London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham (202334879)

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Decision

Case ID

202334879

Decision type

Investigation

Landlord

London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham

Landlord type

Local Authority / ALMO or TMO

Occupancy

Leaseholder

Date

19 December 2025

Background

  1. The resident has complained that the landlord was not transparent about the arrears on her service charges account. She was consistently making payments via standing order but was unaware that the payments were being applied to balances for older invoices. She is unhappy that the landlord did not communicate the arrears for 3 years. She asked us to investigate after receiving responses from the landlord that she remains dissatisfied with. 

What the complaint is about

  1. The complaint is about:
    1. The landlord’s communications about an outstanding service charge balance.
    2. The handling of her complaint.

Our decision (determination)

  1. We have found the landlord responsible for:
    1. No maladministration in its communications about the outstanding service charge balance.
    2. No maladministration with its complaint handling.

Summary of reasons

The landlord’s communications about the resident’s service charge

  1. The landlord notified the resident of the arrears in January 2020, February 2024 and July 2024. It therefore acted reasonably in making her aware of the arrears on her account and her responsibility to pay the service charges.
  2. When the resident enquired about the balance of her window replacement costs in January 2021, the landlord confirmed she had a significant balance remaining on her account, therefore reminding her of the debt.
  3. By signing the lease, the resident understood that she had to pay the service charges, and any overdue balance would be subject to interest.
  4. The resident was responsible for keeping her service payments up to date and ensuring she was making payments towards the charges she was liable for. The landlord has therefore not acted unreasonably in chasing the resident for arrears on her leaseholder account.

Complaint handling

  1. The landlord provided its complaint responses within the timescales set out within the Complaint Handling Code and acted reasonably.

Our investigation

The complaint procedure

Date

What happened

12 January 2024

After receiving an email from the landlord notifying her of an outstanding debt of £7084.19 on her account, she raised a formal complaint. She said:

  • She had been making regular payments via standing order, believing these covered all charges. However, the payments were only for Major Works (window replacement) and did not include the current service charges.
  • The landlord was not transparent about the situation for 3 years and only notified her of substantial arrears after she contacted it.
  • As it was not proactive in informing her about the arrears and accrued interest, this has caused financial strain and negatively affected her mental health.

She was seeking:

  • For the landlord to write off the accrued interest on the outstanding debt.
  • Partially write off the arrears to reflect the impact of delayed communication.
  • Improve its communication by providing timely notifications of arrears and any changes.

26 January 2024

The landlord provided its stage 1 complaint response. It acknowledged the resident’s concerns about interest being charged on the arrears and her request for a payment plan. It did not uphold the complaint, as it said it had followed the correct policies and procedures. It also said:

  • When the resident purchased the property, it provided a homebuyer’s pack containing the invoices issued within the previous 3 years and details of any pending major works. This was intended to give the resident an indication of annual invoices and approximate costs.
  • The resident’s legal advisors were responsible for informing the resident about the terms of her lease and her rights and obligations.
  • When the resident contacted it in January 2020, it made an exception by agreeing to a payment arrangement outside the terms of the lease.
  • When it set up the payment plan, it said the payments would only be applied to old invoices and would not cover her ongoing service charge liabilities, set out in the invoices issued twice annually. 
  • The landlord highlighted that failure to pay service charges is a breach of the lease and could lead to legal action.
  • It is not legally required to continually remind leaseholders to pay the service charges and under the lease, if payment is not made within 21 days, interest will accrue until the balance is cleared.

29 January 2024

The resident escalated her complaint to stage 2 as she was dissatisfied with the resolution provided. She said:

  • The landlord’s response did not address the impact the lack of communication about the arrears had on her.
  • She only received the formal letter about the service charge arrears and accrued interest on 5 January 2024 and questioned why the landlord did not notify her sooner.
  • The response failed to address the threatening tone in the landlord’s communications, including warnings about applying interest to outstanding invoices.

