One Housing Group Limited (202329336)

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Decision

Case ID

202329336

Decision type

Investigation

Landlord

One Housing Group Limited

Landlord type

Housing Association

Occupancy

Assured Tenancy

Date

12 December 2025

Background

  1. The resident pays a variable service charge for services which are outlined in her tenancy agreement. The resident advised in 2015 the landlord refunded her £650 for service charges it should not have charged her for. The resident raised her concerns the landlord had started charging her for these services again which brought about this complaint.

What the complaint is about

  1. The complaint is about the landlord’s:
    1. Response to concerns about service charge errors.
    2. Complaint handling.

Our decision (determination)

  1. There was maladministration in the landlord’s response to concerns about service charge errors.
  2. There was reasonable redress in the landlord’s complaint handling.

We have made orders for the landlord to put things right.

Summary of reasons

The landlord’s response to concerns about service charge errors

  1. The landlord gave contradictory answers in its complaint responses for which items it will charge the resident. This left the resident confused and unsure.
  2. After the landlord recognised it had charged her for services she had not received, it appropriately credited the resident’s account – but on a weekly basis. This continued for at least 4 years until the landlord returned the credit. In our view, this was not a fair approach. The amount owed was the result of an incorrect charge and not an overcharge. As such, we believe the landlord should have offered the resident a direct (and single payment) refund.

 

The landlord’s handling of the resident’s complaint

  1. Appropriately the landlord apologised and provided the resident with an explanation why it overlooked her escalation request. It offered reasonable compensation for this failing. This resulted in reasonable redress for the resident.

 


Putting things right

Where we find service failure, maladministration or severe maladministration we can make orders for the landlord to put things right. We have the discretion to make recommendations in all other cases within our jurisdiction.

Orders

Landlords must comply with our orders in the manner and timescales we specify. The landlord must provide documentary evidence of compliance with our orders by the due date set.

Order

What the landlord must do

Due date

1

Apology order

The landlord must apologise in writing to the resident for the failures identified in this report. The landlord must ensure:

  • The apology is specific to the failures identified in this decision, meaningful and empathetic.
  • It has due regard to our apologies guidance.
  • The letter is to include clarification about the services it has removed and the resident’s account balance.

No later than

15 January 2026

2

Compensation order

The landlord must pay the resident £300 to recognise the distress and inconvenience caused by its response to concerns about service charge errors.

The landlord must pay this directly to the resident by the due date. The landlord must provide documentary evidence of payment by the due date.

No later than

15 January 2026

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recommendation

Our recommendation is not binding, and a landlord may decide not to follow it.

Our recommendations

We emphasise that we made the reasonable redress finding on the provision the landlord has either paid or offers again to pay the resident the £250 for its complaint handling failures. If the landlord does not do this, it would undermine our reasonable redress finding and we may revisit this decision.


 


Our investigation

The complaint procedure

Date

What happened

24 February 2023

The resident sent the landlord her complaint through the post. She was unhappy with the lack of service charge information, and that though, still paying them she does not think she gets the services. She said:

  • The landlord had not given her a service charge breakdown when she asked for this in May 2022, despite her chasing it shortly after.
  • In February 2023 she chased again, but she had no response.
  • The landlord had previously, in 2015, refunded her £650 for service charges and sent her a letter saying she was not liable for these. Since December 2019 it resumed these charges.

As a resolution the resident wanted the landlord to review her service charges, to rectify any issues, and reimburse any incorrect charges.

7 March 2023

The landlord called the resident and sent a complaint acknowledgment.

9 March 2023

The landlord called the resident to discuss her complaint.

16 March 2023

The landlord sent its stage 1 response. The landlord apologised that it did not respond to her request for a service charge breakdown. It said it closed the case without sending her query to the correct team. The landlord confirmed the resident chased on 19 July 2022, and it responded on 27 July 2022. It confirmed it would remove the following from the 2022/2023 service charges:

  • Bulk rubbish removal.
  • CCTV.
  • External cleaning.
  • Mechanical and electrical (M&E) maintenance.
  • Water safety assessments.

It would make these amendments in the end of year accounts. It anticipated these would be finalised by 30 September 2023. The landlord outlined further communication between it and the resident. It provided the resident with the 2022/2023 service charge breakdown. Then the resident asked the landlord to send her service charge breakdowns from 2012-2017. It sent from 2016 onwards. It explained it only holds records for 6 years, confirming that no more breakdowns were available. The landlord confirmed that since 2019:

  • There were services it should not have charged the resident for. It had corrected these in the end of year accounts for 2019/2020 and 2020/2021. It would correct the rest in the accounts 2021/2022 and 2022/2023. It ensured future years would not include charges she was not liable to pay.
  • It would pay the credit from 2019/2020 and 2020/2021 accounts back to the resident. The landlord will credit her rent account on a weekly basis through 2023/2024. This totalled £10.90 per week.
  • It anticipated there would be another credit in 2024/2025.

It upheld the resident’s complaint and offered £100 as recognition she had been disputing these charges for some time.

29 March 2023

The resident emailed the landlord requesting it escalated her complaint. She found the letter confusing, it had not clarified the refund amount. She declined the £100 compensation as it did not account for the emotional, physical, and mental distress caused since 2012. She felt she had been ignored and shut down by the landlord.

25 April 2023

The resident phoned the landlord, she said the case was not resolved.

13 March 2024

We contacted the landlord as the resident had not received a response to her escalation request.

