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    • Well the difference is that in all our other cases It was Kev who was trying to entrap the motorist so sticking two fingers up to him and daring him to try court was from a position of strength. In your case, sorry, you made a mistake so you're not in the position of strength.  I've looked on Google Maps and the signs are few & far between as per Kev's MO, but there is an entrance sign saying "Pay & Display" (and you've admitted in writing that you knew you had to pay) and the signs by the payment machines do say "Sea View Car Park" (and you've admitted in writing you paid the wrong car park ... and maybe outed yourself as the driver). Something I missed in my previous post is that the LoC is only for one ticket, not two. Sorry, but it's impossible to definitively advise what to so. Personally I'd probably gamble on Kev being a serial bottler of court and reply with a snotty letter ridiculing the signage (given you mentioned the signage in your appeal) - but it is a gamble.  
    • No! What has happened is that your pix were up-to-date: 5 hours' maximum stay and £100 PCN. The lazy solicitors have sent ancient pictures: 4 hours' maximum stay and £60 PCN. Don't let on!  Let them be hoisted by their own lazy petard in the court hearing (if they don't bottle before).
    • Thanks for all the suggestions so far I will amend original WS and send again for review.  While looking at my post at very beginning when I submitted photos of signs around the car park I noticed that it says 5 hours maximum stay while the signage sent by solicitor shows 4 hours maximum stay but mine is related to electric bay abuse not sure if this can be of any use in WS.
    • Not sure what to make of that or what it means for me, I was just about to head to my kip and it's a bit too late for legalise. When is the "expenditure occured"?  When they start spending money to write to me?  Or is this a bad thing (as "harsh" would imply)? When all is said and done, I do not have two beans to rub together, we rent our home and EVERYTHING of value has been purchased by and is in my wife's name and we are not financially linked in any way.  So at least if I can't escape my fate I can at least know that they will get sweet FA from me anyway   edit:  ah.. Sophia Harrison: Time bar decision tough on claimants WWW.SCOTTISHLEGAL.COM Time bar is a very complex area of law in Scotland relating to the period in which a claim for breach of duty can be pursued. The Scottish government...   This explains it like I am 5.  So, a good thing then because creditors clearly know they have suffered a loss the minute I stop paying them, this is why it is "harsh" (for them, not me)? Am I understanding this correctly?  
    • urm......exactly what you filed .....read it carefully... it puts them to strict proof to prove the debt is enforceable, so thus 'holds' their claim till they coughup or not and discontinue. you need to get readingthose threads i posted so you understand. then you'll know whats maybe next how to react or not and whats after that. 5-10 threads a day INHO. dont ever do anything without checking here 1st.
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    • We have finally managed to obtain the transcript of this case.

      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

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      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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Employer wants to meet to discuss absence regarding depression they caused.


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Finally, look at this blog and see if the employer has carried out the requirements listed below

 

http://www.hempsons.co.uk/news-articles/consideration-reasonable-adjustments-part-performance-management-process-helpful-reminder/

 

 

 

1) Ensure recommended reasonable adjustments are implemented before commencing performance management, and allow for some time to see if this results in an improvement.

 

2) Consider adjustments even if there is only a possibility that the adjustment will remove the disadvantage (resources permitting)

 

3) Dismissal without making all reasonable adjustments is likely to render the dismissal unfair.

 

4) Ensure recommended reasonable adjustments are implemented in a timely manner.

 

5) Ensure that the standards of performance required are realistic and achievable.

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ha ha ha, sorry but what you read in the papers and what happens in real life are two separate things. Her Union said there's nothing they can do so obviously there are no real "rights" in this situation. Best advice for future people: If you have mental health issues keep your mouth shut and try to blag it through.

 

Absolutely wrong.

 

Most people do not have the experience you describe. Most employers now have very good policies around mental health. One of the biggest barriers to seeking help is stigma - telling people to keep quiet about it is the kind of thing that perpetuates stigma, prevents people asking for help, and is utterly irresponsible.

