London Defender

The Daily Mirror of the Great Britain

Santander scrambles to recover £130m after accidentally paying customers twice

Have you received some unexpected Christmas money from Santander? 

Email isabella.nikolic@mailonline.co.uk 

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Santander has been forced into a desperate scramble to recover £130million it accidentally paid to tens of thousands of its customers on Christmas Day.  

Some 75,000 payment transactions, at an average of £1,733 each, were wrongly put through twice from 2,000 people and businesses who were set up to send either a one-off or regular payment, with the second payment coming directly from Santander’s own reserves.  

The Spanish-owned bank – which said the blunder was due to a payments’ ‘scheduling issue’ – is now struggling to get its money back because it has been sent to recipients who belong to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest according to The Times.    

Even though the windfall was Santander’s mistake, it is illegal for customers to keep the wrongly accredited money and if they spend it they face being charged with ‘retaining wrongful credit’ under the Theft Act 1968. 

The maximum sentence is 10 years in prison.  

But although those banks are able to take back money that was incorrectly paid into its customers’ accounts, they fear some may have already spent it. 

It is unclear whether Santander is allowed to immediately take wrongly accredited money out of their own customers’ accounts and whether they are allowed to report customers to the police if they have already spent the money. 

Roughly 75,000 people and businesses who were already set up to receive either a one-off or regular payments from 2,000 companies with Santander accounts were wrongly paid twice

Roughly 75,000 people and businesses who were already set up to receive either a one-off or regular payments from 2,000 companies with Santander accounts were wrongly paid twice

Roughly 75,000 people and businesses who were already set up to receive either a one-off or regular payments from 2,000 companies with Santander accounts were wrongly paid twice

The bank will struggle to get their money reimbursed because it has been sent to recipients who belong to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest

The bank will struggle to get their money reimbursed because it has been sent to recipients who belong to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest

The bank will struggle to get their money reimbursed because it has been sent to recipients who belong to a litany of other banks such as Barclays, HSBC and NatWest

One bank said it didn’t want to take money back from a customer if it would force them into overdraft. 

Pay UK, which runs the main payment systems in the UK, is discussing the issue with Santander while the bank desperately tries to recover the money.  

The bank has been using ‘bank error recovery’ to go to various banks or directly to recipients of the cash to get it back.     

A Santander spokeswoman told The Times: ‘We’re sorry that due to a technical issue some payments from our corporate clients were incorrectly duplicated on the recipients’ accounts

‘None of our clients were at any point left out of pocket as a result and we are taking steps to recover the duplicated transactions in line with industry processes.’

The spokeswoman added: ‘The duplicated payments were the result of a scheduling issue, which we quickly identified and rectified. The recipients and purpose of payment will have varied among clients but could have included wages or supplier payments.’

Santander, which has 14million customers, was left in hot water earlier this year in May when it was forced to apologise after a glitch meant some of its customers weren’t able to make any payments for almost an entire Saturday. 

And in August last year thousands of customers were unable to access their online accounts. 

Have you received some unexpected money from Santander? Email isabella.nikolic@mailonline.co.uk 

Q&A: Are you allowed to keep money given to you by accident? 

Are you allowed to keep money sent to you by accident?  

It is illegal to knowingly keep money that was put into your bank account in error. 

If you refuse to give the money back you face being charged with ‘retaining wrongful credit’ under the Theft Act 1968. 

What happens if you’ve already spent the money? 

You could be jailed if you spend the money when you know it’s not yours. According to the Theft Act 1968, the maximum sentence is ten years in prison.

For instance, a woman from Blackburn was sentenced to 10 months in prison after she went on a spending spree, after receiving £135,000 in error from Abbey bank. 

Could you keep the money if you can prove you genuinely believed it to be yours? 

The only exception to these rules are if you have genuine cause to believe you were owed the money. 

For example, a part-time bank worker who was overpaid £7,500 a year for three years won a court case to keep her windfall. A tribunal ruled in her favour after she successfully argued she had assumed the increase was a pay rise that she had been promised by her employers. 

Are there any loopholes? 

There is a loophole to being wrongly paid more money. 

If you put the extra cash into a separate savings account and allow it to accrue interest until you are required to pay back the money, you may end up with free cash. 

Source: money.co.uk 

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