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    • it is NOT A FINE.....this is an extremely important point to understand no-one bar a magistrate in a magistrates criminal court can ever fine anyone for anything. Private Parking Tickets (speculative invoices) are NOT a criminal matter, merely a speculative contractual Civil matter hence they can only try a speculative monetary claim via the civil county court system (which is no more a legal powers matter than what any member of Joe Public can do). Until/unless they do raise a county court claim a CCJ and win, there are not ANY enforcement powers they can undertake other than using a DCA, whom are legally powerless and are not BAILIFFS. Penalty Charge Notices issued by local authorities etc were decriminalised years ago - meaning they no longer can progress a claim to the magistrates court to enforce, but go directly to legal enforcement via a real BAILIFF themselves. 10'000 of people waste £m's paying private parking companies because they think they are FINES...and the media do not help either. the more people read the above the less income this shark industry get. where your post said fine it now says charge .............. please fill out the Q&A ASAP. dx  
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    • good you are getting there. Lloyds/TSb...i certainly would not be risking possible off-setting going on if a choice were there, but in all honestly thats obv too late now..., however..you might not never be in that situation so dont worry too much. regardless to being defaulted or not, if any debt that is not paid/used in 6yrs it becomes statute barred. you need to understand a couple of things like 'default' and 'default notice' a default is simply a recorded D in the calendar section/history of a debt, it does not really mean anything. might slightly hit your rating. the important thing here is a default notice , these are issued by the original creditor (OC) under the consumer credit act, it gives you 14 days to settle whatever they are asking, if you don't then they have the option to register a defaulted date on your credit file. that can make getting other credit more difficult. and hits your rating. once that happens, not matter what you do after that, paying it or not or not paid off or not, the whole account vanishes from your credit file on the DN's 6th b'day. though that might not necessarily mean the debt is not still owed - thats down to the SB date above. an OC very rarely does court and only the OWNER of a debt can instigate any court action (Attempted a CCJ) DCA's debt collection agencies - DCA's are NOT BAILIFFS they have ZERO legal powers on ANY debt - no matter what it's TYPE. an OC make pass a debt to a dca as their client to try and spoof people into paying through legal ignorance of the above statement. an OC may SELL on an old debt to a DCA/debt buyer (approx 10p=£1) and then claim their losses through tax write off and their business insurance, wiping their hands of the debt. the DCA then becomes the debt OWNER. since the late 70's dca's pull all kinds of 'stunts' through threat-o-grams to spoof a debtor into paying them the full value of the debt, when they bought if for a discounted sum (typically 10p=£1). you never pay a dca a penny! if read carefully, NONE of their letters nor those of any other 'trading names' they spoof themselves under making it seem it's going up some kind of legitimate legal 'chain' say WILL anything....just carefully worded letters with all kinds of threats of what could/might/poss happen with other such words as instruct forward pass... well my dog does not sit when instructed too...so... DCA's SOMETIMES will issue a court claim, but in all honesty its simply a speculative claim hoping mugs wet themselves and cough up...oh im going to court... BIG DEAL DCA - show me the enforceable paperwork signed by me...9/10 they dont have it and if your defence is conducted properly, most run away from you . however before they do all that they now have to send a letter of claim, cause the courts got fed up with them issuing +750'000PA speculative claims and jamming up the legal system. so bottom line is two conclusions.... if you cant pay a debt, get a DN issued ASAP (stop paying it!) make sure it gets registered on your file then it stops hurting your file/future credit in 6yrs regardless to what happens (bar of course a later DCA CCJ - fat chance mind!)  once you've a registered DN , then look into restarting payments if the debt is still owed by the OC, if SOLD to a DCA, don't pay - see if they issue a letter of claim (then comeback here!).        
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    • Any update here?  I ask as we have someone new being hassled for parking at this site.
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HCEO visit 2 days after we paid original ccj saying we owe their fees - help please


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we had a visit from a HCEO for a CCJ debt to a supplier - this ccj has been paid in full- only a couple of days before their visit , but never the less paid.

the debt (CCJ dates back to 10/2013)

The original debt was about £900 , this was reduced every couple of weeks by £150 or so ( what ever we could afford really), final payment being made on 11th which was a few days before they even turned up.

so we were of the opinion had satisfied the CCJ.

then the visit from the HCEO saying he had come to collect £1010 for the debt.

