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    • They have defended the claim by saying that the job was of unsatisfactory standard and they had to call another carpenter to remedy. My husband has text messages about them losing the keys a second time and also an email. What do they hope to achieve??? Most importantly,  as far as I have seen online, now I need to wait for paperwork from the court, correct?
    • The Notice to Hirer does not comply with the protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule  4 . This is before I ask if Europarks have sent you a copy of the PCN they sent to Arval along with a copy of the hire agreement et. if they haven't done that either you are totally in the clear and have nothing to worry about and nothing to pay. The PCN they have sent you is supposed to be paid by you according to the Act within 21 days. The chucklebuts have stated 28 days which is the time that motorists have to pay. Such a basic and simple thing . The Act came out in 2012 and still they cannot get it right which is very good news for you. Sadly there is no point in telling them- they won't accept it because they lose their chance to make any money out of you. they are hoping that by writing to you demanding money plus sending in their  unregulated debt collectors and sixth rate solicitors that you might be so frightened as to pay them money so that you can sleep at night. Don't be surprised if some of their letters are done in coloured crayons-that's the sort of  level of people you will be dealing with. Makes great bedding for the rabbits though. Euro tend not to be that litigious but while you can safely ignore the debt collectors just keep an eye out for a possible Letter of Claim. They are pretty rare but musn't be ignored. Let us know so that you can send a suitably snotty letter to them showing that you are not afraid of them and are happy to go to Court as you like winning.  
    • They did reply to my defence stating it would fail and enclosed copies of NOA, DN Term letter and account statements. All copies of T&C's that could be reconstructions and the IP address on there resolves to the town where MBNA offices are, not my location
    • Here are 7 of our top tips to help you connect with young people who have left school or otherwise disengaged.View the full article
    • My defence was standard no paperwork:   1.The Defendant contends that the particulars of claim are generic in nature. The Defendant accordingly sets out its case below and relies on CPR r 16.5 (3) in relation to any particular allegation to which a specific response has not been made. 2. Paragraph 1 is noted. The Defendant has had a contractual relationship with MBNA Limited in the past. The Defendant does not recognise the reference number provided by the claimant within its particulars and has sought verification from the claimant who is yet to comply with requests for further information. 3. Paragraph 2 is denied. The Defendant maintains that a default notice was never received. The Claimant is put to strict proof to that a default notice was issued by MBNA Limited and received by the Defendant. 4. Paragraph 3 is denied. The Defendant is unaware of any legal assignment or Notice of Assignment allegedly served from either the Claimant or MBNA Limited. 5. On the xx/xx/2023 the Defendant requested information pertaining to this claim by way of a CCA 1974 Section 78 request. The claimant is yet to respond to this request. On the xx/xx/2023 a CPR 31.14 request was sent to Kearns who is yet to respond. To date, xx/xx/2023, no documentation has been received. The claimant remains in default of my section 78 request. 6. It is therefore denied with regards to the Defendant owing any monies to the Claimant, the Claimant has failed to provide any evidence of proof of assignment being sent/ agreement/ balance/ breach or termination requested by CPR 31.14, therefore the Claimant is put to strict proof to: (a) show how the Defendant entered into an agreement; and (b) show and evidence the nature of breach and service of a default notice pursuant to Section 87(1) CCA1974 (c) show how the claimant has reached the amount claimed for; and (d) show how the Claimant has the legal right, either under statute or equity to issue a claim; 7. As per Civil Procedure Rule 16.5(4), it is expected that the Claimant prove the allegation that the money is owed. 8. On the alternative, as the Claimant is an assignee of a debt, it is denied that the Claimant has the right to lay a claim due to contraventions of Section 136 of the Law of Property Act and Section 82A of the consumer credit Act 1974. 9. By reasons of the facts and matters set out above, it is denied that the Claimant is entitled to the relief claimed or any relief.
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Debt Recovery Plus's answer to how charge is calculated


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A colleague received one of Parking Eye's charge letters - he overstayed by some 20 minutes in a free car park which serves a supermarket and several other shops (they just didn't finish their shopping in time) . I gave him the letter suggested on CAG particularly asking how the charge was calculated - affixed is their explanation !

