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    • Yep, I agree with what you are saying, I only mentioned the governing body code of practice as a nod to the fact that I wasn't dismissing the BPA or whoever out of hand, thought that would go in my favour before a judge. I wrote a long post about the BPA CoP earlier but then deleted it because I realised I wasn't talking about points of law but a set of guidelines drawn up by one bunch of charlatans for another bunch of charlatans. It is ludicrous that the 5 minute consideration period doesn't apply if the motorist parks, such nonsense. As for legislation, I was referring to the government legislation (if it is legislation?) document which has been withdrawn. Does that stand until it has been reintroduced? In the explanatory document it is quite clear. Otherwise, how does one hold them to the consideration and grace periods? Or is that at the discretion of the judge?
    • Thank you all   JK, I agree; if they were to accept my full claim today, then the interest would be around 8-9 pounds. If I were them, I would have offered to pay the interest and said no to the 12 pounds for the letters. These have not been mentioned, which is my mistake.   As you pointed out, if the judge were to award at 4% and I did not get the letters, I would get less.   Bank, thank you. I do hear what you are saying. If I am to continue with this, then I will need to pay an additional trial fee of £59. If I win everything, then great, but if I win less the claim and court fee, then I lose out. I am not sure what the judge will think about the interest. I think we have to remember that I won the item and, therefore, did not pay a penny for it. Yes, I have had to purchase an additional one, but maybe the judge will hold this against me. I am content that this is a win. I have not signed any non-disclosure clauses, and they do not ask for this either in their offer. 
    • Are you saying that both businesses were closed? Yet you stayed there for over two hours. . If both were closed than to charge £100 is a penalty since Horizon had no legitimate interest in keeping spaces clear for the company. sake as there were no customers..
    • Well you would think that would be the case. Sadly i doubt there is one honest broker within the BPA or IPC and most of their members. they are there to take as much money as they can from motorists regardless of PoFA.   Take the Consideration  period for example. This is a minimum of 5 minutes to allow motorists to find a parking space, read the T&Cs giving them enough time to leave the car park without having to pay if they decide not stay. Simple. Well it would be simple if it were any other company than BPA [or IPC who have now fallen into line with BPA's "reasoning"].  You see if you decide to stay then despite the fact that during the Consideration period when you still weren't classed as parking , once you accept the terms [with all the underhand little tricks designed to trip you up] that five minutes is now included in your parking time. [No not the parking period because the poor dears who ANPR cameras are apparently unable to work out what the exact parking period is since their ever so infallible cameras [yeah right] are incapable of tracking cars once they are in a car park]. After 12 years they still haven't worked out a way of doing it. Some of them fudge and the majority [with a wink fro their ATA [Accredited Trade Association though it should be Discredited Trade Association] just ignore the parking period all together. This is what BPA claim is the Consideration period Entrance grace period: This is for when motorists enter a car park, read the signs and/or attempt to make payment then leave. In these instances, motorists must be offered a reasonable amount of time before an operator takes enforcement action, but we do not define this time, due to the variance in size and layout of car parks. An entrance grace period for a small, permit-only car park could be below 5 minutes, whereas for a large multi-story this could be 15. But  heaven forbid that anyone should leave 6 or 7 minutes after entering  their member's car parks. . They are dutybound to receive a PCN. This is regardless of how busy the car park would be [Christmas eve for example ] .Our minimum is their maximum. Moving on to Grace periods. Again BPA gobble degook. Exit grace period: This must be a minimum of 10 minutes and this is when a motorist intends to stay – for example, if you paid for an hour but spent a total of 1 hour 10 minutes on-site, you will not receive a PCN. It is important to note that the grace period is not a free period of parking however and should not be advertised as such. If that ten minutes in not free parking what is it. their members all think they can send out PCNs for anything after 1 minute after the exact time never mind ten minutes. Our snotty letters have stood the test of time. Do not try to reinvent the wheel -especially with DCBL . They don't even know what a non compliant PCN is for goodness sake! You already know more about PoFA then they do. However if you include that they will find a way to disabuse the Judge of your logic and the law. So don't give them the chance.  I am sure you have the Parking Prankster going on about the rogues misusing the rules on planning permission by lying and stating that they had "retrospective permission". There is no such thing in English law yet Judges were swallowing it until one Judge pulled up Parking Eye about one of their Witness Statements alluding to "rp" by claiming it was "tantamount to perjury".  It wasn't tantamount,it was plain and simple perjury. Parking Prankster: The great private car park planning approval scam PARKING-PRANKSTER.BLOGSPOT.COM Guest blog from shuteyepark, from the Consumer Action group forums In December 2013 my daughter received a Parking Charge Notice (PCN) fro... Hope it wasn't too long winded Nicky Boy.🙂
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    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

