So a few weeks back, I got a notice that my account at Huntington Bank had been overdrawn $60 from speedway. I figured this was just a place holder, as some gas stations will do that.
Turns out it wasn't. So I filed a dispute. The bank eventually came back siding with the station. I didn't really understand, since my card had been deactivated before the charge was made, due to the fact that they had sent out new cards to several customers.
PIN or Visa/MC transaction? Either way, you contact Speedway directly and demand a receipt for that charge, IN WRITING. If they can't provide one, get written documentation of that, and present it to your bank. Without a receipt, there was no transaction, and the bank can't side with them no matter what. Lack of cooperation from the bank will present other options for escalation. Eating the charge is the worst thing you can do.
I had a bad run-in with my bank also... the teller gave me the wrong account number (someone elses, to be exact)... and this was the account number I put on my tax refund for direct deposit!!!
Keep a direct deposit form on hand. All banks have them to supply to customers for their employers, to begin DD of their paychecks. Have one handy with your proper account info and refer to it when necessary. And of course as someone else mentioned, double and triple check your numbers before using them.
We're currently looking into a variable mortgage rate because our current mortgage is at 5.24% and the variable rate as of today is 3.05%.
No matter how good the rate looks, as soon as the fixed low term is over, they are going to jack it up to unreasonable levels. That's a big part of the overall economic problem we are faced with today. ARMs got rate jacked beyond reason when their fixed terms expired. Consider the risk. Fixed rates are as low as 4.5% right now. If you really think you can axe the loan balance before the fixed term is over, by all means do it, but tread lightly in such risky waters.