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    • Hi All. A family friends car was having issues when she was on a trip visiting family up north at the begining of January.  She ended up leaving it at my friends garage in the same location, who parked it on his forecourt to investigate the issue, howver he said most likely it is beyond economical repair as its a serious gearbox fault. In the meantime i replaced her car with one of my spare cars. The insurance on the car then expired in at the end of January.  When the insurance expired, I sent a paper V890 paper as i didnt have her V5 Reference number in hand to do it online (i have a copy of this).  She didnt mention she hadnt recieved any confirmation as she didnt know if she would get one.  She then cancelled her road tax at the end of March (i think) as she was paying by DD. She then was travelling up north so didnt get her ,ail until last week. She recievd a letter dated 09/04/2024 stating she had failed to insure the vehcile and there was a £100 fine which could be reduced to £50 if she respons by 11/05/2024.  As soon as we noticed, i got her to dig  out the V5 and SORN'd the vehicle.   My friend has been a bit slow in checking the fault, however i suspect it will still be scrapped and is still on his forecourt. Is this possible to appeal?
    • worthy to not forget Just to let you know this bunch Kensington have been fined £1.225m by the financial regulator for treating borrowers who were in arrears unfairly. Claim those charges back plus the interest and tell them not to add any more to the account. There are a few news stories here you can get the info for a letter to send to them. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8615870.stm  
    • Hi All. I went to visit a family friend in Rochdale on a new housing estate opposite a old row of houses. The location is Royle Road, Postcode OL11 3PE. I was originally parked in parking bays outside the old houses, then moved the car, when I noticed my tyre was flat, so parked on what looked like double yellows to use his air pump to check and inflate the tyres before we left the house.   In the time i went inside to sort the pump and power supply i got a PCN.  The tyre then got changed (has a puncture) and we left. PCN Number:         RE######## Date:             04/05/2024 Time:             20:36 Observation:         20:34 to 20:36 Reported location:     Royle Park Road Reason:        Parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours (Code: 01) I believe this PCN is not correct and has grounds to appeal: 1. My friend who moved into the property around 6 months ago, swears that even though it has old double yellows marked, they are not current or council marked.   He said the property development company had said they had marked them for ease of access during development. 2. The road i was parked on was Royle Road.  The PCN was issued for Royle Park Road, which is about 400 yards up the road. 3. There are no sign posts or marking showing parking  restriction hours in the entire area (there maybe on Royle park Road). I have attached a map of the Location where i parked as a red dot. I have 2 questions: a.  Is there a way to check where double yellow lines are marked on some register to check if they are current? b. Can my grounds of appeal simply be, wrong location, wrong offence? Thanks in advance. Map_20240505.pdf
    • you made it very confusing, though i doubt any of it was ever read by the delivery franchise for DPD. your saving grace might well be you didn't select your own address (though if you are all the same postcode..??) and neither mentioned a safe space other than another neighbour. but with the actual delivery address on the parcel, it appears the driver had a choice of 3 addresses, all under the same post code with differing house numbers. so chose the label one but left it on your doorstep. play it carefully and along with the photo and the retailers requirement you should be ok.   dx  
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      On 15/1/24 booked appointment with Big Motoring World (BMW) to view a mini on 17/1/24 at 8pm at their Enfield dealership.  

      Car was dirty and test drive was two circuits of roundabout on entry to the showroom.  Was p/x my car and rushed by sales exec and a manager into buying the mini and a 3yr warranty that night, sale all wrapped up by 10pm.  They strongly advised me taking warranty out on car that age (2017) and confirmed it was honoured at over 500 UK registered garages.

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    • Housing Association property flooding. https://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/topic/438641-housing-association-property-flooding/&do=findComment&comment=5124299
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    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

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      This is good ethical practice.

      It would be very nice if the parcel delivery companies – including EVRi – practised this kind of thing as well.

       

      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Unenforceability Cases on hold until further notice


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Hello Jackpotind :) Just checking:cool:

 

Welcome to CAG

 

If you need specific advice with any particular bank/creditor, open your own thread and your responses will be there:)

 

In the meantime, read as many threads as you can...... most of your questions will be many times answered :)

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Hi!.All. I am not a debt collector. I run a cafe here in Southampton. I have in total 11 cards and owe £110,000 which I have put in dispute last September. So far only 1 has pursued me to court.

 

Welcome jackpotind!

 

Good grief Guys, getting rather paranoid aren't we!?

