jfm
Well-Known Member
Marine law is different from "normal" law, this seems to be the point that passes everyone by.
The boat does NOT need to be registered, it does NOT need to be a "marine mortgage".
If money was loaned for the boat then the debt follows the boat.
Oh, and there's no way of finding out whether a boat has outstanding finance.
And still people are saying that "it'll probably be alright so that's good enough".
Genuinely odd.
Ari we have debated this before and I don't want to go over that same ground. But this case is not one which justifies your proposals imho. The reason OP has the judgment against him is frankly that he didn't turn up to court when served with proceedings. Courts hate that. If he had, there is a quite strong chance he would have resisted the bank's claimed security over the boat. Starting with the bank's failure to tell the world of their security interest, despite there being registers/facilities (HPI, Part 1, ad in MBY, a plate on the boat) to do just that. This lazy omission by lender would form a pretty decent defence, and there may be more once you get into the fine detial of the bank's acts and omissions.
What is to be learned from this case is:
(a) if this happens to you, enter a defence. Don't not show up
(b) even though OP didn't enter a defence, he merely loses his boat. He is not liable for the full £26k debt.
The only thing that would justify your proposals imho would be a significant number of cases where innocent buyers lose their boats even though they enter a defence and turn up to court. Which isn't the case. The rest of us/taxpayers in general should not be made to pay for your proposed HPI-mark2 to protect those folks who don't enter defences when served with legal proceedings
Sorry to be so scathing of the failure to enter a defence but it's a tough world out there and folks doing non trivial finacial transactions need to take responsibility and manage risk personally, and not expect the state to bail them out