
- •Commercial Law
- •Contents
- •Preface
- •Abbreviations
- •Table of Statutory Provisions
- •Table of Cases
- •1 Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 What is agency?
- •3 Nature and characteristics of agency
- •4 The different types of agency
- •5 Conclusion
- •6 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 The authority of an agent
- •3 Agency by ratification
- •4 Agency of necessity
- •5 Conclusion
- •6 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Duties of an agent
- •3 Rights of an agent
- •4 Commercial agents and principals
- •5 Disclosed agency
- •6 Undisclosed agency
- •7 Termination of agency
- •8 Recommended reading
- •Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Development of the sale of goods
- •4 Equality of bargaining power: non-consumers and consumers
- •5 Impact of the European Union
- •6 Contract of sale
- •7 Contracts for non-monetary consideration
- •8 Contracts for the transfer of property or possession
- •9 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 12: the right to sell
- •4 Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 13: compliance with description
- •5 Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 14(2): satisfactory quality
- •6 Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 14(3): fitness for purpose
- •7 Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 15: sale by sample
- •8 Exclusion and limitation of liability
- •9 Acceptance
- •10 Remedies
- •11 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background to the passage of property and risk
- •3 Rules governing the passage of property
- •4 Passage of risk
- •5 The nemo dat exceptions
- •6 Delivery and payment
- •7 Remedies
- •8 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Provision of Services Regulations 2009
- •4 Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982
- •5 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Electronic Commerce (EC Directive) Regulations 2002
- •4 Distance selling
- •5 Recommended reading
- •Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 CIF contracts
- •3 FOB contracts
- •4 Ex Works
- •5 FAS contracts
- •6 Conclusion
- •7 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction and background
- •2 Structure and scope
- •3 UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts
- •4 Conclusion
- •5 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction and background
- •2 Open account
- •3 Bills of exchange
- •4 Documentary collections
- •5 Introduction to letters of credit
- •6 Factoring
- •7 Forfaiting
- •8 Conclusion
- •9 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Hague and Hague-Visby Rules
- •3 Charterparties
- •4 Time charterparty
- •5 Common law obligations of the shipper
- •6 Common law obligations of the carrier
- •7 Bills of lading
- •8 Electronic bills of lading
- •9 Conclusion
- •10 Recommended reading
- •Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Development of negligence
- •4 The move to strict liability
- •5 Types of defect
- •6 Developments in strict liability
- •7 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Personnel
- •3 Meaning of ‘product’
- •4 Defectiveness
- •5 Defences
- •6 Contributory negligence
- •7 Recoverable damage
- •8 Limitations on liability
- •9 Recommended reading
- •Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Enforcement strategy
- •4 Criminal law controls
- •5 Civil law enforcement
- •6 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Scope of the 2008 Regulations
- •3 Prohibition against unfair commercial practices
- •4 Codes of practice
- •5 Misleading actions
- •6 Misleading omissions
- •7 Aggressive commercial practices
- •8 Commercial practices which are automatically unfair
- •9 Offences
- •10 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Background
- •3 Controls over misleading advertising
- •4 Comparative advertising
- •5 Promotion of misleading or comparative advertising
- •6 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 History of banking regulation: early policy initiatives
- •3 New Labour and a new policy
- •4 The Financial Services Authority
- •5 The Coalition government
- •6 Conclusion
- •7 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 What is a bank?
- •3 What is a customer?
