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    • next time dont upload 19 single page pdfs use the sites listed on upload to merge them into one multipage pdf.. we aint got all day to download load single page files
    • If you have not kept the original PCN you can always send an SAR to Excel and they have to send you all the info they have on you within a month. failure to do so can lead to you being able to sue them for their failure.......................................nice irony.
    • Thank you and well done  for posting up all those notices it must have have taken you ages.. The entrance sign is very helpful since the headline states                    FREE PARKING FOR CUSTOMERS ONLY in capitals with not time limit mentioned. Underneath and not in capitals they then give the actual times of parking which would not be possible to read when driving into the car park unless you actually stopped and read them. Very unlikely especially arriving at 5.30 pm with possibly other cars behind. On top of that the Notice goes on to say that the terms and conditions are inside the car park so the entrance sign cannot offer a contract it is merely an offer to treat. Inside the car park the signs are mostly too high up and the font size too small to be able to read much of their signs. DCBL have not shown a single sign that can be read on their SAR. Although as they show photographs which were taken the year after your alleged breach we do not know what the signs were when you were there. For instance the new signs showed the charge was then £100 whereas your PCN was for £85. Who knows, when you were there perhaps the time was for 3 hours. They were asked to produce  planning permission which would have been necessary for the ANPR cameras alone and didn't do so. Nor did they provide a copy of the contract-DCBL  "deeming them disproportionate or not relevant to the substantive issues in the dispute" How arrogant and untruthful is that? The contract and planning permission could be vital to having the claim thrown out. I can find no trace of planning permission for the signs nor the cameras on Tonbridge Council planning portal. and the contract of course is highly relevant since some contracts advise the parking rouges that they cannot take motorists to Court. I understand that Europarks are now running that car park which means that nexus didn't  last long before being thrown out.....................................
    • Hi,   I am not sure if I posted this already here but I don't think I did. I attach a judgement that raises very interesting points IMO. Essentially EVRi did their usual non attendance that we normally see, however the judge (for the first time I've seen in these threads) dismissed the notice and awarded me judgement by default because their notice misses the "confirmation of compliance" paragraph. in and out in 3 minutes (aside from the chat at the end with the judge about his problems with evri) Redacted - evri CPR loss.pdf
    • Just to update this. I did apply to strikeout and they did not attend the hearing. I won by defualt and the hearing lasted 5 minutes (court only allocated 15). The judge simply explained that the only matter he was really considering is if the Defendant could have any oral evidence to defend the claim. However he said he had decided that based on their defence, and their misunderstanding of law, and their non attendence he did not think they had any reasonsable chance so he awarded me SJ + Costs on the claim form + the strikeout fee. Luckily when I sent the defendant the order I woke up the next day to a wire trasnfer for the full sum of the judgement
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Landlady breached tenancy agreement, what can I do?


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Hi,

 

Hopefully someone can offer me some advice here, sorry for the long post.

 

I live in Bristol and have a statutory periodic tenancy on a rolling one month basis. I have been here just over a year.

 

My landlady has repeatedly breached the tenancy agreement by coming round and allowing herself and workmen access to my house with no notice whatsoever. My tenancy agreement says she must give 24 hours notice for any visit.

 

I have told the letting agents in writing on several occasions that I am categorically not OK with this and I insist on notice. They have informed me (in writing) that they have asked the landlady to provide me with notice of her visits, but this has happened numerous times since.

 

I live alone and I feel like I've been robbed of my privacy and harassed in my own home. As a result, I have found somewhere else to live, but I cannot move in for a month or so yet, maybe longer.

 

My question is, because she has breached the tenancy agreement, can I serve my one month's notice from any date, citing these breaches, rather than the date of the rental payment (the 21st). When I can move, I want to get out of this house as soon as possible, and I don't need a reference from her for my new flat.

 

I know "fair" doesn't hold always much weight legally, but it doesn't seem right that she can breach the agreement at will and suffer no consequences, but if I breached the terms, I would be served notice and evicted. I would be happy to stay here had I not been subject to this treatment, but now I feel I have no choice if I want a quiet life.

