The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

Nationwide gave fraudster account

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In mid-2016, a company that we held a few hundred shares in was subject to an “all cash offer” by a rival. We voted against accepting but only 3pc of the votes agreed with ours.

On return from a stay in France, we made inquiries about the payment arrangemen­ts. Then we found that, without reference to us, it had sent out a settlement cheque by ordinary first-class post at the risk of the recipient.

We would never have selected this method of payment and, having voted against the scheme, had not consented to it in any way.

Then we discovered the cheque had been intercepte­d and a fraudulent account opened with the Nationwide Building Society in our names.

We complained to Equiniti, the administra­tor, that it had acted beyond its authority and, having paid dividends by BACS in the past, could have paid us in the same way.

This complaint was rejected on the grounds that the terms of the offer were that the risk was ours.

We also complained that Nationwide had let someone open a fraudulent account using fake or forged documents. DAVID DRAYSEY, KENT

For more than 30 years you have had a legitimate account with Nationwide, so how could it allow a fraudulent account to be opened in your name with a different address?

Within a week or so of the cheque being deposited, funds were withdrawn until just £22 remained.

Three weeks after it had been opened and two weeks after the deposit, the account was reviewed by Nationwide’s financial crimes team in relation to an issue affecting another customer. A week later, the fraudulent account was closed.

You complained to Nationwide that it had failed to exercise a duty of care and due diligence.

It refused to disclose any further informatio­n to you but did admit to the police and the Financial Ombudsman Service’s adjudicato­r that it had not kept copies of any of the documents used to open the account. The adjudicato­r rejected your case.

You escalated it to a full ombudsman. He was not impressed with some of Nationwide’s excuses.

For example, the identifica­tion documents were supposed to have been convincing. Yet the record of them showed that they were alleged to have been issued in different parts of the world on the same day.

Your claim was then upheld and Nationwide repaid the £27,000 plus 8pc interest, coming to £28,935.

Nationwide insisted it followed the correct account opening processes. It doesn’t believe it acted negligentl­y.

Equiniti said it acts on the instructio­ns of the company it does the administra­tion for. In this case the corporate action was a Scheme of Arrangemen­t, the rules for which are approved by the court including those relating to payments on share transfers. It said the terms of these transactio­ns were communicat­ed via an “Offer Document” that was posted to all shareholde­rs.

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