- •4 Bank accounts
- •5 Cheques
- •6 Payment cards
- •7 Banker’s duty of confidentiality
- •8 Banking Conduct Regime
- •9 Payment Services Regulations 2009
- •10 Conclusion
- •11 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 European banking regulation
- •3 The Financial Services Authority
- •4 Financial Services Compensation Scheme
- •5 Financial Ombudsman Scheme
- •6 Financial Services and Markets Tribunal
- •7 The Bank of England
- •8 Bank insolvency
- •9 Illicit finance
- •10 Conclusion
- •11 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Evolution of the consumer credit market
- •3 Consumer debt, financial exclusion and over-indebtedness
- •4 Irresponsible lending
- •5 Regulation of irresponsible lending
- •6 Irresponsible borrowing
- •7 Ineffective legislative protection for consumers
- •8 A change of policy
- •9 Lessons from the United States
- •10 Conclusion
- •11 Recommended reading
- •1 Introduction
- •2 Crowther Committee on Consumer Credit
- •3 Consumer Credit Act 1974
- •4 Formalities
- •5 Cancellation of agreements
- •7 Documentation of credit and hire agreements
- •8 Matters arising during the currency of credit or hire agreements
- •9 Credit advertising
- •10 Credit licensing
- •11 Unfairness test
- •12 Other powers of the court
- •13 Financial Ombudsman Service
- •14 Enforcement
- •15 Consumer Credit Directive
- •16 Conclusion
- •17 Recommended reading
- •Bibliography
- •Index
531 |
4â Formalities |
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Credit) Regulations 1980,94 regulation 3 of which defines the total charge for |
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credit as the sum of charges specified in regulation 4 less those charges speci- |
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fied in regulation 5. Regulation 4 refers, in particular, to interest payments and, |
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somewhat blandly, to ‘other charges … payable under the transaction’. The con- |
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cept of the ‘total charge for credit’ is not all-encompassing; some costs do not |
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come within this concept. The selection of the costs which constitute the ‘total |
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charge for credit’ is essentially a matter of legislative policy.95 These provisions |
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were amended by the Consumer Credit (Total Charge for Credit) Regulations |
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2010.96 The Regulations implement a number of provisions of the Consumer |
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Credit Directive 2008/48/EC and outline the method of calculation of the APR |
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and the total charge for credit. |
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Q2 How were the main recommendations of the Crowther Committee imple- |
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mented by the Consumer Credit Act 1974? |
4â Formalities
The CCA 1974 outlines the formalities that must be complied with when making a regulated agreement. The purpose of these formalities is to ensure that the debtor is fully aware of the nature and content of the transaction he is about to enter into and that the written agreement gives him a clear account of his rights and obligations.
The relevant sections specify that the regulated agreement is not properly executed unless the document is signed by the debtor or hirer and on behalf of the creditor or owner;97 the document includes all the terms of the agreement;98 and all of the terms are readily legible.99 The Act also contains provisions as to copies, stipulating those points in the contractual process at which the debtor/ hirer is entitled to receive a copy of the agreement.100 A failure to provide the relevant copies at the relevant times will make the contract unenforceable.101
The Act also imposes a duty to give notice of cancellation rights.102 These requirements apply to regulated agreements but not to any non-commercial agreement.103
Furthermore, a regulated agreement must comply with the requirements of the Consumer Credit (Agreements) Regulations 2004, which require the insertion of the names and address of the parties to the consumer credit agreement;
94SI 1980/51. See also F. Bennion, ‘Consumer credit: the narrowing of “linked transactions” in relation to the total charge for credit’ (1986) Journal of Business Law (July) 294 and S. Bone and L. Rutherford, ‘Consumer credit, defects in the linked transactions Regulations’ (1985) Journal of Business Law 209.
