Paid cash in, counted and weighed. Bank now disputes figure.

Paid cash in, counted and weighed. Bank now disputes figure.

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S1_RS

Original Poster:

782 posts

199 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
I recently sold a car for cash so went to pay it in to my bank today, 4K in twenties in one account, 1K into another. I had counted both sums out. When I paid it in the cashier physically counted them out then weighed each bundle of notes, one bundle was apparently £40 over, another was £20 over so she handed me back £60, recounted and weighed the bundles and satisfied herself the figures were correct, then paid them in and gave me a receipt for both deposits. Fast forward 4 hours and the cashier phones me up and says a colleague checked the bundles and found them short. The cashier is now blaming her weighing scales saying they must be out. From a legal point where do I stand? Surely having been given a receipt they have no comeback after the event? They cannot be 100% certain the bundles in question were mine? Morally I will drop the £60 in to the bank but I'm not sure I really need to?

Edited by S1_RS on Thursday 16th February 16:43

Dave350

359 posts

118 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
I would refuse out of principal, if you walk away having them done their part in counting the money then it is their issue to resolve their mistake/incompetence.

Muzzer79

9,948 posts

187 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Seriously?

You have a receipt for the full amount...

They could have:

  • Nicked it
  • Dropped it down the back of the counter
  • Mixed it up with another bundle
  • Paid it out to someone else
  • Office dog could have eaten it
If they've made a mistake, they cover it. It's not your problem.

Tell them to do one.

mi1ne

307 posts

198 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
More importantly, what cologne did she use?

S1_RS

Original Poster:

782 posts

199 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
mi1ne said:
More importantly, what cologne did she use?
Lol, edited!

Car mad enthusiast

571 posts

87 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Its their cock up and not your problem.

LIke it says in most shops, " Please check your change before leaving as mistakes cannot be rectified afterwards".

Enjoy your £60

red_slr

17,231 posts

189 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Checked twice and they still screwed it up... their problem IMHO.
They are professional money counters.

Yipper

5,964 posts

90 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Report it to the Financial Ombudsman and get them to rule on the dispute. They will almost certainly rule in your favour (assuming the details are correct).

http://www.financial-ombudsman.org.uk/publications...

Hammer67

5,730 posts

184 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
I recently paid in £410 in cash to my bank via the Post Office.
3 weeks later it hadn't shown up in the account.
Emailed the bank a scan of the receipt and the money was credited the same day.

Surely the receipt is your proof, if not then the system is not fit for purpose and open to all sorts of nonsense.

stevensdrs

3,210 posts

200 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
So you knew at the time having counted the cash yourself that the teller was making a mistake yet you kept schtum. Legally the bank doesn't have a leg to stand on but morally and to keep a good relationship with the bank you need to stump up the sixty quid.

Wacky Racer

38,157 posts

247 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
If YOU counted them out and arrived at £5000 in total I would return the money, mistakes happen in life.

That's what I would do anyway.

Yipper

5,964 posts

90 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
stevensdrs said:
So you knew at the time having counted the cash yourself that the teller was making a mistake yet you kept schtum. Legally the bank doesn't have a leg to stand on but morally and to keep a good relationship with the bank you need to stump up the sixty quid.
Given almost the entire UK banking system has spent the past ~40 years cheating and lying through its teeth to get fat on consumer and business deceit, banks are not really in a good position to take the moral high ground. From PPI to CDOs to hidden overdraft charges, the banking system does little more than glide from one ripoff to the next.

red_slr

17,231 posts

189 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
If YOU counted them out and arrived at £5000 in total I would return the money, mistakes happen in life.

That's what I would do anyway.
How does he know he did not count it wrong. OK probabilities are that he didn't but they are the pros, that's all they do for a living. They issue that bit of paper and put the money in the drawer its done.

S1_RS

Original Poster:

782 posts

199 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
stevensdrs said:
So you knew at the time having counted the cash yourself that the teller was making a mistake yet you kept schtum. Legally the bank doesn't have a leg to stand on but morally and to keep a good relationship with the bank you need to stump up the sixty quid.
I told the cashier I had counted it out, she replied that some of the notes had stuck together. The fact she then weighed them and said it was correct was enough for me to doubt myself, she counted and weighed, I only counted.

sidicks

25,218 posts

221 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Yipper said:
Given almost the entire UK banking system has spent the past ~40 years cheating and lying through its teeth to get fat on consumer and business deceit, banks are not really in a good position to take the moral high ground. From PPI to CDOs to hidden overdraft charges, the banking system does little more than glide from one ripoff to the next.
Sounds someone with a chip on their shoulder commenting on things they don't understand.

CDOs..
rofl

sidicks

25,218 posts

221 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
S1_RS said:
I told the cashier I had counted it out, she replied that some of the notes had stuck together. The fact she then weighed them and said it was correct was enough for me to doubt myself, she counted and weighed, I only counted.
I suggest you please your ignorance and rely on the receipt you were given at the time.

Yipper

5,964 posts

90 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
sidicks said:
Yipper said:
Given almost the entire UK banking system has spent the past ~40 years cheating and lying through its teeth to get fat on consumer and business deceit, banks are not really in a good position to take the moral high ground. From PPI to CDOs to hidden overdraft charges, the banking system does little more than glide from one ripoff to the next.
Sounds someone with a chip on their shoulder commenting on things they don't understand.

CDOs..
rofl
It ain't rocket science, son. The banks and others wrapped bad mortgages with fancy packaging and ripped everyone off wink

sidicks

25,218 posts

221 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
Yipper said:
It ain't rocket science, son. The banks and others wrapped bad mortgages with fancy packaging and ripped everyone off wink
As I expected, you understand very little in this area. No surprise there.

pincher

8,558 posts

217 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
If this one gets technical, my fiver is on sidicks biggrinyes

Edited for spelling like a 5 year old rolleyes

Edited by pincher on Thursday 16th February 19:04

sidicks

25,218 posts

221 months

Thursday 16th February 2017
quotequote all
pincher said:
If this one gets techinal, my fiver is on sidicks biggrinyes
We shouldn't take this thread off topic, but I'm pretty confident of which one of us knows what they are talking about!