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    • Hi welcome to the Forum.  If a PCN is sent out late ie after the 12th day of the alleged offence, the charge cannot then be transferred from the driver to the keeper.T he PCN is deemed to have arrived two days after dispatch so in your case, unless you can prove that Nexus sent the PCN several days after they claim you have very little chance of winning that argument. All is not lost since the majority of PCNs sent out are very poorly worded so that yet again the keeper is not liable to pay the charge, only the driver is now liable. If you post up the PCN, front and back we will be able to confirm whether it is compliant or not. Even if it is ok, there are lots of other reasons why it is not necessary to pay those rogues. 
    • Hi 1 Date of the infringement  arr 28/03/24 21:00, dep 29/03/24 01.27 2 Date on the NTK  08/04/2024 (Date of Issue) 3 Date received Monday 15/04/24 4 Does the NTK mention schedule 4 of The Protections of Freedoms Act 2012?  Yes 5 Is there any photographic evidence of the event? Yes 6 Have you appealed? [Y/N?] post up your appeal] No  7 Who is the parking company? GroupNexus 8. Where exactly [carpark name and town] Petrol Station Roadchef Tibshelf South DE55 5T 'operating in accordance with the BPA's Code of Practice' I received a Parking Charge letter to keeper on Monday 15/04/24, the 17th day after the alleged incident. My understanding is that this is outside the window for notifying. The issue date was 08/04/2024 which should have been in good time for it to have arrived within the notice period but in fact it actually arrived at lunchtime on the 15th. Do I have to prove when it arrived  (and if so how can I do that?) or is the onus on them to prove it was delivered in time? All I can find is that delivery is assumed to be on the second working day after issue which would have been Weds 10//04/24 but it was actually delivered 5 days later than that (thank you Royal Mail!). My husband was present when it arrived - is a family member witness considered sufficient proof?
    • lookinforinfo - many thanks for your reply. It would be very interesting to get the letter of discontinuance. The court receptionist said that the county court was in Gloucester 'today' so that makes me think that some days it is in Gloucester and some days its in Cheltenham, it was maybe changed by the courts and i was never informed, who knows if DCBL were or not. My costs were a gallon of petrol and £3.40 for parking. I certainly don't want to end up in court again that's for sure but never say never lol. Its utterly disgusting the way these crooks can legally treat motorists but that's the uk for you. I'm originally from Scotland so it's good that they are not enforceable there but they certainly still try to get money out of you. I have to admit i have lost count of the pcn's i have received in the last 2 yr and 4 months since coming to England for work, most of them stop bothering you on their own eventually, it was just this one that they took it all the way. Like i mentioned in my WS the the likes of Aldi and other companies can get them cancelled but Mcdonalds refused to help me despite me being a very good customer.   brassednecked - many thanks   honeybee - many thanks   nicky boy - many thanks    
    • Huh? This is nothing about paying just for what I use - I currently prefer the averaged monthly payment - else i wouldn't be in credit month after month - which I am comfortable with - else I wold simply request a part refund - which I  would have done if they hadn't reduced my monthly dd after the complaint I raised (handled slowly and rather badly) highlighted the errors in their systems (one of which they do seem to have fixed) Are you not aware DD is always potentially variable? ah well, look it up - but my deal is a supposed to average the payments over a year, and i dont expect them to change payments (up or down) without my informed agreement ESPECIALLY when I'm in credit over winter.   You are happy with your smart meter - jolly for you I dont want one, dont have to have one  - so wont   I have a box that tells me my electricity usage - was free donkeys years ago and shows me everything I need to know just like a smart meter but doesnt need a smart meter,  and i can manually set my charges - so as a side effect - would show me if the charges from the supplier were mismatched. Doesn't tell me if the meters actually calibrated correctly - but neither does your smart meter. That all relies on a label and the competence of the testers - and the competence of any remote fiddling with the settings. You seem happy with that - thats fine. I'm not.    
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Mobile phone debt


warrenuk
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Hi

Have been reading these forums we some interest but need some help on my next step

 

My daughter recently got a letter from a debt collection agency asking for £763.80p for an old t-mobile bill, whilst she acknowledges that she does owe T-Mobile some money the ammount is far in excess of the amount she thought she owed. She phoned them to try and sort it out and they did an over the phone assessment of her finances ( Currently unemployed ) she offered them £10 a month, they said that was not enough and she should pay £20.

After reading your forums I sent them your Subject Access Requst letter. There reply was as follows

Dear / Sir Madam

 

We write in refreance to your recent letter, the contents of which have been noted

Please see a copy of all our notes on the system and also a copy of your final bill, provided to us by t-mobile. ( This is a one page Bill with no break down of charges )

We can confirm that we have not given your information to any other company, and there has been no fees added by Transcom

T-Mobile do not retain copies of the original airtime agreement at there is no regulatory ""act"" that requires them to do so, being a service agreement of airtime and/or telephone handsets/equipment.

 

All they sent was their breakdown of movements, a one page bill from t-mobile dated 4th March 2010 and a copy of a girobank slip.

 

How would you procede from here

Thanks

Warren

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wasted £10, you only send a SAR to the OC, the debt collector will have nothing worthy of note on you. get in touch with tmobile and query the amount of the final bill and demand a full breakdown.

