about
this issue
Some
of the disputes that are referred to us are outside our 'jurisdiction'
– which means we have no power to deal with them, whatever
their merits. In this issue we outline the criteria we use when
establishing whether complaints against banks and building societies
are within our jurisdiction.
We
also discuss the small but increasing number of insurance disputes
referred to us where firms have varied the terms of an insurance
policy after the customer has bought it. We have seen cases, for
example, where a travel insurer has sought to exclude from cover
not just any medical conditions that customers suffered from before
they took out the policy, but also any medical conditions arising
between the start of the policy and the start of the holiday.
We would not normally expect a firm to issue a policy and later
change its mind about what cover – if any – it will
provide. And we do not necessarily consider the terms of such
policies to be fair and reasonable – particularly if they
were not highlighted when the policy was sold.
Following
on from last month’s article about calculating compensation
for mortgage endowment mis-selling, we give further examples of
cases where the firm has been uncertain of the approach to take.
The situations we look at are where the firm has argued that the
customers failed to ‘mitigate their losses’,
and where the complaint involves the sale of more than one mortgage
endowment policy to the same customer.
Finally,
in this month's 'ask
ombudsman news', we hear from the director of a small
firm of independent financial advisers, asking whether our increased
caseload will impact on the amount that firms have to pay for
our service.
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