      Please note that a recent case against UPS failed on exactly the same issue with the judge held that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 did not apply.

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      We will be recommending that people do include this adverse judgement in their bundle so that when they go to county court the judge will see both sides and see the arguments against this adverse judgement.
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      This is good ethical practice.

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      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Oxford Retail Loss Prevention A Retailer / ** reveiwed September 2015 **


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Interesting to read but lets face it, nothing that surprising !, the Judge interpreted the law correctly IMO, and commented that it may be possible for the store/RLP to recoup loses but not in the present guise and Im not sure that following the parking charge example would be any more succesfull, surely this would need big signs at shop doorways telling shoppers they are entering a contract as soon as they enter a shop, this would scare me off !

 

I'm really surpsried that QC Mawrey opinions on this overlooked some very obvious basic facts.

 

Andy

Andy

 

I would be grateful if you could direct me to Mr Mawrey's opinion on this?

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You are quite right in what you say. It is, indeed, very rare for a judge to award punitive damages. The only case I know of where a District Judge awarded punitive damages against a defendant was in a personal injury case where the defendant, a manufacturer and their insurers, were repeatedly seeking adjournment of the assessment of damages hearing, without good reason and attempted to mislead the judge, who visited the factory to inspect the machinery that caused the claimant's injuries. The DJ, in addition to awarding substantial damages plus costs against the manufacturer and their insurers, inflicted punitive damages in respect of their abuse of the legal process and attempts to mislead him and the court.

Minor gripe: wrong phrase. Exemplary damages are what you ask for. The test is common law, two limbs (depending on whether the Defendant is a servant of the government or calculates that it will profit from its action), found in Rookes v Barnard. Your pleadings should be aligned very precisely with the words of the judgment. Unwise to bother except in circumstances I won't go into (dont want to be accused of encouraging it), otherwise you might just annoy everyone and thus weaken your main case.

 

But who needs exemplary damages when you can get 100% costs awards, even in a civil recovery small claim? Civil recovery? Love it almost as much as costs recovery.

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Minor gripe: wrong phrase. Exemplary damages are what you ask for. The test is common law, two limbs (depending on whether the Defendant is a servant of the government or calculates that it will profit from its action), found in Rookes v Barnard. Your pleadings should be aligned very precisely with the words of the judgment. Unwise to bother except in circumstances I won't go into (dont want to be accused of encouraging it), otherwise you might just annoy everyone and thus weaken your main case.

 

But who needs exemplary damages when you can get 100% costs awards, even in a civil recovery small claim? Civil recovery? Love it almost as much as costs recovery.

 

The case highlighted in my post refers to a case where the defendant abused the legal process and attempted to mislead the judge and court. The DJ involved hit the defendant with the punitive damages award for doing this and the punitive damages went into central funds. The claimant received substantial damages for personal injury and full costs against the employer and their insurers.

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CitizenB, yes it did get a couple of lines, buried deep in a local rag, and this was back in the 1970's. We were appalled that it only got that sort of coverage, I do think that those up the "TOP" had influence in what was printed because they didn't want the Inspector named, which to me was a bit stupid as from what I understand it is a matter of public record when its been to court so why try to play it down.... should have been front page headlines........

Keefy (:-)The "Moaner":rolleyes:)Boy

Prepared to take on anyone until I win...................

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Thanks keefy, that is a shame, I thought it might have been a bit more recent:)

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I did used to have a copy of it, but about 5 house moves later I haven't seen it for a few years, the paper itself went kaput (A very large fire) so no way or trying to dig it up either..//The particular Officer was then promoted to the next rank up, and a few months later got promotion again and returned back to the original station, from where he retired under a cloud shall I say..... something to do with possible assaults charges........ the mind boggles....... I wonder if he signed up for that security company??