26 February 2024

The landlord apologised that the resident was unhappy with the stage 1 outcome. It did not uphold the complaint as it was satisfied with the information it had provided previously. It said:

  • The resident’s lease sets out how the landlord will communicate payment of service charges.
  • The landlord issues an estimated service charge invoice in March each year and a final invoice in September. It sent payment demands every 6 months in line with the lease.
  • There is no provision in the lease for the landlord to continually pursue the resident for payment of invoices and she had been aware that she had a contractual obligation to pay the service charge.
  • It apologised if the resident felt communications were threatening. It explained that payment of service charges is a condition of the resident’s mortgage.

Referral to the Ombudsman

The resident contacted the Ombudsman as she was unhappy with the landlord’s response. She said the landlord failed to notify her of arrears on her account and was not transparent in its communication, which caused confusion and financial strain.

 


What we found and why

The circumstances of this complaint are well known by the parties involved, so it is not necessary to detail everything that’s happened or comment on all the information we’ve reviewed. We’ve only included the key information that forms the basis of our decision of whether the landlord is responsible for maladministration.

Complaint

The landlord’s communications about an outstanding service charge balance.

Finding

No maladministration

  1. Under the terms of her lease, the resident is required to pay the service charge. If charges are overdue by more than 21 days, the landlord could charge interest at 5% above its bank’s base rate, which would accrue daily until the balance is cleared. The lease also requires the landlord to provide an annual service charge statement at year-end, showing total charges and any adjustments. 
  2. The landlord had previously identified arrears on the resident’s account and agreed to a payment plan as an exception, as she was experiencing financial difficulties. The plan ran from 13 January 2020 to 13 January 2022 and required 47 equal monthly payments of £90.74. This was a reasonable action by the landlord, as it showed it was understanding of the resident’s situation.  
  3. We requested evidence of when the resident was first informed of the debt. The landlord provided an email dated 8 January 2020 stating she owed £4,355.59 for 6 service charge invoices relating to April 2017 to September 2019. The resident responded on the same day. Her response confirms that she received the email.  
  4. However, the resident has complained that the landlord failed to inform her promptly and frequently about arrears on her account. She has said the issue arose on 2 January 2024 when she asked the landlord if her Major Works balance was cleared. The landlord confirmed the Major Works invoice had been paid, but highlighted that she owed £7,084.19, with accrued interest of £931.23 on her leasehold account. This was because she had not paid subsequent service charge invoices since the earlier agreement.
  5. The landlord’s letter on 5 January 2024 demanded full payment of the arrears. The resident responded by explaining that she believed the deductions from her account covered service charges. She questioned why those payments had stopped and why the landlord did not contact her to resume them. We have not seen that the landlord responded to these queries directly, which it should have done as this was a fair question by the resident. It should have made it clear that the previous debt had been paid but also clarified the status of the account.
  6. By signing the lease, the resident would have been aware that she must pay service charges and that failure to do so would incur interest and breach the lease, potentially leading to further action. We have also seen that it notified the resident of arrears in January 2020 and as the resident responded to the email, this demonstrates that the resident received the reminder about the arrears. We recognise that it also confirmed to the resident on 14 January 2021 that the resident was paying £260 a month for the window replacement, for which she had made 10 payments. However, this left a balance of £9,857.89, which reminded her of the debt.
  7. On 22 February 2024, the landlord wrote to the resident, confirming the overdue debt was £6,564.19 for 10 service charge invoices, with 8 of them incurring £1,028.80 of interest which was accruing daily. It sent a further reminder to the resident on 30 July 2024, which said that her account balance was £7,875.75, of which £6,796.16 was overdue. This indicates that the resident was notified of the arrears on various occasions, which was reasonable.
  8. We have also seen evidence of service charge invoices, including estimates and final bills, every September and March from 2020-2024. The resident has not disputed receiving these invoices. This would have notified the resident of her obligation to pay the ongoing service charges and a reminder that the resident was liable to pay. However, we recognise that this would not have alerted her to the balance of the outstanding debt, but rather her obligation to pay the ongoing service charges.
  9. During our investigation, the resident has confirmed that she does not recall receiving details for an online leaseholder account when she moved into the property and she did not log in or actively use any online account during 2020-2021. She confirmed that she was not made aware of any way that it enabled her to access or monitor her service charge account and she relied on correspondence sent to her directly. While we appreciate this, we are satisfied that the landlord had notified of her debt in other ways, for example by email in January 2020 and January 2021.
  10. The resident complained that she did not realise her payments excluded current service charges. She believed all payments were being taken by direct debit and said the landlord failed to inform her about the arrears. In its stage 2 response, the landlord stated that the payment plan agreed in January 2020 covered only old invoices, not ongoing bills. It has reiterated that this was explained at the time, but the agreement letter did not confirm this.
  11. We find that on balance the agreement letter was for the resident’s past debts, and it was not unreasonable that it did not mention future or ongoing invoices. As she continued to receive service charge invoices, and due to the terms of her lease, the resident should have expected a payment to cover her ongoing service charge liabilities.
  12. We recognise that in the service charge invoice dated 1 April 2023, it stated that direct debits would appear as one combined payment where another payment plan exists or if the resident had more than one property. This could have led the resident to assume her monthly payments covered all charges.
  13. We recognise that the resident is now facing arrears of over £7,000, which would understandably be distressing, given she thought she was paying towards her service charges each month. However, as she had previously built-up arrears, it would have been reasonable for her to monitor her account and check she was paying towards all of the charges she was liable for.
  14. As part of the resident’s complaint, she included that she did not think it was fair that the landlord continues to charge interest while her complaint is with us. The resident’s lease includes that if any payments are overdue for 21 days, interest will accrue. The evidence provided to us demonstrates that the landlord notified the resident of the arrears from January 2020 and that it would charge interest. We therefore do not consider the landlord to have acted unreasonably by continuing to charge interest on the overdue balance. We also recognise that the resident’s liability to pay costs is not paused by her decision to access the Ombudsman service.
  15. Based on everything we have seen, we have found no maladministration by the landlord in its communications about the resident’s outstanding service charge balance. The landlord acted reasonably by notifying the resident about the arrears in January 2020 and January 2021. The lease does not require the landlord to chase payments beyond issuing invoices and the resident was contractually responsible for paying the service charges. It reminded the resident of her ongoing service charge liabilities through regular invoices and ultimately acted in line with the terms of the resident’s lease.

