Success for the CMA’s COVID-19 Taskforce

Following on from the Competition and Market Authority’s (CMA) statement in May 2020, holiday accommodation provider, Vacation Rentals, has voluntarily changed its policy after originally failing to offer refunds to all customers whose trips were cancelled.

Vacation Rentals (who operates sites including Hoseasons and Cottages.com) is just one holiday accommodation provider which was reported to the CMA’s COVID-19 Taskforce. Vacation Rentals has now given the CMA a formal commitment that customers will have the option of a full refund if a booking has been cancelled because of restrictions associated with the coronavirus outbreak.

The CMA says some other providers have not yet agreed to follow the approach of Vacation Rental and the CMA continues to investigate.

Read the full update here.

Financial Ombudsman Service publishes latest edition of ‘Ombudsman News’

On 5 June 2020, the Financial Ombudsman Service (the Ombudsman Service) published its latest edition of ‘Ombudsman News’.

The Ombudsman Service sets out things it will consider when looking at:

– claims by customers under Section 75(1) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974;

– complaints by customers in financial difficulties;

– complaints about motor finance agreements (including expecting businesses to “listen and proactively look for signs of financial difficulties“, expecting firms to be “even more flexible in their forbearance measures” and expecting firms to “fully inform consumers of their options to exit the agreement where necessary/appropriate“); and

– complaints about mortgages.

Voluntary terminations for regulated hire purchase and conditional sale agreements – does a customer have to take care of the vehicle whilst collection arrangements are being made?

The current COVID-19 restrictions mean asset and motor finance lenders are unable to collect vehicles as quickly as they’d like when a customer voluntary terminates a hire purchase or conditional sale agreement under Section 99(1) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. Can you ask your customer to carry on taking care of the vehicle whilst you make arrangements to collect it?

After an agreement has been voluntarily terminated, the customer is likely to be a gratuitous bailee of the vehicle.  This type of bailment is known as a ‘deposit’ because the customer keeps possession of the vehicle without payment.

It’s likely there is two possible types of bailments: (a) involuntary deposit or (b) necessary deposit.

Involuntary deposit – this is where the vehicle is left with the customer against her wishes. In most cases, the customer will need to take reasonable care of the vehicle. But the customer will normally need to make good any damage caused deliberately but not negligently.

Necessary deposit – this is where the vehicle is left with a customer because of a peculiar stress or set of circumstances such as an unforeseen disaster (which the Covid-19 pandemic and lockdown arguably could fall into). The customer is likely to be responsible in negligence or bad faith whilst she has the vehicle.

So how do you protect your position and the vehicle? Talk to your customer. Ask if they’re willing to hold on to the vehicle whilst you make your collection arrangements. And talk to them about insurance, and who is going to pay for it.