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    • Hello all,   I ordered a laptop online about 16 months ago. The laptop was faulty and I was supposed to send it back within guarantee but didn't for various reasons. I contacted the company a few months later and they said they will still fix it for me free of charge but I'd have to pay to send it to them and they will pay to send it back to me. The parcel arrived there fine. Company had fixed it and they sent it via dpd. I was working in the office so I asked my neighbours who would be in, as there's been a history of parcel thefts on our street. I had 2 neighbours who offered but when I went to update delivery instructions, their door number wasn't on the drop down despite sharing the same post code.  I then selected a neighbour who I thought would likely be in and also selected other in the safe place selection and put the number of the neighbour who I knew would definitely be in and they left my parcel outside and the parcel was stolen. DPD didn't want to deal with me and said I need to speak to the retailer. The retailer said DPD have special instructions from them not to leave a parcel outside unless specified by a customer. The retailer then said they could see my instructions said leave in a safe space but I have no porch. My front door just opens onto the road and the driver made no attempt to conceal it.  Anyway, I would like to know if I have rights here because the delivery wasn't for an item that I just bought. It was initially delivered but stopped working within the warranty period and they agreed to fix it for free.  Appreciate your help 🙏🏼   Thanks!
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    • Hi Guys, well a year on and my friend has just received this in the post today, obviously a little scared so looking for more of your advice.  Letter from the NCC dated 1-May-2024 is as follows.......   Before deputy district judge Haythorne sitting at the national business centre, 4th floor st Kathrine's house Northampton Upon reading an application from the claimant  it is ordered that  1. The claim be sent to the county court at #### (Friends local Court) Because this order has been made without a hearing, the parties have the right to apply to have the order set aside, varied or stayed.  A party making such an application must send or deliver the application to the court (together with any appropriate fee) to arrive within seven days of service of this order.  If the application is one which requires a hearing, and a) the party making the application is the defendant: and b) the defendant is an individual, then upon filing of the application the claim will be transferred to the defendants home court.  In all other cases requiring a hearing the claim will be transferred to the preferred court.    As a result of an order made on the 1 May 2024, this claim has been transferred to the county court at ##### (friends local court) 
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Voadafone filed late payments on my credit report


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I had a contact with Vodafone for 12 months. I finished the contract 2 months early. I sent them a letter and also call them to onfim closure of my account. They said to me, we have closed your account and if you have any monies outstanding we will send you a letter but not to worry cos on our screens it doesnt seem like you do. They sent me the last bill on which I paided. Nearly a month and a half down the line they sent me a finally payment demand saying that I had seven days to pay due £7.or they would get a collection company invloved. The letter said as I have ignore te other reminders. The problem was I didnt recieve the reminders and vodafone filed a 2 month late payment on my record . Another incident I had with them is that I couldnt make a payment on time an I said can i pay it in a few weeks, They ageed i could but again they filed a late payment on my record. On both times vodafone agreed that it would not go on my report.

 

I have contacted them and they are looking in to this. If it turn out that they will not remove it what can I do as my credit rating was good until they filed there two late payments.

 

Please Help

Thanks

Paul

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They said it was fine to cancel this as I paided the last bill. and they said if you owe anymore money they would send me a letter. I recieved no further reply until month and a half down the line. saying that they has sent me reminding to pay and this was the final letter. But I did not recieve them, only the final letter on which i payed the day i recieved this and ask the advisor will it go on my credit on which they advised this wouldnt

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You have to give 30 days notice so would still have your final bill to pay for call charges up to the point of disconnection. Did you move address at all as usually collections letters would be sent out advising of the balance. Which department have you spoken to at vodafone and what did they advise you?

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Have you asked them what the 7.00 is for, a final bill means exactly that its final no more money to pay.

 

Actually it doesn't. Charges for services supplied but not billed can take up to 4 months to arrive, especially if roamed calls or texts were made. The final bill only reflects charges known at the time of compilation, it usually will NOT include line rental as this is paid in advance.

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Vodafone would not agree to a waiver of noting payment dates on your credit file. If you pay late, they'll saay 'fine' but still note the date or how late it was paid. This is because this is a statemet of fact supplied by them, it cannot show you paid on time when you didn't. In cases like these where you advice of delaed payment it usually means they will not place a default on the account because of the delay, and it appears the didn't.