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Dondana

Define reasonable

 

 

It would have been courteous to use the word please

 

Reasonable, in Law, doesn't have a fixed definition

 

The Judge looks at the circumstances of the case and determines what is reasonable

 

Asking a person to travel to a far location might be deemed reasonable if she has a car and it is daylight

 

Asking same person to travel to same location at night when she nolonger had the car would be deemed unreasonable

 

Reasonableness is fact- sensitive

 

In order words, the Judge has to hear the whole evidence and rule

 

You can't determine reasonableness without full information

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Dondana

Define reasonable

 

You are wasting your breath. That's why I am refraining from posting here now. The poster is adept at telling people what they want to hear, as opposed to what they need to hear, and posting random and broadly irrelevant cases to support the contention that they know what they are talking about. This is going to end horribly for someone, and it won't be dondada, who cares nothing about the consequences that other people will reap from following their advice. There is a difference between disagreement and complete denial - dondada clearly, unlike someone like Emmzzi or others here, has no experience of employment law or tribunals but is setting themselves up as some sort of authority on a subject they know nothing about. Unfortunately that happens on sites, and then things can go horribly wrong for people. I am more than capable of googling the theory of nuclear physics, but you'd be an idiot employing me to manage your reactor!

 

And apparently, now, you must say "please" to them when toy speak. Getting above ourselves or what? He or she is an anonymous poster of dubious provenance on a random internet site. Not a High Court judge!

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Absolutely wrong.

 

Most people do not have the experience you describe. Most employers now have very good policies around mental health. One of the biggest barriers to seeking help is stigma - telling people to keep quiet about it is the kind of thing that perpetuates stigma, prevents people asking for help, and is utterly irresponsible.

 

I'm sorry but I disagree. Most employers now have policies. SOME employers have been known to actually follow the spirit of them. Whilst I agree that keeping quiet can have adverse impacts, collectively and individually, there are still many employers who certainly will discriminate against people for both physical and mental disabilities. Having policies doesn't mean that you act well. It means your have a documents to produce at a tribunal to back up your assertion that you are being reasonable! We have had laws on gender and equality for 40+ years and employers have had policies on it for just as long. And look how well that is going....!

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I know I am sangie.

I asked the question realistically in a rhetorical way.

 

I still notice that dondana didn't answer the question on another thread about how many actual ET they have personally been involved in.

They failed to answer the question, posted another couple of times and disappeared off the thread even tho it went on for another couple of pages or so.

 

From this I conclude"armchair lawyer"

And experience in searching on google.

 

Ps I might have a nuclear reactor that needs a manager! 😁

 

Reasonable is subjective to an individuals circumstance.

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You are wasting your breath. That's why I am refraining from posting here now. The poster is adept at telling people what they want to hear, as opposed to what they need to hear, and posting random and broadly irrelevant cases to support the contention that they know what they are talking about. This is going to end horribly for someone, and it won't be dondada, who cares nothing about the consequences that other people will reap from following their advice. There is a difference between disagreement and complete denial - dondada clearly, unlike someone like Emmzzi or others here, has no experience of employment law or tribunals but is setting themselves up as some sort of authority on a subject they know nothing about. Unfortunately that happens on sites, and then things can go horribly wrong for people. I am more than capable of googling the theory of nuclear physics, but you'd be an idiot employing me to manage your reactor!

 

And apparently, now, you must say "please" to them when toy speak. Getting above ourselves or what? He or she is an anonymous poster of dubious provenance on a random internet site. Not a High Court judge!

 

 

This is a classic Ad Hominem argument!

 

You have not provided evidence to refute my position rather you are attacking my person

 

To put to rest the question of how many Tribunal Claim I have had

 

I have had 3 Tribunal Claims

 

1 Appeal Tribunal Claim

 

I have assisted in over 10 Tribunal Claims to date

 

I have now put in an official request to the MOJ to volunteer at the Employment Tribunal near me

 

I'm not surprised that you are attacking my person rather than my arguments

 

Several times I have provided documented evidence to show your position was wrong

 

You have never proved any of my points wrong

 

Keep attacking my person, it shows me that I'm right

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Its not Ad Hominem.

