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    • You probably do need to ignore it, but show it to us just in case. Cover up your name, address and anything that could ID you like your car reg. HB
    • Hi all! I've now had a "final notification letter" through from ECP. I assume I should continue to ignore this, but is there likely any action I need to take? Do you need to see a copy of the letter? Thanks
    • Please will you upload the defence in a PDF format document
    • Afternoon All - after 3 weeks of silence, this morning I received an email from HMCTS advising that P2G have rejected my claim. Decide whether to proceed Parcel2Go.com has rejected your claim. You need to decide whether to proceed with the claim. You need to respond before 4pm on 25 June 2024. Your claim won’t continue if you don’t respond by then. This is their ‘defence’ Their defence Why they disagree with the claim When choosing a service on the Defendants website, the Claimant chose to book their order with Evri and selected to take out £20 parcel protection which comes with the service. On the first page of the booking process, the Claimant entered the value of £265 for the contents and was offered parcel protection for loss or damages against their goods for £13.99 + VAT. The Claimant selected no, which then produced a pop up which explained 'We strongly recommend that you protect the full value of your item(s).' however, the Claimant still did not take this protection out and instead continued with the booking process. At the end of the booking process, the Claimant was offered this again which was refused and the Claimant continued with the booking by accepting the terms and conditions which re-iterates the information provided in the booking process. The parcel was sent, however, seems to be delayed in transit. The parcel finally started to track again, however, when delivered the parcel was empty with no contents. As such, the claim was re-opened and attempted to be settled for the £20 protection taken out in the booking process. This was refused by the Claimant as they felt they should be paid the full amount of the value entered when booking. Unfortunately, due to the refusal of the parcel protection in the booking process the Defendant is not liable to settle the claim to the value and only to the parcel protection taken out. The Defendant shall rely on the Terms and Conditions of carriage in particular section 9. The Defendant understands that the contents have not be handled with due care and attention, which is not being disputed, however, they are disputing the amount they are liable to. They have requested mediation, I’m sure not least to drag the case out even longer, but I can see no benefit to me in this and so shall reject it. As ever, I’d welcome your thoughts guys. g59   
    • I doubt HMCTS holds any data on whether arrests by AEAs required police assistance.  They couldn't or wouldn't provide data on how many of warrants issued were successfully executed - just the number issued!  In my experience, arrest warrants whether with or without bail are [surprisingly] carried out with little or no fuss.  I think it's about how you treat people - a little respect and courtesy goes a long way. If you treat people badly they will react the same way. Occasions when police are called to assist are not common and, having undertaken or managed many thousands of these over the years, I can only recall a handful of occasions when police assistance was necessary. On one occasion, many years ago, I arrested and transported a man from Hampshire to Bristol prison on a committal warrant. It was just me and he was no problem. I didn't know the Bristol area (pre Sat Nav) and he was kind enough to provide directions - seems he knew the prison.  One young chap on another committal warrant jumped out of his back window and I had to chase him across several garden fences.  When he gave up (we were both knackered) I agreed to drive by his girlfriend's house to say farewell for a while.  I gave them a few moments and he was fine. The most difficult are breach warrants but mainly in locating the defendant as they don't want to go back to prison - can't blame them.  These were always dealt with by the police until the Access to Justice Act transferred responsibility from them to the magistrates' courts. The fact was the police did not actively pursue them and generally only executed them when they arrested someone for something else and found they had a breach warrant outstanding.  Hence the transfer of responsibility.
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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.

      Please note that a recent case against UPS failed on exactly the same issue with the judge held that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 did not apply.

      We will be getting that transcript very soon. We will look at it and we will understand how the judge made such catastrophic mistakes. It was a very poor judgement.
      We will be recommending that people do include this adverse judgement in their bundle so that when they go to county court the judge will see both sides and see the arguments against this adverse judgement.
      Also, we will be to demonstrate to the judge that we are fair-minded and that we don't mind bringing everything to the attention of the judge even if it is against our own interests.
      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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Hi All, i hope someone can help me this is my situation.

I started working for a healthcare company as a healthcare assistant in early May of this year but i have never signed a contract, i usually work 33 hrs per week.

I had decided pretty much in the first month that i wanted to leave but being in so much debt i decided to try and stick it out and see if it got better, which it has not infact its worse much worse.

Due to a much increased work load, a change of managers and their attitude i now really need to leave. I know that once you sign a contract with them you need to give a months notice but i kind of jobs i like and have experience in are mostly asap starts or only want to wait a week or so, i dont want to hand in my notice with having another job and they have doubled my hours without even telling me i found out on the rota sheet and they are all 12hours shifts and they are backbreakers! I honestly dont think my body and mind could last another 6-8 weeks there.

So my question is: can i give 1 weeks notice as i have not signed a contact or have i been there too long??

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Thank you Thank you Thank you ;) You have made a bad day all bright again !!! I dont even mind losing the week or so holiday pay that they will no doubt withold. Now another question i take it i should state in my notice letter that the reason i'm giving one week is because i've not signed a contract.

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Thank you Thank you Thank you ;) You have made a bad day all bright again !!! I dont even mind losing the week or so holiday pay that they will no doubt withold. Now another question i take it i should state in my notice letter that the reason i'm giving one week is because i've not signed a contract.

 

You can state that you wish to leave for personal reasons and leave it at that.