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It was for the service the £&. I have spoke to them and they are going to take these late payments off my credit record. Should I claim money for them messsing my rating up for a loan?

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If it was done as a gesture of goodwill i.e. previous good payment history/long term customer or they believed it was a genuine oversight rather than a no intent to pay and they stated it was with no admission of liability on their part then you wouldn't get very far if you tried to claim. What exactly would you be claiming for? The onus would be on you to prove any financial loss. You would also have to prove that it was purely the Vodafone late payments that stopped you getting the loan. Lenders don't usually worry too much about the odd late payment therefore can you be 100% sure that you have no other late payments on your credit file as Vodafone could ask for your credit file to be produced as part of their defence.

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Also, information of your file is not deemed to be 'public' therefore no claim for defamation would succeed, and if another financial house declined you, that would be their decision based on their profiling, you couldn't assert the sole reason for rejection was because of the credit reference report - I'd suspect they'd not entertain the idea - just think how many folk could be in the same boat!

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With regards the late payment entry on your credit file - Vodafone (and anyone else who is bound by the consumer credit act) is legally obliged to provide information of that nature.

Now, if there has been a breakdown of communication between the service provider and yourself [and you have done everything you could do to reasonably resolve the issue] then the service provider [Vodafone] can if they choose to; update the information already entered to reflect that the entry was not valid.

 

More often than not people have detrimental entries made because they have less than co-operative with the service provider in managing their account.

My little brother is the Stig - number 2 stig (not the fat one).......:p

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With regards the late payment entry on your credit file - Vodafone (and anyone else who is bound by the consumer credit act) is legally obliged to provide information of that nature.

 

Where should we start? Firstly, Vodafone is not bound by the CCA as they do not provide credit. So they are not 'bound' to provide this information relevant to late payments. In fact, there is NOTHING that I am aware of in the CCA that automatically provides any authority to provide a customers credit record to a reference agency. This has to be covered within the firms terms and conditions, and it is THIS that enables Vodafone to disclose details of how the customer pays their bills, not the CCA.

 

Now, if there has been a breakdown of communication between the service provider and yourself [and you have done everything you could do to reasonably resolve the issue] then the service provider [Vodafone] can if they choose to; update the information already entered to reflect that the entry was not valid.

 

More often than not people have detrimental entries made because they have less than co-operative with the service provider in managing their account.

 

I'm afraid a 'breakdown of communication' is not a reason for removal of information entered on to a consumers credit file, it has to be inaccurate. Therefore the data is not updated to reflect the inaccuracy, it is removed if a fabrication or corrected to reflect the true situation - this is a requirement laid down by the Data Protection Act.

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Where should we start? Firstly, Vodafone is not bound by the CCA as they do not provide credit. So they are not 'bound' to provide this information relevant to late payments. In fact, there is NOTHING that I am aware of in the CCA that automatically provides any authority to provide a customers credit record to a reference agency. This has to be covered within the firms terms and conditions, and it is THIS that enables Vodafone to disclose details of how the customer pays their bills, not the CCA.

 

 

 

I'm afraid a 'breakdown of communication' is not a reason for removal of information entered on to a consumers credit file, it has to be inaccurate. Therefore the data is not updated to reflect the inaccuracy, it is removed if a fabrication or corrected to reflect the true situation - this is a requirement laid down by the Data Protection Act.

 

 

Thankyou. My use of Engligh was not entirely correct in my post (English being my second language).

 

What I meant to say it that anyone bound by a CCA & Vodafone (who are not) are obliged to provide information to credit reference agencies on how you conduct your account. You will find this in the T&C's provided by Voda.

 

When I say 'breakdown of communicaton' I mean that you have been sold a bag of nonsence from the CS team and as a result a bad entry has been made. This of course can by agrued that the information is not correct, simple fact and should be removed.

My little brother is the Stig - number 2 stig (not the fat one).......:p

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Your English is pretty good - it is just the fine details that can mislead! It is however safe to say that any consumer has a right to keep his financial affairs private and NOT have them shared with third parties.

 

The problem is that firms want to have an inside track in knowing how the customer may conduct themselves, so in exchange for receiving this information from CRA's, they have to agree to providing information on their customers to the same database. Because of this, consumers are being forced to release their information because it is already in the small print, and there is no mandated 'opt out', which I feel is an apalling omission!

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