 

Unless I'm missing something - I cannot understand how staying longer in a car park that is free anyway - has cost the landowner any money ?????

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It doesnt cost them anything. Its already been proven in court. Its nothing more than a speculative invoice

Any advice i give is my own and is based solely on personal experience. If in any doubt about a situation , please contact a certified legal representative or debt counsellor..

 

 

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Also all their 'costs' cannot be reclaimed through the motorist. Espcially if the car park is free. A court would simply ask why overstayers are charged but normal users arent.

 

THe costs they state are their normal costs that do t change and have no maintenance and cannot be attributed to overstayers.

 

IIrc there was a court case on pepipo where the judge came down on another company who tried this and threatened to jail their directors and legal team.

Any advice i give is my own and is based solely on personal experience. If in any doubt about a situation , please contact a certified legal representative or debt counsellor..

 

 

If my advice helps you, click the star icon at the bottom of my post and feel free to say thanks

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I find that quite funny really.

 

as everything listed

 

has solely been installed to 'manage' the speculative invoice production.

 

if the stuff were not there, there would be no cost at all!

 

and as its a free car park, with few abusers shall we say..

 

why put it in , in the first place!!

 

amazing

 

dx

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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If the cost displayed on signage is a genuine pre estimate of loss, why is the charge reduced by a minimum of 40% if payed within 14 days.

 

This is intersting in as much as PE always evade the calculation question. I wonder if DRP have scripted this off their own back.

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I think the argument set out in that letter is very weak. Most of the 'costs' referred to have nothing to do with the breach of contract. The signage, number plate recognition system and membership fees are all fixed costs incurred regardless of whether your colleague (or any other motorist) is in breach of contract. The costs flowing from that breach of contract are essentially just the cost of paying someone to send a letter.

 

The letter also does not give any justification for the increase from 60 to 120 ... which is another penalty.

 

If it gives your colleague confidence, there is a county court judgment confirming this at http://forums.pepipoo.com/index.php?act=attach&type=post&id=4984. Not binding precedent unfortunately but still helpful.

 

If Parking Eye want to argue that the charge is a genuine pre-estimate of loss, then they should be expected to provide evidence of the amount of costs incurred and how the estimate has been calculated. The other arguments from the link in my signature still apply.

 

Your colleague could try making a POPLA appeal if he is in time? http://www.popla.org.uk/makinganappeal.htm

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Thanks for your input Steampowered, much appreciated. Apart from appealling to POPLA (the rejection letter came today from Debt Recovery, not Parking Eye with no info re an appeal to Popla. Should we wait and see if anything else arrives ? or is there a letter we can send in response ?

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No ref to POPLA, (Shocking) An urgent complaint to the BPA. Furthermore, how can they possibly justify adding charges for the efforts of debt collectors when the have clearly failed to meet their obligations under the Protection of Freedoms Act.

Edited by Crocdoc
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The question of losses was fully covered last year during a retail "civil recovery" court case. The store tried to claim £100 for the security guard's wages when dealing with a shoplifter, even though it took him less than one hour.The judge ruled that the guard's time they were trying to claim for was part of his "core duties" ,and he would have been paid the same wages whether he had had to deal with the shoplifter of not.

Edited by DBC
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No worries Ell-enn. Apart from asking them for a code to make a POPLA appeal, I can't think of anything significant.

 

If it makes your colleague feel better he could write them a letter (1) explaining that most of the costs cited in the letter are fixed costs incurred regardless of any breach of contract, (2) no justification whatsoever has been provided for the increase from 60 to 120 which is also a penalty; and (3) stating he denies liability and any court action will be vigorously defended. Realistically I doubt he would get a substantial response so may take the view it is not worth the time to write and send such a letter. Could also add that claiming to have a legal team where no such separate team exists (given that Debt Recovery is not licensed as a law firm) has been held to constitute fraud in certain reported cases and meets the test for criminal contempt of court ... personally I would leave that bit out but up to you.

