Nearly $600K to be returned to borrowers
Issued 5 March 2019 Nearly
$600K to be returned to borrowers following Commission
action
Release No. 118
Thousands of borrowers from two finance companies will receive about $590,000 in refunds following settlement agreements with the Commerce Commission.
Motor vehicle lender Auto Finance Direct Limited (AFD) has agreed to return approximately $460,000 in fees which, in the Commission’s view, were not reasonable and Pacific Loans Limited (Pacific Loans) will return more than $130,000 in fees that it accepts should not have been charged.
“Consumers will benefit because both these lenders have entered settlement agreements with the Commission, have changed their practices, and have agreed to remediate borrowers who were affected by their conduct,” said Commissioner Anna Rawlings.
Auto Finance
Direct
AFD has accepted that between April 2015 and
August 2018 it charged more than 7,200 fees which were
likely to be unreasonable under the Credit Contracts and
Consumer Finance Act 2003 (CCCFA). The fees, which were
charged to more than 5,000 borrowers, were:
• an
establishment fee over $190
•
• an early
settlement fee over $65
•
• a variation fee over
$55.
•
“The Commission has been actively
monitoring credit fees charged by lenders to assess whether
fees cover costs that are closely related to the particular
loan transaction, as required by consumer credit law. Proper
fee setting enables borrowers to better compare the cost of
different loan products," said Ms Rawlings.
Pacific
Loans
Pacific Loans assigned distressed loans to B&D
Holdings Limited (In Liquidation) for collection.
Pacific Loans has agreed that it breached the Fair Trading Act 1986 (FTA) by representing that it had the right to add interest and fees to loan accounts after repossession and sale of borrowers’ assets, when this was not the case.
Adding those costs was prohibited under the Credit (Repossession) Act 1997 (now repealed, see background), under which a loan balance was frozen when repossessed assets were sold.
Pacific Loans has agreed to return a total of $134,779.23 to 82 affected creditors.
“Pacific Loans has undertaken to credit loan accounts by 28 February 2019. It has stopped charging interest and fees after repossession and sale action,” said Ms Rawlings.
Separately, B&D Holdings has been warned that, in the Commission’s view, it likely breached the FTA by representing that it was entitled to add interest, fees and commission to debtors’ loans after repossession and sale of loan securities.
Background
Unreasonable
fees
In May 2016 the Supreme Court ruled in favour of the
Commission’s view that credit fees should only cover costs
that are closely related to the particular loan transaction.
The Court said that “[i]t is not permissible to take all
operating costs (or virtually all) and allocate them to one
fee or the other.” Fees should not be used to recover
general business costs or to generate profits - that is what
interest is for.
CRA and CCCFA
The Credit
(Repossession) Act 1997 set out the rules that applied when
a creditor took possession of consumer goods under a
security agreement covered by the Act. It was repealed in
2015 and replaced by provisions in the CCCFA.
For contracts entered into after 6 June 2015, section 83ZM of the CCCFA provides that any debt that remains after repossession is frozen when goods are sold. The lender cannot add further interest or fees after that point.
ends