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    • 05.05.24 Ever so sorry if I have entered this in the wrong part of this website.   My grandfather is in his 70's and retired.  He asked me to help him find a work pension that he was paying into when he was working. From 1967 - 1982 he worked for a Fabric Dying Company, Celanese, Spondon Derby UK. I have already used the GOV.uk Trace Pension Scheme. It listed a few pension companies : Akzo Nobel (CPS) Pension Scheme formerly Courtaulds Pension Scheme.  I do not fully understand how this works but I think this scheme is administer by a company called Willis Tower Watson. We have called this company, got through to the pension department submitted all my grandfather's details (D.O.B. , N.I. no. etc.) but that agent tells that they have no record of my grandfather and ask what is the name of the pension scheme. Here is the problem, his home was burgalled in 2005 and a briefcase which contained his legal documents was stolen. So he does not know who was the Pension Scheme company. I have a this phone number 01332 681 210 for Celanese but it just rings and never gets answered. So I am asking for help if anyone can tell us where we can try next. I am also hoping for a massive long shot that one of them members on this website, worked for or knows someone who worked for British Celanese Spondon Derby and could tell us of any pension company. Thanks for any help.
    • Well I sent them the letter of claim, the only responses so far was a few emails reopening the claims on the parcels where they asked for information such as proof of value (which I get) but other things like photos of the parcels, which I haven't got as I never took photos of them. It's been well over the 14 days since I sent the letter now anyway, so what do you think I should do now?
    • Know it has already been answered, but? Does not explain why JCI has registered a different default date when they get the information from the original creditor, Virgin
    • Since you were stopped at the time there is no requirement for the police give you anything there and then or to send you anything before they have decided how to deal with the offence.  They have three choices: Offer you a course Offer you a fixed penalty (£100 and three points) Prosecute you in court  The only option that has a formal time limit is (3). They must begin court proceedings within six months of the date of the alleged offence. Options (1) and (2) have no time limit but since the only alternative the police have if you decline those offers is (3) they will not usually offer a course beyond three months from the date of the offence and will not usually offer a fixed penalty beyond four months from that date. This is so as to allow time for the driver to accept and comply with their offer and to give them the time to go to option (3) if he declines or ignores it.  Unless there is a good reason to do otherwise, the action they take will usually be in accordance with the National Police Chiefs' Council's guidance on speeding enforcement. In a 40mph limit this is as follows Up to 45mph - no action. Between 46mph and 53mph - offer a course Between 54mph and 65mph - offer a fixed penalty Over 65mph - prosecution in court So you can see that 54mph should see you offered a fixed penalty. Three weeks is not overly long for a fixed penalty offer to arrive. As well as that, there has been Easter in that period which will have slowed things down a bit. However, I would suggest that if it gets to about two months from the offence date and you have still heard nohing, I would contact the ticket office for the area where you were stopped to see if anything has been sent to you. Of course this raises the danger that you might be "stirring the hornets' nest". But in all honesty, if the police have decided to take no action, you jogging their memory should not really influence them. The bigger danger, IMHO, is that your fixed penalty offer may have been sent but lost and if you do not respond it will lapse. This will see the police revert to option (3) above. Whilst there is a mechanism in these circumstances  to persuade the court to sentence you at the fixed penalty level (rather than in accordance with the normal guidelines which will see a harsher penalty), it relies on them believing you when you say you did not received an offer. In any case it is aggravation you could well do without so for the sake of a phone call, I'd enquire if it was me.  I think I've answered all your questions but if I can help further just let me know. Just a tip - if you are offered a fixed penalty be sure to submit your driving licence details as instructed. I've seen lots of instances where a driver has not done this. There will be no reminder and no second chance; your £100 will be refunded and the police will prosecute you through the courts.
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      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.

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      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Just want to be sure!!


chrisnorden
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Ready to start court action against Barclays. I'm just a little nervous that the spreadsheet (which now includes 8% statutory interest claim) is error free, as I would hate to fail due to "incompetence" on my part.

Also, should the 8% be applied from the date I raised the claim i.e. 22/8/06 or from the planned court application date - 9/10/06?

 

I've included my spreadsheet. Any help would be gratefully received. Thanks in advance.

