| banking
case studies disputed cash payments in
24/5
discrepancies between branch cash records and customers
deposit via self-service deposit facility
Ms J said that she paid £300 into her bank account,
via the firms self-service deposit facility, in order
to meet forthcoming bills. However, the firm told her it
had no record of receiving the payment.
complaint upheld
We looked at all the available evidence. Although there
had been no similar complaints about that branch, there
were some discrepancies in the branch cash records that
the firm could not explain. Ms J appeared to be an honest
and reliable witness and it was clear from her bank statements
that she regularly paid in a similar amount to cover certain
bills.
We concluded, on the balance of probabilities, that Ms Js
recollection was likely to be correct. We therefore required
the firm to make good the deposit and to pay Ms J £50
to compensate her for the inconvenience she had suffered.
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24/6
over-the-counter deposit authenticity of receipt
disputed
Mrs A said that she paid in £1,600 over the counter
at a branch of the firm, to be credited to her credit card
account. The firm said it had no record of receiving the
money and it disputed the authenticity of the receipt
she produced, which was ragged and partly illegible.
Mrs A explained the state of the receipt by saying that
she had left it in the pocket of her jeans when they went
in the wash.
complaint rejected
We found no evidence of any discrepancy in the branchs
records of cash payments. However, those parts of Mrs As
receipt that were still legible revealed an amount that
was different from the one she claimed to have paid in,
together with part of an account number that was not hers.
On the balance of probabilities, we thought the firms
version of events was more likely to be correct. We therefore
rejected her complaint.
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24/7
amount of deposit disputed lost cash
deposit slip altered by firm
Mr K said that he had visited his branch to make a payment
into his savings account comprising a £1,000
cheque and £500 in cash. He said he paid the money
over the counter and was given a stamped deposit slip for
£1,500.
When he received his bank statement a month later, Mr K
found that the firm had credited him with only £1,000.
He raised this with the firm and was told this was the total
amount he had paid in. Insisting that he had paid in more
than this, he made a formal complaint. However, the bank
maintained he must have been mistaken, so he came to us.
complaint upheld
When the firm had processed Mr Ks payment, it had
found no cash, only the cheque for £1,000. All the
cash tills had balanced, so it concluded that the deposit
slip must have been incorrect.
It
had therefore altered its copy of the deposit slip. The
firm claimed that, following its standard practice in such
situations, it would have sent Mr K a computer-generated
letter telling him
what it had done.
As the cashier who had stamped Mr Ks deposit slip
was no longer with the firm, we were unable to obtain a
statement from him, but we noted that the slip had not been
completed in full. It detailed the total amount paid in,
but not how the payment was made up.
Although the firm said it would automatically have contacted
Mr K to tell him it had adjusted its record of the amount
paid in, there was no evidence it had done this. And we
thought that Mr K would have complained right away had he
received such a letter.
Since it seemed likely that Mr Ks version of events
was correct, we required the firm to credit him with £500
and to pay him £75 compensation for inconvenience.
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24/8
lost receipt customers claim that cash withdrawals
made up of notes not in circulation
Mr D, who lived in Scotland, claimed that he had deposited
£1,000 in cash into his account with firm A. So he
was most concerned when his bank statement showed that he
had deposited just £100.
He said that the £1,000 came originally from his account
with firm B. He claimed to have taken the money out over
a period of weeks, withdrawing £200 a time from the
cash machine. He then paid all the cash, which was entirely
in £20 notes, into his account with firm A.
complaint rejected
When the dispute came to us, Mr D told us he was unable
to produce the receipt that firm A had given him when he
paid in the money. He said he had not checked it at the
time and he had since lost it. However, he said he recalled
that some of the £20 notes were not Scottish ones,
but old Bank of England notes. These notes had been taken
out of circulation shortly before Mr D had made the payment
into his account, but Mr D said that firm A had agreed to
take them.
We found no discrepancies in firm As cash records.
And although it kept records of any withdrawn notes it accepted,
it had no record of the old Bank of England notes Mr D said
he had paid in.
When we questioned firm B, it insisted that Mr D could not
have obtained the old Bank of England notes from its Scottish
cash machines. It said these were filled only with the Scottish
notes it issued itself. It also pointed out that it was
very unlikely for a cash-machine withdrawal for £200
to consist entirely of £20 notes; such withdrawals
almost always included two £10 notes. The machine
might occasionally have run out of £10 notes, but
this was unlikely to have happened five times.
In the circumstances, it appeared unlikely that Mr Ds
recollection was correct and we rejected his complaint.
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24/9
dispute concerning transaction made four years earlier
firm had no record of customers account customer
unable to produce relevant documentation
Mrs As dispute concerned the £10,000 in cash
that she claimed to have paid in over the counter four years
earlier. The firm told her that it had no record of this
transaction and no account in her name.
complaint rejected
When we asked Mrs A how she had obtained the cash, she told
us that she had withdrawn some of it from an account with
another firm. She said the rest of the money had been a
gift from a relative, who had since died. Mrs A was unable
to produce any evidence to show she had paid the money in.
She told us she had received a receipt, but had lost it
later the same day when her handbag was stolen.
When
we asked Mrs A why she had waited four years before bringing
her complaint to us, she said she had reported the incident
to the police at the time but they had decided not to pursue
it. She was able to produce documents showing that she had
withdrawn £1,000 in cash from an account with another
firm. However, she had withdrawn the money a year before
she made the alleged deposit. She was unable to produce
any documents relating to the rest of the money.
Having looked at all the evidence and information available,
we concluded that we were unable to uphold her complaint.
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