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    • Thank you to you all, you guys are amazing!! Yes of course i will be making a donation, i am very grateful to you all. Keep up the good work
    • I'm not quite out of the woods yet. The email they sent me also said that I have £290 of arrears and it has been passed onto their collections department. If anything my account should be £10 in credit.  They haven't taken into account the trainers that were returned back in October. The other items have been credited to my account so it looks like I've still got work to do.  They are not very quick to reply to emails, although I've only sent one trying to find more information, and I have no idea what happens next. Half of me want's to get it sorted properly the other half just wants it over with, if that means a default then so be it. 
    • No. It's a public (council maintained) road with some houses in it.   Some other houses back onto it too and those owners have right of way down the road to access the back of their properties.  Theres a few garages with private osp - so one drives out the garage, over the osp, and onto the public side road and then out on to the public main road.  Irrespective of whether the garages are used - the local businesses parking their cars on the private osp are ostensibly preventing cars from accessing the public roads.
    • is the side street solely for access to your garages? who owns the land and thus the road? dx  
    • A local business has been parking on an off-street parking space in front of my garages (in a side street).  I wasn't using them for a while so didnt bother to do anything.  But now a second local business is also using the osp - taking it in turns with the 1st biz.  This has started to nark me.    The employees choose to drive to work.  There is no private parking in their business's street.  But there are some underground secure garages in their street - which cost apx £2.4k/y to rent - which works out apx £6.60/d. (I believe one of the biz owners already rent one for storage purposes).  If the employee had to park on a meter it would cost them £6.60/h - £66 for 10h and have to move every 4h.  They just don't want to pay for parking. I haven't confronted either of them.  Instead I just put 2 clear "no parking" signs in front of the garages. And a note on one of the cars specifically saying that as they don't live or rent in the street and it's private land could they stop parking.   They ignored that.  And just put notes on their dash with a # to call if one needs the car moved.  There is a sign and they've been told in writing to stop parking. And they are just ignoring it.    I don't what a confrontation.    I don't want to go to the expense of bollards (other than maybe traffic plastic ones - but they'll probs just move them).  Council won't do zilch cos it's private land. And police won't get involved - unless I clamp/ tow the cars and then they'd be after me, not the drivers!    What's the best thing to do?
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Can non UK residents take a UK bank to small claims court?


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I am a British citizen but I have been non UK resident since June 2002. However, I still use First Direct in the UK as my main bank.

I have incurred excessive bank charges both before and after I became non resident.

As a non resident can I use the county court system to:

a) Claim all the excessive charges back

b) Just the charges before June 2002

c) Nothing because I am non resident

I have a UK correspondence address I can use.

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This is little unclear at the moment. You can certainly claim for the last 6 years.

If you found this post useful, please click on the "scales" icon in the bottom left of my post and say so!

 

The opinions of this post are those of monkey_uk and do not constitute sound legal advice. I am not a lawyer.

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Halifax Unlawful Bank Charges: S.A.R - (Subject Access Request) Sent 28/02/07 - CC Statement's rcv'd 18/04/07 Bank a/c statements rcv'd 19/04/07

 

 

 

First Direct Unlawful Bank Charges: Settled in Full 12/05/06 | £2235.50

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Guess one question is would you be able to attend a small claims court in the UK, if it got that far? Or at least have somone willing to take your place, if that's allowed?

 

Neil.

 

Yes. I'm in mainland Europe so getting back to the UK on a budget airline would not be a big deal.

 

I could just go ahead and use my UK address and not mention the non residencey issue but my bank has my Europe address (it's where they send my statements) so they may bring it up as a spoiler if it got that far.

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I dont think it would be a problem. You are a british citizen, therefore you should have access to the british legal system.

First Direct, £4031 Recovered

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Correct Mondeo.

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If you found this post useful, please click on the "scales" icon in the bottom left of my post and say so!

 

The opinions of this post are those of monkey_uk and do not constitute sound legal advice. I am not a lawyer.

--

 

Halifax Unlawful Bank Charges: S.A.R - (Subject Access Request) Sent 28/02/07 - CC Statement's rcv'd 18/04/07 Bank a/c statements rcv'd 19/04/07

 

 

 

First Direct Unlawful Bank Charges: Settled in Full 12/05/06 | £2235.50

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As long as the defendant has a UK address to which a claim can be correctly served you can issue proceedings.

The law maybe reason without passion as Aristotle said, but hey, he said nothing about having fun when getting even!

 

Opinions given herein are made informally by myself as a lay-person in good faith based on personal expereince. For legal advice you must always consult a registered and insured lawyer.

 

 

Reputation Points Always Welcome

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Are you in the EU ? if so, it might be worth reading up on 'Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982'. I looked it up in relation to cross border claims from Sctland to England but I think it covers the EU. Best google it.

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  • 9 years later...

I hope it's ok to revive this old thread.

 

We are british, living in France, being diddled by a uk car hire company (trustpilot rating 0.5/5!) for a rental when we were in UK. Using a UK credit card.

 

We are using resolver.co.uk (which is good) as are the company. But it keeps going on, they keep charging semi-random amounts on the card which we have to get frozen and so on. It really has been a considerable amount of trouble by now.

 

We've got the "bill" down from £1450 to £85, so we are making progress. They are only claiming now for a valet charge which is baloney.

 

Can I use the uk small claims court procedure without having to attend? Should I? Is there some better alternative (like getting a hearing in France would be handy).

 

Is it correct the claim would have to be restricted to the £85 plus actual expenses, nothing for hassle and distress and time spent?

 

Thanks

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I hope it's ok to revive this old thread.

 

We are british, living in France, being diddled by a uk car hire company (trustpilot rating 0.5/5!) for a rental when we were in UK. Using a UK credit card.

 

We are using resolver.co.uk (which is good) as are the company. But it keeps going on, they keep charging semi-random amounts on the card which we have to get frozen and so on. It really has been a considerable amount of trouble by now.

 

We've got the "bill" down from £1450 to £85, so we are making progress. They are only claiming now for a valet charge which is baloney.

 

Can I use the uk small claims court procedure without having to attend? Should I? Is there some better alternative (like getting a hearing in France would be handy).

 

Is it correct the claim would have to be restricted to the £85 plus actual expenses, nothing for hassle and distress and time spent?

 

Thanks

 

The site team will need a new thread, as they don't like old threads belonging to someone else being added to

 

You have to issue a court claim in the UK as the company you are trying to sue are in the UK. Yes you might have to attend a UK court.

 

If you want advice about merits of legal claim, you need to post a new thread to the legal section.

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  • 3 years later...

This topic was closed on 09 March 2019.

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