 

TYPE YOUR FULL NAME HERE

TYPE YOUR BANK'S NAME HERE

TYPE YOUR SORT CODE HERE

TYPE YOUR ACCOUNT CODE HERE

CLAIM DATE:22-Aug-2006

INTEREST RATE:8.00%Pa

TOTAL CLAIM:1,416.90

DAILY INTEREST RATE£0.31

TOTAL AMOUNTS£1,148.35

£268.55

Charge ReasonCharge AmountCharge DateInterestInterest£6.5922/11/99£3.56Paid Referral£20.0022/12/99£10.67Interest£6.4822/12/99£3.46Interest£5.2624/01/00£2.77Interest£6.4522/02/00£3.35Interest£5.0022/03/00£2.57Interest£5.8822/04/00£2.98Interest£4.0622/05/00£2.03Interest£2.9222/06/00£1.44Interest£6.5424/07/00£3.18Interest£1.6323/11/00£0.75Interest£2.6122/12/00£1.18Interest£1.5322/01/01£0.68Interest£6.6722/02/01£2.93Interest£11.3622/03/01£4.93Interest£7.4322/03/01£3.22Interest£9.0423/04/01£3.86Paid Referral£20.0022/06/01£8.27Interest£11.0822/06/01£4.58Interest£1.8423/07/01£0.75Interest£1.0622/08/01£0.42Interest£2.1224/09/01£0.83Interest£0.6022/10/01£0.23Interest£0.6922/11/01£0.26Paid Referral£20.0029/11/01£7.57Interest£3.3024/12/01£1.23Interest£1.0422/01/02£0.38Paid Referral£20.0023/01/02£7.33Paid Referral£20.0024/01/02£7.32Paid Referral£20.0025/01/02£7.32Unpaids out£25.0028/01/02£9.13Paid Referral£20.0012/02/02£7.24Paid Referral£20.0018/02/02£7.22Interest£5.3822/02/02£1.94Interest£5.4622/03/02£1.93Interest£1.9522/04/02£0.68Paid Referral£20.0026/04/02£6.92Paid Referral£20.0015/05/02£6.84Paid Referral£20.0016/05/02£6.83Interest£2.8622/05/02£0.97Paid Referral£20.0022/05/02£6.81Interest£5.3224/06/02£1.77Interest£2.0622/07/02£0.67Interest£0.9322/08/02£0.30Interest£2.4923/09/02£0.78Interest£2.1122/10/02£0.65Paid Referral£20.0018/11/02£6.02Interest£2.5822/11/02£0.77Interest£3.3523/12/02£0.98Paid Referral£20.0021/01/03£5.74Paid Referral£20.0022/01/03£5.73Interest£0.7922/01/03£0.23Interest£3.0824/02/03£0.86Interest£0.6324/03/03£0.17Paid Referral£20.0011/07/03£4.99Interest£3.4922/07/03£0.86Paid Referral£20.0025/07/03£4.93Interest£7.5922/08/03£1.82Interest£6.2822/09/03£1.47Paid Referral£20.0023/09/03£4.66Paid Referral£20.0024/09/03£4.66Paid Referral£25.0021/10/03£5.68Interest£5.8822/10/03£1.33Paid Referral£25.0014/11/03£5.55Interest£7.5824/11/03£1.66Paid Referral£25.0025/11/03£5.48Paid Referral£25.0026/11/03£5.48Paid Referral£25.0015/12/03£5.38Interest£6.1822/12/03£1.32Interest£6.4222/01/04£1.33Interest£4.9823/02/04£0.99Interest£0.3322/03/04£0.06Interest£0.8022/04/04£0.15Interest£3.4024/05/04£0.61Interest£3.6122/06/04£0.63Paid Referral£25.0025/06/04£4.32Interest£5.1122/07/04£0.85Interest£5.1223/08/04£0.82Paid Referral£25.0025/08/04£3.98Interest£5.6822/09/04£0.87Interest£4.3122/10/04£0.63Interest£4.3322/11/04£0.61Interest£3.7622/12/04£0.50Interest£0.6924/01/05£0.09Interest£2.4022/02/05£0.29Interest£1.2222/03/05£0.14Interest£2.0322/04/05£0.22Paid Referral£25.0011/05/05£2.56Interest£3.9923/05/05£0.40Interest£7.0022/06/05£0.65Paid Referral£25.0023/06/05£2.33Paid Referral£25.0024/06/05£2.32Interest£6.9322/07/05£0.60Interest£4.6922/08/05£0.38Interest£4.2022/09/05£0.31Interest£4.0824/10/05£0.27Interest£3.8822/11/05£0.23Paid Referral£25.0016/12/05£1.36Interest£6.6122/12/05£0.35Interest£4.0823/01/06£0.19Interest£5.2622/02/06£0.21Interest£4.0322/03/06£0.14Interest£5.2424/04/06£0.14Paid Referral£30.0025/04/06£0.78Paid Referral£30.0026/04/06£0.78Interest£6.5722/05/06£0.13Interest£2.3122/06/06£0.03Paid Referral£30.0013/07/06£0.26Paid Referral£30.0017/07/06£0.24Paid Referral£30.0018/07/06£0.23Interest£3.7124/07/06£0.02Interest£4.4122/08/06£0.00

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Hi There

Just wanted to say good luck. After hearing Martin Lewis on Radio 2 I just had to check out this website. I too find taking on the big boys daunting, yet, encouraging reading the success stories. Barclays have charged me £1200 over the last 2 years, with the help (hopefully) of this board i intend to get it back. This is my first post on this board.