Its asking for what real life experiences you have. A bit like references.

 

You can vol thru the FRU.

But this is mainly for juniors looking to gain experience for study purposes. Someone taking their law degree for example.

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I'm sorry but I disagree. Most employers now have policies. SOME employers have been known to actually follow the spirit of them. Whilst I agree that keeping quiet can have adverse impacts, collectively and individually, there are still many employers who certainly will discriminate against people for both physical and mental disabilities. Having policies doesn't mean that you act well. It means your have a documents to produce at a tribunal to back up your assertion that you are being reasonable! We have had laws on gender and equality for 40+ years and employers have had policies on it for just as long. And look how well that is going....!

 

You're right; I should have said 'many employers'. I come to this as a mental health trainer working with organisations that want to change their culture around mental health, and my experience is that more and more are trying to do better - not just because it's the right thing to do, but because they now recognise that there are good financial reasons for doing so. One of the things that drives presenteeism is a culture of encouraging people to keep quiet about mental health problems, and whilst I recognise that there are some dinosaur employers out there, I wouldn't ever recommend telling someone to try to hide problems

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I don't think questioning someone's advice is ad hominem, DD.

 

I didn't know you could volunteer at an ET, what will you be doing?

 

HB

 

 

 

Yes you could volunteer at the ET

 

 

I will be assisting self-representing Claimants at Case Management Hearings

 

 

Later, I will be assisting them at Preliminary Hearings on worker status, reasonable prospect of success and other simple PH cases

 

 

I will NOT conduct their litigations for them

 

 

Apparently, I'm allowed to do so but it would take too much of my time

 

 

Since I'm doing it for free, it will be best to help as much people as possible

 

 

PH and CMD are simple hearings which could be over in one or two hours and I move on to the next

 

 

I definitely wouldn't be doing any Full Merit Hearings (takes way too much time)

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I would strongly advise that you do not listen to the advice from dondada. They are wildly keen to quote laws that do not do what they claim they do, and case law that doesn't apply. There is a vast differences between a duty to CONSIDER reasonable adjustments and an obligation to provide them. A difference which the poster appears to not understand. And since this is not about reasonable adjustments but performance, a somewhat irrelevant comment. It's easy to claim to be some sort of expert on a subject you know little about, because you don't have to live with the consequences of other people following your advice. You are right to be cautious and to recognise that the real world doesn't operate like a Google law search! The only reason I'm posting a response is because I've seen too many people here being drawn into unrealistic expectations by this poster, and you have had enough problems over the past year without falling for amateur lawyer hour here.

 

Its not Ad Hominem.

Its asking for what real life experiences you have. A bit like references.

 

You can vol thru the FRU.

But this is mainly for juniors looking to gain experience for study purposes. Someone taking their law degree for example.

 

I strongly believe it is Ad Hominem argument

As you can see Sangie595 claimed #45 that there is only a duty to CONSIDER reasonable adjustments and not an obligation to provide them

That position is very contrary to Section 20 and Schedule 8 of the Equality Act 2010

If it wasn't an Ad Hominem argument, she would have come out to either apologize on her error or clarify her statement

She did neither, which shows she is not interested in facts but to get at a person (Ad Hominem)

She is still welcome to clarify her statement though

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Well its your democratic right to disagree.

But I'm in the no its not camp.

 

You also didn't read sangies statement in the context in which its clearly worded.

 

All employers have to do Is consider an adjustment. Come to the

Conclusion its not reasonable and move on.

 

In your highlighted text sangie was pointing out that there are vast differences.

You should stop speed reading

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Thread is in danger of becoming derailed.....again...and not of any assistance to the OP.

 

Thread temp closed until OP advises it be reopened.

 

 

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