 

AC

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morning all......can anyone advise the legal requirements to a loan agreement.

does it have to be word perfect......i have my own threads running concerning the dreaded logbook loans but quickly wanted to know if anyone knew the legality of a loan agremeent with the wrong companies name on.......cheers

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Posted by AA99

 

Hello Jackpotind :-) Just checking:cool:

 

Welcome to CAG

 

If you need specific advice with any particular bank/creditor, open your own thread and your responses will be there:-)

 

In the meantime, read as many threads as you can...... most of your questions will be many times answered :-)

 

 

 

jackpotind has his own thread now the link is here. To keep the continuity of the thread, I have unapproved or moved the appropriate posts.

 

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/legal-issues/227596-jackpotind-help-required-please.html#post2519486

 

HTH

Edited by citizenB

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I have also diligently read through the 71 pages and have lost my way somewhat. I hope a few pedantic queries may get me on the right path.

 

The Wilson v. SSTI [H 2003] set the precedent that if a Credit agreement does not contain all the prescribed terms then the agreement is unenforceable

 

In SPPL and Walker the Judge found in favour of the defendant that the Credit agreement was irredeemably unenforceable.

 

If there were only a handful of cases pending (not 100 000) could the pending cases just rely on this two judgements as authority?

 

Stating the question in another way what briefly then is the aim of the test cases.

In the only test case that I am aware McGuffick v RBS does not concern the fundamental issue of whether a breach of terms in the consumer credit agreement renders the debt irredeemably unenforceable but whether or not a claimant can stop the lender passing on adverse information to credit reference agencies if he/she stops making repayments while in dispute.

 

My (rather naive ) take on the test cases is to select different types of breach of terms in the consumer credit agreements to cover as many of the types of cases making up the 100 000 so as to give direction to lower courts in dealing with this huge case load. Once the test cases have been completed how many of the 100 000 cases would still need to go to court?

 

As you can see these 71 pages have really confused me , I think it all started when one of the posts stated that in McGuffick the judge felt that he was not bound by Wilson v. SSTI HL as this was a referal on the Human Rights Act

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I have also diligently read through the 71 pages and have lost my way somewhat. I hope a few pedantic queries may get me on the right path.

 

The Wilson v. SSTI [H 2003] set the precedent that if a Credit agreement does not contain all the prescribed terms then the agreement is unenforceable

 

In SPPL and Walker the Judge found in favour of the defendant that the Credit agreement was irredeemably unenforceable.

 

If there were only a handful of cases pending (not 100 000) could the pending cases just rely on this two judgements as authority?

 

Stating the question in another way what briefly then is the aim of the test cases.

In the only test case that I am aware McGuffick v RBS does not concern the fundamental issue of whether a breach of terms in the consumer credit agreement renders the debt irredeemably unenforceable but whether or not a claimant can stop the lender passing on adverse information to credit reference agencies if he/she stops making repayments while in dispute.

 

My (rather naive ) take on the test cases is to select different types of breach of terms in the consumer credit agreements to cover as many of the types of cases making up the 100 000 so as to give direction to lower courts in dealing with this huge case load. Once the test cases have been completed how many of the 100 000 cases would still need to go to court?

 

As you can see these 71 pages have really confused me , I think it all started when one of the posts stated that in McGuffick the judge felt that he was not bound by Wilson v. SSTI HL as this was a referal on the Human Rights Act

 

A cynic might argue that the Mcguff case was selected as a test case precisely because the issues being disputed were so narrow (as you mentioned reporting to CRAs whilst in dispute). The banks have a hollow PR victory. The same cynic might then go on to state that the remaining test cases will be exactly the same - small issues surrounding the consumer credit act which really change little as a point of law but give the banks some PR points, scare of most consumers and cause some silly decisions in the lower courts.

 

Im not a cynic though ;)

I have no legal qualifications whatsoever, so please check any input I have for accuracy. And please correct me if you disagree!

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Hi All (and a warm welcome to all our guests...)

 

Looks like the Treasury Select Committee are investigating the credit referencing agencies. When they report which should be any time soon, there will be the usual BBA whitewash. However there may also be submissions from the likes of Which?

 

here's the link for future reference.

 

UK Parliament - tc0809pn220909

Keep the faith. EiE.

