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    • I used to post regularly in order to provide factual information (rather than advice) but got fed up with banging my head against a brick wall in so many cases when posters insisted black was white and I was writing rubbish. I have never posted anything which was untrue or indeed biased in any way.  I have never given 'advice' but have sought to correct erroneous statements which were unhelpful. The only username I have ever used is blf1uk. I have never gone under any other username and have no connection to 'bailiff advice'.  I am not a High Court Enforcement Officer but obtained my first 'bailiff' certificate in 1982. I'm not sure what records you have accessed but I was certainly not born in 1977 - at that time I was serving in the Armed Forces in Hereford, Germany (4th Division HQ) and my wife gave birth to our eldest.   Going back to the original point, the fact is that employees of an Approved Enforcement Agency contracted by the Ministry of Justice can and do execute warrants of arrest (with and without bail), warrants of detention and warrants of commitment. In many cases, the employee is also an enforcement agent [but not acting as one]. Here is a fact.  I recently submitted an FOI request to HMCTS and they advised me (for example) that in 2022/23 Jacobs (the AEA for Wales) was issued with 4,750 financial arrest warrants (without bail) and 473 'breach' warrants.  A breach warrant is a community penalty breach warrant (CPBW) whereby the defendant has breached the terms of either their release from prison or the terms of an order [such as community service].  While the defendant may pay the sum [fine] due to avoid arrest on a financial arrest warrant, a breach warrant always results in their transportation to either a police station [for holding] or directly to the magistrates' court to go before the bench as is the case on financial arrest warrants without bail when they don't pay.  Wales has the lowest number of arrest warrants issued of the seven regions with South East exceeding 50,000.  Overall, the figure for arrest warrants issued to the three AEAs exceeds 200,000.  Many of these were previously dealt with directly by HMCTS using their employed Civilian Enforcement Officers but they were subject to TUPE in 2019 and either left the service or transferred to the three AEAs. In England, a local authority may take committal proceedings against an individual who has not paid their council tax and the court will issue a committal summons.  If the person does not attend the committal hearing, the court will issue a warrant of arrest usually with bail but occasionally without bail (certainly without bail if when bailed on their own recognizance the defendant still fails to appear).   A warrant of arrest to bring the debtor before the court is issued under regulation 48(5) of The Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 and can be executed by "any person to whom it is directed or by any constable....." (Reg 48(6).  These, although much [much] lower in number compared to HMCTS, are also dealt with by the enforcement agencies contracted by the local authorities. Feel free to do your own research using FOI enquiries!  
    • 3rd one seems the best option, let 'em default, don't pay a penny, nothing will happen, forget about all of this. As for Payplan don't touch them with a bargepole, nothing they can do that you can't, and they will pocket fees. A do it yourself DMP is pointless as it will just string out the statute barred date to infinity.
    • Because that’s what the email said. Anyway it’s done now. Posted and image emailed.    im doing some reading in preparation for defence but I will need my hand holding quite tightly by you good people.  I’m a little bit clueless
    • why do you need adobe...use a pdf online website. all for now...no get reading up and do not miss your defence filing date no matter what. post it up in good time no!!    
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MBNA CCA - Is it legal?


nks22
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Hi, like nks and others i had no cca from mbna and the debt has been sold to dlc.

I’ve seen another thread where circumstances are similar, but it seems the advice is to tell the dca to 'whistle' on the basis of no cca. Would this not be the correct ‘tack’ as opposed to stressing over whether or not any subsequent dn was faulty and or the account unlawfully rescinded.

If the above were the case, surely we could simply write to tell the dca not to bother us any more as this account remains in dispute, and that we will see them in court, along with all correspondence and phone recordings if they try to illegally hassle.

Surely, the dn doesn’t come into the matter, save that we my want to have it in the background at the hearing for the next level of defence, if necessary?

Any comments?

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thanks vint, i'm sending a letter accepting the unlawful termination to mbna.

 

can you confirm though, why a non existiant cca agreement would not be better? am i right in thinking that even if no cca can be produced, it could still be argued in court that a balance can still exist, allbeit unenforceable, whereas, unlawfull dn's actually terminate whatever contract might have existied making any balance uncollectable, save arrears, which can be claimed but can be offset against any damages counterclaim i may have for unlawful termination.

thanks

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In this case, the CCA would be used as an argument also. So:

 

The DN you sent me is pants and unlawful. You have terminated my agreement unlawfully on the back of it. I accept your unlawful termination. Notwithstanding the above, your CCA is also pants or does not exist, therefore a court is precluded from making an order.

