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    • Good afternoon,    I am writing in reference to the retail dispute number ****, between myself and Newton Autos concerning the sale of a Toyota Avensis which has been found to have serious mechanical faults.    As explained previously the car was found to be faulty just six days after purchase. The car had numerous fault codes that appeared on the dash board and went into limp mode. This required assistance from the AA and this evidence has already been provided. The car continues to exhibit these faults and has been diagnosed as having faults with the fuel injectors which will require major mechanical investigation and repairs.    Newton Autos did not make me aware of any faults upon purchase of the vehicle and sold it as being in good condition.    Newton Autos have also refused to honour their responsibilities under The Consumer Rights Act 2015 which requires them to refund the customer if the goods are found to be faulty and not fit for purpose within 30 days of purchase.    Newton Autos also refused to accept my rejection of the vehicle and refused to refund the car and accept the return of the vehicle.    It is clear to me that the car is not fit for purpose as these mechanical faults occurred so soon after purchase and have been shown to be present by both the AA and an independent mechanic.   Kind regards
    • Commercial Landlords are legally allowed to sue for early cancellation of the lease. You can only surrender your lease if your landlord agrees to your doing so. They are under no obligation even to consider your request and are entitled to refuse. You cannot use this as an excuse not to pay your rent. Your landlord is most likely to agree to your surrendering the lease if they want the property back in order to redevelop it, or if they wants to rent it to what they regards as a better tenant or at a higher rent. There are two types of surrender: Express surrender in writing. This is a written document which sets out the terms of the surrender. Implied surrender by conduct. (applies to your position) You can move out of the property you leased, simply hand your keys back and the lease will come to an end, but only if the landlord agrees to accept your surrender. Many tenants have thought they can simply post the keys through the landlord's letter box and the lease is ended. This is not true and without a document from the landlord, not only do you not know if the landlord has accepted the surrender, you also do not know on what basis they have accepted and could find they sue you for rent arrears, service charge arrears, damage to the property and compensation for your attempt to leave the property without the landlord's agreement. Unless you are absolutely certain that the landlord is agreeable to your departure, you should not attempt to imply a surrender by relying on your and the landlord's conduct.  
    • I had to deal with these last year worst DCA I have ever dealt with. Just wait for the constant threats of CCJ and how you'll lose in court and how they won't do mediation and they want the judge to question you with a load of "BIG" words to boot with the letter. My case was struck out in the end, stupidity on their part as I admitted to owing the debt in the end going through the court process was just a formality as they wouldn't let it drop despite me admitting the debt regardless. They didn't send the last part of the court paper work in so it ended up being struck out     .
    • Well, that's it then. Clear proof of the rubbish cameras. Clear proof of double dipping. G24 won't be getting a penny. Belt & braces, I would write to the address LFI has found, include the evidence of double dipping, and ask Fraser Group to call their dogs off.
    • LOL. after sending Perch capital a CCA request with a stapled £1 PO attached (x2) Their lapdog Legal team TM Legal have sent me two letters today saying "due to a recent payment on the account, your account is open to legal/enforcement action" so i guess they have tried to apply that payment to the account to run the statue bar along. dirty tactics lol.
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Being Mailed By Wescot For A Debt I Don't Owe!


Daffy Duck
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Right, keep it short and sweet I think.

 

I've moved into a property that's owned by the council. I'm now getting red letters from Wescot that are addressed to a previous tenant because there is a debt of over £450 for the water company to the address.

 

When I contacted the water company to set a new account set up in the first week, I was informed about the debt but made clear that it was absolutely nothing to do with me.

 

Two months down the line, a red headed letter came about the debt. Phoned the water company up and the agent on the phone said I could ignore said letter.

 

Now a final notice has arrived stating in a nutshell, pay us now or we'll send a debt collector round or see you in court.

 

The previous tenant had correspondence from various companies (that I'm now receiving) for various things that should have ideally been stopped before they left - Child Fund details, Cash ISAs, even Tesco Clubcard vouchers and statements. I've sent all of this stuff back or notified the companies in question. I have no contact details for the tenant as it's a council property.

 

So basically, I owe the water company nothing. If anything, it's in credit. Everything else is in credit, rent, power, gas and council tax. Therefore how do I get Wescot out of my mailbox, so to speak, and stop mailing me for a debt that's to the previous tenant, please?

 

Thanks in advance.

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Hi Daffy,

 

Welcome to the Consumer Action Group :)

 

Ringing Creditors/DCA's is never a good idea.

 

Best thing to do is send this letter :-

 

http://www.consumerforums.com/resources/templates-library/86-debt-collectors/573-general-debt-letter-if-you-know-nothing-of-the-debt

 

Remember to inclued the date you moved into the property.

 

Hope this helps,

 

Lex

Please help us to help you. Download the CAG tool bar for free

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Please don't rush, take time to read these:-

 

 

&

 

 

This is always worth referring to

 

 

 

 

 

Advice & opinions given by me are personal, are not endorsed by the Consumer Action Group or the Bank Action Group. Should you be in any doubt, you are advised to seek the opinion of a qualified professional.

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Thanks to the two contributors, very much appreciated.

 

I will send the template letter off to Wescot and hopefully this will be the end of the issue. I will update the post as and when I have an update.

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The previous tenants of where I now live did a runner owing around £35k on loans, catalogues, etc. They had had their mail held at the Royal Mail delivery office for 3 months and told me they were moving to Spain. 3 months later a huge pile of around 300 letters lands on the doormat. I used to get 4-8 DCA letters a week and in the end I just sent them back as, "Not at this address, left in october 2001."

 

9 Years later and I still get occasional letters for them, from the bottom pondlife DCA's like Lowells and Wescot, etc. (I can tell without opening them, as I have experienced most DCA's over the last 3 years, and can spot their begging letters a mile off.

 

But no hassle myself as a result of the old tenants. Just send any letters back. :D You could even give the letters to your postman and explain that the person it's addressed to doesn't live here anymore. Then in future they will automatically return the letters to the sender for you at the local mail sorting office.

These are video links to show how I deal with Debt Collectors.

 

Fly fishing for C.A.R.S

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=zPtzK8FqE6k&feature=related

 

Frederickson International don't accept my card type

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=eiZBULlWW6Q&feature=related

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