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banking
case studies disputed withdrawals
25/08
disputed cash withdrawal at branch counter signed
withdrawal slip disputed by customer
£1,500
was withdrawn in cash from Mr Bs savings account.
He said that he did not make or authorise the withdrawal,
and that he had not been into the firms branch for
over a year.
The firm had a signed withdrawal slip authorising the transaction.
It said that the signature was genuine and that a staff
member who knew Mr B had seen him sign the slip. The firm
also said that Mr B had carried out other transactions at
the branch during that year.
complaint rejected
The signature on the withdrawal slip looked like Mr Bs,
and the member of staff who witnessed it gave a clear statement.
Significantly, Mr B had written to the firm complaining
about other events he said had taken place in the branch
during the year in question. So he was clearly mistaken
in saying he had not visited the branch for a year. We therefore
rejected his complaint.
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25/09
disputed cash withdrawal at branch counter customer
claimed he had deposited money despite signing withdrawal
slip
Mr T said that he paid £2,000 into his passbook account.
The firm pointed out that his passbook showed he had withdrawn
£2,000, not paid it in, and it produced the withdrawal
slip he had signed.
Mr T accepted that he had signed the withdrawal slip. But
he said the cashier had covered up the heading on the slip
that showed the word withdrawal, so he had not
realised it was not a paying-in slip. Mr T said that
because the entry in his passbook had been misaligned, he
had not realised for some while that the transaction was
entered as a withdrawal.
complaint rejected
It was not only the heading on the signed form that identified
it as a withdrawal form. The text, which Mr T signed, confirmed
that he wanted to withdraw the money and acknowledged receipt
of it. And, though the passbook entry was misaligned, the
resulting balance was clearly £2,000 less than it
had been before the transaction. There were also significant
discrepancies between what Mr T said in writing to the firm
and what he said to us.
We therefore rejected his complaint.
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25/10
disputed cash-machine and counter withdrawals from bank
abroad
Mr K, who frequently visits Greece to see family members,
disputed three cash withdrawals made in Greece with his
card, issued by the firm in the UK. Two of the withdrawals
were from cash machines. The other was made over the counter
in a bank.
Mr K said that he was in the UK at the time of the withdrawals
and that his card never left his possession. The firm insisted
that the cash-machine withdrawals had been made using Mr
Ks card and PIN. And it said that before the over-the-counter
withdrawal was made, the Greek bank had inspected and noted
the number of Mr Ks passport.
complaint rejected
We checked the cash-machine records and the branch withdrawal
slip. All of these appeared to be in order, and the signature
on the withdrawal slip appeared to be authentic. Mr K was
unable to produce the passport that he had at the time of
the disputed withdrawals; he said he had lost it and had
subsequently obtained a duplicate.
We rejected the complaint and considered that the firm was
entitled to debit Mr Ks account with the withdrawals.
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25/11
disputed cash-machine withdrawals with correct PIN
firm considered customer to have been grossly negligent
Mr N disputed various cash-machine withdrawals from his
account. He said that he did not make or authorise the withdrawals
and had been at home at the time they were made.
The firm said the withdrawals had been made with the correct
PIN and it considered Mr N to have been grossly negligent
in allowing someone to discover his number. However, Mr
N insisted that no one else could have known the number
and that he had not written it down.
complaint upheld
The Banking Code says that it is for the firm to prove gross
negligence, not for the customer to disprove it. We
did not consider that the firm had proved gross negligence
in this case. The circumstances and the nature of the withdrawals
led us to believe that the withdrawals had been made without
Mr Ns authority by a family member who would
have been able to observe him entering his PIN for previous
cash-machine withdrawals.
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25/12
disputed cash-machine withdrawal use of firms
security camera
Mrs E complained to the firm about a £200 cash withdrawal
that she insisted she had never made. She said she had withdrawn
£100 from the same cash machine the day before the
disputed withdrawal. However, she said that her husband
could confirm that they had been out of town on the day
the £200 was withdrawn, so she could not have visited
the cash machine.
complaint rejected
The film from the firms security camera clearly showed
Mrs E visiting the cash machine on two consecutive days,
including a visit at the time of the disputed withdrawal.
We did not accept Mrs Es contention that the film
was falsified and we rejected her complaint.
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25/13
disputed cash-machine withdrawals allegation of gross
negligence consumer credit act
Mr S, who has homes in London and Edinburgh, disputed three
cash-machine withdrawals made in Scotland on successive
days. These withdrawals increased by £600 the amount
he owed the firm.
Mr S said he could not have made these withdrawals since
he had been based in London on the days in question and
had left the card in his flat in Edinburgh.
The firm said that since the correct PIN had been used for
each withdrawal, Mr S must have either made the withdrawals
himself, or been grossly negligent by leaving a note of
his PIN with the card. Mr S angrily denied this, saying
he had destroyed the notification of his PIN some months
earlier, as soon as he had received it.
complaint upheld
Mr S produced sufficient evidence to prove that he was in
London at the time of the withdrawals and that he did not
make or authorise them. We did not need to consider whether
or not he had been grossly negligent. The withdrawals
increased the amount he owed the firm, so under the Consumer
Credit Act, his liability was limited to £50,
regardless of any gross negligence.
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