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    • 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.🙂
    • and more immediate issues WT* is the UK doing. Ukraine needs these funds and weapons NOW Lets sincerely hope this isnt another Tory VIPal skimming issue.   MoD accused of ‘go-slow’ with half of £900m Ukraine fund unused | Defence policy | The Guardian WWW.THEGUARDIAN.COM Delays mean just £404m of the money donated by nine countries has been committed or spent  
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What happens if you don't pay a CCJ


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I was talking to someone today who said that since he moved to New Zealand he's not going to pay the fee's for his CCJ in england because he won't be back in England for over 6 years and by that time it's off his credit record.

 

Is this right or should I warn him otherwise?

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Not an expert in this area, but he would certainly be in contempt of court. I suppose it is possible that the authorities could chase him in NZ, but I am not certain. It sounds a risky game. If he were right, there would hardly be anyone left in the country!

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NO CONTEMPT whatsoever. He's perfectly entitled to ignore the CCJ, it is up to the coeditor to pursue and arrange for his assets to be seized - which may include property. If the due diligence does not work, then after six years both his credit record will be clear and his CCJ expired. However, if it becomes known he's moved to NZ,he could be pursued there also....

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Guest strangewayofsavin

it depends on the common wealth countries laws, If he moved to Austrailia, he can still be persued, however in Canada he cannot, not sure about NZ.

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interesting, he may possibly be correct then! Wow, that's good news for any immoral people emigrating to canada!

If that same as Australia applies to NZ I suppose it all boils down to if they can find you over there. Any ideas how hard these companies try to locate people? He told me today it was 30 flippin grand!!! Blimey, my debts don't even reach a third of that and thats enough!

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I think for £30k, there may well be interest in pursuing him, but it probably won;t be the original creditor that will expend the effort. It is well known that credit card firms and other institutions sell on debts to other firms who specialise in recovering delinquent accounts.

 

It would well be sold on for - say - £5k to a collections firm, who will then use the difference between what they paid and what was owed to fund the tracing and formal recovery in ANY administration.

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It is up to the recovery agency - due diligence, through Electoral Register, newspaper reports anything else that puts the debtor's head above the parapet is fair game. Only a name change (either formally or informally) removes this possibility.

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A CCJ can be enforced at any time - there is no statute of limitations on it i.e. 6 years. However the information will be erased from the CCJ register and therefore your credit record. But the debt still exists and debt collectors can come calling 10 years or more after. It is always essential if you pay a CCJ that you keep the paperwork recording final payment indefinitely

You may receive different advice to your query as people have different experiences and opinions. Please use your own judgement in deciding whose advice to take.

 

If in doubt seek advice from a qualified insured professional. Any advice I have offered you is done so on an informal basis, without prejudice or liability.

 

If you think I have been helpful PLEASE click the scales

 

court bundles for dummies

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his CCJ expired.quote

 

CCJs do NOT expire. In theory one can be chased forever for an outstanding CCJ. The leave of the court may be required for enforcement but fi there is good reason, it will be granted.

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In Scotland they do. A Sheriff will ask why due diligence had not taken within the relevant period (five years) and whilst it can be reactivated, it requires a further court fee to do so - so using the term 'expiry' is quite correct. As to E&W, as you note, leave of enforcement is a similar step so whilst a full hearing may not be required, a renewal of the order would be required before re-service. Therefore as using the original documentation would be deemed incompetent, my saying it would expire is still a valid interpretation. In any event, Registry Trust would cease to list it as outstanding or satisfied whatever the actual disposition.

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  • 2 weeks later...
In any event, Registry Trust would cease to list it as outstanding or satisfied whatever the actual disposition.

 

Someone who has an unsatisfied CCJ has every right to reregister it indefinatly (except possibly in scotland, I don't do scotland, LOL).

i will be off site for the next month or so. if you have any problems, feel free to report the post so a moderator can help you.

 

I am not a qualified or practicing lawyer.

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I'm only going on a hazy memory (it's the Irn Bru, honest), that whilst a re-registration is feasible the court would have to be satisfied that the pursuer had used due diligence in the past and had been unsuccessful. As an exercise to keep the debt enforcement alive for possible assignation to a debt collector subsequently, I don't think would be a simple task. Also, if they've taken 6 years and got nowhere, why pour more good money after bad (as the pursuer). If they haven't got it in 4 years, they'll probably never get it!

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THAT would be a big mistake if they did - a fraud warning simply for not supplying a previous address? They'd never be out of court having to defend their position if that became common practice. According to the CIFAS rules, a provable irregularity or fraud attempt must be perpetrated before the flag is set, but then, nothing surprises me these days. Who needs courts to administer justice when a CRA can do it much better and cheaper without an annoying judicial process?

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Well thats what I had - had a letter from a Barrister no less stating that I wasn't living there at the time and neither the company that were offering the credit nor the cra were willing to remove the cifas warning.

 

There are several cifas warnings and mine was for attempting to gain credit with partially true info/withholding info or somethign to that effect.

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This would be at the discretion of the lender, and who would ultimately be responsible to support the allegation if challenged. From memory there had to be more than an intent to defraud (by omission) there had to be a provable misleading statement. You can't remember the precise wording?

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