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ALJ 2019 Wolfgang Faber/Claes Martinson 112
problem could occur if any of the possible solutions to the ‘real issue’ could cause unexpected
major losses for the banking industry at large. However, since the bank, in a setting like the Banco
Santander case, would at least retain a proprietary security right for the same claim it originally
had, we assume that no such major consequences are to be anticipated in this regard.
(v) Another assumption on risk concerns the security object. If a judicial review of potentially unfair
terms is declared still possible or even necessary, the bank faces an additional risk that the
apartment may deteriorate in value because of the simple fact that it is used every day and this
causes wear and tear. This consequence, in principle, is very likely to occur. However, there is no
equally tenable prognosis on how significant such deterioration would probably be. On the one
hand, one could have reasons to assume that the consumer, if she is allowed to remain in the
apartment, would take reasonable care of it. On the other hand, there may be reasons to assume,
and even certain empiric support, that a person in economic distress is more likely to take bigger
risks;103 this might also affect the state of the apartment. Evidently, this makes it difficult to find an
appropriate way of how to measure such (partly contradictory) assumptions. In a practical case
before a (national) court, it may sometimes be possible to deliver particular evidence to make an
assumption more specific or clarify its likelihood. After all, deciding the ‘real issue’ in terms of
excluding any further mortgage contract review right away appears to be slightly preferable to the
bank. However, the bank’s main interest of at least keeping some sort of proprietary security for
its claim is also served if the opposite decision were made. The economic value of the security may
be somewhat lower, depending on further wear and tear. Further, the real estate market may
develop in one or the other direction.
(vi) It should be kept in mind that the effect that a consumer who cannot pay will lose the object
over which the security right has been created, is not unfair as such. The consumer’s interest of
keeping his or her home is, however, not the only interest the consumer typically has.104 In case
this goal cannot be achieved, a consumer, in the capacity of debtor and mortgagor, has an evident
interest of achieving the best possible economic result once the apartment is lost. In the present
case, this would mean achieving a better result than 60% of the (former) market value.
Theoretically, this could be attained in different ways, including: retrospectively avoiding the forced
sale and enforcing the mortgage under the ordinary judicial enforcement procedure (at a time
when prices may have started to go up again after the financial crisis) or, if the bank is allowed to
keep the apartment, by imposing on the bank an obligation to deduct any income gained from the
apartment (by way of sale or renting out to a third person) from the consumer’s remaining credit
obligation.
(vii) Other arguments concerning the sale of the security object have to do with assumptions on
how banks will act if they are still subject to an ex officio intervention by the court in the process
of evacuation. Would banks then change their behaviour and never buy the mortgaged property
themselves? Is it possible to assume that excluding banks from the market would lead to a less
favourable outcome for the consumer, since the prices fall if there is one buyer less on the market?
Would the banks instead use partner enterprises, who they ask to buy the security object? Would
the possibility of ex officio interventions affect the interest in and incentive for special
103 See, e.g., REINHARD H. SCHMIDT, ÖKONOMISCHE ANALYSE DES INSOLVENZRECHTS 27 (1980).
104 This aspect has already been touched supra, III.B. What we add here are more detailed deliberations as to the
consumer’s interest to achieve the best economic result if the credit debt cannot be paid.
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Buch Austrian Law Journal, Band 1/2019"
Austrian Law Journal
Band 1/2019
- Titel
- Austrian Law Journal
- Band
- 1/2019
- Autor
- Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz
- Herausgeber
- Brigitta Lurger
- Elisabeth Staudegger
- Stefan Storr
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 19.1 x 27.5 cm
- Seiten
- 126
- Schlagwörter
- Recht, Gesetz, Rechtswissenschaft, Jurisprudenz
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Austrian Law Journal