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    • I had to deal with these last year worst DCA I have ever dealt with. Just wait for the constant threats of CCJ and how you'll lose in court and how they won't do medication and they want the judge to question you with a load of "BIG" words to boot with the letter. My case was struck out in the end, stupidity on their part as I admitted to owing the debt in the end going through the court process was just a formality as they wouldn't let it drop despite me admitting the debt regardless. They didn't send the last part of the court paper work in so it ended up being struck out
    • Well, that's it then. Clear proof of the rubbish cameras. Clear proof of double dipping. G24 won't be getting a penny. Belt & braces, I would write to the address LFI has found, include the evidence of double dipping, and ask Fraser Group to call their dogs off.
    • LOL. after sending Perch capital a CCA request with a stapled £1 PO attached (x2) Their lapdog Legal team TM Legal have sent me two letters today saying "due to a recent payment on the account, your account is open to legal/enforcement action" so i guess they have tried to apply that payment to the account to run the statue bar along. dirty tactics lol.
    • I have initiated the breathing space so ill wait. from re reading everything this what i understand BS gives me 60 days break from the creditors during these 60 days they may contact me and will most likely default I need to wait until after a default notice to see whether the OC will keep the debt or sell it off If kept by the OC then i should attempt a plan or pay some token payment? If sold to DCA then don't pay and after 6 years it will leave my credit report once the DN is registered with a date. DCA may start a CCJ but unlikely, if they do come back here. last question, do you know roughly how long this will all take? in terms of defaults/default notice, potential CCJ? Would you say I have 12 months plus from when the BS ends?
    • Well, it's up to you. Years & years & years ago the forum used to suggest appealing to POPLA, but then AFAIK POPLA's remit was changed and it became much more biased in favour of the PPCs. One of the problems with taking that route is that the onus will fall on you to prove your appeal, while if you do nothing the onus is on MET to start legal action which experience teaches they are very, very reluctant to do. If you go down the POPLA route I would think your ace would be insufficient signage.  Are you able to go back there and get photos of their rubbish, entrapping signs?
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Charged £6600 in two years - can I go to small claims court?


Kevin Davis
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Having recently sent a letter to Nationwide asking for my bank charges to be refunded I was sent a letter back basically saying 'no'.

 

I then asked them to send me copies of my statements since opening the account in 2003. They sent them within a week at no charge.

 

I've now calculated that Nationwide have charged me £6602.14 in just over 2 years! No, I have not added the 8% interest on that yet!

 

Does anyone know if I can still pursue them in the small claims court - limit of £5000 - or what other process is available to me to take these robbing bankers to task?

 

Any help would be gratefully appreciated to try to get back some of this money.

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Are you able to claim for a years charges, say 2003-2004 as one claim, then set up a second claim for 2004-2005?

 

This would surely bring both claims under the £5000 limit?

 

This is just guessing and not backed up by any legal experience. Maybe someone else has other advice?

Paul

 

Halifax Status

LBA Sent 11/04/06

1/3 offered by phone 20/04/06 - Rejected

BCT Status

Statements Recieved 31/03/06

Capital One Status

Recieved Lie/Reply 24/04/06

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Claim back about 4 years so that you have a figure of about £4000. deal with that. Then when it is sorted out, start a seond clim for the first 2 years. Do it in that order so as to attract less attention to what you are doing.

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Well whatever it takes - sever the claim.

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Should I send two letters before action to Nationwide asking them to pay back charges for 2003/04 and another 2004/05?

Or should I send the back one letter with the full amount and then do two different claims if I have to go to court?

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I would split it by date. Complete one claim so that about £3500-£4000 is covered (date closest to today). Go all the way using that until you get your money back.

 

Then make another claim recovering the remainder of the debt. Hopefully, you will not have to go as far (i.e. to court) as the bank is already aware that you are willing to go all the way. You never know ;)

regards,

 

InterSimi

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Seperate by type, not date.

 

If you seperate by date, the bank could argue that you should have combined the claims and are trying to work the system

The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.

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The impression I get is that banks will try every tactic in their book against you.

 

If you try the 'I only used statements available to me' line this may well be a justification to date.

 

But what will you do when then judge says, 'fair point, but there are other monies that bring this over the threshold. This is going to the multi track.' ?

 

I think perhaps you should get some professional legal advice. The multi track is not something you should take lightly.

 

Without sounding too pesemistic. In the multi track you beome liable for the other sides cost if you lose your claim. This could be massive amounts of money. It is for this reason you make sure you know what you are getting into.

 

FP

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Handle the two claims separately, one at a time - each without reference to the other.

Finish one first and then start with the other.

Do not try to run them together. If the bank realises what you are doing they might try to consolidate the claims.

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Easier just to do it in 3 year or something chunks at a time.

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How much could the fees be if you lost on a larger claim, does anyone know yet? And if previous cases are anything to go by, the banks would not want the embarrasment of having ripped someone off with large amounts, they know they should not be doing this and the press would make a meal of it.

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Is a claim for £5000 about £350 to bring? Something like that.

 

believe me it is a good investment.

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  • 12 years later...

This topic was closed on 03/06/19.

If you have a problem which is similar to the issues raised in this topic, then please start a new thread and you will get help and support there.

If you would like to post up some information which is relevant to this particular topic then please flag the issue up to the site team and the thread will be reopened.

- Consumer Action Group

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