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    • Firstly, I would like to thank everyone for their help in this matter. Since my last post I have received a reply from Plymouth Council Insurance Team concerning my wife’s accident (please see enclosed letter and photo of the offending Badminton post) which they deny any responsibility for the said accident. I feel that the Council is in breach of their statutory duties under the following acts: The Leisure Centre was negligent in its duty of care and therefore, in breach of the statutory duty owed under section 2 of the Occupiers’ Liability Act 1957. Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 (the Act) to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare at work of all their employees, and others who might be affected by its undertaking, e.g. members of the public visiting the Leisure Centre to use the facilities. The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 that requires employers to assess risks (including slip and trip risks) and, where necessary, take action to address them. The Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations (PUWER) require the risk to people’s health and safety from equipment that is used at a Leisure Centre be prevented or controlled. I would like some advice to see if my assumptions are correct and my approach to obtaining satisfactory outcome to this matter are accurate. Many thanks   PLM23000150 - Copy Correspondence.pdf post docx.docx
    • Talking to them does not reset the time limit, although they will probably tell you it does, they'd be lying. Dumbdales are the in-house sols for Lowlife, just the next desk along. If Lowlifes were corresponding with you at your current address then Dumbdales know your address. However, knowing that they are lower than a snake's belly, you would be well advised to send them a letter, informing them of your current address and nothing else. Get 'proof of posting' which is free from the PO counter, don't sign it, simply type your name. That way then they have absolutely no excuse for attempting a back door CCJ.   P.S. Best course of action, IGNORE them, until or unless you get a claim form......you won't.
    • A 'signed for' Letter of Claim has been sent today so they have 14 days from tomorrow... Lets wait and see what happens but i suspect judging by their attitude they wont reply 
    • I am extremely apprehensive about burning our files.... I do not know why, so it is becoming an endless feedback loop. Scared to pull the trigger to speak in the desire not to mess up my file. 
    • Hi All, So brief outline. I have Natwest CC debt £8k last payment i made was 7th November 2018 Not a penny since. So coming up to the 6 year mark. Can't remember when i took out the  credit card would be a few years before everythign hit the fan. Moved house 2020 - updated NatWest as I still have a current account with them. Then Lowells took over from Moorcroft and were writing to me at my current address. I did get a family member to speak to them 3 years ago regarding the debt explained although it may be in my name I didn't rack it up then went contact again. 29th may received an email from overdales saying they were now managing the debt. I have not had any letter yet which i thought is odd?  Couple of questions 1. Does my family member speaking to lowell restart statute barred clock? 2. Do you think overdales aren't writing to me because they will back door CCJ to old address even though Lowells have contacted me at current address never at previous? ( have no proof though stupidly binned all letters  ) Should I write to them and confirm my address just incase? Does this restart statute barred clock? 3. what do you think best course of action is?   Any help/advice is appreciated I am aware they may ramp up the process now due to 7th December being the 6 year mark.   Many Thanks in advance! The threads on here have been super helpful to read.  
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Who has my deposit?


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Hi,

 

I have a problem getting a deposit back from a rented property.

 

With 3 friends I began renting a property in harrow around september 2005, in june 2006 I moved out and a new guy moved in to replace me. At this point the landlord instructed me that he intended to change letting agents and not to take the deposit from the incoming hosuemate as a whole new contract would be put together and all deposits refunded/trasnferred.

 

A few weeks later I asked both the landlord and the agent for my deposit back. Both parties insist that the other one is holding the deposit. The problem is that the landlord insists that they never gave him the deposit; the agent says they are not holding the entire deposit. Further more they are insisting that he owes them money so any part of the deposit that they may hyperthetically be holding is theirs anyway.

 

Frankly I trust neither the landlord nor agent, both have been confirmed to lie to myself or the other housemates and both have prooved to be highly money grabbing.

 

Basically all I need to know is who I need to issue the claim against?

 

Cheers

Brett

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Always the landlord. The agent is just that, only an agent for the landlord. Any claim against the agent will fail.

7 years in retail customer service

 

Expertise in letting and rental law for 6 years

 

By trade - I'm an IT engineer working in the housing sector.

 

Please note that any posts made by myself are for information only and should not and must not be taken as correct or factual. If in doubt, consult with a solicitor or other person of equal legal standing.

 

Please click the star if I have helped!!

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Ok two contradictory posts, it was my understnading that the landlord should only hold deposits with writen permision of the tennant and that it should be held in escrow.

 

Also I forgot to say in the original post that the landlord's solicitor said that the landlord cannot claim the money from the agent as it is my money not his ...

 

further more... the last I asw the money it was with the agent... who also says no proof exists (or none that he can show me) that the money was with the landlord. so I really have no reason to believe that he does have it.

 

But you seem very confident MrShed, so I assume this logic is wrong...?

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Yeh it is definitely the landlord, does not matter whether he holds it or not. If the agent holds it, he is only holding it on behalf of the landlord. The ONLY contract that a tenant has is with the landlord, not the agent, thus any claims for anything related to the tenancy must be made against the landlord.

 

I will give my standard(ish!) response as well - if you are in any doubt about what I am saying, I can suggest one of three options:

 

- Pay me for my services, and I will give you the same answer in a professional capacity.

- Go to a specialist landlord forum such as www.landlordzone.co.uk/forum, where there are many more letting experts

- Consult with a specialist solicitor or look through case law

 

Please note I do not care if I am right or wrong, although it may not seem it - I only care that the poster gets the right answer, and as I know this is the right answer, I believe it important for him to know that. Otherwise he is going to be wasting time and money chasing the wrong person. I can definitely understand the point of view, which is why I am not slating it - I thought the same until I learnt differently! If the landlord loses and does not hold the deposit, he can then sue the letting agent for the amount.

7 years in retail customer service

 

Expertise in letting and rental law for 6 years

 

By trade - I'm an IT engineer working in the housing sector.

 

Please note that any posts made by myself are for information only and should not and must not be taken as correct or factual. If in doubt, consult with a solicitor or other person of equal legal standing.

 

Please click the star if I have helped!!

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I totally back up Mr Shed on this one, the landlord is responsible to return your deposit to you. You can check this out here Shelter: Advice and support. Although you could save your time as I already contacted them for the answer.

 

This is the way I've done it to try and get my deposit back. Wrote initial prelim letter giving 14 days copied to both agent and landlord, followed up with 14 day LBA letter. Any court summons will be issued directly to my ex landlord.

 

Good luck x

First letter to halifax sent rec del 26/4

Data Protection Act letter to capital one sent rec del 26/4

Halifax 1st offer dated 5/5

Capital One ack Data Protection Act request rec 6/5

Request for repayment to Capital One 2/8

LBA sent 22/8

Court proceedings issued 13/10

Settled in Full 9/11

Donation made 14/11

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