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The Treasury, being a government department designated[1] for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972[2] in relation to matters concerning the distance marketing of consumer financial services, in the exercise of the powers conferred on them by that section, hereby make the following Regulations: Citation, commencement and extent 1. These Regulations may be cited as the Financial Services (Distance Marketing) Regulations 2004 and come into force on 31st October 2004. Interpretation 2. - (1) In these Regulations -
(b) made by a designated professional body, and approved by the Authority, under section 332 of the 2000 Act,
as the context requires;
(2) In these Regulations, subject to paragraph (1), any expression used in these Regulations which is also used in the Directive has the same meaning as in the Directive.
(b) regulation 15 does not apply to any supply of financial services by an EEA supplier from an establishment in that EEA State to a consumer in the United Kingdom,
if the provisions by which that State has transposed the Directive, or the obligations in the domestic law of that State corresponding to those provided for in the Directive, as the case may be, apply to that contract or that supply.
(b) regulation 15 does not apply to any supply of financial services by a supplier who is an authorised person, where that supply constitutes or is part of a regulated activity carried on by him.
(3) Subject to regulation 6(3) and (4) -
(b) regulation 15 does not apply to any supply of financial services by a supplier who is an appointed representative, where that supply constitutes or is part of a regulated activity (other than an exempt regulated activity) carried on by him.
(4) Subject to regulation 6(3) and (4) -
(ii) the making or performance of that contract constitutes or is part of an exempt regulated activity carried on by the supplier;
(b) regulation 15 does not apply to any supply of financial services where -
(ii) that supply constitutes or is part of an exempt regulated activity carried on by the supplier.
(5) Paragraph (2) does not apply in relation to any contract or supply of financial services made by a supplier who is the operator, trustee or depositary of a scheme which is a recognised scheme by virtue of section 264 of the 2000 Act (schemes constituted in other EEA States), where the making or performance of the contract or the supply of the financial services constitutes or is part of a regulated activity for which he has permission in that capacity.
5.
- (1) Where a consumer and a supplier enter an initial service agreement and -
(b) a series of separate operations of the same nature,
are subsequently performed between them over time and within the framework of that agreement, then, if any of regulations 7 to 14 apply, they apply only to the initial service agreement.
(b) a series of separate operations of the same nature,
are performed between them over time, then, if regulations 7 and 8 apply, they apply only -
(ii) to any operation which is performed more than one year after the previous operation.
(3) For the purposes of this regulation, "initial service agreement" includes, for example, an agreement for the provision of -
(b) a credit card; or (c) portfolio management services.
(4) For the purposes of this regulation, "operations" includes, for example -
(b) payments by a credit card; (c) transactions carried out within the framework of an initial service agreement for portfolio management services; and (d) subscriptions to new units of the same collective investment fund,
but does not include adding new elements to an existing initial service agreement, for example adding the possibility of using an electronic payment instrument together with an existing bank account.
(b) the reference to the supplier in the definition of "means of distance communication" in regulation 2(1), each reference to the supplier in regulations 7, 8(1) and (2), 10 and 11(3)(b), and the first reference to the supplier in regulation 8(4), were a reference to the intermediary; (c) the reference to the supplier in regulation 8(3) were a reference to the supplier or the intermediary; (d) for regulation 11(2) there were substituted -
(b) either -
(ii) the supplier has done what the intermediary was required to do by regulation 7(1) and (2) or, if applicable, regulation 7(4)(b), and by regulation 7(5).";
(e) the reference to a supplier in regulation 22(1) were a reference to an intermediary; and
(3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (2) to (4) of regulation 4, regulations 7 and 8 apply in relation to the intermediary unless -
(b) the intermediary is an appointed representative and the marketing of the financial service constitutes or is part of a regulated activity (other than an exempt regulated activity) carried on by him; or (c) the intermediary is not an authorised person, but -
(ii) the marketing of the financial service constitutes or is part of an exempt regulated activity carried on by him.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraphs (2) to (4) of regulation 4, regulation 15 applies to the intermediary unless -
(b) the intermediary is an appointed representative and is acting in the course of a regulated activity (other than an exempt regulated activity) carried on by him; or (c) the intermediary is not an authorised person, but -
(ii) he is acting in the course an exempt regulated activity carried on by him.