All the best.

MickeyB

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Guest ian cognito

If you have just entered your figures and dates into the spreadheet and it has worked out your number of days and amount of interest then it is error free! Only human interference in formuae cannot be certified!!

 

Not sure what you mean by the second query? The 8% is applied at the tme you submit your money claim or N1 to the court.

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For each charge the interest is 8% per annum (=approx 0.022% per day) from the time the charge was applied to your account, right up to the date you get your money back.

 

Since you don't know exactly when you're going to receive the cash, you work it out as follows:

 

First (the spreadsheet does this for you) work out the interest on each charge from the day it was applied up to your claim date, and total them up.

 

Then multiply the total of charges (before interest) by 0.00022 to get the amount of interest to be added each day, and put this amount on your claim form as the daily interest rate.

Victimnomore

By day, quiet unassuming bank customer - but, by night, .. .. .. .. ..

Barclays Case1

14/03/07 **WON** FULL settlement £3358.39

Barclays Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £187.91 back.

Halifax Case1

14/03/07 **WON** Refunded £728 (including £54 costs)

Halifax Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £268.24 back.

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I notice that you seem to have included on your spreadsheet, the (overdraft) interest charges that the bank has applied to your account.

 

Be careful.

 

The bank is pefectly entitled to charge you interest on your overdraft. The only reason for claiming this back would be if the overdraft which gave rise to the interest was itself caused by previous reclaimable charges. You need to be sure of this.

 

You also need to include a note in your "Particulars of claim" such as, "The claimant also claims the return of £XXX.XX levied by the defendant in the way of overdraft interest on overdrafts caused solely by disproportionate penalty charges."

Victimnomore

By day, quiet unassuming bank customer - but, by night, .. .. .. .. ..

Barclays Case1

14/03/07 **WON** FULL settlement £3358.39

Barclays Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £187.91 back.

Halifax Case1

14/03/07 **WON** Refunded £728 (including £54 costs)

Halifax Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £268.24 back.

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Many thanks for your replies & encouragement.

 

It is true to say that SOME of the interest was because of the overdraft.

 

What do I do for the best (i.e. make sure my action doesn't fail)?

 

Do I remove the interest part, and charge the 8% only on the 'Paid Referral' fees, or do I let it go & take my chances of a reduced offer?

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Many thanks for your replies & encouragement.

 

It is true to say that SOME of the interest was because of the overdraft.

 

What do I do for the best (i.e. make sure my action doesn't fail)?

 

Do I remove the interest part, and charge the 8% only on the 'Paid Referral' fees, or do I let it go & take my chances of a reduced offer?

 

if the overdraft interest is because of charges and is a substantial amount then claim it but if it is not it is probably better to leave it. However it is your choice.:D

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Does this help, it's a post I made elsewhere about claiming overdraft interest:-

 

To work it out 100% accurately, you need to know Barclays accounting period dates for the last six years, the history of their overdraft interest rates and their accounting practices together with your account balance history. Chances are, if you're reliant on S.A.R - (Subject Access Request) data as oposed to standard statements, you only have the last of these.

 

However, this may be helpful:

 

Barclays calculate overdraft interest by "accounting periods" each of about 4 weeks, and they charge overdraft interest to your account, depending on how overdrawn you were during the period, about 2 weeks after the end of the period. The period dates are quoted in some of their "helpful" letters (the ones that say "For clarification .. ), and also on standard statements under "About your next statement".

 

First you need a list of the charges you're claiming back, with a running total from oldest to newest.

 

Then compare the amount by which you were overdrawn in each accounting period to that running total at that time.

 

If the running total of charges is greater than your maximum overdraft in any accounting period, then the overdraft interest charged for that period is just as invalid as the unlawful fees - and just as reclaimable!!

Victimnomore

By day, quiet unassuming bank customer - but, by night, .. .. .. .. ..

Barclays Case1

14/03/07 **WON** FULL settlement £3358.39

Barclays Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £187.91 back.

Halifax Case1

14/03/07 **WON** Refunded £728 (including £54 costs)

Halifax Case2

08/09/08 Prelim: please give me my £268.24 back.

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