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    • I've looked through all our old NPE threads, and as far as we know they have never had the bottle to do court. There are no guarantees of course, but when it comes to put or shut up they definitely tend towards shut up. How about something like -   Dear Jonathan and Julie, Re: PCN no.XXXXX cheers for your Letter Before Claim.  I rolled around on the floor in laughter at the idea that you actually expected me to take this tripe seriously and cough up. I'll write to you not some uninterested third party, thanks all the same, because you have are the ones trying to threaten me about this non-existent "debt". Go and look up Jopson v Homeguard Services Ltd, saddos.  Oh, while you're at it, go and look up your Subject Access Request obligations - we all know how you ballsed that up way back in January to March. Dear, dear, dear - you couldn't resist adding your £70 Unicorn Food Tax, you greedy gets.  Judges don't like these made-up charges, do they? You can either drop this foolishness now or get a hell of a hammering in court.  Both are fine with me.  Summer is coming up and I would love a holiday at your expense after claiming an unreasonable costs order under CPR 27.14(2)(g). I look forward to your deafening silence.   That should show them you're not afraid of them and draw their attention to their having legal problems of their own with the SAR.  If they have any sense they'll crawl back under their stone and leave you in peace.  Over the next couple of days invest in a 2nd class stamp (all they are worth) and get a free Certificate of Posting from the post office.
    • Yes that looks fine. It is to the point. I think somewhere in the that the you might want to point out that your parcel had been delivered but clearly had been opened and resealed and the contents had been stolen
    • Hi All, I just got in from work and received a letter dated 24 April 2024. "We've sent you a Single Justice Procedure notice because you have been charged with an offence, on the Transport for London Network." "You need to tell us whether you are guilty or not guilty. This is called making your plea."
    • Okay please go through the disclosure very carefully. I suggest that you use the technique broadly in line with the advice we give on preparing your court bundle. You want to know what is there – but also very importantly you want to know what is not there. For instance, the email that they said they sent you before responding to the SAR – did you see that? Is there any trace of of the phone call that you made to the woman who didn't know anything about SAR's? On what basis was the £50 sent to you? Was it unilateral or did they offer it and you accepted it on some condition? When did they send you this £50 cheque? Have you banked it? Also, I think that we need to start understanding what you have lost here. Have you lost any money – and if so how much? Send the SAR to your bank as advised above
    • In anticipation of lodging my court claim next Weds 1 May (14 days after advising P2G that was my deadline for them to settle my claim) I have completed my first draft POC as below: Claim Claim number: xxxxx Reference: P2G MAY 2024   Claimant xxxxx   Defendant Parcel2Go 1A Parklands Lostock Bolton BL6 4SD  Particulars of Claim The defendant has failed to arrange for the safe delivery of the claimant's parcel containing a 8 secondhand golf clubs (valued at £265) that was sent to a UK address using their delivery service (P2G Reference xxxxx). The defendant contracted Evri to deliver the parcel (Evri Reference xxxxx) and refuses to reimburse the claimant on the grounds that the claimant did not purchase their secondary insurance contract. The defendant seeks to exclude their liability in breach of section 57 Consumer Rights Act. The secondary insurance contract is in breach of section 72. The claimant seeks reimbursement of £265, plus P2G fees of £9.10, plus postage costs for two first class letters to P2G of £2.70, plus court fees, plus interest. The claimant claims interest under section 69 of the County Courts Act 1984 at the rate of 8% a year from xxxxx to xxxxxx on £276.80 and also interest at the same rate up to the date of judgment or earlier payment at a daily rate of £xxxx   Details of claim Amount claimed £276.80 I look forward to your thoughts and comments guys! As ever, many thanks - G59    
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      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.

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Professor Lone Ranger / DVLA fines.


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I read the Register's report, but I do believe it is making much out of nothing - the problem for the DVLA is NOT that they are misrepresenting the dates on their communications, but not posting them out when they are prepared/printed. A very different issue indeed.

 

What the Register seems to expect its readers to believe, is that the notice letter should be given a date 'when it is recieved' - which is laughable! The DVLA is really no different from Bills from BT and Virgin Media, the day shoing as the billing date now invariably ISN;T the date of posting, (which can be up to a week to 10 days later). Now, to my mind this issue is one for them to resolve with their postal services provider - and be held accountible for same. (If a letter is dated 1st Month, then the letter should be posted on that date). If it isn;t, then the letters need to be reissued - not allowed to pile up till they've got enought to send to achieve their mailing discount.

