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    • I'm still pondering/ trying to find docs re the above issue. Moving on - same saga; different issue I'm trying to understand what I can do: The lender/ mortgagee-in-possession has a claim v me for alleged debt. But the debt has only been incurred due to them failing to sell property in >5y. I'm fighting them on this.   I've been trying to get an order for sale for 2y.  I got it legally added into my counterclaim - but that will only be dealt with at trial.  This is really frustrating. The otherside's lawyers made an application to adjourn trial for a few more months - allegedly wanting to try sort some kind of settlement with me and to use the stay to sell.  At the hearing I asked Judge to expedite the order for sale. I pointed out they need a court-imposed deadline or this adjournment is just another time wasting tactic (with interest still accruing) as they have no buyer.  But the judge said he could legally only deal with the order at trial. The otherside don't want to be forced to sell the property.. Disclosure has presented so many emails which prove they want to keep it. I raised some points with the judge including misconduct of the receiver. The judge suggested I may have a separate claim against the receiver?   On this point - earlier paid-for lawyers said my counterclaim should be directed at the lender for interference with the receiver and the lender should be held responsible for the receiver's actions/ inactions.   I don't clearly understand that, but their legal advice was something to do with the role a receiver has acting as an agent for a borrower which makes it hard for a borrower to make a claim against a receiver ???.  However the judge's comment has got me thinking.  He made it clear the current claim is lender v me - it's not receiver v me.  Yet it is the receiver who is appointed to sell the property. (The receiver is mentioned/ involved in my counterclaim only from the lender collusion/ interference perspective).  So would I be able to make a separate application for an order for sale against the receiver?  Disclosure shows receiver has constantly rejected offers. He gave a contract to one buyer 4y ago. But colluded with the lender's lawyer to withdraw the contract after 2w to instead give it to the ceo of the lender (his own ltd co) (using same lawyer).  Emails show it was their joint strategy for lender/ ceo to keep the property.  The receiver didn't put the ceo under any pressure to exchange quickly.  After 1 month they all colluded again to follow a very destructive path - to gut the property.  My account was apparently switched into a "different fund" to "enable them to do works" (probably something to do with the ceo as he switched his ltd co accountant to in-house).   Interestingly the receiver told lender not to incur significant works costs and to hold interest.  The costs were huge (added to my account) and interest was not held.   The receiver rejected a good offer put forward by me 1.5y ago.  And he rejected a high offer 1y ago - to the dismay of the agent.  Would reasons like this be good enough to make a separate application to the court against the receiver for an order for sale ??  Or due to the main proceedings and/or the weird relationship a borrower has with a receiver I cannot ?
    • so a new powerless B2B debt DCA set up less than a month ago with a 99% success rate... operating on a NWNF basis , but charging £30 to set up your use of them. that's gonna last 5mins.... = SPAMMERS AND SCAMMERS. a DCA is NOT a BAILIFF and have  ZERO legal powers on ANY debt - no matter WHAT its type. dx      
    • Migrants are caught in China's manufacturing battles with the West, as Beijing tries to save its economy.View the full article
    • You could send an SAR to DCbl on the pretext that you are going for a breach of your GDPR . They should then send the purported letter of discontinuance which may show why it ended up in Gloucester and see if you can get your  costs back on the day. It obviously won't be much but  at least perhaps a small recompense for your wasted day. Not exactly wasted since you had a great win  albeit much sweeter if you had beat them in Court. But a win is a win so well done. We will miss you as it has been almost two years since you first started out on this mission. { I would n't be surprised if the wrong Court was down to DCBL}. I see you said "till the next time" but I am guessing you will be avoiding private patrolled car parks for a while.🙂
    • It is extremely disappointing that you haven't told us anything about the result of the hearing. You came here at the very last minute and the regulars - all unpaid volunteers - sweated blood trying to get an acceptable Witness Statement prepared in an extremely short time. The least you could have done is tell us how the hearing went, information invaluable for future users. Evidently not.
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Summons - how can I get my own back on them?


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Yes I am intending to make a FOI Act request to challenge these costs but have been so busy on other projects that I haven't had a chance to do this yet.

 

Every time somebody posts on this thread I am reminded of this and start to feel quite guilty about not getting round to it.

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  • 1 month later...
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dear militant customer... i have read your post with interest & great admiration! keep it up! these council are true conmen! i wish i had the energy and balls to do what you are doing!!! however unless you continue all your efforts will be for nothing!

 

do you know what on a practical level is required to take this issue to ECJ?! I would be prepared to put in some money for this and if another few caggers do the same maybe a real case could be undertaken!

 

keep up the very good work!!! i feel that the councils are simply stealing from us common mortals!

