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    • I don't think I've ever seen someone appeal a mags court decision on fare evasion, JK, but as you say in this case TiredDodo has pleaded guilty. It is possible to challenge, as below. HB Appeal a magistrates’ court decision: Overview - GOV.UK WWW.GOV.UK How to challenge a decision by a magistrates' court. Including how to get a fine reviewed, if you did not know about your case, how to appeal to the...  
    • Update! I have now opened the mail from Barclaycard. I am assuming that their letters were prompted by my confirmation to them of my change of address, which I had advised them of twice. They are treating my change of address notification as a "General Data Protection Regulation Right of Access Request"  and state that I have made a "Right of Access Request. They are asking me to provide valid indentity documents! I have made no such request and am minded to ignore their request for extra information? I should add that their letters were sent to my correct current address!
    • Are you allowed to appeal if you plead guilty?   I know you appeal the sentence, but the criminal record formed from your guilt would surely remain?   I'm not sure if your able to appeal a crimianl record if you plead guilty are you?
    • DX: I did not pursue Link after I got the CCJ amended to monthly payments. Pretty sure the CCJ does not mention reviews, I do have the CCJ somewhere, I will have to look it up in storage. It is as mentioned on the thread you referenced  in your post #28. The Barclays loan was taken out in September 2004 for 60 months! Current Balance remaining approx £2K. On checking back my past correspondence with Barclaycard about this loan, there was a history of them ignoring my letters and offers to pay, and I even had problems in obtaining their bank account details for them to accept my payments! I have received strange correspondence from them too, one referring to insurance which I did not have. They seem very disorganised! Barclaycard told me to pay "Masterloan" a while back and I now receive regular statements and arrears notices from "Personal Loans from Barclaycard" clearly marked Masterloan, they changed the account reference number! I have never requested a CCA on this account. I advised them of my change of address last September, but they are still sending, until today, statements etc. to my old address! I have received 2 letters from Barclaycard Loan today though, not opened them yet!!
    • Yes, a few months ago. They wrote back saying there was no CCA and the debt was unenforcable. I then started gtting bombarded with threatening emails from their 'litigations team' which have been sent to spam. I've now recieved the letter before claim with the PAP form enclosed, but still no CCA or even a letter from them to say the debt is deemed enforcable. Thank you.
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Dormant Company


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This is for a friend.

 

He signed a contract of employment with company A

 

All his payslip and letters were in Company B's name

 

He lost his job

 

He took his Company B to the Tribunal and lost

 

Among the arguments put forward by the Respondent was that he was employed by Company A and not B.

 

He lost due to some other reasons.

 

He is now appealing

 

He has now discovered that Company A has always being a Dormant company.

 

Companies House records it as Dormant and Non Trading.

 

And this is both before and after his employment.

 

He wants to state that the Respondent lied in that matter and hence lied in other matters.

 

I didn't discuss with him regarding the merit of the original claim.

 

I really don't know what to think

 

So guys please your views.

 

Great if you have case laws to support.

 

Thanks

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Those are not grounds for appeal. IF someone lied about one thing that is not evidence that they lied about anything else. And appeals do not rehear the case anyway.

 

Plus this is not new evidence. It was always available. The fact her didn't know it was because he didn't do his research well enough - if he had, he could have introduced this at the tribunal. There are no second bites of the cherry.

 

And he lost, you say, on other grounds. So this fact was not pertinent to the case - it had no influence on the reasons he lost.

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Those are not grounds for appeal. IF someone lied about one thing that is not evidence that they lied about anything else. And appeals do not rehear the case anyway.

 

Plus this is not new evidence. It was always available. The fact her didn't know it was because he didn't do his research well enough - if he had, he could have introduced this at the tribunal. There are no second bites of the cherry.

 

And he lost, you say, on other grounds. So this fact was not pertinent to the case - it had no influence on the reasons he lost.

 

 

What about propensity?

 

If a person has misled the Tribunal in a fundamental way, then that should be relevant.