 

As for PLR's assertion the it is somehow against HRA of being found guilty of an offence without a right of reply. How so? You can reply, and they can accept or reject your representation - but then we've all been told of what will happen if the SORN is not declared, so the smart guys make sure it is done (and it shuts them up) - lets not forget it was the KLAbour Government that came up with this great idea and passed it into law, A bit late to complain about the unfairness of the process when your democratically elected representative probably not only accepted, but voted for it too.

 

I suggest there is another angle here. If DVLA were seriously engaged in ensuring prompt payment of VED it would issue a demand for payment as soon as the 14 day period of grace expired, if not before, (after all it issues renewal notices well in advance) but; if it did that, it would run the risk of not benefiting from the Late Licensing Penalty (LLP) it can claim, after 30 days, beyond the expiry date of the VEL, have passed. That would explain would it not, why LLPs were being printed, but not dispatched, until the 30 day trigger point passed? If so, it seems, there has been some muddled thinking. On the one hand; delay until 30 days passed generates a LLP, on the other, early payment removes that, so all that happened, is, DVLA causes an artificial delay, by holding back on demanding payment, thereby collecting VED one month later than it could, and, should have done. If its true aim were to collect monies due, rather than victimise, the perceived lawless motorists, who wilfully keep, and, use untaxed vehicles on public roads prompt action to recover what is due would be the right course of action but that risks having a DVLA, that is much more efficient, needing less workers, for the taxpayers to employ, in a Quango with delegated powers, to write its own laws. Such delegation surely amounts to a dereliction of duty, by the Secretary of State? When I wrote, and complained, it was referred back to the organisation I was complaining about.

 

How can that result in justice?

Edited by Professor Lone Ranger
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I don't take issue with much of what you say - but are you aware it is NOT the DVLA that process the Continuous Registration issues? DVLA got no extra staff, the work was farmed out to a back-office system fron the same company that provides TFL's Congestion Charging - Capita. So, like the PPC's the benefits are well hidden, it is the fines that are paying for the enforcement administration.

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It depends what your appeal is about.

 

I recently asked for a copy of the notice and was sent the latest version which is much more friendly and polite but fortunately I have found the nasty version on my computer today.

 

On the question of an appeal, for it to be right, it needs to be to an impartial court established by law. The DVLA has a complaints procedure but I think that is just aimed at delay.

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Thanks for the advice, I will ask them to send me the a copy of the LLP.

 

I am more likely to get a friendly verson of LLP because my "offence" is recent. Do you expect the dates on the LLP will be still be inccorrect or have they since picked up on this?

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You are probably not aware that in a court case at the Central London County Court 18/07/09 Secretary of state for transport~V~E.T.A. DVLA's old LLP notices were ruled to be Non-compliant with the law. If your original LLP has only 28 days between the letter date and the final date to pay the reduced amount it is non-compliant. DVLA have since changed their SORN LLP's in an attempt to make them compliant.

 

AS DVLA's haven't followed the rules to the letter the penalty as it stands is in theory unenforcable. Following the case of Secretary of state for transport~V~James Collins held at the Clerkenwell County Court on the 26/10/09 District Judge Armon-Jones held that DVLA DO have to follow the law to the letter.

 

 

Remember that county court DOES NOT create case law president. At best it can be introduced at a similar level court as a note for guidance.

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LLP simply means 'Late Licensing Penalty' DVLA notifies its enforcement agencies details of those who they allege to have failed to 're-license their vehicles', even though they have no legal obligation to do so. They then send demands for payment accompanied with what I claim to be harassment of the public, because there is no requirement to re-license a vehicle that is neither on the road nor in use. The LLP is a supplement for failing to pay within 30 days after a licence expires, but that is waived if the amount due is paid within 28 days of receiving the claim. Where DVLA seems to have erred is by delaying the issue of penalty notices to ensure that 30 days have expired after the VEL runs out, thereby not giving RKs the 28 days they are due for time to pay. It seems DVLA is the judge and jury in its own case, making it possible for it to interpret laws as it sees fit. There is not a lot of point of appealing to lawbreakers for the application of the Human Rights Act in their case if normally law abiding citizens are being harassed by them and their agencies. As for the suggestion the laws have been written and passed by our democratically elected representatives, so we have no grounds for complaint, what do those like me who have an MP who has shown no ability to do anything that is not in their own interests do? I tried to make a copy for you but failed. I do not think it would be of any help.

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