Information required prior to the conclusion of the contract
(b) if the consumer explicitly consents, only the information specified in Schedule 2 need be given.
(5) The supplier shall ensure that the information he provides to the consumer pursuant to this regulation, regarding the contractual obligations which would arise if the distance contract were concluded, accurately reflects the contractual obligations which would arise under the law presumed to be applicable to that contract.
(b) immediately after the conclusion of the contract, where the contract has been concluded at the consumer's request using a means of distance communication which does not enable provision in accordance with sub-paragraph (a) of the contractual terms and conditions and the information specified in Schedule 1.
(2) The supplier shall communicate the contractual terms and conditions to the consumer on paper, if the consumer so requests at any time during their contractual relationship.
(b) in writing, or (c) in another durable medium available and accessible to the supplier,
which, however expressed, indicates the intention of the consumer to cancel the contract by that notification.
(b) leaves it at the address of the supplier last known to the consumer and addressed to the supplier by name (in which case it is to be taken to have been given on the day on which it was left); (c) sends it by post to the address of the supplier last known to the consumer and addressed to the supplier by name (in which case it is to be taken to have been given on the day on which it was posted); (d) sends it by facsimile to the business facsimile number of the supplier last known to the consumer (in which case it is to be taken to have been given on the day on which it was sent); (e) sends it by electronic mail to the business electronic mail address of the supplier last known to the consumer (in which case it is to be taken to have been given on the day on which it is sent); or (f) by other electronic means -
(ii) indicates it on such a web-site in accordance with instructions which are on the web-site or which the supplier has provided to the consumer,
(in which case it is to be taken to have been given on the day on which it is sent to that address or web-site or indicated on that web-site).
(5) The references in paragraph (4)(b) and (c) to the address of the supplier shall, in the case of a supplier which is a body corporate, be treated as including a reference to the address of the secretary or clerk of that body.
(b) the references to giving notice of cancellation orally include giving such notice by voice telephone communication, where the supplier has informed the consumer that notice of cancellation may be given in that way; and (c) "electronic mail" has the same meaning as in regulation 2(1) of the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003 (interpretation)[7].
Cancellation period
(ii) money market instruments, (iii) transferable securities, (iv) units in collective investment undertakings, (v) financial-futures contracts, including equivalent cash-settled instruments, (vi) forward interest-rate agreements, (vii) interest-rate, currency and equity swaps, (viii) options to acquire or dispose of any instruments referred to in sub-paragraphs (i) to (vii), including cash-settled instruments and options on currency and on interest rates;
(b) a contract whose performance has been fully completed by both parties at the consumer's express request before the consumer gives notice of cancellation;
(ii) covers travel risks within the meaning of article 72B(1)(d)(ii) of that Order, and (iii) has a total duration of less than one month;
(d) a contract under which a supplier provides credit to a consumer and the consumer's obligation to repay is secured by a legal mortgage on land;
(2) Paragraph (1) does not apply to a distance contract if the supplier has not complied with regulation 8(1), unless -
(b) the supplier has complied with regulation 7(1) and (2) or, if applicable, regulation 7(4)(b), and with regulation 7(5).
(3) Where -
(b) the supplier has not complied with regulation 8(1), and (c) the consumer has not, by the end of the sixth day after the day on which the distance contract is concluded, received all the contractual terms and conditions and the information required under regulation 8(1),
the consumer may cancel the contract under regulation 9 during the period beginning on the seventh day after the day on which the distance contract is concluded and ending when he receives the last of the contractual terms and conditions and the information required under regulation 8(1).
(b) a third party, the further financial service being provided pursuant to an agreement between the third party and the supplier under the main contract,
then the secondary contract (referred to in these Regulations as an "attached contract") is attached to the main contract if any of the conditions in paragraph (2) are satisfied.
(b) the main contract is, or is to be, financed by the secondary contract; (c) the main contract is a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement within the meaning of the 1974 Act, and the secondary contract is, or is to be, financed by the main contract; (d) the secondary contract is entered into by the consumer to induce the supplier to enter into the main contract; (e) performance of the secondary contract requires performance of the main contract.
