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    • and it legally informs them of your correct and current address as you must do with all old debts last paid/used in say 7 yrs you dont want backdoor CCJ's. what were the names of these IVA scammers, the one you took it out with, and the one that scammed you to let them take over please? your story is slightly worrying. dx  
    • Incidentally, congratulations on not buying the warranty. That is another Big Motoring World rip-off. See what we have to say about extended warranties and the Big Motoring World attitude to them is particularly unhelpful
    • well that google is from 2019, but the photos are certainly of someone driving on the public highway in/out by an ANP system, though the site of where the camera actually is, is not showing there are anpr cameras up by the low yellow barriers but they wont get from facing shots from there. interesting, needs to be checked if the road IS a public highway but on private land, cause as you say, if the whole area is max 4hrs , how does the hotel work< ?? must have a reg entry system.  now as for taking pictures of cars on a public highway then guessing the are parking ...erm.... i dont thnk thats right nor allowed under GDPR. dx  
    • Under the consumer rights act 2015, if a defect manifests itself within 30 days and you have a right to return the vehicle for a full refund. If any defect manifests itself within the first six months of ownership then you have a right to return the vehicle for a full refund subject to the retailers right to carry out a repair. If the retailer declines to repair or if the repair fails then you have the right to return. The problem here is that you have to assert their right. It's a bit ridiculous – but you have to do let them know preferably in writing that you are asserting your rights under the consumer rights act either the 30 day right or the six month right. I suppose that you haven't done this – which would be quite understandable because most people don't know that these rights exist and that they are subject to these conditions – the condition that the right must be inserted. It is frankly ridiculous. The dealers know it and we have lots of instances of this company delaying appointments et cetera and our strong suspicion is that they are simply trying to run their customers out of time. On the basis that you haven't asserted your rights, we now have to look to ordinary contract law. You are entitled to purchase a vehicle which is of satisfactory condition and which remains that way for a reasonable period of time. Clearly it is in satisfactory. They are blaming you. Has your independent inspection identified the reason for the defect? This will be important because as you have seen BMW are already saying it is down to your driving and you are going to have to produce evidence that it wasn't down to your driving and the you drove it absolutely reasonably and it was simply the condition of the car. Have you been without the car for any period of time. Is it driveable now? If the car was off the road for a substantial amount of time and was still off the road then you would be able to argue that this is a fundamental breach of contract and that you have been deprived of substantially the whole benefit of the contract and therefore you will be entitled to treat the contract as breached by Big Motoring World and insist on cancelling the contract. It may be that you will eventually be obliged to keep the car but have the repairs paid for. Have you had any quotations for the work that needs doing? I asked you questions about the MOT – but you haven't responded.
    • A 'violent left wing mob', comprised of a chap in a red hoody with a damp polystyrene coffee cup and a bit of wet cement, gets nowhere near cowering frightened farage some distance away on top of his double decker bus .. as farages security and support seem to film the incident grinning     Farage bravely flinches, grimaces and seems to almost burst into tears as the 'objects managed to travel a part of the way toward his position on top of his bus. His reactions honed by having a bit of milk splash him at a prior incident allow him to swiftly fall into a protective cower and grimace .. .. Sometime after, once the mob of 1 had been safely bundled away, farage apparently wipes his eyes of tears, and rising from his cowed and frightened pose, bravely shouts “I will not be bullied or cowed by a violent left-wing mob who hate our country.” .. however few they may comprise of.   https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/nigel-farage-cement-barnsley-reform-uk-b2560501.html  
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CCAs post April 2007


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the law changed in april 07 and the unenforcability element of the old consumer credit act have been removed.

 

new agreements are subject to a unfair relationships test

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/general-debt/108467-basic-introduction-consumer-credit.html#post1048139

if you look here its offers an explanation

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So all agreements regardless of the date entered into, become subject to the new regulations.?

 

For Credit Agreements Made After April 2006, Or For All Credit Agreements After April 2008.

UNFAIR RELATIONSHIPS.

This is a completely incomplete body of law. It related to the new unfair relationships terms of the Consumer Credit Act 2006.

 

And it is broad.

 

In short, it includes anything done or not done by the creditor. At all times, the creditor is to behave fairly and reasonably. Exactly what is fair and reasonable is in question.

Did they breach, at any stage, any code of conduct?

What procedures did they put in place to check your credit worthiness before they entered the agreement?