Keefy (:-)The "Moaner":rolleyes:)Boy

Prepared to take on anyone until I win...................

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I popped into a local supermarket today and saw a huge sign which stated.

 

"Plain Clothes police officers patrol this store"

 

Can it be assumed that rather than pay a private firm, they are contributing to the salaries of "real" police officers?

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Advice & opinions given by citizenb are personal, are not endorsed by Consumer Action Group or Bank Action Group, and are offered informally, without prejudice & without liability. Your decisions and actions are your own, and should you be in any doubt, you are advised to seek the opinion of a qualified professional.

PLEASE DO NOT ASK ME TO GIVE ADVICE BY PM - IF YOU PROVIDE A LINK TO YOUR THREAD THEN I WILL BE HAPPY TO OFFER ADVICE THERE:D

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I popped into a local supermarket today and saw a huge sign which stated.

 

"Plain Clothes police officers patrol this store"

 

Can it be assumed that rather than pay a private firm, they are contributing to the salaries of "real" police officers?

 

 

I think they probably mean: "Plain clothes police officers sometimes buy their sandwiches here"

 

It's a bit like those stickers you see on cars that say: "Powered by fairy dust"; when you see the driver, you realise that it means: "Powered by pies".

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I knew several police officers that used to "moonlight" in big stores to supplement their pay, it saved the stores paying out to a private security firm who didn't know what the hell they could do or couldn't do.

Keefy (:-)The "Moaner":rolleyes:)Boy

Prepared to take on anyone until I win...................

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And if those police officers had been caught, they could have been sacked. Secondary employment in the police force is a no-no. The stores who employed them would have been in big trouble. too.

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If, as my reading of this case is off on a slight tangent, surely a mortgage shortfall cannot be legal as it is claiming damages - ie the remaining part of the contract which cannot now take place as the property has been seized and resold.... means that you can use Dunlop in a mortgage shortfall claim?

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If, as my reading of this case is off on a slight tangent, surely a mortgage shortfall cannot be legal as it is claiming damages - ie the remaining part of the contract which cannot now take place as the property has been seized and resold.... means that you can use Dunlop in a mortgage shortfall claim?

 

It's a bit more complicated than that as those who provide mortgages can be thoroughly dishonest. Some will say they have suffered loss and are entitled to the shortfall, despite the fact that there is a duty, in law, to mitigate losses as much as possible. Some mortgage providers have been known to deliberately sell repossessed properties at artificially low prices in order to make more money. The problem is, they can afford very clever barristers to pull the wool over the eyes of judges. There is a need for change in property law which is long overdue. Our current property law is based on the feudal system they had in the Middle Ages. The system they have in Scotland is a lot simpler, fairer and easier to understand. I'm sure if there are any caggers from Scotland who know differently, they will tell me.

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As far as I am aware it's the original opinion. It's on RLP's website.

 

Nice to see you here, by the way.

Thanks. Right. I have read Richard Mawrey's Opinions with some pleasure. I have to say I do NOT like the random, and often un-argued, criticisms on this site of Mr Mawrey's advice. To assist I set out some points:

 

1. Mr Mawrey has suggested what seems to me a good arguable case on the CCA stuff to put up against the skeletal Law Commission view. Possibly wrong in the end (especially in respect of some obvious public policy bear-traps), but brilliant work and strategically very useful for any ripoff merchants out there if they want a couple of years delay. Provided, that is, it's even relevant to the test case at issue, and they don't mind gambling circa 0.4-1 million taking it all the way to the Supreme Court (remember the other side even if pro bono will still claim costs for the Access to Justice Foundation). I think they'd satisfy a couple of the special threshold requirements (if I'm wrong the SC'd just kick it out at the permission stage). However this is probably irrelevant to the more interesting point, which is:

 