(3) Where a main contract is cancelled by a notice of cancellation given under regulation 9 -
(b) the supplier under the main contract shall, if he is not the supplier under the attached contract, forthwith on receipt of the notice of cancellation inform the supplier under the attached contract.
(4) Paragraph (3)(a) does not apply to an attached contract if, at or before the time at which the notice of cancellation in respect of the main contract is given, the consumer has given and not withdrawn a notice to the supplier under the main contract that cancellation of the main contract is not to operate to cancel that attached contract.
(b) the supplier under the main contract shall, if he is not the supplier under the attached contract, inform the supplier under the attached contract forthwith on receiving notification of the consumer's intention to cancel the main contract by that notification.
(6) Paragraph (5)(a) does not apply to an attached contract if, at or before the time at which the consumer gives notification of his intention to cancel the main contract by that notification, the consumer has given and not withdrawn a notice to the supplier under the main contract that cancellation of the main contract is not to operate to cancel that attached contract.
(b) if the supplier proves that this is later -
(ii) in the case of an attached contract under which the supplier is not the supplier under the main contract, the day on which, pursuant to regulation 12(3)(b) or (5)(b), he was in fact informed by the supplier under the main contract of the cancellation of the main contract.
(4) The reference in paragraph (3) to any sum paid on behalf of the consumer includes any sum paid by any other person ("the creditor"), who is not the supplier, under an agreement between the consumer and the creditor by which the creditor provides the consumer with credit of any amount.
(b) regulation 7(4) and paragraph 5 of Schedule 2, or (c) rules corresponding to those provisions,
as the case may be.
(b) in the case of an attached contract, would be applicable to that contract if that contract were a main contract,
under regulation 10, or under rules corresponding to that regulation, as the case may be.
(b) either restore to the supplier any property of which he has acquired possession under that contract, or deliver or send that property to any person to whom, under regulation 9, a notice of cancellation could have been given in respect of that contract.
(12) Breach of a duty imposed by paragraph (11) on a consumer is actionable as a breach of statutory duty.
(b) fraudulent use is made of that card to make a payment under or in connection with a distance contract to which these Regulations apply, by another person who is neither acting, nor to be treated as acting, as the card-holder's agent,
the card-holder may request cancellation of that payment, and is entitled to be recredited with the sum paid, or to have it returned, by the card issuer.
(5) For the purposes of this regulation -
Unsolicited services
(b) a person includes with the supply of those services a demand for payment, or an assertion of a present or prospective right to payment in respect of those services,
that person is guilty of an offence and liable, on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding level 4 on the standard scale.
(b) places or causes to be placed the name of any person on a list of defaulters or debtors or threatens to do so, or (c) invokes or causes to be invoked any other collection procedure or threatens to do so,
is guilty of an offence and liable, on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale.
(b) does not comply with the requirements, applicable to invoices and similar documents, of regulations made under section 3A of the Unsolicited Goods and Services Act 1971 (contents and form of notes of agreement, invoices and similar documents)[12] or, as the case may be, article 6 of the Unsolicited Goods and Services (Northern Ireland) Order 1976 (contents and form of notes of agreement, invoices and similar documents)[13],
is to be regarded as asserting a right to the payment.
(b) in relation to any alleged breach concerning a contract under which the supplier is a local authority, but which is not a specified contract, the OFT is the enforcement authority; (c) in relation to any other alleged breach -
(ii) in Great Britain every local weights and measures authority, and in Northern Ireland the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment,
is an enforcement authority.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1) and regulation 22(6), each of the following is a specified contract -
(b) a contract for the provision of a debit card; (c) a contract relating to the issuing of electronic money by a supplier to whom the Authority has given a certificate under article 9C of the Regulated Activities Order (persons certified as small issuers etc.)[14]; (d) a contract the effecting or carrying out of which is excluded from article 10(1) or (2) of the Regulated Activities Order (effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance) by article 12 of that order (breakdown insurance), where the supplier is a person who does not otherwise carry on an activity of the kind specified by article 10 of that order; (e) a contract under which a supplier provides credit to a consumer and the obligation of the consumer to repay is secured by a first legal mortgage on land; (f) a contract, made before 14th January 2005, for insurance mediation activity other than in respect of a contract of long-term care insurance.