 

I really don't know.

 

He is thinking of seeking legal advice on Tuesday.

 

Also, there is no statute of limitation on fraud.

 

He could redo his appeal all over again.

 

Sometimes, Interest of Justice would ensure that the case is reheard.

 

This is a tough one!

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You wrote

 

Companies House records it as Dormant and Non Trading.

 

You should of done thorough research.

Its public knowledge.

 

 

 

He wants to state that the Respondent lied in that matter and hence lied in other matters.

 

Did the respondent lie?

If the subject was not brought up ( as you claim its new evidence (and its not))

How can a person lie when they are not asked.

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Misleading and lying are two different things. But even if they lied, it is still impossible to identify ANOTHER lie based on a lie about something else.

 

BUT according to you, he lost on other grounds. So the lie had no bearing on the decision. Assuming it's a lie. Because in the first place, it is entirely possible that the employer did believe it; and there is no objective evidence that the employer is not company A. Being dormant, in and of itself, is not actually objective evidence of that. I wouldn't make such an assumption unless I was privy to the details the tribunal had and their reasoning for a decision. And what "should" be relevant, in your opinion, doesn't make it so.

 

But there do not appear to be any legitimate grounds here for an appeal. There is no point of law involved in the employer being a better liar than your friend. And if you want to be pedantic about it, everybody "lies" in a tribunal - it's an adversarial court in which each party tells their version of the truth, whether or not they know it to be the case. Subjective "fact" is rarely cut and dried.

 

If there is claimed to be new evidence, that is the subject of a review, not an appeal, which may only be on the grounds of a point of law or perversity. But this is not new evidence. It is evidence that always existed which he didn't bother to check - checking out your employers records being a very basic point to do! But you will not succeed on a review that says that he lied about one thing therefore lied about everything else. If, as I say, it was a lie.

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I'm not sure what lie the employer is supposed to have told.

 

His contract of employment was with company A but as company A was non-trading he was paid by Company B (presumably a related comapny?). If so your point is what? There's nothing obviously illegal or fraudulent about that, not on what you've said so I'm not sure how the Respondent misled the Tribunal.

 

Naming company B as the Respondent instaed of Company A wouldn't usually be a major issue. It's usually possible to amend the name of the Respondent in circumstances like that. Anyway it doesn't appear to be why he lost his case at Tribunal.

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If a person has misled the Tribunal in a fundamental way, then that should be relevant.

 

Hi - Whether or not a witness gave credible evidence is an issue of fact for the trial judge to decide, not something that will be revisited on appeal.

 

The appeal only looks at points of law. The appeal procedure does not involve hearing from witnesses again.

 

If the alleged "lying" was not raised in the original hearing, unfortunately I think he will struggle to raise it now. You can't use an appeal as an opportunity to raise new arguments that were not made in the original hearing. Your friend would have been required to disclose the documents he intended to rely on before the hearing. Unless something major has changed with Companies House since the hearing you can't introduce new evidence now.

 

A good idea to seek legal advice on whether an appeal would have a chance of success.

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third party agreements are not uncommon. Yiur friend may well have had a reason to claim form company A or B or even both, the "who should I sue" would be irrelevant. If A had assigned everything to B then suing A is OK, suing B is OK and then company A saying they werent liable would get short shrift

I think that this is a red herring, you have already said that he lost for other reasons. If you look up case law on peopel behaving in a manner that breaks the law in one area it doesnt change a contractual relationship to others. VCS v HMRC and VCS v Somerfield show this. Robbing a third party blind doesnt negate a contract between the first and second parties.

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  • 7 months later...

Hi everyone,

 

The Appeal Tribunal has still not given a date for the Appeal Hearing

The Tribunal has now agreed a Reconsideration Hearing

The reason the Tribunal gave is that it is in the interest of justice

Clearly, the credibility issue is on the mind of the Tribunal

The Recon Hearing is for the end of this month

My question is this; if he is successful at the Recon Hearing and he gets a retrial, can he ask for Cost?

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