UK's highest court largely overturns ruling on auto finance payments
		
		[August 02, 2025]  By 
		PAN PYLAS 
						
		LONDON (AP) — Britain's highest court Friday largely overturned a lower 
		court's ruling that certain car finance agreements were unlawful, a 
		decision likely to bring a sigh of relief among lenders and limit the 
		scale of compensation payments. 
		 
		A Supreme Court panel of five judges sided with lenders on two of the 
		three issues at hand, finding that they are effectively not liable for 
		hidden commission payments to dealers. It said there was no bribery 
		involved in the purchase arrangements and that dealers did not have a 
		legal obligation that required them to act only in the customers’ 
		interest. 
		 
		“No reasonable onlooker would think that, by offering to find a suitable 
		finance package to enable the customer to obtain the car, the dealer was 
		thereby giving up, rather than continuing to pursue, its own commercial 
		objective of securing a profitable sale of the car,” the judges said. 
		 
		As a result, lenders are expected to be spared making compensation 
		payments to millions of people who had taken out car finance plans that 
		industry experts said could have cost them tens of billions of pounds. 
		Banks have been preparing to pay out compensation with Lloyds, the 
		U.K.’s biggest car finance provider through its Black Horse arm, having 
		set aside over 1 billion pounds ($1.3 billion). 
		 
		The decision was made after the stock markets had closed to prevent 
		disorderly trading of firms linked to the car finance market. 
		 
		The decision will likely be welcomed by the financial services sector, 
		which has been rocked over the past decade by a series of scandals, 
		notably in relation to the improper selling of payment protection 
		insurance, or PPI, on loans. 
		 
		The sector has also worried that it could face additional claims 
		regarding the sale of other financial agreements, for example with 
		regard to deals offered for the purchase of household appliances, such 
		as kitchens. 
		 
		The decision by the Supreme Court has diminished that fear, industry 
		experts said. 
						
		
		  
						
		 
		
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            A man looks at an advertisement for car finance in London, Friday 
			Aug. 1, 2025, where the Supreme Court is to rule on whether millions 
			of motorists could be entitled to compensation on their 
			hire-purchase agreements. (Jonathan Brady/PA via AP) 
            
			  “The risk of claims in other finance 
			arrangements where commission payments are made will also have 
			significantly reduced as a result,” said Andrew Barber, Financial 
			Regulatory Partner at legal firm Dentons. 
			 
			Last October, the Court of Appeal found that three motorists, who 
			all bought their cars before 2021, had not been told either clearly 
			enough or at all that the car dealers, acting as credit brokers, 
			would receive a commission from the lenders for introducing business 
			to them and should thereby receive compensation. 
			 
			Two lenders, FirstRand Bank and Close Brothers, took the dispute to 
			the Supreme Court, saying in a three-day hearing in April that the 
			decision was an “egregious error.” Industry regulator, the Financial 
			Conduct Authority, also told the U.K.’s highest court that the Court 
			of Appeal ruling went "too far.” 
			 
			Following the decision, the FCA said it welcomed the clarification 
			and that it will be working through the weekend to analyze the 
			judgment and "determine our next steps.” 
			 
			It added that it will address with interested parties on a possible 
			redress scheme to compensate customers before markets open on 
			Monday. 
			 
			"Our aims remain to ensure that consumers are fairly compensated and 
			that the motor finance market works well, given around 2 million 
			people rely on it every year to buy a car," it said. 
			
			
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