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Man Changes Credit Card Contract, Wins in Court to Not Pay Any Interest

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  • Man Changes Credit Card Contract, Wins in Court to Not Pay Any Interest

    A Russian man who decided to write his own small print in a credit card contract has had his changes upheld in court. He's now suing the country's leading online bank for more than 24 million rubles ($727,000) in compensation.

    Disappointed by the terms of the unsolicited offer for a credit card from Tinkoff Credit Systems in 2008, a 42-year-old Dmitry Agarkov from the city of Voronezh decided to hand write his own credits terms.

    The trick was that Agarkov simply scanned the bank’s document and ‘amended’ the small print with his own terms.

    He opted for a 0 percent interest rate and no fees, adding that the customer "is not obliged to pay any fees and charges imposed by bank tariffs." The bank, however, didn’t read ‘the amendments’, as it signed and certified the document, as well as sent the man a credit card. Under the agreement, the bank OK'd to provide unlimited credit, according to Agarkov’s lawyer Dmitry Mikhalevich talking to Kommersant daily...


    A Russian man who decided to write his own small print in a credit card contract has had his changes upheld in court. He's now suing the country's leading online bank for more than 24 million rubles ($727,000) in compensation.

  • #2
    He probably wouldn't have won that court case in the USA.

    I guess the banks don't read the fine print either. LOL
    Brian

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