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    • Given the evidence you have provided it should hopefully be a formality, the WS is ready to go and their case is torpedoed below the waterline.
    • Hey sorry that I am a bit late to the party but to look into your issues, could you explain in a bit more detail what happened? I did not know that either before you mentioned it, but it seems indeed that Booking.com holidays are just a mirror site for lastminute.com and therefore the exact same thing... Good to know because Last minute is an awful OTA. It actually doesn't seem to be a big secret. If you click the link below (which is the main link from booking.com home page, and has lastminute written in it!) you will see the slogan "Booking.com Powered by Last minute" on 3 separate areas at least within the same page! Just a moment... BOOKING-DP.LASTMINUTE.COM Anyway, do let us know what exactly happened and we can try and see who you should be claiming from.
    • post re submitted  we are quite secure with that. it's ok to it here  you need to formerly WRITE to BMW AND to the finance co. (who is?) and REJECT the car under your short term right to reject. 100's of threads here on Big Motoring World, and they scammed you out of a useless warranty too, you dont need it ever, CRA covers you for FREE. dx  
    • Hey there, as the plane went tech you are entitled to the £520 x2 compensation under EC261. This is a clear cut case. Just claim straight with Virgin. However you are not entitled to a full refund, since you were eventually flown to the final destination; of course that second flight should have been totally free of charge; if not you must bill Virgin for it. Your mum+sis are also entitled to full reimbursment of taxis to and from the hotel, as well as meals+refreshments that they had for the entire duration of the unexpected stop, including both at the hotel and airport. (Just stay reasonable: no claiming for 49 pina coladas at the beach bar) Was their luggage returned to them during the unexpected stop? If not they may also claim for any toiletries and clothing that they had to purchase during the night stop. I understand the hotel has already been paid for, just don't forget the rest. Hopefully they have kept the receipts. Otherwise bank statements should do the trick. You need to claim for this in addition of the £1040 Other than the above there is no statutory compensation due for missing out on 1.5days of holiday. You could however talk to someone at customer service and make a polite request to extend your stay by another couple days and see if they will do it for you free of charge (providing they have space). Or if not, you could possibly get some token gesture of money back or voucher off your next holiday. It's worth trying. That you paid £700 for a name change is unfortunate but it's completely unrelated to the situation at hand. Above all I hope they don't worry too much about this mishap, and make the most of their holiday. Compensation is practically guaranteedwhen they are back. Just tell them to save all receipts they have and don't worry about the rest until they're back!
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Hi,

 

I have a query regarding whether my landlord has followed proper procedure in relation to a tenancy transfer.

 

I moved in to a 3-bedroom shared flat with two others on 13th March '15. Prior to this, one of the flat mates with whom I am now sharing with had lived at the property with three of her friends. For various reasons, the three friends moved on however my current flatmate wanted to remain in the property. As I understand it, the original contract for her and her three friends started on 26th April 2014 and was due to finish on 26th April 2015. The landlord allowed for her to advertise the two spare rooms to find new tenants. This lead to myself and the other new flatmate moving in.

 

My move in to the flat was called a 'tenancy transfer'. I took over the room previously occupied by two (a couple) of the former tenants. As part of this arrangement, I paid the former tenants their deposit back and the deposit certificate was amended to my name. The landlord provided me with an assured tenancy agreement for a term of three years, starting on 13th March. There was no formal check-out procedure for the previous tenants and no inspection of the flat. Fortunately, the flat was in good condition so I was ok about paying them their deposit back.

 

Unfortunately, the dynamic between myself and my two new flatmates is poor. I now intend to use the same tenancy transfer arrangement to get someone to take my place. I noted that the landlords own guidance on this process states that transfers can't take place in the first and last three months of the tenancy.

 

This made me think about the process for when I transferred in. It appears I transferred in to the property in the last three months of the previous tenants' contract.

 

At the time, the landlord said that they were treating my entry in to the property as 'effectively' a transfer. I was a bit confused at the time because they also provided a new tenancy agreement for the three-year period. I'm pretty sure the original contact for the original tenants was for one year, which would mean that a transfer in March would not be possible, due to it being in the last three months. If their original contract had a tenancy period of longer than one year, surely the contract they provided to me should have been for the remaining time of their original contract.

 

The landlord added a statement to the contract that I signed (perhaps stupidly) that the contract was a renewal of the contract originally signed by the previous tenants on 26th April 2014.

 

There's something that doesn't seem quite right about all of this. I'm concerned that it might take me a while to find someone to take my place in the flat and as it's not a great place to be at this time, it would be good if I had a get out.

 

I would be grateful if someone can advise on whether my transfer in to the property was by the proper means and if not, does this make the contract void.

 

Thanks for reading.

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Did all 3 of you sign a single AST for whole flat as joint & severally liable Ts, or did you alone sign an AST for your room only + communal areas?

Assignments of Tenancy such as you describe are not unusual, but the bad news is you say you signed an AST for 3 yr fixed term.

I cannot see an easy 'out', other than to explain situation to LL and offer early surrender. He can dictate conditions for his agreement up to 3 yrs rent, more likely rent until you find an acceptable (to LL & pref other Ts) replacement and they move in. Not ideal, but best offer you are likely to get IMO. Or you could try to build brdges with female and stay.

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We all signed the tenancy agreement as joint and severally liable. There's a six month break clause but the three of us would have to sign it. The way the tenancy transfer happened for me seems a bit dodgy.

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It may not have been the best solution but that is now irrelevant havng now all signed a new AST. Activating the break clause would end the T for all 3, so your best option remains ind offer of surrender on LL terms. You don't have to stay, just pay rent etc until suitable replacement moves in.

Best advice, only move in with friends, etc who you know you can live with for duration of term.

LLs don't supply hotel rooms but min 6 month accom.

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I'm well aware it's not a hotel room I'm renting, otherwise I wouldn't be asking for advice, but thanks for your reply. Having moved to a city where I don't know anyone, I was unable to move in with friends. I am pursuing the tenancy transfer option for myself at the moment.

 

Can any other readers of this forum offer an opinion on whether the way in which my transfer in to the property was managed correctly? I have a suspicion that when landlords start using words like 'effectively' that something isn't right.

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It seems from what you say that the previous contract was ended by mutual agreement between the original set of tenants, and a new one begun with you and the remaining people. So there was no "tenancy transfer".

 

I think that what the landlord meant was "It is possible to do a tenancy transfer within an existing contract. But since this contract is almost up, it is easier to create a new contract."

 

From point of view of the landlord, he had some work to "transfer" the deposit, but I think this transfer is separate from the contractual arrangement.

 

Whatever the procedure was called, you have a new contract and I don't see how you can rely on the old contract as you were not party to it.

 

The three month rule is presumably there to avoid to much tooing and froing of different tenants. It may be that it would be relaxed. However, you might find it hard to find someone to take over a 3 year contract when you have only survived a month.

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