95 Macleod, above n. 3, at 283.â 96â SI 2010/1011.
97CCA 1974, s.61(1)(a). For a general commentary on s.61 of the Act see Brophy v. HFC Bank [2011] EWCA Civ 67 and in particular the statement by Clarke LJ in Watchtower Investments
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Ltd v. Payne [2001] EWCA Civ 1159. |
98 |
CCA 1974, s.61(1)(b).â 99â Ibid. s.61(1)(c).â 100â Ibid. ss.62 and 63. |
101 |
Ibid. s.65.â 102â Ibid. s.64.â 103â Ibid. s.74(2). |
532 |
The Consumer Credit Act 1974 |
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the cash price; the amount of any deposit or advance payment required of the |
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customer; the credit limit; the APR; the total amount payable; the amount of |
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each payment and when payable; details of default charges and details of any |
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security provided by the debtor or hirer.104 If these obligations are not complied |
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with, then the agreement is ‘improperly executed’.105 |
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The CCA 1974 also provides that the consumer credit agreement must be |
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signed (i) by the debtor or hirer and (ii) by or on behalf of the creditor. Dobson |
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and Stokes pointed out that ‘the debtor must sign in person, unless the debtor |
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or hirer is a partnership or other unincorporated body in which case [the |
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agreement] can be signed by one person on behalf of the debtor or hirer. It is |
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not sufficient that the debtor or hirer signs it when it is still blank.’106 It is also |
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important to note that the Consumer Credit (Agreements) Regulations 1983 |
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provide that the credit agreement must include a signature box, which must |
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contain the signature of the debtor or hirer.107 |
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The Consumer Credit Directive has also amended the formalities require- |
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ments of the CCA 1974. Regulations 8 and 9 of the Consumer Credit (EU |
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Directive) Regulations 2010, SI 2010/1010, inserted new provisions into the |
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CCA 1974 which impose a duty to supply a copy of the executed credit agree- |
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ment108 and a duty to supply a copy of any overdraft agreement.109 |
5â Cancellation of agreements
The CCA 1974 provides that a regulated agreement can be cancelled by the debtor or hirer unless ‘the agreement is secured on land, or is a restricted-use credit agreement to finance the purchase of land or is an agreement for a bridging loan in connection with the purchase of land’,110 or ‘the unexecuted agreement is signed by the debtor or hirer at premises at which any of the following is carrying on any business (whether on a permanent or temporary basis): (i) the creditor or owner; (ii) any party to a linked transaction (other than the debtor or hirer or a relative of his); (iii) the negotiator in any antecedent negotiations’.111 The Act also provides for a cooling-off period from ‘the end of the fifth day following the day on which [the debtor or hirer] received a copy under section 63(2) or a notice under section 64(1)(b)’,112 or ‘the end of the fourteenth day following the day on which he signed the unexecuted agreement’.113
6â Preand post-contract information
The CCA 1974 outlines the information that creditors are obliged to provide to people before they enter into a consumer credit or hire agreement. There are two sets of regulations that apply to this area, the Consumer Credit
104â SI 2004/1482.â 105â Dobson and Stokes, above n. 30, at 350.
106 |
Ibid. 347.â |
107â SI 1983/1553.â 108â CCA 1974, s.61A. |
109 |
Ibid. s.61B.â |
110â Ibid. s.67(1)(a).â 111â Ibid. s.67(1)(b). |
112 |
Ibid. s.68(1)(a).â 113â Ibid. s.68(1)(b). |
533 |
6â Preand post-contract information |
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(Disclosure of Information) Regulations 2004,114 and the Financial Services (Distance Marketing) Regulations 2004.115 The Consumer Credit (Disclosure of Information) Regulations 2004 apply to face-to-face advice situations and apply to all consumer credit agreements with the exception of distance agreements and contracts secured on land. The Regulations specify that a creditor must provide the debtor with the same type of information as required in the credit agreement so the debtor can consider the information before entering into the agreement. If the Regulations are not complied with, the creditor is permitted to enforce the agreement against the debtor by obtaining a court order. Furthermore, local authorities or the OFT are able to initiate enforcement proceedings against the creditor under Part 8 of the Enterprise Act 2002. The Financial Services (Distance Marketing) Regulations 2004 apply to financial services contracts and credit agreements agreed at a distance, that is to say, without any face-to-face communications. These Regulations stipulate that explicit information must be provided to the consumer prior to entering into the agreement. If it relates to a consumer credit agreement the information must include the name and address of the creditor, the main characteristics of the credit, the total price payable for the credit, the collection of payment, and information relating to the cancellation or termination of the agreement. Importantly, the Regulations allow a right of cancellation where the contract is entered into at a distance and the fourteen-day period of cancellation is from the conclusion of the contract or from the date on which the consumer obtained the terms and conditions.
