A German man whose bank mistakenly gave him €200 million has been told
he can keep the €12,000 interest earned while it was “resting in his
account” overnight. The man, named only as Michael H., sold shares last
April for €20,000 – but his online bank, Comdirect, accidentally put
€200 million into his account.
Michael H. swiftly transferred
€10 million of it into his current account in a different bank. And
although Comdirect successfully clawed back all the €200 million, it
demanded €12,000 on top – 14.4 percent interest on the money he moved.
The district court in Itzehoe, Schleswig-Holstein, ruled on Thursday that Comdirect should repay the man the €12,000 – plus the interest it accrued over the last year. But
the bank – which is owned by Commerzbank – is going to appeal. “People
who want to use money that does not belong to them generally have to pay
interest," a bank spokesman said.
“That is the same for
everyone. We only implemented normal procedures – it was nothing more
than correct protocol.” Michael H. admitted it was fun to be a
multimillionaire for a moment, but now regrets moving the money. “It
would have been better if I had done nothing.”
No comments:
Post a Comment