| Consumer Credit Act 2006 | |
| 2006 Chapter 14 - continued | |
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Section 14: Default notices 36. Section 14 amends section 88 of the 1974 Act to extend from seven to 14 days the minimum period after which a creditor or owner may take action in respect of the agreement after having issued a default notice. Section 87 of the 1974 Act requires a creditor or owner to give the debtor or hirer a default notice in the prescribed form if he wishes to terminate the agreement, demand earlier payment of a sum, recover possession of any goods or land, treat any right conferred on the debtor or hirer by the agreement as terminated, restricted or deferred, or to enforce any security. Section 88 is also amended to allow the Secretary of State to prescribe information in the default notice to include any matters relating to the agreement (e.g. information about whether the agreement includes a term providing for the charging of post-judgment interest). Section 15: Enforceability of regulated agreements 37. The 1974 Act provides that in certain circumstances where the requirements of the Act are not complied with in relation to regulated agreements or to security provided in relation to such agreements, the agreement or security is enforceable against the debtor or hirer only on an order of the court. Sections 127(1) and (2) of the 1974 Act give the court discretion whether to grant an enforcement order in those circumstances subject to subsections (3) and (4). Section 127(3) and (4) provides that a court shall not make an enforcement order (i.e. a consumer credit or hire agreement will be automatically unenforceable) where:
38. Section 15 repeals sections 127(3) to (5) of the 1974 Act (subsection (5) is consequential on subsection (3)), which means that a court will have the power to determine in its discretion whether agreements are enforceable in accordance with section 127(1) and (2) regardless of the breach in question. Section 16: Time orders 39. Section 129 of the 1974 Act provides that a debtor or hirer may apply to the court for a time order. A time order is an order in which the court may reschedule any payments due under the regulated agreement. Section 16 amends section 129(1) of the 1974 Act and inserts a new section 129A after section 129 of the 1974 Act. Section 129 sets out the circumstances in which a debtor or hirer may apply for, and a court may grant, a time order in respect of a regulated agreement. The amended section 129 will enable a debtor or hirer to apply for a time order after having received a notice of sums in arrears (where required by the new sections 86B or 86C inserted in the 1974 Act by this 2006 Act), in addition to being able to make an application after having received a default notice (under section 87). 40. This does not permit a debtor or hirer to automatically make an application. The new section 129A provides that, having received a notice of sums in arrears, the debtor or hirer may only make an application if he has given a notice to the creditor or owner including certain required information and a period of 14 days has passed since he gave the notice to the creditor or owner. This requirement does not apply to debtors or hirers who receive default notices under section 87 of the 1974 Act. A notice given under section 129A by a debtor or hirer must indicate that the debtor or hirer intends to make the application for a time order in relation to the agreement, indicate that he wants to make a proposal to the creditor or owner in relation to his making of payments under the agreement and give details of that proposal. Although the notice must be in writing, there are no specific requirements as to its form. 41. Section 16(4) of the 2006 Act amends the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1971 to provide that, in respect of applications relating to time orders under section 129 and 130(6) of the 1974 Act made in Scotland, the rules of the Sheriff Court may permit the debtor or hirer to be represented by a person who is not an advocate or a solicitor. (Section 130(6) of the 1974 Act allows a court to vary or revoke a time order on the application of any person affected by it.) Subsection (5) makes it clear that, in such circumstances, a person representing a debtor or hirer will not breach section 32(2B) of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980, which prohibits persons who are not advocates or solicitors from preparing certain documents. This brings the position in Scotland into line with that in the rest of the UK where lay representation is already permissible in these cases. Section 17: Interest payable on judgment debts etc. 42. Section 17 inserts a new section 130A after section 130 of the 1974 Act. Section 130A imposes requirements on a creditor or owner to notify and give information to debtors and hirers in the specified form about interest applying to a judgment debt by virtue of a term of the agreement enabling interest to accrue after judgment until payment. After the giving of a judgment, where such interest applies to a judgment sum, the creditor or owner must notify the debtor or hirer and provide further notices at intervals of not more than 6 months. The notice may be incorporated into any other statement or notice that the creditor or owner gives to the debtor or hirer under the 1974 Act. The debtor or hirer will not be liable to pay such interest for any period when the creditor or owner has not complied with the requirements of this section. This provision does not apply where a court has the power to order that interest at a specified rate be payable on a judgment sum. Section 18: Definition of "default sum" 43. Section 18 inserts a new definition of "default sum" into