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    • Yup, for goodness sake she needs to stop paying right now, DCA's are powerless, as .  Is it showing on their credit file? Best to use Check my file. All of the above advice is excellent, definitely SAR the loan company as soon as possible.
    • Hi all, I am wandering if this is appealable. It has already been through a challenge on the Islington website and the it was rejected. Basically there was a suspended bay sign on a post on Gee st which was obscured by a Pizza van. The suspension was for 3 bays outside 47 Gee st. I parked outside/between 47 & 55 Gee st. I paid via the phone system using a sign a few meters away from my car. When I got back to the car there was a PCN stuck to the windscreen which I had to dry out before I could read it due to rain getting into the plastic sticky holder.  I then appealed using the Islington website which was then rejected the next day. I have attached a pdf of images that I took and also which the parking officer took. There are two spaces in front of the van, one of which had a generator on it the other was a disabled space. I would count those as 3 bays? In the first image circled in red is the parking sign I read. In the 2nd image is the suspension notice obscured by the van. I would have had to stand in the middle of the road to read this, in fact that's where I was standing when I took the photo. I have pasted the appeal and rejection below. Many thanks for looking. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- This is my appeal statement: As you can see from the image attached (image 1) I actually paid £18.50 to park my car in Gee st. I parked the car at what I thought was outside 55 Gee st as seen in image 2 attached. When I read the PCN issued it stated there was a parking suspension. There was no suspension notice on the sign that I used to call the payment service outside number 55 Gee st. I looked for a suspension notice and eventually found one which was obscured by a large van and generator parked outside 47 Gee st. As seen in images 3 and 4 attached. I am guessing the parking suspension was to allow the Van to park and sell Pizza during the Clerkenwell design week. I was not obstructing the use or parking of the van, in fact the van was obstructing the suspension notice which meant I could not read or see it without prior knowledge it was there. I would have had to stand in the road to see it endangering myself as I had to to take images to illustrate the hidden notice. As there was no intention to avoid a parking charge and the fact the sign was not easily visible I would hope this challenge can be accepted. Many thanks.   This is the text from the rejection: Thank you for contacting us about the above Penalty Charge Notice (PCN). The PCN was issued because the vehicle was parked in a suspended bay or space. I note from your correspondence that there was no suspension notice on the sign that you used to call the payment serve outside number 55 Gee Street. I acknowledge your comments, however, your vehicle was parked in a bay which had been suspended. The regulations require the suspension warning to be clearly visible. It is a large bright yellow sign and is erected by the parking bay on the nearest parking plate to the area that is to be suspended. Parking is then not permitted in the bay for any reason or period of time, however brief. The signs relating to this suspension were sited in accordance with the regulations. Upon reviewing the Civil Enforcement Officer's (CEO's) images and notes, I am satisfied that sufficient signage was in place and that it meets statutory requirements. Whilst I note that the signage may have been obstructed by a large van and generator at the time, please note, it is the responsibility of the motorist to locate and check the time plate each time they park. This will ensure that any changes to the status of the bay are noted. I acknowledge that your vehicle possessed a RingGo session at the time, however, this does not authorize parking within a suspended bay. Suspension restrictions are established to facilitate specific activities like filming or construction, therefore, we anticipate the vehicle owner to relocate the vehicle from the suspended area until the specified date and time when the suspension concludes. Leaving a vehicle unattended for any period of time within a suspended bay, effectively renders the vehicle parked in contravention and a Civil Enforcement Officer (CEO) may issue a PCN. Finally, the vehicle was left parked approximately 5 metres away from the closest time plate notice. It is the responsibility of the driver to ensure they park in a suitable parking place and check all signs and road markings prior to leaving their vehicle parked in contravention. It remains the driver's responsibility to ensure that the vehicle is parked legally at all times. With that being said, I would have to inform you, your appeal has been rejected at this stage. Please see the below images as taken by the CEO whilst issuing the PCN: You should now choose one of the following options: Pay the penalty charge. We will accept the discounted amount of £65.00 in settlement of this matter, provided it is received by 10 June 2024. After that date, the full penalty charge of £130.00 will be payable. Or Wait for a Notice to Owner (NtO) to be issued to the registered keeper of the vehicle, who is legally responsible for paying the penalty charge. Any further correspondence received prior to the NtO being issued may not be responded to. The NtO gives the recipient the right to make formal representations against the penalty charge. If we reject those representations, there will be the right of appeal to the Environment and Traffic Adjudicator.   Gee st pdf.pdf
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    • Well done.   Please let us know how it goes or come back with any questions. HB
    • Incorrect as the debt will have been legally assigned to the DCA and they are therefore now the legal creditor. Read up on debt assignment.   Andy
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House owned outright - told I have to sell it!?