Further amendments were introduced by the Consumer Credit (Disclosure of Information) Regulations 2010, which apply to unsecured credit including loans, hire-purchase, credit cards and overdrafts.116 These Regulations provide that certain information must be revealed to the borrower ‘in good time’ prior to entering into the credit agreement.117 In the vast majority of instances this will be communicated via the pre-contract credit information form. If these Regulations are not complied with the agreement is unenforceable. Furthermore, the 2010 Regulations also provide that creditors must provide an adequate explanation to the borrower pre-contract. This is to allow the borrower to evaluate the proposed agreement. The explanation must include:
•any features of the credit which may make it unsuitable for particular types of use;
•how much the borrower will pay periodically and in total;
•features which may have a significant adverse effect in a way that the borrower is unlikely to foresee;
•the principal consequences of failure to make repayments, including legal proceedings and repossession where applicable;
•the right of withdrawal and how/when this can be exercised.
114 |
SI 2004/1481. These Regulations were made pursuant to CCA 1974, s.55. |
115 |
SI 2004/2095.â 116â SI 2010/1013.â 117â Ibid. reg. 10. |
534 |
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The Consumer Credit Act 1974 |
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The CCA 1974 contained several provisions that related to the post-contract |
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information and stipulated that certain types of information should be given to |
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debtors during the credit agreement, including, for example, regular statements |
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of the credit account, notification of any variations of the credit agreement, |
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default notices, enforcement and termination and what information is to be |
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provided upon request. The CCA 2006 introduced new measures covering the |
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post-contract information so that consumers are able to manage their borrow- |
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ing. This is an important amendment to the CCA 1974 and any statutory provi- |
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sion that seeks to empower debtors with more information about their financial |
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commitments must be applauded. Since the introduction of the CCA 2006, |
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creditors are required to provide debtors with annual statements in relation to |
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regulated agreements for fixed-sum credit.118 Furthermore, creditors are also |
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required to include supplementary information in periodic statements for run- |
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ning-account credit. This now includes the outcome of only making minimum |
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repayments; the result of not making minimum repayments; a statement of the |
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order of payment allocation; what happens if the balance is not repaid in full |
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and the implications for future interest charges; the dispute resolution mecha- |
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nisms available; and that complaints can be made to the Financial Ombudsman |
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Service (FOS).119 Additionally, creditors are also required to provide debtors |
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with notice of sums in arrears under fixed-credit agreements where the debtor |
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is in arrears by more than a certain amount.120 Debtors must receive notice |
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from the creditor in a specified form where a default sum becomes payable |
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under a regulated credit agreement.121 Furthermore, creditors are required to |
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provide more information regarding default notices. Creditors are required to |
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notify the debtor if they intend to charge post-judgment interest under a regu- |
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lated agreement in connection with a sum that is required to be paid under a |
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court judgment.122 Finally, debtors are also required to have copies of the OFT |
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information sheets to accompany arrears notices and default notices.123 These |
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provisions have been amended following the implementation of the Consumer |
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Credit Directive in February 2011. The Consumer Credit (EU Directive) |
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Regulations 2010 introduced several provisions that related to the notification |
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of interest rate charges, periodic information on overdraft rates and charges, |
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information on non-significant overrunning, rights to request an amortisation |
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table and notification of assignment of rights.124 |
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Q3 What preand post-contract information must be provided by a creditor |
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to a debtor under the Consumer Credit Act 1974? |
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118 |
CCA 1974, s.77A, as inserted by CCA 2006, s.6. |
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119 |
CCA 1974, s.78(4A), as inserted by CCA 2006, s.7. |
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120 |
CCA 1974, s.86B, as inserted by CCA 2006, s.9. |
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121 |
CCA 1974, s.86E, as inserted by CCA 2006, s.12. |
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122 |
CCA 1974, s.130A, as inserted by CCA 2006, s.17. |
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123 |
Consumer Credit (Information Requirements and Duration of Licences and Charges) |
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Regulations 2007, SI 2007/1167, as amended by SI 2008/1751. |
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124 |
SI 2010/1010. |