As an example of the circumstances which
COMP 7.2.5 R is designed to address, take two claimants, A and B.
(2) In this example, the liquidator is able to recover assets from the
relevant personin default and makes a payment of 50p in the pound to all the
relevant person's creditors. If the liquidator made the payment before any offer of compensation from the
FSCS had been accepted, A and B would both receive £30,000 each from the liquidator, leaving both with a loss of £30,000 to be met by the
FSCS. Both
claims would be met in full.
(3) However, if the payment were made by the liquidator after A had accepted the
FSCS's offer of compensation and assigned his rights to the
FSCS, but before B accepted the
FSCS offer of compensation, A would be disadvantaged relative to B even though he has received £48,000 compensation from the
FSCS. A would be disadvantaged relative to B because he promptly accepted the
FSCS's offer and assigned his rights to the
FSCS. Because A has assigned his rights to the
FSCS, any payment from the liquidator will be made to the
FSCS rather than A. In this case the
FSCS has paid A more than £30,000, so the £30,000 from the liquidator that would have been payable to A will be payable in full to the
FSCS and not to A.
(4) B is able to exercise his rights against the liquidator because he delayed accepting the
FSCS's offer and receives £30,000 from the liquidator. B can then make a
claim for the remaining £30,000 to the
FSCS which the
FSCS can pay in full (see
COMP 10.2.2 G). B therefore suffers no loss whereas A is left with a loss of £12,000, being the difference between his
claim of £60,000 and the compensation paid by the
FSCS of £48,000.