES between the terms in the Mortgage Conditions and those contained in the OFFER OF LOAN then THE TERMS CONTAINED IN THE OFFER OF LOAN WILL PREVAIL.”

I accept that the mortgage company needs the contractual ability to vary their Standard Variable Mortgage rates in their generic Special Conditions booklet and I had every reason to believe that the clause they are now relying upon to increase my interest rate only exists because Standard Variable Rate mortgages are not pegged to another rate in the same way as a tracker. I had no reason to assume that the clause allowing them to make variations to interest rates would affect me, after all I had a Tracker Rate Mortgage with a premium over the Bank of England base rate UNTIL THE TERM END, which in my case is in the year 2031.

Would you have come to the same conclusions I did?

#WestBromTrackerThe reason I took the lead and encouraged other affected borrowers to fund this expensive legal battle was that the industry regulators have a proven track record of allowing banks and building societies to get away with this particular form of “daylight robbery”. In 2013 the Bank of Ireland hiked its rates for over 14,000 customers with Tracker Mortgages, many of them were home-owners, NOT Landlords. The regulators proved ineffective for affected complainants. Prior to that, in 2009, the Skipton Building Society CEO publicly confirmed  that their Standard Variable Rate mortgages were capped at 3% over the Bank of England base rate and that pledge would be honoured despite market conditions. A year later that promise was broken and the regulators did nothing about that either!

The problem that all borrowers have faced when complaining to regulators has been that all mortgage lenders who have been a party to these rate hikes to date have very sneakily targeted borrowers who ‘fall between the cracks’ in terms of consumer protection regulation. WBMC targeted borrowers who own three or more properties whereas the Bank of Ireland relied on a date when mortgage selling regulations changed. The the Bank of Ireland case this provided them with an opportunity to mercilessly target homeowner mortgages too. Anybody who took out a Tracker Mortgage before the MCOB (Mortgage Conduct of Business) rules were introduced on 31st October 2004, AND anybody who owns three or more properties has good cause to be VERY worried following the judgement passed today.

There are an estimated 1 million Tracker Rate mortgages in the UK, they were very popular in the decade prior to the Credit Crunch. I have other tracker mortgages with other Buy to Let lenders and I am fearful that if they follow suit all my hard work to generate money to invest for my retirement will be undone. Many homeowners with tracker rate mortgages could also lose their homes.

I simply couldn’t allow this to continue unchallenged. Somebody had to stand up to the financial bullies and I am proud to have been one of them, despite this awful news.

The question now is; “Should we appeal?”

We already have £68,912.39 lodged with Barco (The Bar Council Escrow Account Service) and we have paid £350,000 into the Court on account of the other sides claimed legal expenses. The Judge is yet to rule on costs to date so we may get some of the money paid into Court back too. We don’t yet know how much an appeal will cost in terms of paying the others sides legal fees if we lose, however, our barrister is so dissapointed by the verdict that he has already offered to represent us in the Court of Appeal on a no-win-no-fee basis, despite this not being covered in his original terms of engagement.

I also worry about the potential impact on tenants. The ramifications of lenders being able to hike up Tracker Mortgage interest rates or call in unprofitable loans on a whim (even if they are not in default) could no doubt result in mass defaults of repayments and inevitable repossessions of the quality rental property which has been funded by Buy To Let mortgage lenders. The knock on effects to tenants in terms of security of tenure and the availability of quality accommodation, afforded by the very existence of Tracker Rate buy to let mortgages, could be devastating!

Please share your thoughts in the comments section towards the bottom of this page.

Mr Justice Teare’s 20 page reasoning for his ruling is available free of charge via the Courts. However, I am asking everybody reading this article to donate £50 by completing the form below and in return we will immediately redirect you to a full copy of the Judges ruling. All money received will be used in a marketing campaign to raise awareness of the potential consequences of this dreadful decision. If you want to donate more than £50, simply order two copies for £100 or three for £150 etc. We believe we have already raised enough money to fight an appeal. However, we must not dip into these funds to promote the importance of the case, hence the need for an additional fundraising campaign.

Download the full judgement

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Comments

Sheila Smith

7:27 AM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "john jones" at "06/02/2015 - 18:35":

Hello John,

I hope you don't mind me saying that you might want to fucus on yourself as you have special circumstances with your health issues?

Winning this great Property118 campaign is a great idea but fogive me for saying that your health and your own home come first.

To attract donations I think it would be good to focus on your recent health issues how this has affected your ability to work and how this has then affected your your personal circumstances and put your house at risk. This is a story in itself.

So ask a friend to take some photos of you and describe your personal circumstances and ask people to donate here: http://www.gofundme.com/

You might only raise a few £1000's but it could be much more.

If 10,000 people dontate £1 this would be £10,000!