the 1974 Act. "Default sum" means a sum payable by a debtor or hirer in connection with his breach of a regulated agreement (e.g. a charge imposed for late payment of an instalment due under the agreement or a fee imposed for exceeding a credit limit on a credit card). A default sum does not include sums that, as a consequence of a breach of the agreement, become payable earlier than they otherwise would have done. It does not include interest. UNFAIR RELATIONSHIPS 44. Sections 19-22 repeal and replace sections 137-140 of the 1974 Act which empowered the Court to reopen an 'extortionate credit bargain'. A bargain was 'extortionate', if at the time the agreement was made, it required the debtor to make payments which were grossly exorbitant or otherwise grossly contravened ordinary principles of fair dealing. In coming to its conclusions the court was required to consider evidence produced concerning specific factors relevant to prevailing interest rates, the debtor (e.g. age, experience or degree of financial pressure) and creditor (e.g. accepted risk having regard to value of security). 45. The amended provisions will enable a court to consider whether the relationship between the creditor and debtor arising out of that agreement is unfair to the debtor because of the terms of the agreement, the way in which the agreement is operated by the creditor or any other thing done or not done by or on behalf of the creditor before or after the agreement was made. The court may take into account all matters it thinks relevant relating to the creditor and debtor in making its assessment. The court is provided with a broad range of remedies under new section 140B to address the unfairness. Section 19: Unfair relationships between creditors and debtors 46. Section 19 inserts a new section 140A after section 140 of the 1974 Act. Section 140A(1) enables a court to make an order under the new section 140B, inserted into the 1974 Act by section 20 (see below) if it finds that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of a credit agreement, or that agreement taken with any related agreement, is unfair to the debtor. A relationship may be unfair to the debtor because of one or more of the following:
48. Section 140A does not apply to agreements that are exempt under section 16(6C) of the 1974 Act. Section 16(6C) exempts consumer credit agreements secured on land that are regulated by FSA under FSMA. Section 20: Powers of the court in relation to unfair relationships
Section 21: Interpretation of ss.140A and 140B of the 1974 Act 50. Section 21 inserts a new section 140C after the new section 140B (inserted into the 1974 Act by section 20). The new section 140C defines the types of agreements that are covered by sections 140A and 140B. Any agreement that involves the provision of credit to an individual, whether or not regulated by the 1974 Act (except as specified (see paragraph 48 above)), is covered. The sections also cover, through the definition of "related agreement", the practice where the creditor enters into successive credit agreements with a debtor for the purpose, for example, of increasing the total amount of the debt or obtaining multiple fees from the debtor for setting up each loan. Section 22: Further provision relating to unfair relationships 51. Section 22 makes consequential amendments. In particular, it inserts a new section 140D, which requires OFT to give advice and information about the interaction between the provisions on unfair relationships and Part 8 of the Enterprise Act 2002. Part 8 of the Enterprise Act 2002 allows OFT to bring proceedings against a person who, as a consequence of a breach of a statutory obligation, harms the collective interests of consumers in the United Kingdom. The advice and information published by OFT may include examples of the circumstances, conduct or practices that, in the opinion of OFT, could give rise to an unfair relationship between creditors and debtors. 52. Section 22(3) repeals sections 137 to 140 of the 1974 Act, which permit the court to re-open or set aside a credit agreement if it finds the credit bargain to be extortionate (see paragraph 44 above). BUSINESSES REQUIRING A LICENCE AND CONSEQUENCES OF NOT BEING LICENSED Section 23: Definitions of consumer credit business and consumer hire business 53. Section 23 redefines "consumer credit business" and "consumer hire business" to clarify that these include respectively being a creditor or an owner under regulated agreements. "Creditor" and "owner" are defined in section 189(1) of the 1974 Act. Section 24: Debt administration 54. Section 24 amends section 145 of the 1974 Act to include 'debt administration' as a type of ancillary credit business. 'Debt administration' means the taking of steps to perform duties under a consumer credit or consumer hire agreement on behalf of the creditor or owner, or to exercise or enforce rights under such an agreement on behalf of the creditor or owner (so far as these steps do not constitute debt collecting). As a consequence, people carrying on a business of debt administration will need to be licensed. Section 25: Credit information services 55. Section 25 amends section 145 of the 1974 Act to include provision of 'credit information services' as a type of ancillary credit business. 