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The problem with a missing CCA is that it could still be produced when necessary (eg in court). Confirmation of a non-existant or faulty CCA would be a different matter.

 

(I have received my CCA from MBNA, BTW, although I believe it's faulty.)

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cheers vint.

 

nks, is that the mbna account re which you first started this thread about, ie, the one that wrote 11 Jan then 28. if so, its the same dates as mine but they havnt sent a cca. i wonder if now they've located them from their archives, why they havnt copied mine to me yet. hopefully, it is lost!

 

can you tell me what a BTW means?

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DLC chased me on phone tonight. i told them the account has been unlawfully rescinded and i've not had reply to my cca request. the bloke spouted that even if invalid termination the account would still be owed? worried now, perhaps i should have refused to speak, what you think. BAB

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Just had letter from mbna apologising for not responding to my s78 request. they said i am still obliged to make payments as confirmed by recent McGuffick v rbs case. i had a look at the case but got a bit lost. the gist (i think) is to do with enforcement, which is not allowed if an account is in dispute. but the judge said that asking for payments is not enforcement, is this correct.

 

if so, where do we stand not making payments? anyone got a view on this. BAB

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Just had letter from mbna apologising for not responding to my s78 request. they said i am still obliged to make payments as confirmed by recent McGuffick v rbs case. i had a look at the case but got a bit lost. the gist (i think) is to do with enforcement, which is not allowed if an account is in dispute. but the judge said that asking for payments is not enforcement, is this correct.

 

if so, where do we stand not making payments? anyone got a view on this. BAB

 

Yup Mcguff concerned s78 requests and subsequent enforcement. The Gist was that nothing the creditor does ever counts as enforcement - that judge would probably have allowed the bank to take the debtors family hostage :rolleyes:

 

So they can still ask you for payments, doesn't mean you can't tell them to bog off though!

 

Note that in Mcguff the creditor initially failed to satisfy the the s78 request but then satisfied it at a later date before court action. IMHO the judgement therefore can be interpreted to only apply to situations like this - so would only be relevant if MBNA at some time in the future satisfy your request.

 

Further reading:

 

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/legal-issues/216538-claim-stayed-due-unenforceable-79.html

 

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/debt-collection-industry/240186-dissecting-manchester-test-case-73.html

 

If anyone disagrees with what Ive said please correct me!

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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cheers Haggis, nice answer, just hope they dont come up with a valid agreement.

 

can you or anyone advise the next step. adca now owns my account, possibly illegally, do i just sit and wait for them to take me to court?

 

and, if they do take court action, and i defend on the basis of no cca and invalid default, are there any court cases showing the result of such an action? just so i can get an idea of what might happen as i'm loosing my bottle a bit,

cheers

BAB

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The more you learn the more bottle youll have ;)

 

From the recent OFT guidance:

 

Where there has been a variation of the terms and conditions of the

agreement

2.27 Where an agreement has been varied in accordance with section 82(1)

of the Act, the OFT considers that, by virtue of Regulation 7 of the

Copies of Documents Regulations, the duty is to provide not only a copy

of the agreement as originally executed but also either

14 There are cases where no executed agreement is required by the Act, for example, certain

bank overdrafts.

15 Section 127(3) continues to apply to agreements made before 6 April 2007.

OFT1175con | 15

a copy of the latest variation given in accordance with section 82(1)

of the Act relating to each discrete term of the agreement which has

been varied, or

a clear statement of the terms of the agreement as varied in

accordance with section 82(1) of the Act.

2.28 Although some creditors have apparently considered it is sufficient to

provide a copy of the current terms and conditions (that is, 'a statement

of the terms of the agreement as varied'), that does not comply with the

requirements of Regulation 7. In Carey v HSBC Bank plc16 there was

detailed analysis of this issue and it was confirmed that 'include' meant

that the documents showing the variations were to be supplied in

addition to a copy of the original agreement.

 

 

Vints comments in post 83 are spot on. A quick letter to MBNA accepting unlawful recission of contract and a quick letter to ADCA explainging this, and the failure to satisfy the s77 request will do for now.