 

write to the Debt collector (DCA) (dont phone ever) and tell them that you dispute the amount and until such times as tmobile have the decency to submit a full breakdown, they aint getting a penny.

 

Also you tell them what you can afford not the other way round

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Hi Warren.

 

You say an 'old' bill, when was the last payment made on this account

Any advice I give is honest and in good faith.:)

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Personally I'd be pretty unimpressed at the scant information they have sent. If they cannot prove there was actually a contract in place then I don't see how they could get this past a judge.

 

However, did you SAR the DCA or T-Mobile themselves? Also, has the DCA purchased this debt or are they still just T-Mobile's agent?

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Deal with T-Mobile, but do keep the DCA advised about what is going on. There are a couple of DCA's who are issuing statutory demands threatening bankruptcy for such small debts.

 

When you deal with T-Mobile, do make sure that any issues are subject to any necessary formal complaints, as then these are formally note and then she may get a proper response. If a debt is in dispute, DCA's should stop collection activity, until the dispute is resolved.

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All the DCA (who I suspect will be lowells??) need to be told is to clear off account is disputed end of.

It is up to the original creditor to inform their chosen third party goons of the current state of play.

 

Definitely enter into T-mobile's complaints procedure, http://www.t-mobile.co.uk/service/contact-us/email/comments/

 

And exactly how old is this?

Who ever heard of someone getting a job at the Jobcentre? The unemployed are sent there as penance for their sins, not to help them find work!

 

 

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  • 4 weeks later...
Hi

Have been reading these forums we some interest but need some help on my next step

 

"My daughter recently got a letter from a debt collection agency asking for £763.80p for an old t-mobile bill,"

 

 

What you are dealing with here is a buyer of buckets full of old debt for pennies who will attempt to screw as much as possible from you backed up by an indifferent solicitors for whom its an 'earner' with very little effort, by using the 'robust' US methods adopted by, for example, Arrow Global and which gained them a 600% increase in monies claimed and which attracted RBOS to buy a major part of Arrow Global, Guernsey - screwing UK consumers in order to make (?) excessive profits for the UK consumer. It is now a successful industry, by example as it were, full of chancers trying to cash in on people who have let protecting evidence simply 'dissapear' over time.

 

I will be in court soon (by choice, I'm going to nail these scumbags with 'fraud') because I want to see just how far one-such is willing to go by using due process of law to break the law.

 

I will give a full report, and which might send these **** back under the rocks they came from, but don't hold your breath, when the issue resolves in court.

 

Get an 'origin of debt' statement from whoever pursues you - they falsified mine and in a manner I can evidence to show the debt they pursue is not even mine!

 

They want to talk to you/or you to contact them just in case you mention a company (as I did) when trying to remember stuff, and they use that name to pursue a debt, knock up a phoney bill etc.

 

Check my submission today on mobiles.co.uk and Carphone Warehouse to see where the £700+ bill might have been constructed from - usually a breach of contract claim for a lost 2 year contract, and Vodafone attempting to gain money by false pretences from me in a similar revenue earning [problem].

 

I was beginning to think I was a '****' magnet, but I think there are a lot of companies, even major and supposedly respected companies, who are willing to bear down criminally on consumers until challenged.

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T-Mobile (Everything Everywhere) will probably sell the debt, I had a bill from them £800+ there were the usual threats then the debt was sold to Crapquest at which point the amount owing dropped by several hundered pounds.

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heres an idea of a guide of what happened when i was dealing with o2 for a friend

 

debt collection letter for £330, no breakdown

 

emailed DCA stating bill in dispute till breakdown receaved, email only, no doorstep callers

receaved reply stating terms and conditions stated doorstep caller could attend anyway#

replyed stating "intrested they felt T&C's overode law and reported to regulators (never sent it anywhere)"

passed back to o2

 

passed to second debt collectors

advised in dispute as no breakdown

 

passed to 3rd debt collectors

advised in dispute as no breakdown

advised would receave breakdown in post

 

4 months later nothing

 

 

they like trying it on

Please note:

 

  • I am employed in the IT sector of a high street retail chain but am not posting in any official capacity,so therefore any comments,suggestions or opinions are expressly personal ones and should not be viewed as an endorsement or with agreement of any company.
  • i am not legal trained in any form.
  • I have many experiences in life and do often use these in my posts

if ive been helpful kick my scales, if ive been unhelpful kick the scales of the person more helpful :eek:

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T-Mobile (Everything Everywhere) will probably sell the debt, I had a bill from them £800+ there were the usual threats then the debt was sold to Crapquest at which point the amount owing dropped by several hundered pounds.

 

Is it a bill for a two year loss of contract? If so, no one can force a contract of more than a year on anyone. It is unlawful. And if you have cancelled a contract because, for example, 'customer care' treated you shoddily, wasn't up to what would be expected, then it is your Statutory Right to reject a contract even though the 7 days (by god they lobbied and knocked that down!) has passed- a lot of Distance Sellers (google Consumer Protection (Distance Selling ) Act, 2000 it is eay to read and get on top of your Statutory Rights : and it is criminal offence to attempt to undermine to negate a statutory right.

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It occurs to me they dont force a two year contract on you, at the time of taking the contract you sign. If it were unlawful I dont think the networks would get away with continuing to offer 2 year contracts. Further as I understand it there is a 14 day cooling off period on any contract where you can take back the handset and provided you have not run up charges terminate the contract without cost.

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