Rotorua Daily Post

Class action against banks gets given the green light

- Tamsyn Parker

Customers will have to opt out if they don’t want to be part of a multimilli­ondollar class action lawsuit against the ANZ and ASB banks.

The High Court has granted approval for the case to be taken as an opt-out claim.

A lawsuit was filed against the two major banks in September over claims they failed to fully refund around 150,000 customers for fees and interest earned on loans in which there were disclosure breaches.

The case was being taken by former Commerce Commission lawyer Scott Russell and barristers Davey Salmon, QC, and Ali van Ammers, and was being jointly funded by Australian litigation funder CASL and New Zealand litigation funder LPF Group.

Russell described the High Court decision to allow it to be conducted as an opt-out claim as significan­t.

“The High Court has agreed with our position that over 150,000 ANZ and ASB home and personal loan customers who were affected by their bank’s alleged failure to comply with the law should be part of the class action,” he said.

“Importantl­y, all of these customers are now part of the claim and will have the opportunit­y to get back the money our claim alleges their bank was not entitled to charge or take from them. Unless they elect to opt out of the claim.”

Russell said the approval provided a high level of certainty the case would proceed through the courts.

“It was our preference to conduct the claim as opt-out so that as many customers as possible could participat­e in the claim and the Court has agreed based on the precedent set in the Supreme Court ruling in Southern Response v Ross [2020] case.”

The claim centres around two Commerce Commission settlement­s with the banks in which both acknowledg­ed a failure to provide accurate informatio­n to personal and home loan customers who varied the terms of their loans during a particular period.

In May last year, ASB agreed to pay a settlement of $8.1 million to 73,000 customers after it was unable to confirm it had sent written disclosure informatio­n to those who made loan variations between June 6, 2015, and June 18, 2019.

In March 2020, ANZ agreed to pay $29.4m to around 100,000 customers after it confirmed it had misstated the amount of interest on loans from May 30, 2015, until May 29, 2016, as a result of a coding error within a loan calculator used by its frontline bank staff.

The lawyers allege that while the banks have made certain remediatio­n payments to affected customers, that remediatio­n is only a fraction of what customers are entitled to under the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003.

An ANZ spokeswoma­n said the opt-out decision was based on a procedural hearing to clarify the next steps in the case.

An ASB spokeswoma­n said it would vigorously defend the action.

 ?? Photo / Doug Sherring ?? An ASB spokeswoma­n says the company will vigorously defend the High Court action involving thousands of customers.
Photo / Doug Sherring An ASB spokeswoma­n says the company will vigorously defend the High Court action involving thousands of customers.

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