I told him we had paid the CCJ in full to the client prior to his visit, & showed him the remittance advice from the bank from a few days earlier.

he said we still owe for the HCEO fees as they were instructed in November to collect,and his visit fees + their fees are valid., I told him we would not pay as i didnt believe we owed anything, He said pay it and take it up with the office if we were not happy.

We didnt pay, he left after spending about 15mins on the phone in his van,

Today we get a letter from his office saying we owe £1010 under a high court writ of FIFA ...

he has no WP , the debt was paid before he attended. what is this FiFA.

 

I phoned their office only to be told the payments I paid to the creditor only serve to reduce the amount and we still owe their fees,how can this be the case if they never visited or informed us.

 

Are they trying it on ?

 

any advice please.,

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Had the HCEO visited you at any point prior to this visit, levied on goods/property?

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I would think that the HCEO then has not 'earned' the fees claimed.

I'm sure someone more knowledgeable than I will give you more advice.

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You will probably find that the HCEO is levying for the 'execution costs' which are legally due under the writ. These will either be £60 or £111.75 (if the claimant has used a solicitor).

 

The HCEO can legally levy for these costs but some of his fees should be reduced to reflect the payments you have made.

 

Could it be that you did not keep the claimant up to date with your payments you made?

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Direct question for HCEOs, for future reference under the circumstances described, where claimant aware, and debt paid in full BEFORE HCEO visit, where can the fees be justified?

Edited by brassnecked

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I'll make an assumption as to how I think this has panned out.

 

You have paid direct to Judgment Creditor who has willingly accepted payments. I would suspect the HCEO has been instructed by the JC's solicitor because they have failed to keep said solicitor up to speed with what has been going on. In my view you have done nothing wrong as it appears to be lack of communication between Judgment Creditor & solicitor and if any fees are due then the HCEO should be directed to his issuing party.

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I would still like to know what my real options are

what is my best course of action if these HCEO do turn up asking for their fees.

i was unaware they were involved until their vist after I had made payment to the client.

Are they allowed to come and threaten, add fees etc for their fees ??

the way i see it is that they should have acted sooner - but id like to know where i stand

I do not want to give them anything

 

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Sorry only just seen this today.

If the judgment is paid in full before the Form N293A is sealed (date of certificate) then the HCEO can charge no fees to the debtor.

If the N293A is sealed by the issuing court and a writ is obtained then technically the execution costs are outstanding. These can be enforced.

The problem is that these costs will only be £60 or £111.75 making the fees charged for an HCEO attendance seem hugely disproportionate. It would be sensible for the HCEO to withdraw from enforcement, allow the debtor to pay the execution costs and charge the creditor his fees/abortive charge.

As I stated earlier the HCEO can legally levy for the outstanding execution costs but some of his fees should be reduced to reflect the payments you have made.

The sensible thing to do would be to contact the creditor, see if he has paid for a writ and make that payment immediately. I'm surprised you haven't contacted the creditor already given what has happened.

You really need to sort this prior to another attendance. That will be no good for anybody and will likely cause you unnecessary stress and money.

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Thanks for the clarification HCEOs looks like the creditor was hedging their bets, or the solicitor went for HCEO whatever. Either way HCEO has acted in good faith, so someone should pay for the work done.

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How are the execution fees calculated and how do find out what they are without inviting a load of hassle ?

i suppose that if the fee is only £60 or so - ill pay it, but only if i have to and only to avoid more fees.

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The execution costs are set. They are £60 as standard but a solicitor may claim another £51.75 also which if used will make them £111.75.

Some small HCEO 'franchises' state on their websites that a creditor may claim the £51.75 but that is wrong and illegal. The £51.75 is set out as a 'solicitors fee' under the CPR rules.

Are you sure you paid the creditor everything that was owed including the court costs?

My advice is to contact the creditor ASAP to ensure that everything that was due has been paid and within the timescales required.

If it has then he will need to pay the HCEO for their time and efforts. Probably an abortive fee of £60 plus VAT but if he's had payment without telling them they could demand a lot more. Either way, his problem not yours.

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