Jump to content

CrappoMan

Registered Users

Change your profile picture
  • Posts

    438
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Everything posted by CrappoMan

  1. Is the OR wanting the WHOLE 20k or just the "pro-rata" portion of it ? I would suggest that you get some proper legal advice.
  2. You've got that wrong, lane 1 is a forced left turn only, so lane 2 BECOMES lane 1, and lane 3 becomes lane 2, NO LANE CHANGES ARE NEEDED. A new lane 3 (A630 SCUN) is created by a hatched area on the right hand side of the road, adjacent to the X's. I repeat, no lane changes are needed, that's why the 'X's are there, to guide you
  3. The effect of this is your final salary will be reduced by £1440, so you will pay £288 less PAYE and £172.8 less NI on your final salary as you would have paid had you received the full £2000. If your final salary isn't enough to pay that much PAYE, you will have overpaid your PAYE and can either reclaim it as a PAYE refund or it will work itself out as you earn more through the tax year. If you have overpaid NI, I'm not sure if you can claim it back. NI is worked out on each months salary in isolation, unlike PAYE which is amortized over the tax year. You may have to approach your company and explain that this will cause you to suffer a loss due to their mistake and they should put that right.
  4. Did he read the requirements for Chainfire3D first: If his phone doesn't fit any of the above, WHY did he try install it ???
  5. Is that not a better deal ? In twelve months your current tv will depreciate considerably and you could get a much better tv for the same price.
  6. Absolute rubbish! You really should know better than spreading these lies. The roadside breath test only gives reasonable suspicion that an offence has been committed and grounds to arrest. The intoxylizer/blood/urine test only gives grounds to charge. The courtroom is where you are asked to plead guilt or innocence. THAT is the forum for deciding guilt or innocence. Nothing is assumed beforehand regarding guilt. The police may think you are guilty, they may think they have enough evidence to prove your guilt, but until the judge in a courtroom actually says "you have been found guilty of ..." you are 100% INNOCENT.
  7. The list of excluded items on their website is extensive, it looks like it covers just about everything you could ever want to send by parcel.
  8. You misunderstand: - The refund you have made to the buyer is covered by the payment they made to you when winning the auction/b.i.n. - The compensation from myhermes is to cover the cost of the damaged item. £50 may not be enough to replace it like-for-like, it is upto you to persue them further. Simon
  9. I thought the same when I was in court last year for a possible ban. I claimed a ban would cause exceptional hardship and the first thing the magistrates asked was If I needed my car for work. As I commute about 25 miles each way and could not use public transport in a reasonable time ( Afterwards, I asked them about not taking commuting into account and they said to me, "Don't believe everything you read on internet forums".
  10. A question to put to your employer: If they had made an error entering the account number/sort code and the money went to an incorrect bank account that belonged to a stranger, would they still expect you to wait 4 weeks for it to be sorted out ? If it happened at my employer, I would demand to be paid the same day by faster payments/bank transfer. If you told them of the new parachute account details, then I would argue that you haven't been paid, as they haven't credited the account you specified. The account doesn't have to be in your name, it just has to be the account you specified. Emmzi: It is none of his employers business where the money goes, or if it is used to reduce any debt, or if he has technically had any benefit from it. It just has to be credited to the account details provided. This is why this situation is not legitimate. The money that has already been credited (note I didn't say wages/pay/salary) is akin to a gift. If the employer chooses to send money to that account, that is his employers business, it has nothing to with the OP, but it cannot be classified as wages/pay/salary, as it is not the account the OP provided details for.
  11. There are only 2 ways the coolant level can drop, either: - Leak, from thermostat/head gasket gone/hole in radiator/split hose/etc. - Air lock, which would cause the level to drop when the air pocket worked its way around to the reservoir. Any competent mechanic would have checked the first reason, and would have forced the second reason to happen whilst the vehicle was in his care and then topped the coolant up to compensate for the drop in level. Get the repair report from them and see what work they claim to have done.
  12. You did record the call, didn't you ? As has been said on this forum countless times, invest in a call recorder of some sort and you wont have to worry about things like this. Then there is no need for confirmation emails, just keep the recording on your computer in case it is needed in the future. In case they did take the money back from your bank account, you can use the direct debit indemnity, and if the bank require proof, you have the recording! If you don't get a confirmation email in 24hrs, ring them back and ask for it to be sent again.
  13. Not if its a private seller. Most of the Sale of Goods Act applies only where the seller sells goods in the course of a business
  14. The contractual sick pay arrangements will be per year. You accrue 1 day sick pay for each month of service, for the first 40 months of service, then your sick pay is capped at 5 weeks (40 days) per year.
  15. The letter says "you are obliged to pay us the fair market value of our vehicle". That, to me, doesn't say "full replacement cost", it says you must buy the vehicle off them. Then they mention repairing the vehicle, surely they can either charge you one or the other, but not both. Either charge you for the repairs to make the vehicle good, or you buy them another vehicle, and the old vehicle becomes yours. Also, if you were categorically told "if anything happened to the vehicle, i would not be held liable", without mention of any exemptions in the T&Cs, and you were also told you wouldn't be held liable for more than £100 when you returned the vehicle because you purchased the extra insurance, I would argue that it is an unfair term, and it wasn't brought to your attention on 2 occasions.
  16. The grant of probate is free, unless his estate would leave a substantial 'net' figure. If he had any bank accounts/shares/investments, the executor will need a grant of probate or grant of letters of representation to access those funds. I am assuming they were not married (you said 'partner', not 'husband'). If they were married, she can act on his behalf straight away, as his estate becomes her property on his death.
  17. Its nothing to do with the Registration Number, it's part of the D.V.L.A.'s anti-fraud system to make forgery more difficult. It's a random character, generated when the document is printed, and is stored in the database against that document. DVLA will ask you for the validation character for all queries relating to a particular document. If the character you provide doesn't match what they have logged against that document, they know the document is a forgery. If someone tries to clone your car registration number, for example, you can confirm it's actually yours, by giving the D.V.L.A. the validation character on your V5. A criminal can't, because they don't have your V5
  18. The PDF states stat they haven't accepted your request, but have they cashed the £10 you sent ?
  19. If Hastings are concerned about ownership, why are they asking to see the V5 ? As you all know, the V5 records the registered keeper, not the owner.
  20. "The PENIS with the Smallest Penis in Existence and the Electron Microscope Technician Who Loved Him" Yes its a real one!
  21. Try pressing CTRL + ALT + [any arrow key (up/down/left/right)] to change screen orientation.
  22. Did you cancel your insurance or notify your insurance company of the change of vehicle on the day of the sale ? Where was the offence committed ? Can you prove you were elsewhere at the time in question ? Depending on your answers, these could be evidence in your favour.
  23. looking at the small picture of the tickets, it appeared to me that they have the same time stamp of 13:53:13, and a number '1' in the box with the £0.50, presumably a count of coins entered, but looking at the larger pics, it appears the tickets only have the hours and minutes shown, their is a small gap between the time and the number '131', which is a totally seperate number. So as they only have a time stamp resolution of a minute, there could be several explanations, all of them bad news for the OP. The tickets could have been bought upto 59 seconds apart, the first ticket could have been left in the machine from a previous person and the OP bought the second one 59 seconds later. Afraid their is no chance of appealing with regards to a faulty ticket machine. Remember occams razor, the simplest explanation is more likely to be correct. A faulty ticket machine is not the simplest explanation. Others more knowledgeable might find errors with the PCN
×
×
  • Create New...