13 March 2024

The landlord called the resident and sent acknowledgement of her escalation request. It said she asked for an escalation as she found the stage 1 response confusing and it did not fully address the issue. She would like clarity on charges and arrears on her account. She also wanted the landlord to say why it missed her escalation request.

She confirmed, in resolution, she wanted the landlord to resolve this issue and to review the compensation it offered her.

11 April 2024

After speaking to the resident earlier that day, the landlord issued its final response letter. It said the resident wanted:

  • Clarity on what services would be removed and what will not.
  • To know the exact refund amount.

The landlord confirmed, though the resident has her own front door, she still lives within a block, as such she needs to pay towards some of the costs of the block which she benefits from. These are:

  • Fire safety equipment.
  • M&E maintenance.
  • External cleaning.
  • Management costs including the accountant’s fees.

The landlord said it would refund by crediting the weekly charges. It would credit the resident’s account with a total of £1,090.90 for the years 2019-2023. £566.76 of this was credited in 2023/2024. Over the year ahead it will credit a further £524.14. The landlord said it could not go back to 2015 as the resident wished it to.

The landlord apologised for missing her escalation request. It misfiled it. It realised its mistake when we got in touch. It offered her £250 for this and offered a meeting to discuss the service charges further.

Referral to the Ombudsman

The resident asked us to investigate as she remained dissatisfied. She said she was paying for services she did not receive. As a resolution she would like the landlord to:

  • Confirm what service charges will be removed and what remains.
  • Provide clear details of her arrears once the credits are applied.
  • Confirm how much refund is due.
  • Review the compensation offer.
  • Provide clear written responses to her service charge queries within its service standards.

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 response to concerns about service charge errors.

Finding

Maladministration

  1. The landlord’s final response letter answered most of the resident’s escalation points. It told the resident what services would remain, how she benefitted from these, what the total refund was, and how it would apply this.
  2. We note the landlord did not advise which services it had removed. We recognise the resident could look at the previous service charge breakdown for this. However, as this was part of the escalation request, the landlord should have provided a response.
  3. As a resolution the resident asked us for clarity on what the landlord is and is not charging her for. Therefore, she remained unsure on this point. We can understand the resident’s uncertainty, as while the landlord’s final response letter clearly stated the services it was charging her for, it contradicted its stage 1 response. In its stage 1 response it said it would remove external cleaning and M&E maintenance charges, amongst others. The final response letter said, it was charging the resident for both these two services, amongst others.
  4. We recognise the landlord sent these complaint responses a year apart. Also, that it advised it was only charging the resident for some elements of the external cleaning. However, the responses should give the resident clarity on what she is liable for. We could understand if she has lost confidence in the landlord because of this confusion.
  5. Additionally, the landlord noted in the escalation acknowledgement the resident asked it to provide her with clarity on the “charges and arrears account.” As the landlord did not address this in its final response letter, we have made an order for it to confirm the services it removed and the balance of the resident’s account now it has applied the refund.
  6. The landlord acknowledged it should not have charged the resident for certain services. It calculated what it owed the resident through its end of year accounts. It then credited the resident’s account on a weekly basis over the years.
  7. The landlord’s service charge policy says it will carry over any credit or deficit from the end of year accounts into the following years charge. It confirmed this in its published end of year accounts and its complaint responses. This would seem like an appropriate response when there are credits or deficits for charges the resident is liable for.
  8. However, in this situation the landlord had been incorrectly charging the resident for services it should not have been. As such, we believe it should have reimbursed the resident in one payment after it had reconciled the accounts. This was not an overspend but an incorrect charge, and the resident lost the ability to use (or save) this money elsewhere.
  9. A resolution the resident asked us to provide was the refund due, which the landlord clarified in its final response letter. By the resident asking for this again, it emphasised her confusion over the weekly credits.
  10. We recognised the resident advised that she had brought this concern to the landlord’s attention over many years. The landlord itself in its stage 1 response acknowledged that she had been disputing the charges for some time.
  11. It recognised its errors, but there remained confusion through its complaint responses. In addition, it would have been more reasonable to credit the resident’s account in one lump sum after the reconciliation.

Complaint

The landlord’s complaint handling.

Finding

Reasonable redress

  1. The landlord sent its stage 1 response in line with its complaints policy.
  2. The landlord did not escalate the resident’s complaint, despite her requesting this on 29 March 2023 and followed this with a telephone call on 25 April 2023.
  3. We noted a sentence in the resident’s escalation request. She said, “I have been completely shut down and ignored on numerous occasions when attempting to dispute my charges.” While we do not believe the landlord ignored the escalation request on purpose, unfortunately its actions would have reinforced the resident’s belief.
  4. We recognise mistakes are made and once we contacted the landlord in March 2024, it opened the escalation request and acted in line with its complaints policy. This was an appropriate response given the mistake it made.
  5. The landlord apologised and offered the resident £250 for the escalation delays. This is approximately what we would have ordered for a failure of this nature (as set out in our remedies guidance). As such, we find that the landlord’s offer of redress was satisfactory in putting things right.

Learning

  1. We encourage the landlord to use this report to consider issuing residents with full refunds when it charged for services it should not have. This is different to when services were received, and the account reconciliation resulted in an overpayment.

Knowledge information management (record keeping)

  1. We did not find any failures with this.

Communication

  1. There were occasions when the landlord did not progress the resident queries, such as the escalation request or providing the service charge breakdown. We would remind the landlord about the implications of these oversights.