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    • Makers of insect-based animal feed hope to be able to compete with soybeans on price.View the full article
    • Thank you for posting up the results from the sar. The PCN is not compliant with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4. Under Section 9 [2][a] they are supposed to specify the parking time. the photographs show your car in motion both entering and leaving the car park thus not parking. If you have to do a Witness Statement later should they finally take you to Court you will have to continue to state that even though you stayed there for several hours in a small car park and the difference between the ANPR times and the actual parking period may only be a matter of a few minutes  nevertheless the CEL have failed to comply with the Act by failing to specify the parking period. However it looks as if your appeal revealed you were the driver the deficient PCN will not help you as the driver. I suspect that it may have been an appeal from the pub that meant that CEL offered you partly a way out  by allowing you to claim you had made an error in registering your vehicle reg. number . This enabled them to reduce the charge to £20 despite them acknowledging that you hadn't registered at all. We have not seen the signs in the car park yet so we do not what is said on them and all the signs say the same thing. It would be unusual for a pub to have  a Permit Holders Only sign which may discourage casual motorists from stopping there. But if that is the sign then as it prohibits any one who doesn't have a permit, then it cannot form a contract with motorists though it may depend on how the signs are worded.
    • Defence and Counterclaim Claim number XXX Claimant Civil Enforcement Limited Defendant XXXXXXXXXXXXX   How much of the claim do you dispute? I dispute the full amount claimed as shown on the claim form.   Do you dispute this claim because you have already paid it? No, for other reasons.   Defence 1. The Defendant is the recorded keeper of XXXXXXX  2. It is denied that the Defendant entered into a contract with the Claimant. 3. As held by the Upper Tax Tribunal in Vehicle Control Services Limited v HMRC [2012] UKUT 129 (TCC), any contract requires offer and acceptance. The Claimant was simply contracted by the landowner to provide car-park management services and is not capable of entering into a contract with the Defendant on its own account, as the car park is owned by and the terms of entry set by the landowner. Accordingly, it is denied that the Claimant has authority to bring this claim. 4. In any case it is denied that the Defendant broke the terms of a contract with the Claimant. 5. The Claimant is attempting double recovery by adding an additional sum not included in the original offer. 6. In a further abuse of the legal process the Claimant is claiming £50 legal representative's costs, even though they have no legal representative. 7. The Particulars of Claim is denied in its entirety. It is denied that the Claimant is entitled to the relief claimed or any relief at all. Signed I am the Defendant - I believe that the facts stated in this form are true XXXXXXXXXXX 01/05/2024   Defendant's date of birth XXXXXXXXXX   Address to which notices about this claim can be sent to you  
    • pop up on the bulk court website detailed on the claimform. [if it is not working return after the w/end or the next day if week time] . When you select ‘Register’, you will be taken to a screen titled ‘Sign in using Government Gateway’.  Choose ‘Create sign in details’ to register for the first time.  You will be asked to provide your name, email address, set a password and a memorable recovery word. You will be emailed your Government Gateway 12-digit User ID.  You should make a note of your memorable word, or password as these are not included in the email.<<**IMPORTANT**  then log in to the bulk court Website .  select respond to a claim and select the start AOS box. .  then using the details required from the claimform . defend all leave jurisdiction unticked  you DO NOT file a defence at this time [BUT you MUST file a defence regardless by day 33 ] click thru to the end confirm and exit the website .get a CPR 31:14 request running to the solicitors https://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?486334-CPR-31.14-Request-to-use-on-receipt-of-a-PPC-(-Private-Land-Parking-Court-Claim type your name ONLY no need to sign anything .you DO NOT await the return of paperwork. you MUST file a defence regardless by day 33 from the date on the claimform.
    • well post it here as a text in a the msg reply half of it is blanked out. dx  
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suspended claim for JSA


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hello all and I hope you can help. 2 weeks ago my son was due to sign on but he was away at a friends over the weekend got 'pie eyed' on the Sunday and missed his signing on time on Monday morning. When he eventually got through to them on the phone he told them that he had been for an interview and that is why he did not attend.(Daft idiot):mad:Anyway they sent him a letter asking for the details of the intervieiw etc. so he wrote back and told them the truth this time. He has recieved no money from JSA for 4 weeks now, and this morning when he went down to sign on again he was told that his claim had been suspended. He was given a rapid re-claim form to fill in and return. He was also told that he has no right of appeal and that he should have told the job centre he was out of town. Even though it was a Sunday and only 4 miles away?:confused:

So could anyone advise him as to whether there is a right of appeal, and what his next move should be. Thanks in anticipation.

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He has one month from the date the decision was made to suspend his claim in which to appeal. Are you certain the appeal has been suspended and not terminated?

 

If it is a suspension, he should not need to reclaim and can in the meantime apply for hardship payments. To request hardship payments, he needs to complete a form called a JSA10.

 

If it is terminated, he can still appeal; but he has to show "good cause" for not signing on.

 

The jobcentre are correct in that if he is not available to sign on then he has to advise them of this in advance with a reason why, and/or if he is going away within the UK and for that period he will not be available for work. If he is unable to advise them in advance, then he must advise them as soon as possible of the reason for failing to sign on and show good cause.

 

For example if a claimant was rushed to hospital in an emergency situation - they can't vey well advise in advance that they won't be able to sign on, and can show good cause for not being there, and this can be proven

 

If a person was called on friday at 5pm and asked to attend an interview on Monday at 9am, and they are supposed to sign on at 10am....and cannot get there in time - again the person could show "good cause", and again this can be proven.

 

Being unable to sign on because of the morning after the night before is unlikely to be viewed as "good cause"

 

Failure to sign without "good cause" can result in a claim being sanctioned or terminated, and he would have signed a Jobseekers agreement to the effect that he would sign on at a specific day and time, so to be honest it is unlikely an appeal would overturn the decision - an appeal can also take several months if forwarded to the tribunal service.

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My advice is based on my opinion, my experience and my education. I do not profess to be an expert in any given field. If requested, I will provide a link where possible to relevant legislation or guidance, so that advice provided can be confirmed and I do encourage others to follow those links for their own peace of mind. Sometimes my advice is not what people necesserily want to hear, but I will advise on facts as I know them - although it may not be what a person wants to hear it helps to know where you stand. Advice on the internet should never be a substitute for advice from your own legal professional with full knowledge of your individual case.

 

 

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He phoned them after and also lied to them. An appeal won't get very far in reality.

 

You need a good reason to miss signing on like the post above says, and being "away" doesn't count, it's generally just interviews, childcare or hospital and you need to prove you did those things most of the time.

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It's probably not even worth backdating the claim too far on the Rapid Reclaim either when he does that, it'll end up getting turned down for the same reasons, and just delay payments and the processing of the claim.

 

Best bet is to get the Rapid Reclaim running asap, and take it as a lesson in life unfortunately. I mean, without meaning to sound harsh, in reality it was his fault. Had he been working and failed to turn up he would have been sacked, or at least disciplined in the same way.

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