'Credit information services' covers those businesses that help individuals to locate and correct records relating to their financial standing held by credit reference agencies and others in the credit and hire industries. As a consequence, people providing credit information services as part of their business will need to be licensed. Section 26: Enforcement of agreements by unlicensed trader etc 56. Section 26 amends sections 40(1) and (2) of the 1974 Act to provide that a regulated consumer credit or hire agreement is unenforceable by a person acting in the course of a consumer credit or hire business who is not licensed to carry on a consumer credit or a consumer hire business of a description which covers the enforcement of the agreement. In addition, as under the current section 40, the new section 40(1A) provides that a regulated agreement is unenforceable if the creditor or owner who made the agreement did so in the course of a consumer credit or a consumer hire business but was not licensed at that time to make the agreement. Where a person has made an agreement without being licensed, that person may apply to OFT for an order to treat him as if he had been licensed to make the agreement. 57. Subsections (8) and (9) of the amended section 40 ensure that a person who is not required to have a licence under section 21(2) or (3) of the 1974 Act to carry out the acts referred to in sections 40(1) and (1A) is not caught by these provisions. APPLICATIONS FOR LICENCES AND FITNESS TO HOLD A LICENCE ETC. Section 27: Charge on applicants for licences etc. 58. Section 27 inserts a new section 6A after section 6 of the 1974 Act. Section 6A requires applicants for licences (or for licence renewal) to pay to OFT such charge as OFT specifies by general notice towards OFT's costs of carrying out its functions under the 1974 Act. OFT may specify different charges for different classes of persons, including no charges. OFT must obtain the approval of the Secretary of State and HM Treasury before specifying a charge. The section also amends section 189 of the 1974 Act (definitions) to clarify that the definition of "costs" means "expenses" in Scotland (which is the name given to the costs involved in legal proceedings in that jurisdiction). Section 28: Applications for standard licences 59. Section 28 inserts a new section 24A after section 24 of the 1974 Act. Section 24A deals with applications for standard licences. The purpose of the new section 24A is to give OFT power to manage the application process in a more efficient way by requiring people to specify in applications for licences what businesses they want the licence to cover. An applicant must specify whether he wants a licence covering one or more of consumer credit business, consumer hire business and ancillary credit business generally or a licence which only covers one or more descriptions of business within any of these broad types of business. It is OFT which will specify the descriptions of business within the types of business specified in subsection (4) that applicants may use in their applications. Under section 25(1) to (1AD) of the 1974 Act, as amended by section 29, if an applicant satisfies OFT that he is fit to do everything he has applied for, he is entitled to a licence to do that. If not, there is power for OFT to issue him with a more limited licence. Section 29: Issue of standard licences 60. Section 29(2) amends section 25 of the 1974 Act specifically to require OFT in determining fitness to have regard to the skills, knowledge and experience (in relation to consumer credit, consumer hire or ancillary credit business) of the applicant and anyone who will work for him under that licence, and the practices and procedures that will be implemented in connection with the business, in addition to other matters that are currently set out in the section. Those matters include evidence that the applicant or an associate:
Section 29(2) also inserts a new subsection 25(2B) which makes it clear that the business practices which the OFT may consider to be deceitful, oppressive, unfair or improper include practices which appear to the OFT to involve irresponsible lending. Section 30: Guidance on fitness test 61. Section 30 inserts a new section 25A after section 25 of the 1974 Act. Section 25A requires OFT to prepare and publish guidance as to the way it determines the fitness of a person to hold a licence. OFT may revise any guidance on fitness. OFT must consult such persons as it thinks fit in preparing the guidance and publish it in a way that brings it to the attention of those likely to be affected by it. OFT must have regard to the latest published guidance in carrying out its licensing functions. Section 31: Variation of licences etc. 62. Sections 30 and 31 of the 1974 Act give OFT the power to vary licences on application or compulsorily. Section 32 of the 1974 Act gives OFT the power to suspend or revoke licences. Section 31 of the 2006 Act makes consequential amendments to these sections of the 1974 Act arising from the new section 24A inserted by section 28 of the 2006 Act. Section 32: Winding up of standard licensee's business 63. Section 32 inserts a new section 34A after section 34 of the 1974 Act. If OFT determines to renew a licence on different terms to the application, to vary it compulsorily, or to revoke or suspend a licence OFT may as part of that determination authorise the licensee to carry on specified activities (for a specified period) which it would otherwise no longer be licensed to carry on for the purpose of winding up or transferring its business. OFT may specify requirements which the licensee must comply with during the period of the authorisation failing which OFT may terminate the authorisation by notice to the licensee. Subsection (5) ensures (inter alia) that a licensee so authorised will not incur criminal liability for carrying on such activities without a licence. Section 33: Consequential amendments relating to sections 27 to 32 64. Section 33 makes amendments to other provisions of the 1974 Act and to provisions of FSMA consequential on the introduction of the new provisions in relation to the issue of licences by OFT. DURATION OF LICENCES Section 34: Definite and indefinite licences 65. Section 34 amends the definitions of 'standard licence' and 'group licence' in the 1974 Act and enables OFT to issue indefinite standard licences as the norm. It provides for OFT to issue licences either indefinitely or for a specified period, provided definite licences do not exceed a period prescribed by the Secretary of State, and to vary the duration of licences in certain circumstances. 