(3) For the purposes of the application of this regulation and regulations 18 to 22 in relation to breaches of, and offences under, regulation 15, "contract" -
(b) in regulation 22(6),
is to be taken to mean "supply of financial services".
(b) in Scotland, a council constituted under section 2 of the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994[18], and (c) in Northern Ireland, a district council within the meaning of the Local Government Act (Northern Ireland) 1972[19].
Consideration of complaints
(b) that authority is aware that another enforcement authority has notified the OFT that it agrees to consider the complaint.
(2) If an enforcement authority notifies the OFT that it agrees to consider a complaint made to another enforcement authority, the first mentioned authority shall be under a duty to consider the complaint.
(b) the OFT consents to the application being made within a shorter period.
(3) On an application made under this regulation, the court may grant an injunction on such terms as it thinks fit to secure compliance with these Regulations.
(b) the outcome of any application made by it under regulation 19 and the terms of any undertaking given to, or order made by, the court; and (c) the outcome of any application made by it to enforce a previous order of the court.
Publication, information and advice
(b) details of any application made by it under regulation 19[a], and of the terms of any undertaking given to, or order made by, the court; and (c) details of any application made by it to enforce a previous order of the court.
(3) Each of the OFT and the Authority may arrange for the dissemination, in such form and manner as it considers appropriate, of such information and advice concerning the operation of these Regulations as may appear to it to be expedient to give to the public and to all persons likely to be affected by these Regulations.
(b) to be attributable to any neglect on his part,
he as well as the body corporate is guilty of the offence and liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(b) to be attributable to any neglect on his part,
he as well as the partnership is guilty of an offence and liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(b) to be attributable to any neglect on his part,
he as well as the association is guilty of an offence and liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(b) the OFT, and -
(ii) in Northern Ireland, the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment,
may institute proceedings for any other offence under these Regulations.
Functions of the Authority
(b) in regulation 8(1) to a seller or supplier,
include references to a distance supplier and to an intermediary.
(b) a supplier of unsolicited financial services within regulation 15 of those Regulations; and
(3) After regulation 5(5) (unfair terms), insert -
(7) In paragraph (6) -
Amendment of the Consumer Protection (Distance Selling) Regulations 2000
(3) In regulation 5(1)(c) (excepted contracts) omit ", a non-exhaustive list of which is contained in Schedule 2".
(5) Regulations 7 to 9, 17 to 20 and 25 do not apply to any contract which is made, and regulation 24 does not apply to any unsolicited services which are supplied, by an appointed representative where the making or performance of that contract or the supply of those services, as the case may be, constitutes or is part of a regulated activity carried on by him.".
(5) Omit Schedule 2 (non-exhaustive list of financial services).
Amendment of the Enterprise Act 2002 (Part 8 Community Infringements Specified UK Laws) Order 2003
(b) references in these Regulations to regulations 7, 8, 10 and 11 or to provisions contained in them shall be construed accordingly.
(2) In regulation 7 -
(b) in paragraph (4)(b), before "Schedule 2" insert "paragraph 5 of".
(3) In regulation 8(1), for "contractual terms and conditions and the information specified in" at each place where it occurs substitute "information specified in paragraph 13 of".
(b) "those terms and conditions and".
