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    • It's better to keep advice on the open forum for everyone's benefit. Maybe you could post up the correspondence in a single pdf document and cover up your personal details, reference numbers and so on? HB
    • Hi on the notice of disqualification it lists the 2 speed offences and marks offence withdrawn? This is for both offences and then the other 2 is the MS90s which I’m fined for and the additional costs. R
    • Hi,    It has taken a while, but I have received an email from Auxillis -  hello, we are not dealing with this claim all we do is log accident for you isnurance - the claim has been passed to your underwriter markerstudy 0344 873 8183 as they are deal with fault cliams ion behalf of adrian flux. thankyou auxillis   I have made repeated attempts to phone Markerstudy in between working from home, struggling for energy and trying to find a cheap car so that I can keep my job (community support worker). Thankfully I have a supportive team and I am being given phone calls to make but it cant last too long. I had a severe migraine over the weekend and also have quite bad whiplash in my neck and back.    I found this in my insurance policy booklet -    Protection and Recovery If the insured vehicle cannot be driven following an incident leading to a valid claim under this section, we will pay: • the cost of its protection and removal to the nearest approved repairer, competent repairer or nearest place of safety; and • the cost of re-delivery after repairs to your home address; and • the cost of storage of the insured vehicle incurred with our written consent. If the insured vehicle is damaged beyond economical repair we will arrange for it to be stored safely at premises of our choosing. You should remove your personal belongings from the insured vehicle before it is collected from you. In the event of a claim being made under the policy we have the right to remove the insured vehicle to an alternative repairer, place of safety or make our own arrangments for re-delivery at any time in order to keep the cost of the claim to a minimum     I do about 20-25000 miles a year with the work I do, I have been getting quotes and putting that I have now have one accident and no no claims bonus and the cheap quotes from similar companies to markerstudy are more than double what i paid last year at 8-900 and aviva is offering 2600 which is simply out of my price range and more than the car i am looking at.  I am starting to wonder if it is even worth going ahead with the claim as i have no one to claim from. I have had no information from any of the enquiries I have made.  I have a full tank of vpower diesel in the car in the impound, i can strip it for parts and probably make what I will be offered by the insurance payout and get the money quicker.  As I have made contact and started the process can I back out, still keep my NCB and a claim free history? Also what happens with my injuries? I don't think there is any permanent damage but my dr refused to see me and just gave me a boat load of naproxen and codeine. What happens in the future if things don't get better and I cancelled this claim? Can you claim injuries off your own insurance because the other guy ran and you cant find him? I have tried to ask these questions off markerstudy but they keep me waiting for nearly an hour then end the call.    Thank you for your time and help.  It is really appreciated.  I am quite honestly on the floor, I have been really ill, in hospital, had nearly 6 months off work and only been back full time a few weeks and now this.  The fact the company you pay large sums of money to look after you in a time of need is also behaving criminally just makes you want to give up.    
    • Thanks for the response. Am I able to send you the documents I’ve received or can you message via instant message and I’ll send these? Reece
    • Regretfully it does. Have you actually seen any papers which show what you were charged with (rather than what you were convicted of)? It is unusual not to be “dual charged” but if you were not charged with both, you are where you are. If you had been charged with both offences and providing you were the driver at the time, you could, after performing your SD, have asked the prosecutor to drop the “Fail to Provide” (FtP) charges in exchange for a guilty plea to the speeding charges (you cannot be convicted of speeding unless you plead guilty as they have no evidence you were driving). You will have difficulty defending the FtP charges. In fact, it’s worse than that – you have no chance of successfully defending them at all because the reason you did not respond to the requests is because you did not receive them and that’s entirely your fault. No it’s not correct. Six months from 18/11/23 was 18/5/24 so, unless they were originally charged, the speeding offences are now “timed out.” There is one avenue left open to you. If you perform your SD you must serve it on the court which convicted you. You will then receive a date for a hearing to have the matters heard again. Your only chance of having the matters revert to speeding (and this is only providing you were the driver at the time of those offences) is to plead Not Guilty, attend court. When you get there you can ask the prosecutor (very nicely, explaining what a pillock you know you were for failing to update your  V5C) if (s)he is prepared to raise “out of time” speeding charges, to which you will offer to plead guilty if the FtP charges are dropped.   This is strictly speaking not lawful. Charges have to be raised within six months. Some prosecutors are willing to do it, others are not. But frankly it’s the only avenue open to you. There is a risk with this. I imagine you have been fined £660 (plus surcharge and costs) for each offence. The offence attracts a fine of 1.5 week’s net income and where the court has no information about the defendant’s means a default figure of £440pw is used.  If the prosecutor is not prepared to play ball you can revise your pleas to guilty. A sympathetic court should give you the full discount (one third) for your guilty pleas in these circumstances but they may reduce the discount somewhat. The prosecution may also ask for increased costs (£90 or thereabouts is the figure for a guilty plea). So it may cost you more if you have a decent income (I’ll let you do the sums). But MS90 is an endorsement code which gives insurers a fit of the vapours. One such endorsement will see your premiums double. Two of them will see many insurers refuse to quote you at all meaning you will have to approach "specialist" (aka extortionate) brokers. So you really want to exhaust every possibility of avoiding MS90s if you can. One warning: do not pay solicitors silly money to defend you. Making an SD before a solicitor should attract just a nominal sum (perhaps a tenner). That’s all you should pay for. You have no viable defence against the FtP charges and any solicitor suggesting you have is telling you porkies. The offer to do the deal is easily done by yourself and you can save the solicitor’s fees to put towards a few taxis and increased insurance premiums if you are unsuccessful. In the happy event you find out you were "dual charged", let me know and I'll tell you how to proceed. (Seems a bit odd hoping you were charged with four driving offences rather than two, but it's a funny old world!).    
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      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Hey,