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Many years ago my father died and as a result the house he shared with my mum was paid off in full. Eventually my mum remarried but was keen to ensure that her new husband and his family would not benifit from any inheritence (in the event of her death) in relation to the house and that this should come to me and my bother and sister. A will was drawn up which states that my upon mums death the house would belong to the three of us but we would be prevented from moving in or selling it because my step father could remain resident unless he remarried or began cohabiting. My mum unfortunately died and in accordance with the will the house now belongs to the three of us but my step father remains resident. Our relationship with him broke down soon after. Some years later he now has to move into a care home due to blindness. Our solicitor have notified us that if this is the case then the house will have to be sold, the money banked and the interest earned provided to my step father until his death, or alternativley rented out and the proceeds going to him until his death.

Surely this cannot be correct, he has no ownership rights to the house, simply a condition of residence which prevents us from treating it as our own until he marries, cohabits or dies. Surely we don't have to sell our inheritence? can anyone help?

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Ok, I don't know the law but as a lay person my thoughts are that your mother's will made provision for your step father's housing needs until one or more of several conditions arose:

 

a)death b)marriage c) co-habitation.

 

As none of the above has occurred then I'm guessing that legally your step-father still has an interest in the marital home but this is being realised in a different manner.

 

For example, if you did rent the house out and gave the profit to your step father, how would this be any different financially to you than if he were still living there?

Edited by WelshMam2009

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I don't know the answer to this but I'm horrified to think that this could be the case.

 

As more and more people need to go into care homes I'm surprised that the solicitor who drew up the will didn't take this possibility into account. If he should have done then you may have a case against him. You need to know what kind of clauses solicitors today put in wills, because the situation you describe clearly wasn't what your mum would have wanted.

 

I'm sure some expert advice will come along soon.

 

DD

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I can see Welshmam's point, but care homes are expensive. If you have to rent the house out, would the rent cover the care home costs?

 

I really don't see why you should have to sell it and maybe lose all the equity if he lives for another 20/30 years for example because the whole lot could be swallowed up.

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I can see Welshmam's point, but care homes are expensive. If you have to rent the house out, would the rent cover the care home costs?

 

I really don't see why you should have to sell it and maybe lose all the equity if he lives for another 20/30 years for example because the whole lot could be swallowed up.

 

I think you're earlier post is correct Daniella insofar as I don't believe that this is what Mattmarkham's Mum intended.

 

If there is no significant surplus via rental income then I guess the local authority will have to pick up the tab. If the property is sold then it is only the interest and not the equity that will be affected. However, this will effectively diminish over time which is why rental is probably the best long term option.

 

Also, any maintenance costs, necessary improvement works and statutory inspection costs and fees etc should all be off set against any profit.

 

One other thought, if the step father has been admitted to a nursing home because he needs nursing care then I don't believe that he should necessarily be paying for this. HOWEVER, whilst he is still alive, then I'm not sure that you can sell the property and simply divvy it up between the 3 siblings.

 

Just to say, in fairness, it is not the elderly gentleman who is benefiting here but the State!!

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Thanks everone who has replied so far, all very useful.

My thoughts are that he would have been means tested, and in making their determination about who much he has in terms of assets the house should not have even been considered because his rights over the property are limited to conditional occupation rather than any form of ownership

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Thanks Welshmam2009. I agree with you that because his health requires him to go into a care home he sohould not necessarily pay - I am not however entirely sure of the situation in this respect and the letter form his solicitor doesn't make that clear. If this is the case I can see no reason to sell the property, but also accept that we cannot, despite being on the deeds, do anything with the property whislt under the terms of the will we are technically displaced occupiers until he dies.

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Hi all (hi welshmam!)

 

my elderly mother has just spent 9 months in hospital, and 2 weeks ago due to no longer being able to live alone, she now needs 24 hour nursing care, has been moved into a nursing home.

She owns her own property outright, and she has been told by by our local council she does not qualify for fully funded care, so we have been told to sell the property to pay for her care, are you ready for the cost......its £600 PER WEEK.

She was in St Thomas's hospital in London for these nine months and looked after by 5 different consultants, who, when she was discharged recommended she qualify for fully funded care, because she is so ill. Our council says she does not qualify, they only want our money, thats why!

 

Your stepfather is not a homeowner, and the house does not belong to him, so he should be funded by your local council, DO NOT take anything for granted what the local authourity say, or the solicitors, as we have discovered many of the sols do not know the law with regard to this situation.

We have now found a solicitor who works in this field and she is acting on our behalf fighting the council's decision, and it looks positive.

 

The house belongs to you and your siblings, look into this much more, do not just take what these people are saying at face value!