2. His core general argument on criminals not being consumers at the same time is interesting, and may well be sound. I loved it, and it shines through he must have had heaps of fun writing it. The only problem is - and it's not his fault at all - it might just fail to refer to anything relevant to civil recovery. It's a straw-man argument (subspecies of red-herring). Probably brilliant for black propaganda, probably useless for the torts associated with civil recovery. This is absolutely NOT Richard Mawrey's bad - no matter how good he is as a lawyer (and I need say no more than he IS, after all, a QC), he's limited like anyone else to his instructions, and the question came from his instructors, as did his factual instructions. By imprecise analogy, if I were lucky enough to be offered a nice fat fee for giving nil-consequence perfectly sound answers to questions of the sort "What are the legal consequences of the moon being made of criminally green cheese" and "what should we do about those nasty qango folk that say not all moon-rocks are made of green cheese"), hey I'd take it. Wouldn't you? Not my fault if the paying client has joined the Silly Party. Give the punters what they want.

 

There are two alternative approaches in dealing with this type of argument:

(a) "When your opponent sets up a straw man, set it on fire and kick the cinders around the stage" www fallacyfiles.org / strawman.html

(b) "If a person commits this consciously they are either deceptive or intellectually dishonest. If done unconsciously then we should feel pity for them and try to be as patient and compassionate as possible." logical-critical-thinking.com / logical-fallacy / red-herring-fallacy

 

I prefer the latter. Therefore, please show compassion to the retailers and their agency dupes and their gentle security managers as they work through this difficult time (inter alia, being asked for the first time to comply with s.24A Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984). In particular, please preserve their anonymity. Oh, and next time, ask for costs if any of the players are the same. That may help the poor lambs focus their minds. (Yes, these are small claims, but I recently experienced a succession of costs awards for the Claimant in a defended civil recovery small claim, circa 4.7k from the first contested hearing alone, despite no prior form by the Defendant).

 

3. I laughed out loud when I saw Mr Mawrey's conclusion - with which I concur - in his second Opinion where he engagingly suggests the retailers should "put up or shut up". One may suspect Mr Mawrey has a sense of humour and looks forward to it with as much pleasure as everyone else.

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  • 2 months later...
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I am sure the poor lambs in the retail industry are having some difficulty coming to terms with the fact they and their security staff now have to comply with Section 24A, Police & Criminal Evidence Act 1984 and can no longer get away with the stunts they have pulled in the past. It must have come as an awful shock to them. Lol!

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  • 3 months later...

S24a applies for when a shop's security officers apprehend someone outside their store. Common law and the 1953 prevention of crime act (read the MP's comments on the bill in Hansard) allow different courses of action to be taken on private premises but shops are public places according to a ruling somewhere around 1997, even behind the counter. As for handcuffs or the like, does a police officer carry a baton under as a common law right or with crown immunity? The answer is the former, which is a surprise to many police officers.

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  • 7 months later...
S24a applies for when a shop's security officers apprehend someone outside their store...
. Yes. Clarification: and it also applies for when they apprehend someone inside their store. And for when I (or you) apprehend someone in a public place. Or when I (or you) apprehend someone in any store.

 

Summary: s.24 is for police. s.24A is for everyone else. Interestingly, if security guards wrongly execute it, they might render themselves open to arrest by the police or anyone else, including their intended victim (not recommended, they're not renowned for their sense of humour).

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  • 2 years later...

All posts made in respect of RLP allegedly making a claim in their own name have been moved to a thread of their own.

 

Link below if you wish to join the discussion.

 

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?461951-RLP-allegedly-making-a-claim-in-their-own-name-!

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1: Making a PPI claim ? - Q & A's and spreadsheets for single premium policy - HERE

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4: Staying Calm About Debt  Read Here

5: Forum rules - These have been updated - Please Read

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2: Does your Bank play fair - You can force your Bank to play Fair with you

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5: Fair Treatment for Credit Card Holders and Borrowers - COBS

Advice & opinions given by citizenb are personal, are not endorsed by Consumer Action Group or Bank Action Group, and are offered informally, without prejudice & without liability. Your decisions and actions are your own, and should you be in any doubt, you are advised to seek the opinion of a qualified professional.

PLEASE DO NOT ASK ME TO GIVE ADVICE BY PM - IF YOU PROVIDE A LINK TO YOUR THREAD THEN I WILL BE HAPPY TO OFFER ADVICE THERE:D

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