(5) In regulation 11(3), omit "the contractual terms and conditions and" at each place where it occurs. 1. The identity and the main business of the supplier, the geographical address at which the supplier is established and any other geographical address relevant to the consumer's relations with the supplier. 2. Where the supplier has a representative established in the consumer's State of residence, the identity of that representative and the geographical address relevant to the consumer's relations with him. 3. Where the consumer's dealings are with any professional other than the supplier, the identity of that professional, the capacity in which he is acting with respect to the consumer, and the geographical address relevant to the consumer's relations with that professional. 4. Where the supplier is registered in a trade or similar public register, the particulars of the register in which the supplier is entered and his registration number or an equivalent means of identification in that register. 5. Where the supplier's activity is subject to an authorisation scheme, the particulars of the relevant supervisory authority. 6. A description of the main characteristics of the financial service. 7. The total price to be paid by the consumer to the supplier for the financial service, including all related fees, charges and expenses, and all taxes paid via the supplier or, where an exact price cannot be indicated, the basis for the calculation of the price enabling the consumer to verify it. 8. Where relevant, notice indicating that: (i) the financial service is related to instruments involving special risks related to their specific features or the operations to be executed or whose price depends on fluctuations in the financial markets outside the supplier's control; and (ii) historical performances are no indicators for future performances. 9. Notice of the possibility that other taxes or costs may exist that are not paid via the supplier or imposed by him. 10. Any limitations of the period for which the information provided is valid. 11. The arrangements for payment and for performance. 12. Any specific additional cost for the consumer of using the means of distance communication, if such additional cost is charged. 13. Whether or not there is a right of cancellation and, where there is a right of cancellation, its duration and the conditions for exercising it, including information on the amount which the consumer may be required to pay in accordance with regulation 13, as well as the consequences of not exercising that right. 14. The minimum duration of the distance contract in the case of financial services to be performed indefinitely or recurrently. 15. Information on any rights the parties may have to terminate the distance contract early or unilaterally by virtue of the terms of the contract, including any penalties imposed by the contract in such cases. 16. Practical instructions for exercising the right to cancel in accordance with regulation 9 indicating, among other things, the address at which the notice of cancellation should be left or to which it should be sent by post, and any facsimile number or electronic mail address to which it should be sent. 17. The EEA State or States whose laws are taken by the supplier as a basis for the establishment of relations with the consumer prior to the conclusion of the distance contract. 18. Any contractual clause on the law applicable to the distance contract or on the competent court. 19. In which language, or languages: (i) the contractual terms and conditions, and the prior information specified in this Schedule, are supplied; and (ii) the supplier, with the agreement of the consumer, undertakes to communicate during the duration of the distance contract. 20. Whether or not there is an out-of-court complaint and redress mechanism for the consumer and, if so, the methods for having access to it. 21. The existence of guarantee funds or other compensation arrangements, except to the extent that they are required by Directive 94/19/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 May 1994 on deposit guarantee schemes[26] or Directive 97/9/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 March 1997 on investor compensation schemes[27]. 1. The identity of the person in contact with the consumer and his link with the supplier. 2. A description of the main characteristics of the financial service. 3. The total price to be paid by the consumer to the supplier for the financial service including all taxes paid via the supplier or, if an exact price cannot be indicated, the basis for the calculation of the price enabling the consumer to verify it. 4. Notice of the possibility that other taxes or costs may exist that are not paid via the supplier or imposed by him. 5. Whether or not there is a right to cancel and, where there is such a right, its duration and the conditions for exercising it, including information on the amount which the consumer may be required to pay in accordance with regulation 13, as well as the consequences of not exercising that right. 