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The Landlord has to give you 24 hrs Notice,

 

You could also consider changing locks with like for like and keeping the originals to replace when you move out.

 

https://www.gov.uk/private-renting/your-rights-and-responsibilities

 

https://www.gov.uk/private-renting/your-rights-and-responsibilities

 

https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/housing/renting-a-home/common-problems-with-renting/

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Thanks. I know she has to give me 24 hours notice, but she isn't, and there doesn't seem to be anything I can do about it.

 

I did consider changing the locks after it started getting worse, but it seems like an unnecessary expense now I'm moving soon. I won't rule it out though should it get worse.

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My question is, because she has breached the tenancy agreement, can I serve my one month's notice from any date, citing these breaches, rather than the date of the rental payment (the 21st). When I can move, I want to get out of this house as soon as possible, and I don't need a reference from her for my new flat.

 

Unfortunately, I don't think it can be stated that her breaches would give you this right.

 

Your best bet would be to argue it out with the letting agent, and if possible, get any agreement you make with them in writing. Your landlady may wish to get regular access to the property for the remaining month as a term of such a deal.

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changing the cylinder of a standard yale lock is about a tenner. You can then take it with you to wherever you move to and reuse it if you wish. Your landlady isnt going to batter the door down when she finds out you have done this, I doubt if she will say anything at all as she knows her behaviour isnt acceptable. If the letting agents who hold a key then yu could politly tell them that you have done this and will replace the locks at the end of your tenancy but any attempt to enter will rwesult in the police being called for attempted B&E

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Thanks all.

 

It seems calling the police is my only option then. It's not really a road I want to go down though, it seems drastic when all I want is some notice.

 

I thought it was more expensive and a professional job to change a lock. I've found an inexpensive lock on ebay for about £6 that will fit the door., and a quick browse on youtube shows it's quite easy to do myself, so I'll do that if it gets worse.

 

I'd be fine with her having access if I can go sooner, but I'm not sure I trust her not to pull a fast one on me.

 

My tenancy agreement does say I'm not allowed to change the locks or prevent access for new tenant visits in the last 2 months of the tenancy though, and they'll charge me if I refuse. I'm not sure if this would be classed as an unfair term, I think it might. This was my old AST agreement though, I've not seen a different agreement since I went onto a periodic one.

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Thanks all.

 

It seems calling the police is my only option then. It's not really a road I want to go down though, it seems drastic when all I want is some notice.

 

I thought it was more expensive and a professional job to change a lock. I've found an inexpensive lock on ebay for about £6 that will fit the door., and a quick browse on youtube shows it's quite easy to do myself, so I'll do that if it gets worse.

 

I'd be fine with her having access if I can go sooner, but I'm not sure I trust her not to pull a fast one on me.

 

My tenancy agreement does say I'm not allowed to change the locks or prevent access for new tenant visits in the last 2 months of the tenancy though, and they'll charge me if I refuse. I'm not sure if this would be classed as an unfair term, I think it might. This was my old AST agreement though, I've not seen a different agreement since I went onto a periodic one.

 

exactly what is she going to do, evict you? She'd be laughed out of court. It's amazing how many landlords don't understand tenancy law. They think that, because it's their house, they're justified in coming and going as they please. Call the police, if nothing else, it'll educate her.

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exactly what is she going to do, evict you? She'd be laughed out of court. It's amazing how many landlords don't understand tenancy law. They think that, because it's their house, they're justified in coming and going as they please. Call the police, if nothing else, it'll educate her.

 

They do, it's ridiculous. You are right, I really should call the police. There's no way she doesn't know the law, and even if she didn't, I've asked her not to until I'm blue in the face. She once told me she couldn't give me notice because she doesn't know when she's going to come round. What a load of rubbish.

 

She can serve me a S21 for any reason as I'm not in a fixed tenancy, but if she did that I'd make her go all the way to court to get me out. I'll be giving notice as soon as the new place is ready, I just don't have a set date for that yet.

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