S

Chris Brown

10:28 AM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Craig

It won't stop them flogging your property cheap and chasing you for the difference. Ever since I stood as a candidate for the Australain Parliament in the notorious Whitlam/Kerr election, I have argued that lenders should be bound by the value they put on a property when they lend against it. By this means, you hand the keys back, they sell. If they don't make the value - it's their problem, if they make more, they give you the balance. It is the only way of providing a proper control over lenders.

cb

Anon

10:51 AM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Sorry folks but somebody needs to inject some realism back into this thread, which I have been following with interest.

Craig has said that his heart problems were nothing to do with West Brom increasing his interest rates and that his health issues pre-dated that event. He seems to have taken no legal advice and does not claim to be a member of your action group, do we know whether or not he is? He missed three months payments on his BTL mortgage and got repossessed. Isn't that what you would do if your tenants missed three months rent payments? Can you really blame West Brom for that?

Craig seems to want to blame West Brom for his misfortunes but he hasn't exactly helped himself has he? If he couldn't afford to pay the increased payments why didn't he pay the amount he believed he was contractually obliged to pay? If that was due to affordability due to his health problems then his property was at risk of repossession regardless of which mortgage lender he was with.

As for Chris Brown's suggestions, no wonder he wasn't elected! Does he not realise that people can do things that cause reductions in property values? Does he not understand economics either?

Chris Brown

11:07 AM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Anon " at "07/02/2015 - 10:51":

Dear Anon

I do realize very well that property values can go down as well as up, but I have not seen it in my 73 years yet except in very short term situations. Except of course, for lack of maintenance and wanton neglect, which should be exclusions in the loan agreement. Lenders are more aware of the market than borrowers. I would fully expect the proportion to be available as a loan to be much reduced from the rates experienced when I started to think this way.

Not that I haven't benefited myself at times from a highly geared loan, of course.

I stopped buying property in 2002 as I thought we were in a housing bubble, again. I didn't think it would take so long to explode. And in 2007 I took a fixed interest loan as I thought things were really going to go bad with rampant inflation. I didn't allow for Q.E. and the salvaging [not sure about the l in that word] of the economy at savers and our childrens expense.

Trish

12:03 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Rob " at "29/01/2015 - 11:58":

No, Rob. I took out my buy to let mortgage with West Brom in September 2007, and have been shafted like everyone else here

Graham Durkin

13:42 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "john jones" at "04/02/2015 - 22:52":

I am sorry that you have found yourself in this position,but I will say that you have assisted in the creation of your current predicament , I personally think it is wrong that you now want the MASSES to eventually bail you out . It cleary was madness not to pay the WEST BROM your original payment and i cannot see how legal advice was not sought by you . you have stated that you took out 9 btl mortgages between 2007-09 ,so sell them reduce your overall liability to the WEST BROMand at least save your own home..we all have suffered under this INTEREST RATE RISE ,but if SHEILA is prepared to start up a fund can i join and put me down to try and collect £500,000 to help me out of my mortgages

Richard Mann

14:31 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Graham Durkin" at "07/02/2015 - 13:42":

Bit sarcastic and totally unecessary comment.
How would you feel if the situation was reversed and the comment was aimed at you.
Perhaps you are too smart maybe

Graham Durkin

15:56 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Richard Mann" at "07/02/2015 - 14:31":

What is sarcastic about being in business and making a decision that is clearly suicidal ,and remember he says he has further B.T.L properties so sell them and reduce his overall liability to the WEST BROM , you say what if that comment was made to me , to start with i would not be telling anybody the finer points of my business whether i was making millions or losing millions ,i would be making the decision to get me out of the ----. to my last point ( tongue in cheek ) read the DAILY MAIL today about a couple living in HEATHROW, when you do their figures where has the money gone !!!!!!. i,m certainly not the smartest but please don,t think i,m also the stupidist, nobody likes the position that we are in and i personally believe honesty is the best policy .

All BankersAreBarstewards Smith

16:46 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

What a shame that this thread is resorting to personal attacks....divide and rule....

WB must be laughing ... they surely HAVE been successful if you guys keep this up.

Neil Robb

20:47 PM, 7th February 2015, About 9 years ago

Well said All Bankers Are Barstewards Smith.

I feel for John he has obviously been doing property for a while as he said he stopped buying in 2002. Then swapped over to tracker mortgages between 2007 and 2009. Someone advised him this was a good product.

West Brom themselves must be worried about there actions as they are only doing this to people who were advised by independent brokers and not there advisers. Or those who had three mortgages or more. Why are they not treating everyone who has the same product the same way?

I believe in what both Mark's are trying to do here and hope the do go forward with there appeal.

Please remember the purpose of property 118 was to help each other and pass on knowledge. We may not always agree but respect the others point of view.

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