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Santander is seeking to recover £130m after inadvertently paying cash to tens of thousands of his clients on Christmas Day.
About 75,000 people and businesses created to accept one-time or regular payments from 2,000 companies with Santander accounts received improper payments on two occasions, with the second payment coming directly from the bank’s own reserves.
Spanish-owned banks will find it difficult to get their money back because it has been sent to recipients belonging to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest.
Although the windfall was Santander’s fault, it is illegal for clients to keep money that was wrongfully credited, and if they do, they face charges of ‘undue credit holding’ under the Credit Act. 1968 theft.
But while the banks were able to recover money that had been improperly paid to their clients’ accounts, they were concerned that some had spent it.
Approximately 75,000 individuals and businesses who have been set up to receive one-time or regular payments from 2,000 companies with Santander accounts received the wrong payment twice
Banks will have a hard time getting your money back because it has been sent to recipients belonging to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest.
Someone said he didn’t want to get his money back from the customer if it forced him to do an overdraft.
Pay UK, which runs Britain’s main payment system, is discussing the matter with Santander as the bank is desperately trying to get the money back.
Banks have used ‘bank error recovery’ to go to various banks or directly to the recipient of the cash to get it back.
A Santander spokesperson said Time: ‘We apologize for technical issues, some payments from our corporate clients were incorrectly duplicated in the recipient’s account
“As a result, none of our clients are out of pocket and we are taking steps to recover duplicate transactions according to industrial processes.”
The spokesperson added: ‘Duplicate payments were the result of a scheduling issue, which we quickly identified and fixed. The recipient and purpose of payment will vary between clients, but may include salaries or payments to suppliers.’
Santander, which has 14 million clients, was in trouble earlier this year in May when it was forced to apologize after technical issues left some of its clients unable to make payments for nearly a Saturday.
And in August last year, thousands of customers were unable to access their accounts online.
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