What procedures did they use when you first informed them of the problems?

What procedures did they use to collect money

Was it fair and proportionate to take court action? Did they comply at all stages with the Pre-action protocols? Did they reject offers that you made in good faith, that were reasonable?

did they harass you, sending rafts of letters, fail to pass on details of your debt.

Did they fail to send a copy of the Credit Agreement within time limits?

Was there anything else that is unreasonable?

 

The burden of proof rests on the creditor in claims under the unfair relationships test.

 

What happens to those already disputed or those which have cases stayed, say because there may be some slight error in the agreement.

can they then be revisited under the new rules and enforced via that route?

 

I dont like the sound of this one bit, sounds like there could well be a few DCA's coming back for a second bite of the cherry.

Of course I will pay you everything you say I owe with no proof.

Oooh Look....Flying Pigs

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stirred up a hornets nest there eh, lets remember this is Toms interpretation of the law

 

i cant see this would be the case that an unenforceable debt will become enforcabile over night, what would the implications of mrs wilsons case be for example

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The repeal by this Act of— (a)

the words “(subject to subsections (3) and (4))” in subsection (1) of section 127 of the 1974 Act,

 

(b)

subsections (3) to (5) of that section, and

 

©

the words “or 127(3)” in subsection (3) of section 185 of that Act,

 

 

 

 

 

has no effect in relation to improperly-executed agreements made before the commencement of section 15 of this Act.

 

 

Gotcha

 

Consumer Credit Act 2006 (c. 14) - Statute Law Database

 

tehre we go it IS NOT RETROSPECTIVE IN ITS APPLICATION

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I understand what you are saying in terms of the wilson case but suppose for example, a debt which currently may be deemed unenforceable in terms of the 1974 act but which hasnt been to Court, is revisited under the terms of the new act.

 

This is the bit which seems to me to give the DCAs that second chance and has me worried in case all those CCas requests and stayed judgements are suddenly reopened.

 

I might as well sell everything I own now before this comes in because if it does enable the DCAs to revisit, bankruptcy is going to be the only way I can ever get everyone off my back and keep the shirt on it.

 

Damnit sir ..or madam..ya typin' fingers are just too durned fast fer me.

Of course I will pay you everything you say I owe with no proof.

Oooh Look....Flying Pigs

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I understand what you are saying in terms of the wilson case but suppose for example, a debt which currently may be deemed unenforceable in terms of the 1974 act but which hasnt been to Court, is revisited under the terms of the new act.

 

This is the bit which seems to me to give the DCAs that second chance and has me worried in case all those CCas requests and stayed judgements are suddenly reopened.

 

I might as well sell everything I own now before this comes in because if it does enable the DCAs to revisit, bankruptcy is going to be the only way I can ever get everyone off my back and keep the shirt on it.

 

Damnit sir ..or madam..ya typin' fingers are just too durned fast fer me.

hey i dont type too much,

 

 

i use C&P, much quicker and easier

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This thread makes a decent point though, IMO, (not that I'm implying it doesn't anyway...) in that DCA's may pressurise debtors in to believing that the 2006 Act applies when it doesn't - some will probably even try to bring claims under it, if they can get away with it! I can see some of the scrupulous ones getting Judgment by Default or Admission under this if debtors aren't aware. (Surely a reason to have Judgment set aside though, IMO)

 

Every debtor with an agreement governed by the 1974 Act also needs to be aware of this as creditors are already, from what I've seen, trying to get debtors to sign a new agreement (consolidating, refinancing, whatever term they use) which will ultimately mean you lose the protection of the 1974 Act and will be under the mercy of the 2006 Act.

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Hey Chris

 

a truly valid point you've raised there mate

 

i have started including in my defences the fact that s15 does not repeal 127(3) for agreements entered into before the CCA 2006 came into force as ive seen creditors trying to claim the 2006 act applies to old credit agreements too

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This thread makes a decent point though, IMO, (not that I'm implying it doesn't anyway...) in that DCA's may pressurise debtors in to believing that the 2006 Act applies when it doesn't - some will probably even try to bring claims under it, if they can get away with it! I can see some of the scrupulous ones getting Judgment by Default or Admission under this if debtors aren't aware. (Surely a reason to have Judgment set aside though, IMO)

 

Every debtor with an agreement governed by the 1974 Act also needs to be aware of this as creditors are already, from what I've seen, trying to get debtors to sign a new agreement (consolidating, refinancing, whatever term they use) which will ultimately mean you lose the protection of the 1974 Act and will be under the mercy of the 2006 Act.