 

Capstone Mortgage 'Services' - Sub-prime garbage - unlawful behaviour/MULTIPLE consumer abuse, TOTALLY in Defiance of REGULATIONS and the law

 

http://www.fsa.gov.uk/pubs/final/gmac_rfc.pdf

 

CONTACT CIB Here

 

http://www.insolvency.gov.uk/Complaintformcib.Htm

 

Kevin Hughes(Compliance Manager-main) @ 02920 380 633

 

Lee Jenkins(prosecuting Amany Attia) 02920 380 643

 

Mark Youde(accounts compliance) 02920 380 955

 

Charlotte Allan @ 0207 596 6108 investigating all the Lehman lenders

 

Jeremy Pilcher 0207 637 6231

 

NO KAGGA LEFT BEHIND...

 

"We would not seek a battle, as we are; Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it"

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Hi All (and a warm welcome to all our guests...)

 

Looks like the Treasury Select Committee are investigating the credit referencing agencies. When they report which should be any time soon, there will be the usual BBA whitewash. However there may also be submissions from the likes of Which?

 

here's the link for future reference.

 

UK Parliament - tc0809pn220909

 

Hmm very narrow investigation points there, looks like will possibly only benefit people who use comparison sites to do searches.

 

S.

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A cynic might argue that the Mcguff case was selected as a test case precisely because the issues being disputed were so narrow (as you mentioned reporting to CRAs whilst in dispute). The banks have a hollow PR victory. The same cynic might then go on to state that the remaining test cases will be exactly the same - small issues surrounding the consumer credit act which really change little as a point of law but give the banks some PR points, scare of most consumers and cause some silly decisions in the lower courts.

 

Im not a cynic though ;)

 

No.

 

Some of the cases chosen by the CMCs leading the test cases i know for a fact are bullet proof.

 

The mcduff case was clearly a backhander job.

 

Brown paper bags etc

 

Why else would the numpty CMC pursue such a case?

 

They only fool the uneducated, and there are far too many CMCs out there looking to make a buck by spending much money on getting to the consumer and actually educating with the real facts.

 

PR stunt worked for about a week, back to square one for the gangsters.

 

Make no mistake about it, banks/lenders are the biggest gangsters on planet earth.

 

FACT

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Hello

 

 

SPPL v Walker was heard on the 14th October @ the Court of Appeal

 

Judgement has been reserved to be given at a later date.

 

No further information will be decided this month and I would expect a Final Decision at some point in November maybe later.

 

McGuiffick ruling effectively concerned whether or not the Banks failure to provide a CCA pursuant to S77/78 prevent them from pursuing for the debt and reporting to credit reference agencies.

 

The answer as we all know was yes they can which effectively means in my view that they can still pursue you for that debt even if the court decides that your agreement is irredeemably unenforceable.

 

The reason for me saying that is on the basis that whilst the CCA 1974 and the Regulations thereunder are there to effectively protect the consumer and if the lender has not complied with their obligations then they don't have a right to enforce which is quite correct.

 

However in the background the debt is still there and the contractual obligation remains. It will in my view never be declared void. It will alsways remain owing and due.

 

The ramifications of this are that if the court declared your agreement irredeemably unenforceable potentially the lender still could pursue you for the debt, make adverse refernces to credit reference agencies and issue proceedings in respect of that debt. The McGuiffick case confirmed that issuing of proceedings was not classed as enforcement

 

I understand the reasoning as to why in that if that had been classed as enforcement then the judge would have been restricting a persons right to justice.

 

However it does beg the question as to what is enforcement?

 

How far is the lender permitted to go before it constitutes enforcement of the debt

 

Will the lender be able to get a money judgement against the consumer but not be able to enforce to recover that money

 

In respect of credit referencing the Mcguiffick ruling leaves it wide open for Banks to continue issueing adverse reference even after an agreement has been declared unenforceable.

 

In future a court may give further guidance as to what references the lender is permitted to make. Whether after an agreement is declared unenforceable the court may specify what wording is to be used in those references

 

Currently in any event even when you do have an unenforceable agreement the contractual obligation remains and the debt remains owing and due.

 

Whilst the court may have determined an agreement unenforceable the next step will be that the consumer will stop paying and the lender will then make a reference to the CRA's.

 

There is no doubt in my mind that if the court finds in the consumers favour the consumers credit rating will be affected potentially resulting in refusal for credit in cases where previously the consumer had a 100% clear credit rating.

 

Whilst I think McGuiffick is unlikely to be appealed I am positive that there will be further guidance from the courts as to how the lender is to treat the consumer following an agreement being declared unenforceable especially with regard to adverse references and the cra's

 

All that on a Friday afternoon

 

Mickie xx

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