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  • 4 weeks later...
Yes I am intending to make a FOI Act request to challenge these costs but have been so busy on other projects that I haven't had a chance to do this yet.

 

Every time somebody posts on this thread I am reminded of this and start to feel quite guilty about not getting round to it.

 

I have read this entire thread last night with INTEREST !!

 

In the first place I post only on the bailiff section and until last night I had no idea that this section existed !!!

 

As our business specialises in advising debtors on all matters relating to a bailiff visit, the matter of summons costs is of great concern and you have clearly uncovered some facts that a few of us in the industry have been looking at with interest for many months.

 

Have you had a response from your SAR request?

 

If not, PLEASE send me a PM.

 

You may be interested to know that Lord Lucas raised a Parlimentray Question on this very subject recently in the House of Lords and the response from Lord Mc Kenzie of Luton dated 6th November 2009 is below:

 

 

 

Lord Lucas (Conservative)

To ask Her Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of charges of around £100 made by certain local authorities when obtaining liability orders in respect of council tax debts; under what circumstances £3 is charged for such an order from a county court; and whether they propose to review the situation.

 

 

Lord McKenzie of Luton (Parliamentary Under-Secretary (also in the Department for Communities and Local Government), Department for Communities and Local Government; Labour)

No assessment has been made. It is a matter for local authorities to decide what level of costs to charge. Regulation 34 (7) of the Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 allows local authorities to charge reasonable costs incurred by the authority in obtaining a liability order to the debtor.

Local authorities enforce council tax through the magistrates' courts only.

Edited by tomtubby
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What do I need to ask in my Freedom of Information Request?

 

I was thinking about asking how the £68 figure has been calculated. Anything else I should add to the letter?

 

 

 

 

I would be specfic in asking about how the costs had been calculated and that it is believed that the costs should be actual losses that the council (in this instance) had occured..8)

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What do I need to ask in my Freedom of Information Request?

 

I was thinking about asking how the £68 figure has been calculated. Anything else I should add to the letter?

 

Just like with the banks, I bet you don't get an answer to that.

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Hi Millitantconsumer,

Just thinking about the questions you should ask:-

 

1) What are the fixed costs associated with arriving at this charge. they should be enumerated?

 

2) What are the variable costs, Officer grades and time involved?

 

3) What are the economies of scale in dealing with 2,000 defaulters as opposed to 1?

 

4) What staff training cost is involved in training staff to take a sympatheyic and understanding approach to defaulters during a time of recession?

 

Suggest you try these for starters

 

Good luck Carningli

 

4)

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Hi Millitantconsumer,

Just thinking about the questions you should ask:-

 

1) What are the fixed costs associated with arriving at this charge. they should be enumerated?

 

2) What are the variable costs, Officer grades and time involved?

 

3) What are the economies of scale in dealing with 2,000 defaulters as opposed to 1?

 

4) What staff training cost is involved in training staff to take a sympatheyic and understanding approach to defaulters during a time of recession?

 

Suggest you try these for starters

 

Good luck Carningli

 

4)

 

I would also be asking for a copy of the breakdown as supplied to the Magistrates Court to support their last request for an increase in the fees.

 

In addition, you could ask them how many members of staff are employed in the recoveries section (collection tax @ business rates department).

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  • 2 weeks later...

[---------------------------------------------------------------------

Wow what a story. I was gripped!! Well done militantconsumer, I admire your committment to something you strongly believe in. I don't want to go back over old ground too much, but it appears to me that in the lead up to your Jack Nicholson 'you can't handle the truth' moment in court, you weren't given very clear advice as to what constitutes a good defence against the Liability Order being granted and you concentrated on the apparent unfairnes of the whole system which, as you correctly state, the Magistrates cannot do anything about.

 

If you could have cast doubt on the documentation you were issued, i.e. being issued witha joint notice for a period of time when only you were liable for payment, this would have made the Magistrates think twice about granting the Order as they could have considerd the notice defective. It sounds like the Council just added your girlfriends name to your account when she moved in with you instead of ending your single account and setting you up with a brand new joint account which is what they should have done. You could have argued that you were happy to pay what you owed, but only when a correct notice was issued and this would mean withdrawing the summons.

 

The Council has to prove that documentation was correctly issued and I think they got away lightly with having to prove this.