6. That other information is available on request and the nature of that information. (This note is not part of the Regulations) These Regulations give effect in the United Kingdom to Directive 2002/65/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 September 2002 concerning the distance marketing of consumer financial services and amending Council Directive 90/619/EEC and Directives 97/7/EC and 98/27/EC (O.J. L 271, 9.10.2002, p.16) ("the Directive") so far as it is not given effect by rules made by the Financial Services Authority under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 or made by a professional body designated under that Act. Regulations 3 to 5 identify the transactions to which the substantive provisions of these Regulations apply. Regulation 3 defines these as "distance contracts", as defined in regulation 2(1) (or, for the purposes of regulation 15, comparable supplies of financial services) made on or after the date on which the Regulations come into force. Regulation 4 then disapplies certain provisions from various categories of contract and supply where equivalent provision is made by other regimes: paragraph (1) excludes contracts and supplies made by suppliers established in another State within the European Economic Area where the law of that State regulates the contract or supply in accordance with the Directive; paragraphs (2) to (4), taken with paragraphs (5) and (6), exclude contracts and supplies in relation to which effect is given to the Directive by rules made or approved by the Financial Services Authority under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. Regulation 5 gives effect to Article 1(2) of the Directive in the light of Recital (17) in the Directive's preamble, under which the substantive provisions of the Directive only apply to an "initial service agreement" with a financial services supplier or the first in a series of similar operations, and not to every subsequent transaction carried out under that agreement or in that series. Regulation 6 sets out how the Regulations apply in cases where financial services are marketed through an intermediary, as contemplated by Recital (19) in the preamble to the Directive. Some provisions of the Regulations apply to the intermediary instead of the supplier; others apply to either or both of them; others again still apply only to the supplier. Regulations 7 and 8 and the Schedules contain the first set of main provisions, requiring suppliers of financial services, where the Regulations apply, to provide consumers with certain information listed in the Schedules. This information generally has to be provided before the consumer is bound by a distance contract for supply of the financial services in question. Regulations 9 to 13 contain the next set of main provisions, giving consumers a right to cancel most distance contracts for financial services during a set period after commencement of the contract. Regulation 9 contains the right to cancel, specifying the means by which the right can be exercised and defining the effect of cancellation as termination of the contract at the time at which the notice of cancellation is given. Regulation 10 defines the period during which the cancellation right can be exercised: generally from the time the consumer is bound by the contract until 14 days after that, or until 14 days after the information required by regulation 8 is provided if later, but until 30 days after the later of those dates in the case of a contract for a personal pension and until 30 days after the day on which the consumer is informed that the distance contract has been concluded in the case of a contract for life insurance. Paragraph (1) of regulation 11 lists certain types of contract to which, as permitted by the Directive, the cancellation right does not apply except in the circumstances dealt with in paragraphs (2) and (3) of that regulation. Regulation 12 provides that, where a distance contract is cancelled under regulation 9, certain other subsidiary distance contracts connected with that contract - defined in paragraph (1) as "attached contracts" - are automatically cancelled too. Regulation 13 then provides for the consequences of cancellation of distance contracts, whether by notice under regulation 9 or automatically under regulation 12: the supplier must refund any sums received from the consumer under the contract, less a proportionate charge for any services already supplied, and must release and return to the consumer any security taken under the contract; the consumer must repay to the supplier any money paid to the consumer under the contract, and return any property acquired under it. Regulation 14 provides that, where a plastic card issued to a consumer is used fraudulently by someone else to make a payment in connection with a distance contract (other than where the Consumer Credit Act 1974 (c. 39) covers the matter), the consumer is entitled to cancel the payment and to have all sums paid recredited or returned by the card issuer. Regulation 15 prevents consumers from being bound by any obligation in respect of financial services supplied to them but for which they have not asked; and makes it a criminal offence to demand or assert a right to payment with any such supply, or to take or threaten enforcement action with a view to obtaining payment for such a supply, without reason to believe payment is legally due. Regulation 16 is designed to prevent the Regulations being undermined. It renders void any contractual term which is inconsistent with any provision of these Regulations or purports to impose on a consumer additional or greater duties or liabilities than those provided for in the Regulations; and it overrides any contractual term which aims to apply the law of a non-EEA State so as to prevent a contract or supply closely connected with an EEA State from being governed by the provisions of the Directive. Regulations 17 to 21 and 26 to 28 contain or provide for enforcement mechanisms in relation to the substantive provisions of the Regulations. Paragraph (1) of regulation 17 specifies for these purposes that the enforcement authority for certain types