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Customer sends bailiffs in to seize bank's computers

Last updated at 00:07am on 20.01.07

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Declan Purcell: Striking a blow for the customer

A man who was fed up with paying massive bank charges decided to give one of the high street giants a taste of its own medicine.

When Royal Bank of Scotland refused to refund £3,400 charges that Declan Purcell believed he was owed, he sent in the bailiffs.

Stunned customers at his branch of RBS watched as debt collectors seized four computers, two fax machines and a till filled with cash.

The branch manager was told that the items would be sold unless RBS came up with the money owed to Mr Purcell.

Only when the manager gave an undertaking that the debt would be paid did the bailiffs leave.

Mr Purcell said: "I think the bank was pretty shocked when the bailiffs went in. But my view is that this is exactly what they would have done to me."

The move, which will raise a cheer from millions of other bank customers, is part of a consumer fightback against bank charges, which net an estimated £4.5 billion every year.

Every time a current account customer goes overdrawn by as little as £1 most banks will charge around £28, even though the administration cost is only about £4.50.

Then every cheque, direct debit, or card transaction that goes through or is bounced incurs another charge of up to £38.

The Office of Fair Trading is investigating whether banks have implemented these charges unlawfully.

The Daily Mail's Fair Play on Charges campaign and that run by the Consumer Action Group have helped thousands reclaim charges in the past year.

Like other customers Mr Purcell, 48, from East London, had warned his bank that he was prepared to go to court to claim back charges he believes were imposed unlawfully.

In June last year he demanded the refund of £3,400 charges he accrued during the previous six years while running a motorcycle dealership.

RBS ignored the claim so in October Mr Purcell filed an online application to get the money back through the county court.

After 30 days the bank had not responded and so on December 10 the court ruled in Mr Purcell's favour.

It ordered RBS to pay the charges and £120 court costs. When RBS again failed to respond Mr Purcell got the court to give him a warrant of execution, allowing him to order debt collectors to reclaim items from the bank equal in value to the amount he was owed.

Finally on Monday, January 8, a team of debt collectors walked into the busy Camden Town branch in North London, demanded to see the manager, showed their court order and announced that they were repossessing items.

Mr Purcell, who now works for London Underground, said: "I was dismayed by the bank's reaction when I made my claim for a refund – it was so rude and arrogant.

"They thought they were above the law, so it is great to know that customers can use the law in the same way the bank does to get money they are owed."

A spokesman for RBS said: "We are looking into this as a matter of urgency, but early indications suggest that unfortunately due to an administrative error, the bank failed to defend the claim leading to a default judgment being obtained on the branch and a resulting warrant.

"The confusion was cleared up at the branch."

Marc Gander, who set up campaign website Consumer Action Group, which helps consumers get refunds from their banks, said: "I am quite sure that Mr Purcell will not be the last person to send bailiffs in to his bank.

"The continued operation by UK high street banks of their unlawful charges regimes will see to that.

"The heavy-handed debt collecting approach is something that the banks have been handing out to their customers for years. Mr Purcell simply gave them a bit of their own back."


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Reader views (18)

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What a legend! Not only a victory for himself but for everyone who has been done over by the inflexibility and red tape of these grossly over profitable institutions. Oh to have been a fly on the wall!

- Natalie B, Melbourne, Australia

They don't like it up 'em Mr Mainwairing!

- Andy Preskey, UK

Nice, this will demostrate that banks are not above the law...

- Flores, USA

Well done Declan, I brilliant result.

- Richard Carrington, Telford, England

Fantastic. Well done that man. Let's hope more people start doing it - if banks can't play fair then the consumer is well within his rights to start hitting back.

Declan Purcell 1 RBS 0

Game over I think.

- Alex B, Manchester, UK

Having been bled dry by back bank charges I'm all for a little pay back.

- Steve , UK

He should have charged the bank 38 pounds per item (including each individual item in the till) to have them returned to the bank! Turnabout is fair play!

- David, Bloomington, Indiana, USA

Arrogance gets its proper reward. There was no administrative error, RBS considers itself above the law.

- Greg, Kentucky, USA

An apposite illustration of the chasm separating the true feeling of customers' towards their banks and the ludicrous, glossy, advertising campaigns that they run!

- Steve R, London, UK

Knighthood baby, knighthood.

- Pat Bateman, Oklahoma City, US

Awesome, simply awesome. I never knew you can do that. Hopefully someone does that here in the states so it can garner national attention. Well done.

- Sean Wilson, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Purcell for Prime Minister is what I say.

- Squiz, Islington

It needs a lot more people to do this on a daily basis before the robbing banks will take serious attention, just the odd one now and again that gets some publicity wil not change these arrogant bankers in any way, in fact they will tighten up procedures to ensure that situations like this will not get out of hand.

- P Fiennes, Wolverhampton W. Mids

Well done, nice to see someone giving the money grabbers a taste of their own.

- Steve, London , England

Nicely done. Sir, I salute you.

- Benjamin Carey, Canada

Great news for the `little guy' on this bitingly cold January morning!.

- Ted, Shetland

Totally awesome!

- Tim, Bolsk, Greenland

Wow. Good for Purcell. Now if only we can fine doctors who keep us waiting past our appointed time for 'breach of contract', this would be a perfect world!

- Lew Archer, Toronto, Canada


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