Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,774
What do you mean that it was a surrender?
Please summarise exactly what happened and what the figures were
1) Sales price of house
2) Mortgage outstanding
3) Amount of arrears when "surrendered"
4) Shortfall - 2) - 1)
5) What agreement you reached over the shortfall
Brendan
Hi
You have had a number of threads on this complex story before and I am not sure that you have told us what happened.
Forgetting about the prevailing rate issue, your father was a co-borrower. Are you saying that AIB did not pursue his estate for the shortfall? I am astonished at that. But so be it.
It's a fairly dramatic step to go for a PIA for arrears of €7k.
Was there any other debt written off?
What do you mean by "surrender"? Do you mean that you gave the house to AIB and they sold it?
Brendan
So you had a shortfall of €58k written off as part of a PIA
Did you have to contribute anything to it?
Did you have any other debts written off?
Brendan
Hi JAC
I have updated the opening post to take a more systematic approach to it.
Can you provide some figures please
1) What was the balance on your mortgage when you sold the house?
2) What was the shortfall?
3) How much did AIB write off?
4) What deal did they do with you e.g. 6 years at €500 a month to clear the remainder after the write off
5) How much was left to pay on this before the 12% write down under the Prevailing Rate Scheme?
6) How much was the 12% write down? Is that the "€31k redress" figure?
7) Did they reduce the balance by this amount?
8) Do you still owe them money?
8) Do you still owe them money? yes, 5,911 - which we are going to pay off with the interest cheque
Are you sure that this is the right thing to do?
If AIB's breach of contract contributed to the decision to sell the property, then you should be looking for money from them and not giving them money.
Brendan
My aim was to pay this off and then get money back from them through FSPO rather than impact on my current credit rating.
OK, so let's roll back the clock.
.
So AIB overcharged you from [the date you came off your fixed rate] to December 2014.
1) What date did your fixed rate end?
2) Did you buy another home and keep the subject property as an investment?
3) How come they changed the rate to the Buy to Let rate? They don't normally do that.
For example if AIB had offered you a choice
1) Keep your investment property at a tracker of ECB +1.5% , or
2) Sell it and we will write off €75k of the shortfall.
which would you have gone for?
Sorry if this is the wrong thread? After re reading, not sure if a voluntary sale belongs here?Hello,
I have recently started following the boards. Thanks for all the great work.
This is our situation and am wondering if u have advice on a next move? We did make a submission to the BDO panel and were not rejected, still on hold.
Myself and now husband bought an apartment with our friend in 2006 for 360,000. We owend half, our friend owned half. We came off a fixed rate in Aug 2009 and were not offered a tracker. We were offered one in June 2007 after coming off our first fixed period.
In 2012 myself and my husband were living in the apartment with our 2 year old as our family home, paying our half of the mortgage plus rent to our friend.
We wanted to buy our own home and move on with our lives. Our 2nd child was on the way. We tried and failed to get a mortgage through various lenders in 2012 to early 2013, without having to sell the apartment. We were stress tested on rental income from the apartment relative to the mortgage rate we were on at the time (varied between 3 to 4.4%)
After failing to get a mortgage for a house without having to sell apartment, we looked at other options. Renting a house and keeping the apartment vs selling apartment at a loss so we could buy a house. Decision point was heavily influenced by our mortgage repayments vs the rent we would get for the apartment, so the rate we were on was a big factor in our eventual decision to sell at a loss in order to be able to buy a family home.
We have been through alot with AIB over the sale of the apartment, I cant even bring myself to go into it now. But at no time have we ever been a penny in arrears or 1 second late on a payment. Despite this we were required by AIB on 2 seperate occasions to go thru the arrears process.
AIB have also refused to allow us and our friend to seperate the debt.
What was the balance on your mortgage when you sold the house? 344
2) What was the shortfall? 166
3) How much did AIB write off? 0
4) What deal did they do with you - At first they said we woud just pay of the residual debt over the same time period and under same rates as we would have before the sale. Then after we were sale agreed and far into the sale process they demanded we repay all of it over 7 years, which would have meant we would never get a new mortgage for our own home. We didn't hand over the signed agreement, house sale went through and then they harassed us to sign up to 7 years until 2018 when I suspect they realised we were part of this cohort. We have repaid on our original payment schedule ontime and full at all times.
1) How much was left to pay on this before the 12% write down under the Prevailing Rate Scheme? 124
2) How much was the 12% write down? Is that the "€31k redress" figure? 43
3) Did they reduce the balance by this amount? Yes
4) Do you still owe them money? Yes 81 as of today
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?