Decided cases

The Haustürwiderrufsgesetz offers the possibility to the person concerned still after years to separate from unprofitable investments.

 

This frees up liquidity that can then be invested more sensibly. The applicability of the doorstep-selling revocation statute requires that the situation be a doorstep situation. This is understood to mean, -an unsolicited visit to a private home or place of work, or -an approach in means of transport or on public thoroughfares.

 

Typical example:

A “Strukki” visits the consumer at the workplace and has the subscription to a fund and in addition the financing signed as a loan. The new decision of the ECJ on real estate credit: According to the opinion of the European Court of Justice, real estate credit contracts (land charge and mortgage loans) also fall under such contracts, because the credit is a personal right and not a right in rem!

The right of withdrawal expires according to German law two weeks after the written instruction about it:

If no instruction is given, this right expires according to the law within one month after “complete performance”. In plain language: As soon as the loan is disbursed, the right of withdrawal would expire within one month even without instruction. In the opinion of the Advocate General at the European Court of Justice, the German legislator has incorrectly implemented the EU Directive: The aforementioned one-month period is therefore irrelevant.

 

In plain language: Anyone with a mortgage loan who has not been informed in writing about their right of cancellation can refuse the bank any payment. It is then up to the bank to get the money back from the “insolvent” initiator or the “for lack of assets already deleted” property developer GmbH. Credit instalments already paid by the consumer must then be refunded to the bank customer: The ECJ has ruled on the case of a land register security.

 

Other cases already decided The doorstep-selling revocation law offers the investor still after years the possibility to separate from unprofitable investments. This frees up liquidity that can then be invested more sensibly. By the following upper-judicial iurisdiction to the Haustürwiderruf banks, initiators etc. were already condemned (about it the EuGH does not decide today – the concerning can argue with it directly):

 

a) Purchase of an investment fund on installments in a doorstep situation: Which financial advisor does not visit his clients at home to chat in a pleasant atmosphere? Risk of the initiator: As long as the instalments (“savings plan”, etc.) are still being paid (no complete performance), the revocation can be declared. This is what the consumer does when the investment has not performed as expected or prospected.

(b) guarantee by a consumer of the consumer credit of a family member or friend: Occasionally, a guarantee is sold on the basis that it is a mere technicality. The only correct thing about this is that, for the sake of form, the right of withdrawal must be instructed. Bank risk: the guarantor can revoke at any time and the bank loses collateral if the borrower can no longer pay.

c) Obligation to create a land charge: In the countryside and in private banking one visits the customer – entrepreneurs often have little time and do not want to travel to the bank in their free time as well. If the bank customer signs during the house visit of his banker that he will order a land charge, this is also revocable at any time without instruction. Risk of the bank: The loan security should be strengthened – but the home visit was completely in vain.

d) Contracts are also often initiated on coffee trips, sales events in hotels with hospitality or as trial holiday offers: The time-sharing industry has known the rules of the game for years: Without a cancellation policy, nothing works here anymore. Risk of the initiator: Contracts concluded at sales events or during trial holidays can be revoked at any time without instruction as long as full performance has not been rendered – and this can often take years in the case of “instalment plans”.

e) Even if customers ask for a non-binding offer or if an appointment for a home visit is made as a result of a telephone marketing call, a cancellation notice must be provided. Risk of the seller: The contract has to be completely unwound after the revocation.

f) A subsequent notarial certification of the loan agreement does not help either: A nice trick would be to omit the revocation instruction and to have the loan agreement subsequently notarised. This does not help the bank either, because consumer protection would run dry if a (moreover, otherwise superfluous) notarial certification were to help. Risk of the trick seller: Reversal also here.

g) Bundles of contracts are often offered as an “all-round carefree package”: For example, life insurance policies are often coupled with loans, or equity investments with loans. If the revocation instruction is missing, the consumer can withdraw from the investment contract. Risk of the bank: The consumer can refer the credit institution to the initiator, because only the initiator (and not the consumer) has received the money from the loan.

 

And another risk: If you have not been informed about the special risks of combining a loan and life insurance (it can be much more expensive to finance this way, even if brokers say otherwise – a special program can do the math!) you can also demand a reversal from the bank for this reason.

 

h) Real estate contract bundles have been popularly brokered as distance business, especially in the last 12 years. The consumer buys a home, has never seen it (it ends up not being worth much either) and finances the purchase with a mortgage loan.

 

The risk of the bank has materialized: according to the request of the Advocate General of the European Court of Justice, the consumer can revoke his loan contract. An unsigned or missing cancellation instruction in the loan contract can still cost the credit economy billions.

For the buyer, especially of junk real estate, the new ruling offers the chance to reorganize the financial situation – at least by negotiation and without years of litigation.

 

by Dr. Johannes Fiala

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You will find our office at Fasolt-Strasse 7 in Munich, very close to Schloss Nymphenburg. Our team consists of highly motivated attorneys who are available for all the needs of our clients. In special cases, our law firm cooperates with selected experts to represent your interests in the best possible way.


About the author

Dr. Johannes Fiala Dr. Johannes Fiala
PhD, MBA, MM

Dr. Johannes Fiala has been working for more than 25 years as a lawyer and attorney with his own law firm in Munich. He is intensively involved in real estate, financial law, tax and insurance law. The numerous stages of his professional career enable him to provide his clients with comprehensive advice and to act as a lawyer in the event of disputes.
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