66. Section 37 of the 1974 Act, which deals with the circumstances giving rise to termination of a standard licence, is amended to enable licensees to terminate such licences by notice to OFT. OFT may specify the form and content of the notice required for a licensee to terminate such a licence. Sections 35 - 37: Charges for indefinite licences 67. Sections 35 to 37 insert new sections 28A, 28B and 28C after section 28 of the 1974 Act relating to periodic payments for indefinite licences. Holders of indefinite standard licences and original applicants for indefinite group licences shall pay OFT a periodic charge specified by general notice, which may include different provision for different cases. OFT is given the power to extend the period for a person to make payments in respect of indefinite licences if there is a good reason for doing so. Failure to pay a periodic charge in respect of a standard licence during the payment period (or extended payment period) results in the licence being terminated and details of licences terminated for this reason must be kept on OFT's public register. FURTHER POWERS OF OFT TO REGULATE CONDUCT OF LICENSEES ETC. Section 38: Power of OFT to impose requirements on licensees 68. Section 38 inserts a new section 33A after section 33 of the 1974 Act. Section 33A provides OFT with a new intermediate power (additional to existing powers of revocation, suspension or variation of a licence) to impose requirements on licensees. OFT may impose a requirement in relation to a business carried on (or proposed to be carried on) under the licence where it is dissatisfied with any matter in connection with:
69. OFT may, by notice, require the licensee to do or not to do (or cease doing) anything specified in the notice to address the matter with which OFT is dissatisfied or to ensure that the same or similar matters do not arise. The requirement must relate to a business that the licensee is carrying on, or is proposing to carry on, under the licence. OFT may take action to impose a requirement whilst dealing with an application for a licence to be issued. Section 39: Power of OFT to impose requirements on supervisory bodies 70. Section 39 inserts a new section 33B after the new section 33A (inserted into the 1974 Act by section 38). Section 33B deals with the power of OFT to impose requirements on the responsible person in relation to a group licence where OFT is dissatisfied with the manner in which that person is regulating or otherwise supervising, or proposes to regulate or supervise, licensees under that licence. A requirement imposed under this provision may only relate to the practices and procedures of the responsible person for regulating or otherwise supervising licensees under the licence in connection with their carrying on of businesses under the licence. A person is a "responsible person" in relation to a group licence if he is the original applicant under it and he has a responsibility (whether by virtue of an enactment, an agreement or otherwise) for regulating or otherwise supervising persons who are licensees under the licence. Section 40: Supplementary provision relating to requirements 71. Section 40 inserts a new section 33C after the new section 33B (inserted into the 1974 Act by section 39). Section 33C(3) provides that a person cannot be required under section 33A or 33B to compensate or otherwise make amends to another person. Section 33C gives OFT the power to vary or revoke requirements on its own motion or to do so on application by the person on whom the requirement has been imposed. It gives the same rights to make an application for the variation or revocation of a requirement to a person who is named in the requirement and prevented from being employed by the person on whom the requirement is imposed, or restricted as to the activities that he may engage in as an employee, or is otherwise prevented or restricted from doing something in connection with the business under the licence (an "affected person" for the purpose of these notes). Section 41: Procedure in relation to requirements
73. OFT does not need to issue a notice if the proposed determination is in the same terms as one proposed by the person on whom the requirement is or would be imposed or an affected person (so that if OFT and that person agree on the content of a proposed requirement, the notice procedure is not necessary in relation to that person). Section 42: Guidance on requirements 74. Section 42 inserts a new section 33E after the new section 33D (inserted into the 1974 Act by section 41). Section 33E requires OFT to issue guidance as to how it exercises or how it proposes to exercise its powers in relation to the imposition, variation or revocation of requirements. OFT must have regard to this guidance in exercising its powers in relation to requirements. Section 43: Consequential amendments relating to requirements 75. Section 43 provides for a right of appeal for persons on whom a requirement is imposed and affected persons against imposition, variation or revocation of a requirement by OFT or refusal by OFT of an application by the appellant for variation or revocation of a requirement. It also provides that requirements and details of their variation will have to be recorded in the public register held by OFT. |
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