 

good luck

 

MJ:)

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I thought there were cases recently where it was proved in many cases there should not be sale of the property where care is necessary.I will have a hunt around.

Please note I am not an expert - I am not offering opinions or legal help - Please use all the information provided on the site in FAQ- step by step instructions and library- thanks Jansus:)

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif

offer from A&L 24/8/07 - after case stayed

 

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Please note I am not an expert - I am not offering opinions or legal help - Please use all the information provided on the site in FAQ- step by step instructions and library- thanks Jansus:)

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif

offer from A&L 24/8/07 - after case stayed

 

"What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well." - Antione de Saint Exupery

 

 

PROUD TO BE AN ORANGE

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Your home, your assets and your care home fees : Directgov - Health and well-being

 

 

interesting suggestion to rent house out to pay fees .

Please note I am not an expert - I am not offering opinions or legal help - Please use all the information provided on the site in FAQ- step by step instructions and library- thanks Jansus:)

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif

offer from A&L 24/8/07 - after case stayed

 

"What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well." - Antione de Saint Exupery

 

 

PROUD TO BE AN ORANGE

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But if you have no spouse or relative, you can prevent a forced sale by the council. For a modest fee to cover, in many cases, an amendment to property title deeds, there is a potential solution, says Mike Warburton, a tax partner at Grant Thornton, in The Times. Most couples buy a home as “joint tenants”, which ensures that on the death of one of them, their share of the property is automatically transferred to the other.

But it is also possible for a couple to own a property as “tenants in common”, giving both parties the freedom to give their share to whomever they like on death. So, if a husband dies and leaves his, say, 50% share of a property to a “discretionary will trust” (that holds his share for the benefit of, for instance, his children), then the value of his wife’s share in the property may be ignored at the point at which she needs care.

That’s because Department of Health rules only give local authorities the right to value the surviving spouse’s “interest in the property… not the property itself” when means testing for care support. That interest, in turn, is deemed to be worthless because the value of the widow’s share of the house can’t be established via a sale until the surviving children and the trust agree to one. This might sound a bit fiddly, but if you want your family property to remain in the family, then it is well worth taking legal advice on.

 

 

 

 

also found on age concern

 

only recently found out that when my mother was in an authority run residential home from

2002 until 2004 (self funding) she was eventually assessed as needing 24hr nursing care

and moved to a private Nursing Home by SS. She died earlier this year and it soon became apparent that

there were serious problems with her finances this has resulted in my employing a solicitor to

get some justice for my mother as every penny (and more) has gone. The upshot of all this is

the solicitor has read several documents including a psychologist report and the final joint assessment by

the Local Health Authority (District Nurse) and the Local Authority (Care manager) where it clearing

stated she needed 24hr care, because of physical and mental problems i.e immobile and dementia.

But what we didn't know was that she qualified for 'Continuing Care' that is all her fee's should have been paid for by the NHS.

It's going to be a long battle but my solicitor is trying to claim back at least 4 1/2yrs of funding.

 

So please make sure you get good impartial advice and cover every avenue before you let the

local Authority tell you what you have to do.

Edited by jansus

Please note I am not an expert - I am not offering opinions or legal help - Please use all the information provided on the site in FAQ- step by step instructions and library- thanks Jansus:)

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif

offer from A&L 24/8/07 - after case stayed

 

"What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well." - Antione de Saint Exupery

 

 

PROUD TO BE AN ORANGE

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  • 3 weeks later...

This thread might hold some useful info for you too that I had filed http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/benefits-tax-credits-minimum/151137-social-security-nhs-continuing.html

 

mandyjayne sorry to hear about your mums declining health, Matt hope you get things sorted soon.

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Original poster - can you let us know if information has been of any use?

Please note I am not an expert - I am not offering opinions or legal help - Please use all the information provided on the site in FAQ- step by step instructions and library- thanks Jansus:)

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif

offer from A&L 24/8/07 - after case stayed

 

"What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well." - Antione de Saint Exupery

 

 

PROUD TO BE AN ORANGE

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Eventually my mum remarried but was keen to ensure that her new husband and his family would not benifit from any inheritence (in the event of her death) in relation to the house and that this should come to me and my bother and sister. A will was drawn up which states that my upon mums death the house would belong to the three of us but we would be prevented from moving in or selling it because my step father could remain resident unless he remarried or began cohabiting.

 

Your step-father did not inherit the house... therefore the house is not his to sell. He was simply given permission to carry on living there.... If the property has been willed to the 3 of you and your step-father is not on the Title Deeds, then there's no case to answer.

 

Personally, I would fight this one... someone's trying it on or haven't got their facts right re. your step-father.

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