 

I sent the standard recommended letter to my local HSBC branch on 12/06/06, requesting the repayment of charges totalling £1251.06. After receiving no response, I hand delivered a second letter a fortnight later.

 

I received the following response from their Senior Service Quality Officer, Colin Langdale (the letter was not signed by Mr. Langdale however) last week:

 

Dear Mr Essex,

 

Thank you for your letter dated 27 June 2006 regarding your charges of £1251.06.

 

The bank does not agree with your contention that the charges that have been imposed constitute a penalty and are therefore unforceable. The contract between the bank and its customers is governed by our Personal Banking Terms and Conditions. In respect of overdrafts, I would refer you specifically to clause 7.11 in section 2. If you authorise a payment that would, if met by us, lead your account going overdrawn or over an agreed limit the bank consider whether or not to make this payment and a fee is payable for this service.

 

Our fees and charges are clearly stated in our published price list and the circumstances in which these charges will apply are clearly set out in our terms and conditions which you will have been provided with a copy when you opened your account.

 

Whilst I accept that this letter will not provide the response you hoped for, I trust I have been able to clarify the bank's position. If you are not satisfied with the bank's response you should now refer your complaint to the Financial mbudsman Service, as this represent our final response on this matter.

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Colin Langdale

Senior Service Quality Officer

 

Obviously the first thing this chap needs is a lesson in grammar and punctuation, but aside from that where do I stand now?

 

Your help and advice is much appreciated.

 

T.

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I'm sorry, were you actually expecting them to just pay up without an argument?

 

You have not failed at all. You have taken the 1st step in reclaiming your bank charges, now comes step 2.

 

Read the FAQs. Read the step-by-step. Read the relevant forum material. Then send the next letter. And buck up. ;-)

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this is a standard letter they send out, don't worry, keep to your time table and file a claim with moneyclaim 14 days from the date you sent out the LBA letter. Looking at other threads they will pay you before the date of the hearing.

Again don't worry, this is normal procedure.

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Bookworm and jazzyb,

 

Obviously I wasn't expecting them to roll over and start throwing money at me (would have been nice though :)), but I was slightly perturbed by the wording of the letter and the fact that I hadn't read anything like that on the forum (although I can confess to not having searched it's entirety as yet).

 

I picked up a series of leaflets on how the Small Claims Court works from my local CAB office recently, and will now be following their advice on getting action under way.

 

Hopefully I will have a positive update in the near future.

 

Incidentally, is it worth pursuing conjunctive action on emotional grounds, or at least including this in my next letter to the bank?