 

That said - although I certainly know my way round a courtroom I am not an expert in parking specifically - so it may be that someone else has another suggestion.

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Thanks again Steampowered, it just makes me mad to think that they are making a charge for a free car park. Some of the shops in the retail area are Asda, Netto, Home Bargains, Farmfoods and a carpet shop - if you were doing food shopping and also choosing a carpet you could easily go over the time allotted for parking.

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Thanks again Steampowered, it just makes me mad to think that they are making a charge for a free car park. Some of the shops in the retail area are Asda, Netto, Home Bargains, Farmfoods and a carpet shop - if you were doing food shopping and also choosing a carpet you could easily go over the time allotted for parking.

I think a complaint to the manager of the retail sore is called for in this instance.

Was an appeal made to Parking Eye at first?

hello all:-)

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I think a complaint to the manager of the retail sore is called for in this instance.

Was an appeal made to Parking Eye at first?

 

Yes, we wrote to Parking Eye requesting a breakdown of their charge, confirmation that they have the right from the landlord to issue court proceedings and we also stated that given the amount of stores in the retail park it would be quite easy to exceed the time allowed. The reply we got was from Debt Recovery with no Popla reference.

 

I am trying to find out who the landlord is but not having much success at the moment.

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If you can't find the landlord's details perhaps complain direct to a couple of the stores? If it becomes obvious that PE are damaging their business they will raise this with the landlord.

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Good idea, we can complain to all the shops in the retail park.

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Seems to me that these costs would have been incurred no matter what the drivers actions, to say that these represent consequential loss is a nonsense IMO.

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You have got it in one. This just proves that the whole private parking "business model" is based on one big lie. If you look at it sensibly no PPC is ever going to make a profit if they only thing they can claim for is actual losses. They should be "cost neutral" . Anything above that would be considered an unfair penalty.

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I imagine landlords started using companies like Parking Eye because they are cheap. Due to the money collected from aggressive enforcement PE will always be able to undercut a less aggressive competitior.

 

PE will go out of business when landlords realise that the amount they save by using Parking Eye just isn't worth the loss of income from customers. It would also be very helpful to have a Court of Appeal decision on this issue and/or some sort of OFT investigation or legislative action.

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Exactly, these costs weren't incurred because of the driver being there, but in spite of him being there. If no one parked in the car park for a week, they would still have the same costs wouldn't they?

 

I could understand if a shop charged £1.00 to park and you don't pay, they have lost £1.00. But in a free car park they have lost nothing - except good will of course !

 

Perhaps time to get local MP's involved

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Yes, we wrote to Parking Eye requesting a breakdown of their charge, confirmation that they have the right from the landlord to issue court proceedings and we also stated that given the amount of stores in the retail park it would be quite easy to exceed the time allowed. The reply we got was from Debt Recovery with no Popla reference.

 

I am trying to find out who the landlord is but not having much success at the moment.

 

Perhaps asking them for proof that they have a right from the LL to claim damages on behalf of the LL may help? Any one can say they have a £1m, but it means nothing unless they can prove it!

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RLP tried A similar argument in order to quantify their damages for allegations of shoplifting. They had a better argument because the measures are there to prevent an actual tort.( However not a loss because "shrinkage" forms part of their operational costs).

 

No such rationale is available here, the signs are not there to deter trespass, their argument would be better served if they maintained it was a contractual relationship, although this too would ultimately fail, for the reasons shown earlier. IMO

DO NOT PAY UPFRONT FEES TO COLD CALLERS PROMISING TO WRITE OFF YOUR DEBTS

DO NOT PAY UPFRONT FEES FOR COSTLY TELEPHONE CONSULTATIONS WITH SO CALLED "EXPERTS" THEY INVARIABLY ARE NOTHING OF THE SORT

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By their own argument if it costs them £1,000,000 to run their business, and no one ever committed a heinous parking infringement except one poor sod, they would need to sue them for £1,000,000. :!:

 

I seem to recall that this point was touched upon in VCS v I bbotson.

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I seem to recall that this point was touched upon in VCS v I bbotson.

 

What was the result of that case ?

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