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186/04 12 November 2004
The High Court today ruled that the consumer protection given by Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 does apply to domestic credit card transactions but that it does not generally apply to overseas transactions. The OFT is considering whether to appeal the overseas transactions point to the Court of Appeal.
Section 75 provides that for credit purchases with a cash price above £100 and not more than £30,000 the consumer is entitled to claim from the lender if things go wrong - e.g. if the supplier breaches the contract or if there was misrepresentation.
The application of Section 75 to four-party credit card transactions (see below) - by far the great majority of transactions nowadays - and overseas transactions has long been uncertain. The OFT sought to resolve the issue by way of a Court declaration. The OFT's views on Section 75 were opposed by Lloyds TSB, Tesco Personal Finance (part of the Royal Bank of Scotland Group) and American Express Services Europe Limited.
When a customer purchases goods or services using a credit card there typically are four parties involved:
When the card issuer and the merchant acquirer are different banks it is a four-party agreement, when they are the same it is a three-party agreement. The High Court has found that both are covered by Section 75.
Domestic transactions account for over 90 per cent of credit card spending by UK consumers, which in 2003 amounted to over £105 billion in total.
The High Court has ruled that purchases made overseas are not generally covered by Section 75.
NOTES
1. The major share of credit card expenditure in the EC is made by UK consumers.
2. The effect of Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 is that when a lender provides credit to finance a purchase from a separate supplier pursuant to pre-existing or contemplated future arrangements with that supplier, the lender is equally liable with the supplier for any breach of contract or misrepresentation by the supplier if all of the following conditions are met:
3. A declaration is where a judge makes a ruling on a point of law which is the subject of disputed interpretation.
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