 

I was a student when HSBC were placing these charges on my account and I have no qualm in stating that I was suffering from depression for much of the time. Whilst the condition wasn't caused by the problems I was having with HSBC, they certainly didn't help and the bank were made aware of this on numerous occasions. However, they still continued to act in a way too many people are familiar with.

 

Again, any advice will be very gratefully received.

 

T.

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In order to claim emotional distress, you would have to be able to prove very substantially that your emotional distress or depression was caused by the bank's actions. IMO, a non-starter. They are more likely to fight you if you try this angle, as it's not as clear-cut as penalty charges, and the ramifications are enormous.

 

I have to disagree about the wording of the letter. It is pretty much standard for every bank, with the odd variation on words, sure, but it is what I have taken to calling the 1st sod-off letter, to be followed by a 2nd sod-off letter, which may be a) identical, b) ruder, c) even more technical and righteous, d)any or all of the above.

In fact, we've seen so many of them that I can pretty much guess which bank has sent the letter by the wording. Not much of a party trick, I grant you. ;-)

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Hi sorrow

 

I received exactly the same letter on Saturday morning and I too was a little concerned. However after posting my concerns on this site it has been confirmed that this is a standard response and should be ignored.

 

Move on to the next stage and good luck, my 2nd letter is off today.

 

Regards

 

Magic

"The world wants to be fooled ... so fool it" - Pavel

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Hi Sorrow and Magic,

 

Mr Langdale was a very busy man last week as I got exactly the same letter on Saturday morning too. I too was a bit put off by the 'finality' of the wording, but I will plough on regardless. Nothing to lose by trying!

 

Glad to know there are others on the same time scale as me though.

 

LMF

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Nothing to lose by trying!

 

look around the forum not one person has lost , everyone has been paid if they are at that stage .

 

Keep positive and just keep reading around the forum and learning :D

When you want to fool the world, tell the truth. :D

Advice & opinions of Janet-M are offered informally, without prejudice & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any

doubts.

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My claim was issued at 10am on Monday, and HSBC have today filed an Ackowledgement of Service (or at least that's what I presume they have done, as the claim status now reads as Acknowledged).

 

Apparently, this gives them an extra 14 days to respond to the claim and usually signals that they intend to contest the court's jurisdiction. Is this normal for HSBC, or is it something I should be worrying about?

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yes, it's normal, no, it's nothing to worry about.

 

Your question seems to indicate you haven't taken the time to read other people's threads or the step-by-step. Why don't you use the 14 days to do so and familiarise yourself with the way they do things?

 

Also, please don't start a new thread every time you have an update or query, it just makes things harder to follow.

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Having issued my claim on Monday 17th July 2006, I received an offer of full repayment (to the tune of around £1500) on Saturday 22nd. I was, understandably, extremely pleased at this news not least because I have just finished university and the money is much needed.

 

I returned the required documents on the day the letter was received, and spoke to the solicitors being employed by HSBC this afternoon to confirm receipt. I chatted to the person handling my case, stating that I would need to be paid by cheque as my account with HSBC had been inactive for some time. She seemed to see no problem with this and assured me everything would be sorted within seven days.

 

Great.

 

I then received a telephone message half an hour later, stating that I would not be receiving a cheque due to money I owed to HSBC.

 

At the time of the charges being applied I was encouraged, by one of HSBCs account managers, to take out a managed loan (whilst still a student I might add) to cover the removal of my overdraft and credit card facilities. This came to just shy of £1600. When my account was closed, the debt was passed on to a company called Metropolitain Collection Services. A repayment plan was put in place with them, but the account was to be settled in full by my parents three months ago.

 

Whether or not that payment was made I don't know (I will be making enquiries with MCS tomorrow, although I have received no correspondence from them for three or four months) but I still think I should be entitled to receive a cheque and be allowed to redistribute the money as I see fit. Obviously money owed is money owed, but as a recent graduate I can't afford not to have a £1500 lump sum not paid back, especially (should the debt with MCS still stand) when there are repayment plans already in place. After all, the money is technically mine and not HSBCs to place where they want.

 

Do I have any right to request a cheque as I was expecting, or do I have to settle for having the (possible) outstanding balance of the managed loan almost cleared?

 

Many thanks for your advice.

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