Edited by haggis1984

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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  • 2 weeks later...

Add me to the list.

 

MBNA sent me a DN which was dated 4th of the month and the remedy date was 21st of the month.

 

MBNA then sent me another letter dated 18th of the month stating the debt had been sold to a DCA.

 

Plus, I never received a termination letter from MBNA. Just a letter from the DCA stating they now owned the debt and demanding payment in full.

]

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  • 2 weeks later...

hiya all

 

going to recheck my paperwork received and will let you know too

 

laters angel x

Im happy to help with support and my own thoughts, but if I offer any thoughts to your problems please take it as from my life experience only and not of any legal standing. Always take further advice from the legal experts in your final action.:)

 

my new motto is,,,",Taking back control of your life and home - such peace is priceless"

 

This is all due to truecall device , have a serious peek at this you will be thankful like I am x laters angel :D

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Add me to the list.

 

Received Default Notice dated 8th of the month and remedy date 25th of the month.

Another letter dated 19th of the month stating Your outstanding balance due under the above account has been sold to the Lowell Group.

 

Not herd anything from Lowell Group and will be getting the Unlawful Recession leter off ASAP.

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Hi,

Interesting thread...

Best I can tell my account was sold before the DN expired

AND/OR

I wasn’t given enough time to rectify the situation and therefore the DN was invalid.

No Notice of Assignment was ever sent to me, and no reply has been sent to my SAR [sent recorded delivery and they cashed the cheque].

Should I be accepting an unlawful rescission of my account now …or do I hang on hoping that I might get further proof through my SAR [if I ever receive anything back]?

 

Any thoughts?

 

Thanks

Edited by yoyoscot
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Hi,

 

Interesting thread...

 

Best I can tell my account was sold before the DN expired

 

AND/OR

 

I wasn’t given enough time to rectify the situation and therefore the DN was invalid.

 

No Notice of Assignment was ever sent to me, and no reply has been sent to my SAR [sent recorded delivery and they cashed the cheque].

 

Should I be accepting an unlawful rescission of my account now …or do I hang on hoping that I might get further proof through my SAR [if I ever receive anything back]?

 

Any thoughts?

 

Thanks

Yes, you need to accept this as soon as you realise that there is an unlawful rescission.

 

Dear xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,

 

Re account no xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Unlawful Rescission.

 

I refer to your Default Notice dated xxxxxxxxxx, posted second class and received by me on xxxxxxxxxxx and your subsequent letter terminating the agreement by demanding the balance in full, dated xxxxxxxxxx, received xxxxxxxxx, I would add that these actions were taken by you, while the account was in serious dispute, owing to your failure to respond to my request under s78 of the CCA 1974.

 

The default notice failed to give me the required statutory time in which to seek legal advice and/or remedy any alleged defect. Your actions resulted in insufficient time for me to even obtain an appointment with a solicitor let alone remedy the alleged default. These actions by you, have resulted in you unlawfully rescinding the alleged agreement.

 

I accept your unlawful rescission of the agreement and I note that you are now entitled to claim those arrears genuinely due at the time of the termination (not including any unlawful charges ) and I would be obliged if you would advise me of the exact amount of those arrears, against which will be a claim for unlawful rescission

 

Yours xxxxxx

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@vint1954...

 

Thanks v much for your response.

 

Don't think I received anything more from MBNA ...such as a letter terminating the agreement. What happened after the default notice was that my account number was changed within a few days [i have written evidence of this] ...and I was contacted by EC a few weeks later.

 

The timing of the DN appears to have been too short. The change of my account number in a letter a few days after the DN [perhaps] indicates that my account was closed just a few days after my DN. However, there hasn't been anything else in writing from MBNA since the DN.

 

So, no letter informing me of termination [received], no NOA [received] ...and so far no reply to my SAR [received]. I guess it could be that the Royal Mail aren't doing a great job.

 

So with a lack of huge amounts of hard evidence, I'm wondering whether I should hold out to see if MBNA send me a response to my SAR at some point now it's well beyond the forty day mark - and this might shed some light on the situation.

 

OR

 

Maybe I should just send in a letter [thanks] as you suggest?

 

If you get a mo, I'd appreciate your thoughts.

 

Thanks - yoyo

Edited by yoyoscot
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