Complaint

The handling of the complaint

Finding

No maladministration

  1. The Ombudsman’s complaint handling code (“the Code”) sets out when and how a landlord should respond to complaints. The resident formally complained on 12 January 2024, and the landlord acknowledged the complaint on 15 January 2024, which was within the timeframe set out in the Code. It said it would aim to provide the resident with a written response by 26 January 2024. It was reasonable that it gave the resident a timeframe for when it intended to respond. 
  2. The landlord provided its stage 1 complaint response on 26 January 2024, which was within the timeframe set out in the Code and within the timeframe it stated to the resident. The resident requested for her complaint to be escalated to stage 2 of the landlord’s complaint process on 29 January 2024, but we have not received any evidence of the landlord’s acknowledgement to this. Nevertheless, it provided its stage 2 complaint response on 26 February 2024, which was within the 20-working day timeframe set out in the Code.
  3. From reviewing the landlord’s complaints process, we are pleased to see that the landlord responded within the timescales set out in the Code and therefore acted reasonably. We have found no maladministration in the landlord’s complaint handling.

Learning

  1. The landlord acted reasonably by providing an agreement letter that clearly stated the amount and duration of payments. However, it should consider including a payment breakdown when residents pay for multiple items, such as debt and ongoing service charges.

Communication

  1. Where a resident has an outstanding balance for rent or service charges, it may be helpful for the landlord to send a reminder to them with the annual statement, which sets out any outstanding balance which is accruing interest.