 

You should not have to forego any Holiday Pay accrued and I would put that in your letter to be paid in your final pay calculation--Paid Holiday is a Statutory Right dont lose it.

 

Beau

Please note: I am not a lawyer and as such any advice I give is purely from a laymans point of view;-)

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I think employment law is that you only have to give one week's notice if you have worked there for less than 1 year, contract or not.

 

Check out the link Mariefab gave you.

 

Yes you are correct

 

Statutory Notice periods as follows

 

Less than 1 Month Service = Nil by employee or employer

 

1 month to 2 years Service = 1 week

 

More than 2 years = 1 week for every complete year of service

 

Beau

Please note: I am not a lawyer and as such any advice I give is purely from a laymans point of view;-)

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Signing of a "Contract" or "Terms and Conditions of Employment" is not a condition of employment.

 

If no local agreement is in place, ie you have not signed anything then the Employment Rights act is what you should follow as a guide to your conditions of service----and IS legally binding.

 

Good working practice says that you offer an employee a "Contract" which will state any local variances within the binding ERA. Usually stating rate of pay holiday and sick entitlements etc.

 

Hope this helps

 

Beau

Please note: I am not a lawyer and as such any advice I give is purely from a laymans point of view;-)

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Also I Take It You Can Leave Your Job With Out Notice If The Employer Agrees To This

 

Yes, but obviously you should not expect to get paid if you resign. If it is instigated by the employer then good working practice says that he should pay the employee the Statutory Right.

 

 

Beau

Please note: I am not a lawyer and as such any advice I give is purely from a laymans point of view;-)

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Thanks all, i am beaming :D

Elpulpo, the only things i signed was a few sheets of paper along with 20 other people, stating a had been on various traning courses.

 

Beau Brummie, I know its a right! tho try telling them that! I know people who have left and they didnt get it or had to fight for ages for it but i will put it in, infact the bit about the one weeks notice link i'm gonna print off and enclose it with my notice and if i can find it the one about the holiday pay then that too. i just want to be ready if/when my manager tells me i have to give a months notice or no contract cos i think they will defo!!!

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The OP states that they haven't signed anything; however, if their employer has presented them with a written statement of particulars in compliance with section 1 of the ERA, would the employee therefore be bound by any terms of that document over and above the ERA? For example, notice periods etc. Or would the terms of the written statement only be enforcable by the employer if they have a copy of the particulars signed by the employee? ERA 1 states only that the employer 'shall give to' the employee a written statement

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The OP states that they haven't signed anything; however, if their employer has presented them with a written statement of particulars in compliance with section 1 of the ERA, would the employee therefore be bound by any terms of that document over and above the ERA? For example, notice periods etc. Or would the terms of the written statement only be enforcable by the employer if they have a copy of the particulars signed by the employee? ERA 1 states only that the employer 'shall give to' the employee a written statement

 

Are you saying that "been presented" means the employee knows what the terms are? but refused to sign the document. If so then proof would need to be sought that the employee knew of the notice period.

 

If this happens in my workplace. I issue a disclaimer that the employee signs to say that they have been presented with their Terms and Conditions but have decided not to sign it. In the OP's case it would appear that no document in any form has been presented.

 

So if there has been no agreement presented nor signed nor verbally stated then the overiding principles of the ERA will prevail meaning the minimum statutory notice period can be given.

 

Beau

Please note: I am not a lawyer and as such any advice I give is purely from a laymans point of view;-)

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The reason I asked (sorry, I know we're getting away from the OP's question!) is that I recently started a new job and was yesterday presented with a written statement. Now, several parts of the statement I feel are unreasonable.

I've been advised by longer serving employees to simply not sign and return the document, seemingly the employer doesn't chase up a signed copy from their employees, even though the accompanying letter states that one copy should be signed and returned.

If I simply do this, and don't actively challenge the terms that I feel are unreasonable, I trust that it won't subsequently be held that by merely taking receipt of the statement it was implied that I agreed to the terms?

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If I simply do this, and don't actively challenge the terms that I feel are unreasonable, I trust that it won't subsequently be held that by merely taking receipt of the statement it was implied that I agreed to the terms?

 

I'm don't think that will work.

If, after receiving the terms, you raise no objection to any of them; I'm pretty sure that after ? amount of time has passed that you are deemed to have accepted the terms.

 

If you'd like to post the terms that you are not happy with, we could check to see if they are lawful for you.

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I just want to thank everyone for their help, today has been so much better knowing i'm not stuck there for the next month or so and just to make it clear my job was advertised as various shifts and days and at my interview i told my boss the days and hours i wanted to work and he ok'd it. I never even been given a sheet of paper stating my job title and duties, contracted hours or rate of pay never mind anything like a contract, the only thing i signed was a standard company application form and a form for a enhanced crb. This is the best bit of news i've had since last xmas apart from beating Littlewoods, Capital One, Studio and NatWest at the unfair charges game, full refunds + awaiting to hear about a default removal (thanks crap1) and second time for Vanquis!

I'm still in debt but i have reduced it by 75% :D

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I have a friend who works in care so I know shifts are awful and pay is low! They only ever have minimum staff as well so as soon as someone goes on hol or off sick, they're working even more hours. They've been on 6 day weeks for the last month - they're supposed to be on 5.

 

So, I can relate to what you say! Good luck in your new job.

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