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    • Hi I stupidly left my handbrake off,  and my car rolled down a hill and into a fence owned by a company. I am a part owner of the company that owns the fence. My car insurance (Prima) states they won't cover the damage to the fence, just the car as they state  "you own the land', although I don't and I did make that clear to them when reporting the accident.. I understood a company is a separate legal entity, so should be considered third party damage and car insurance should cover? The property has a £400 excess and I'm already going to be paying out the £500 excess on car insurance, so want to avoid paying both if I can.. Thanks for any advice you can give...
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    • Yes, they are digging themselves into a ditch, with regard to people like you who fight back. Remember that, sadly, the vast majority of motorists who get these tickets think they are fines, that companies like ECP have some sort of official status, and give in and pay. They are just putting barriers in your way and encouraging you to fold. How about this as a reply - Dear ECP, Re: Subject Access Request PCN no.XXXXX I refer to my Subject Access Request dated XXXXX and received by yourselves on XXXXX. Thank you for your bizarre letter of 23 April.  Your letter requests Photo ID - which I have already sent to you.  The letter also requests proof of ownership of the vehicle - this is impossible to produce as the vehicle in question was on hire. In any case requests for proof of ownership are silly given your PCNs invite registered keepers to nominate drivers who do not own vehicles. I note all this concern for correct identity was absent when you decided to send letters threatening me with all & sundry if I didn't pay you money! The SAR was received on XXXXX.  I have already sent Photo ID.  The clock is ticking.  I am well aware that I would have the right to complain to the ICO and to sue you for not respecting your statutory duty should you not respect the 30-day deadline. Tick, tock. Yours, XXXXX
    • none of their ruddy business! and if they have been pressuring you in o borrowing from friends and family .. THAT IS WRONG AND AGAINST THE REGULATIONS...if you have that in B&W you need to REPORT THEM. once a debt is defaulted and it gone from your file it can never come back. not without a fight in court you won't. i think you are getting confused here , just because you've been paying 'creditors' via and IVA it does NOT mean the debt can re-appear on your file, and it does not mean you are more likely to get more CCJ attempts. statute barring is 6yrs from a debts last payment, but that can't change anything on your credit file. i really wish you hadn't sent that letter. please dont do anything more now unless you check with us first..no calls, in/out. no emails in/out no letters in/out....thats if you want our help.... NONE OF THEIR BUSINESS STOP GROVELLING to them. could have been worded alot better and more forcefully. dx    
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Paid for goods not received - Advice needed


JEC1965
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Hi All

 

I am looking for some help/advice on behalf of my mother-in law.

 

She had a new kitchen fitted last year.

Earlier this year she had a new boiler fitted need a new cupboard.

She contacted the installer directly and asked if he could source one.

 

He said he would have to order from abroad so stupidly she paid him in full. (over £900 pounds)

 

That was February and she still hasn't received the cupboard.

He does not keep in contact and she leaves messages which he never replies to.

 

He has a shop a few miles away but it never seems to be open.

The last time she spoke to him he promised delivery a few weeks ago but it never arrived.

 

He has his own company and I checked on companies house yesterday and it was dissolved in July. I think she paid him directly and not his company.

 

She has reported it to the police but they seem reluctant to do anything.

 

Could she make a claim against him to recover the money she has paid and if so what would her chances be?

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When was the cheque paid (in relation to the date of the company’s dissolution in July) : it seems likely it was in February from your post, but I don’t want to assume...

 

Was the cheque made out to him personally, or to his company?

If she isn’t sure (check the cheque-stub?) she can ask her bank for a copy of the cancelled cheque.

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Then she can state her contract was with him personally, and sue him personally.

 

She should make “time of the essences” if she hasn’t already done so, in a letter before claim.

 

If she doesn’t get a refund / the cabinet within that reasonable time frame she can then issue a claim.

 

It seems likely she’d win a claim but the over-riding issue is

“If she won a claim would she be able to enforce it?”.

 

A claim won that is then unenforceable is a Pyrrhic victory.

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Reverse the cheque?

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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Thanks for your response.

 

 

I have told her to send him a letter asking for a refund and give him 14 days, (we got his home address from companies house) and to let him know that if she doesn't receive the refund within that timescale then she will make a claim against him.

 

 

“If she won a claim would she be able to enforce it?”. - Do you mean if he hasn't got any money to pay?? I suppose we will cross that bridge when we come to it.

 

 

DX100uk - the cheque was cashed a long time ago so that's not an option.

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“If she won a claim would she be able to enforce it?”. - Do you mean if he hasn't got any money to pay?? I suppose we will cross that bridge when we come to it.

 

I suggest you cross that bridge before issuing a claim.

If he is ‘potless’ it’d be “throwing good money after bad”, so unless you don’t mind wasting the time involved and the cost to issue the claim .......

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Is he trading still (but as an individual)?

Has he got other unsatisfied CCJ's against him that might suggest others have got CCJ's and struggled to enforce them?

 

Does he own where he lives outright? (check the land registry).

Does he own it at all?

 

It won't help with deciding on his solvency, but when it comes to enforcement: Can you get someone to phone him with "an order", and get his bank details?

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I heard of fraudster who reverse a cheque after it's been cashed, so that's a possibility to explore.

To meet him face to face, give a tenner to a neighbour of his shop to call you when he shows up and promise a further reward.

You'll be surprised to see how helpful nosey neighbours could be.

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