PaulGooch
Well-Known Member
On the YDSA site. It was extensively publicised at the time of the Peters judgement. It is alos well covered in the advice on buying and selling boats from the RYA.
How does Aunty Mary become aware of such things ? She's just decided she want a little boat for the broads and as she has a few grand in the bank, wants to put a deposit down on one. She isn't a hardened boat buyer and we're not talking 300k here.
There are a number of inaccuracies in your post which suggests that you still do not understand the differences between traders and brokers. A trader who takes a deposit against goods to be delivered in the future can indeed use the money if it is paid into his trading account. A broker who pays the money correctly into a client trust account cannot. That is the whole point of this argument. There is a clear distinction in law between the two. Just read the Peters case and you will see how important it is.
I deliberately did NOT mention new builds. I said "selling his own boats".
The failures are clear - they are when buyers become unsecured creditors of companies that go bust - and this is unrelated to client accounts. It could be solved by making client accounts a legal requirement for all businesses taking deposits against the future supply of goods. This however would be a fundamental change to the structure of our trading laws and would make many consumer businesses impossible to run.
When you are dealing with individual transactions involving large sums such as boats there are many methods available to protect your money, as is often discussed here. However these are not costfree so many people choose not to use them and accept the risk of being an unsecured creditor.
We're talking about boat brokerage here, nothing else.