 

On the flip-side, the £3 you were quoted would be what the Magistrates Court charges the Council for every complaint laid before the summons is issued (so the Court would have made an easy £6k) so this is not the amount it costs to produce the summons despite what the Council bod told you. When you actually received the summons, you have incurred x amount of costs, and then a further amount once the Liability Order was granted. The whole point of your post was how to get back at the Council. I don't think a FOI request is the correct way (by the way you could have done it for free at whatdotheyknow.co.uk) as the reply as to how the costs are justified will only annoy you. It will probably give you details of costs involved in IT staff having to produce the notices, office staff checking them, the machine packing them with x amount built in for pro-rata maintenance costs, time spend producing complaint lists and having them signed by the JP's prior to the hearing, issuing the summonses etc etc etc. The summons costs do supplement the Council Tax income for the Council and as it is treated as a separate income, it doesn't have to be spent on Council services unlike Council Tax itself so I personally would ask the Council how much cost income they have accrued and what they spent it on. Finally, with an attempt to be fair to all parties, the Council issue a bill at the start of the year with all of your instalments listed so if you refuse to go on DD, the onus is on you to remember to pay (which of course you know) and although you refuse to pay by DD, there is the DD guarantee scheme which is very good and every Council has to adhere to it so your mistrust of DD may be more deeply rooted. Also, most Councils issue at least 2 reminders (although the law says they only have issue 1) so it does appear to be a case of overzealousness on the part of your Council. Anyway, time to put my feet back up my desk, dunk another digestive into my Council-paid-for coffee, practice my most obnoxious beauracratic voice especially reserved for 'customers' , and dream of the day I collect my golden finaly salary pension. ;)

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  • 3 weeks later...

It's all true - councils are using court to make cash.

 

Just had a letter from my district council regarding an offer I made to repay an arrears - they refuse to enter into a repayment arrangement until a liability order is applied for, which is the event that generates the £65 for them.

 

This can't right -- can it?

 

LA

;)

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Welcome to the debate LA,

There should be no requirement for your District Council to seek a liability order, if you are willing to enter an arrangement to repay arrears. Councils have been advised by central government to enter into arrangements in these difficult times, provided future payments are not jeopardised. In this situation advise both your loal District Counsellor and Member of Parliament.

Carningli

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Welcome to the debate LA,

There should be no requirement for your District Council to seek a liability order, if you are willing to enter an arrangement to repay arrears. Councils have been advised by central government to enter into arrangements in these difficult times, provided future payments are not jeopardised. In this situation advise both your loal District Counsellor and Member of Parliament.

Carningli

 

But that is only a guideline and wont make them any money so expect a summons for liability order as the first approach.

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Dear LA

I take Coniff's point, but the important aspect to you is not to get involved in any more cost than necessary. I forgot to mention that you could also seek advice from the Citizens Advice Bureau and if you need to borrow an instalment or two try your local Credit Union.

 

Carningli

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Welcome to the debate LA,

There should be no requirement for your District Council to seek a liability order, if you are willing to enter an arrangement to repay arrears. Councils have been advised by central government to enter into arrangements in these difficult times, provided future payments are not jeopardised. In this situation advise both your loal District Counsellor and Member of Parliament.

Carningli

 

Is the above provided in any document?

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Is the above provided in any document?

 

There is this:

 

On 2nd July the Government published a consumer White Paper “A Better Deal for Consumers: Delivering Real Help Now and Change for the Future”.

 

It says: Councils have discretion to agree a payment arrangement with any taxpayer to enable them to clear arrears. They can also, and frequently do, make such arrangements instead of pursuing formal enforcement measures."

 

 

 

There is also:

 

Citizens Advice and the Local Government Association (LGA) have pulled together best practice on the collection of council tax arrears and developed this good practice protocol to help local authorities.

 

(Notice that it's to help councils not the tax payer).

 

The best they come up with is:

 

Publicising debt advice contact details on council tax notices.

Producing literature addressing any likely concerns debtors may have on bailiffs and enforcement. Information should cover charges bailiffs are allowed to make by law, how to complain about bailiff behaviour and how to check bailiff certification.

Promoting different payment dates within the month as options available to council tax payers. This can allow people to budget more effectively for council tax when they have the money.

Consider the level of debt (inclusive of liability order fees) before bailiff action is taken.

 

There is absolutely nothing on helping the person in trouble.

 

Attached is the White Paper. It seems to be more wind than action.

file52072.pdf

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Did I mention that, around the same time as all this was going on, the company I was working for got behind on its business rates and received a summons from the same local authority as me?

 

The company agreed a payment arrangement and, guess what, the Council dropped the "costs".

 

Why would they do this for a local business but not a local resident?

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  • 1 month later...
there is the DD guarantee scheme which is very good

 

Very good on paper. A whole load of hassle over many months, in the handful of cases I have heard about.

Halifax (current accounts, credit card, old mortgage, secured loan)

thread here

 

MBNA (three credit cards)

thread here

firstdirect (a current account, two mortgage accounts, old loans, old credit card)

they've sold my current account. thread here.

 

Royal Mail

Claim issued by former employer Royal Mail, thread here.

I counterclaimed and won. They paid in full.

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