of distance contract or supply listed in paragraph (2) is the Financial Services Authority, and that the enforcement authorities for other distance contracts and supplies are the Office of Fair Trading with local weights and measures authorities (in Great Britain) or with the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (in Northern Ireland). Regulation 18 requires any such enforcement authority to consider complaints made to it about breaches of the Regulations unless the complaint is frivolous or vexatious or another enforcement authority has agreed to deal with it. Regulation 19 enables enforcement authorities to apply to the courts for injunctions against persons responsible for breaches of the Regulations, and regulations 20 and 21 provide for notification and publication of details about injunctions granted and undertakings given in relation to such breaches. Regulations 26 and 27 bring the Directive, these Regulations, and relevant rules corresponding to them, within the scope of Part 8 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (c. 40), which contains special powers for the enforcement of certain consumer legislation; regulation 28 brings offences under these Regulations within the scope of section 230 of that Act, so that local weights and measures authorities must notify the OFT of intended prosecutions under these Regulations. Regulation 22 provides that breaches of certain provisions of the Regulations are criminal offences, provides for personal criminal liability on the part of certain officers or members of corporate and other bodies where they are responsible for the commission by such bodies of offences under the Regulations, and gives the enforcement authorities power to prosecute offences under the Regulations within their respective spheres of responsibility. Regulation 23 provides that the functions of the FSA under the Regulations are to be treated as functions under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (c. 8) so as to apply for the purposes of these Regulations various general powers and provisions of that Act. Regulation 24 amends the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 (S.I. 1999/2083) so as to deem automatically unfair, for the purposes of those Regulations, any contractual term placing on a consumer the burden of proving whether a supplier or intermediary has complied with obligations deriving from the Directive or any provision implementing it. Regulation 25 makes amendments to the Consumer Protection (Distance Selling) Regulations 2000 (S.I. 2000/2334) consequential upon the provisions of these Regulations. Regulation 29 contains transitional provisions in connection with the application of these Regulations to regulated consumer credit agreements. A full regulatory impact assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on the costs of business is available. Copies of it have been placed in the libraries of both Houses of Parliament, and copies are also available from the Savings and Investment Products Team, HM Treasury, 1 Horse Guards Road, London SW1A 2HQ and at www.hm-treasury.gov.uk. Notes: [1] S.I. 2004/1283.back [2] 1972 c. 68; by virtue of the amendment of section 1(2) of the European Communities Act 1972 by section 1 of the European Economic Area Act 1993 (c. 51) regulations may be made under section 2(2) of the European Communities Act to implement obligations of the United Kingdom created or arising by or under the Agreement on the European Economic Area signed at Oporto on 2nd May 1992 (Cm 2073) and the Protocol adjusting the Agreement signed at Brussels on 17th March 1993 (Cm 2183).back [5] O.J. L 271, 9.10.2002, p. 16; the Directive applies to EEA States which are not Member States of the European Community by virtue of Decision No. 47/2003 of the EEA Joint Committee dated 16th May 2003 (O.J. L 193, 31.7.2003, p. 18).back [6] S.I. 2001/544, as amended by S.I. 2001/3544, S.I. 2002/682, S.I. 2002/1310, S.I. 2002/1776, S.I. 2002/1777, S.I. 2003/1475, S.I. 2003/1476, S.I. 2003/2822 and S.I. 2004/1610.back [8] Article 72B was inserted by article 11 of S.I. 2003/1476, and comes into force on 31st October 2004 for certain purposes and on 14th January 2005 for other purposes: see article 1(3) of S.I. 2003/1476.back [10] 1992 c. 35; section 6A was inserted by regulation 11(3) of S.I. 1997/1081.back [11] Subsection (3B) was inserted into section 84 by regulation 21(5) of S.I. 2000/2334.back [12] 1971 c. 30; section 3A was inserted by section 1 of the Unsolicited Goods and Services (Amendment) Act 1975 (c. 13).back [13] S.I. 1976/57 (N.I. 1), amended by S.I. 2000/2334 and S.R. 2004 No. 23.back [14] Article 9C was inserted by article 4 of S.I. 2002/682.back [15] S.I. 2003/1476, as amended by S.I. 2004/1610.back [16] Articles 4(1), 5(1), 7 and 9(1) of S.I. 2003/1476 amend articles 21 and 25(1), insert article 39A, and amend article 53 of the Regulated Activities Order with effect from 31st October 2004 for certain purposes and from 14th January 2005 for other purposes: see article 1(3).back [17] 1972 c. 70; the definition of "local authority" in section 270 has been repealed in part by section 102(2) of and Schedule 17 to the Local Government Act 1985 (c. 51) and amended by section 1(5) of the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994 (c. 19).back [20] S.I. 1999/2083, amended by S.I. 2001/1186 and S.I. 2003/3182.back [26] O.J. L 135, 31.5.1994, p. 5.back [27] O.J. L 84, 26.3.1997, p. 22.back
[a] Amended by Correction Slip. Page 13, regulation 21(2)(b), "regulation 18" should read "regulation 19". back
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