There is this JUDGEMENT from small claims court where one of the #MicrofinanceInstitutions had SUED a customer claiming Ksh. 700k from the customer.
1/
The customer had taken a loan of 1.3M.
Repaid about 900K and defaulted for one month.
The Microfinance institution repossessed the car valued at 2.5M and sold it at 1.5M.
The client denied the claim and urged the court to dismiss it in its Response to the Statement of Claim.
She stated that there was no evidence that the motor vehicle was sold and that if it was, it was transferred without her knowledge and consent.
She further stated that the motor vehicle was auctioned at an undervalue. She stated that the Appellant changed the terms of the loan facility from 14% per annum to 10 % per month without informing her & that the interest was extremely high contrary to the prevailing lending rate
The court RULED that the Banking Act
(Chapter 488 of the Laws of Kenya) and Central Bank of Kenya Act (Chapter 491 of the Laws of
Kenya) applied to the #MicrofinanceInstitutions interest rates and penalties charged by the Appellant were exorbitant and unconscionable.
The court further RULED that the interest rate applied by the Microfinance institution was unconscionable.
The court relied on the decision in Kenya Commercial Finance Company Ltd v
Ngeny and Another [2002] 1 KLR and Margaret Njeri Muiruri v Bank of Baroda (Kenya) Limited
[2014] that had concluded as follows:
"Even though parties freely entered into the loan agreement, the exorbitant interest and penalties
charged call upon the court to intervene to protect the respondent from a bad bargain."
The court ruled that the amount received from the sale of the vehicle was sufficient and reasonable in offsetting the loan amount considering the period of default and the
claimant’s claim was untenable in light of the exorbitant and unconscionable interest rates charged.
The COURT DISMISSED the case in favour of the CUSTOMER.
The provision of the section 44 of Banking act states, in part, as
follows:
(1) An institution shall be limited in what it may recover from a debtor with respect to a nonperforming loan to the maximum amount under subsection (2).
(2) The maximum amount referred to in subsection (1) is the sum of the following;
(a) the principal owing when the loan becomes non-perfo
(b) interest not exceeding
the principal owing when the loan becomes non-performing;
While it is true that a micro-finance institutions are regulated by the Central Bank of
Kenya and the regulation of interest rates is
governed by section 44 of the Banking,the court agreed this does not apply to the NON DEPOSIT TAKING MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS.
The rresistible conclusion was that:
The rate of interests, whether high or not ,is governed by contractual provisions set out in the LOAN AGREEMENT between the microfinance institution and the customer and the court cannot revise the agreement.
After the #ExploitativeShylocks expose,many victims expressed their willingness to be enjoined in any class legal suit.
90% of those victims complained about MOGO & PLATINUM.
The rest had serious issues with MWANANCHI & MOMENTUM.
Platinum Credit was not helpful at all in my facts finding mission. From the CEO's accounts, it was difficult not to agree with every complaints both employees and clients raised about Platinum Credit.
Eden Bridge were very helpful. The two complaints raised were verified and addressed professionally despite the clients having exaggerated their complaints.
Mr Frederek Bayan took a loan from MOGO against his logbook in 2020. He has been paying the loan for almost a year and a half now.
Last week one of MOGO staff,Mr Christopher Mala Joshua called him & advised he pay Kshs 277,000/ to clear the loan,
After requesting a balance statement,again it came to 279,112.
He cleared the amount via mpesa.
After payment was made, the branch manager assigned a staff member to dismantle the tracker from the car as proof that we had for sure cleared the loan.
When he visited the office again to check progress on his logbook , he was informed that he needed again to pay arrears amounting to 73k.
He was referred to one Mr Kevin who also reteriated that the logbook cannot be released if the amount is not paid.
“Hi Kinuthia, I took a loan of 250,000 from Platinum Credit in 2017. What is so sad is that they have been making 16,000 deductions from my salary till today.”
“Hi Kinuthia, Baron Capital Limited sold a vehicle worth 750k over a loan of 60k despite repaying a total of 125k between April and September this year”
Hello Kinuthia,MOGO harasses Kenyans. It's daylight robbery. You take a loan using your car as collateral. You default even 2k, they come for your car shamelessly. Innocent Kenyans are suffering bro.
The proposed formula by the Commission on Revenue Allocation (CRA) for sharing of revenue among the 47 devolved units relies less on poverty levels in the sharing of Billions from the National Treasury.
The rationale here is that The national government will only raise share of allocations to the counties that increase their own internal revenue collection.
Currently counties share revenue based on five parameters, namely population (45 per cent), equal share (25 per cent), poverty (20 percent), land area (eight per cent) and fiscal responsibility (two per cent).