 

Excellent point, Car....

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  • 2 weeks later...

Absolutely fantastic news to know that the 2006 CCA is not retrospective in terms of S127 (3) of the 1974 Act. I have been trying to get a default removed via the Information Commissioners Office and their response was that the new 2006 Act negated S 127 (3) of the 74 Act. The office line has been as quoted by the Information Commissioners Office is that where an agreement is irrevocably unenforceable by virtue of S 127 (3) of the Act the CRAs are not allowed to record a default. I was asked by the Information Commissioners Office to show evidence that the 2006 Act was not retrospective and nowI have that evidence - thank you oh so much! i have been trying for ages to dig up some documentary evidence that this was in fact the case.

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Absolutely fantastic news to know that the 2006 CCA is not retrospective in terms of S127 (3) of the 1974 Act. I have been trying to get a default removed via the Information Commissioners Office and their response was that the new 2006 Act negated S 127 (3) of the 74 Act. The office line has been as quoted by the Information Commissioners Office is that where an agreement is irrevocably unenforceable by virtue of S 127 (3) of the Act the CRAs are not allowed to record a default. I was asked by the Information Commissioners Office to show evidence that the 2006 Act was not retrospective and nowI have that evidence - thank you oh so much! i have been trying for ages to dig up some documentary evidence that this was in fact the case.

 

Sounds like a circular argument to me, as only a Court can decide if s.127 applies to any agreement, even under s.127(3), as it's only when asked for an Enforcement Order under s.65 that this can be used.

 

Agree with Edz11, in that we need more information and background to this post please flash?

 

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Hi. here is "verbatum" what they wrote to me:

 

Recording Defaults in respect of improperly executed credit agreements

 

The office line, following the House of Lords decision in Wilson in 2003, has been that - where an agreement was not signed by the debtor or did not include the prescribed terms, the agreement is irredeemably unenforceable and details of the agreement should not be recorded with the credit reference agencies. This line applies only in cases where the improperly executed agreement is "irredeemably unenforceable" as a result of the effect of section 127 (3) CCA 74. Where the agreement could be made enforceable on order of the court the findings of the Court of Appeal in the case of R v Modupe should form the basis of our policy with regard to the recording of liabilities under such agreements with the credit reference agencies.

 

That's what they said. The second case referred to is R v Modupe 11 Feb 1991 [1999] GCCR.

 

What do you think?

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That will sort out a number of default removal problems that posters have had. If the IC has that view it will make life that much easier.

 

The second case rings a bell. But I don't think the details are right so I can't find it. Pt2357 has better access than I have to cases but if my memory serves me right I think Modupe was a Barrister. But it was an interesting case.

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Hi pt2357. Do you have any idea where there might be information on the R v Modupe case? I can't see it in the case law section of the BAILLII database. it would be interesting to see a case that established a situation whereby the court had decided that an agreement was not irrevocably unenforceable and why.

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Good evening comrades. I have today emailed the Information Commissioners Office requesting a "second stage case review" in order to have a default removed. The story is that after having done a CCA request to RBS Card Srevices they could not produce the agreement. Consequently, after them trying to wiggle out of their contravention of the Act, they eventually discharged the balance of the credit card account! However, they would not remove the default that they put on my CRA file. I then went through the formal process with the Information Commissioners Office, basing my complaint on the total lack of a CCA, which, I considered barred RBS from processing my data.

 

The Information Commissioners Office, then after having stated that S127(3) of the Act did in their view prevent the CRA from registering the default, went on to state that the 2006 Act repealed s 127 (3), amongst other things, and that I could not challenge the data held on file.

 

As a result of the information gleaned from Paul, showing clearly that S 127 (3) had not been repealed, I submitted this to the Information Commissioners Office. So now I await a result and will keep you posted.

 

Something I have noticed is that when asking certain parties for a CCA they have referred to the Consumer Credit (Cancellation Notices and Copies of Documents) Regulations 1983 SI 1557. they then state that they can supply a copy without certain information e.g. signature box etc as contained within S 3 (2a)....

 

My interpretation of this section is that it refers to pre-contractual aspects of the Act.

 

Any views or comments?

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