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    • all DYL's are subject to a TRO. looking at this newish, ever increasing as old ind units have gotten removed, estate, there are only lines on one side, on the other there is a parking lane with traffic calming through which you mention. i seriously doubt your mate has any clue what he is talking about.!! its not a private housing assoc estate. so its a public council owned road. no construction co can just decide to draw their graffiti on a road. the DYLs are certainly there pre 2016 even before his home was built. now ive had a quick look to see if the main access to royal park road has signs. there is no royle park road even on your map but there is a royal barn road which leads to where you are parked royal road has a restriction sign on the pole by the fence of the electric substation jnc with gipsy lane there does not appear to be one leading in from the other end - tesco petrol station
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    • Hi All. A family friends car was having issues when she was on a trip visiting family up north at the begining of January.  She ended up leaving it at my friends garage in the same location, who parked it on his forecourt to investigate the issue, howver he said most likely it is beyond economical repair as its a serious gearbox fault. In the meantime i replaced her car with one of my spare cars. The insurance on the car then expired in at the end of January.  When the insurance expired, I sent a paper V890 paper as i didnt have her V5 Reference number in hand to do it online (i have a copy of this).  She didnt mention she hadnt recieved any confirmation as she didnt know if she would get one.  She then cancelled her road tax at the end of March (i think) as she was paying by DD. She then was travelling up north so didnt get her ,ail until last week. She recievd a letter dated 09/04/2024 stating she had failed to insure the vehcile and there was a £100 fine which could be reduced to £50 if she respons by 11/05/2024.  As soon as we noticed, i got her to dig  out the V5 and SORN'd the vehicle.   My friend has been a bit slow in checking the fault, however i suspect it will still be scrapped and is still on his forecourt. Is this possible to appeal?
    • worthy to not forget Just to let you know this bunch Kensington have been fined £1.225m by the financial regulator for treating borrowers who were in arrears unfairly. Claim those charges back plus the interest and tell them not to add any more to the account. There are a few news stories here you can get the info for a letter to send to them. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8615870.stm  
    • Hi All. I went to visit a family friend in Rochdale on a new housing estate opposite a old row of houses. The location is Royle Road, Postcode OL11 3PE. I was originally parked in parking bays outside the old houses, then moved the car, when I noticed my tyre was flat, so parked on what looked like double yellows to use his air pump to check and inflate the tyres before we left the house.   In the time i went inside to sort the pump and power supply i got a PCN.  The tyre then got changed (has a puncture) and we left. PCN Number:         RE######## Date:             04/05/2024 Time:             20:36 Observation:         20:34 to 20:36 Reported location:     Royle Park Road Reason:        Parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours (Code: 01) I believe this PCN is not correct and has grounds to appeal: 1. My friend who moved into the property around 6 months ago, swears that even though it has old double yellows marked, they are not current or council marked.   He said the property development company had said they had marked them for ease of access during development. 2. The road i was parked on was Royle Road.  The PCN was issued for Royle Park Road, which is about 400 yards up the road. 3. There are no sign posts or marking showing parking  restriction hours in the entire area (there maybe on Royle park Road). I have attached a map of the Location where i parked as a red dot. I have 2 questions: a.  Is there a way to check where double yellow lines are marked on some register to check if they are current? b. Can my grounds of appeal simply be, wrong location, wrong offence? Thanks in advance. Map_20240505.pdf
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Unsolicited Goods - Guitar


Guest Ibanez1070
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Guest Ibanez1070

A company with whom I hold an account and have made purchases from in the past have sent me a guitar I didnt order.

 

The guitar was added to my account with a price of £0.00.

The guitar duly arrived Addressed to me at my address, it came with an invoice that listed the guitar and a price of £0.00.

 

2 weeks pass and the company have now emailed asking for the guitar back.

 

Im fairly certain that although they may have made an error, I am covered by the unsolicited goods act and am under no legal obligation to return it.

 

Can anyone help me clarify this ?

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I'm fairly certain that because they have made an error and because you are aware of it, that you are not covered by the unsolicited goods act or other related legislation.

 

I'm not in a position to look up the detail of the moment that I would say that you are not only under a duty to return it, but also until you do you are under a duty to take reasonable care of it.

 

The sender of it would be required to make arrangements to collect it or to refund you any costs of returning it to them.

 

What's the value?

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A company with whom I hold an account and have made purchases from in the past have sent me a guitar I didnt order.

 

The guitar was added to my account with a price of £0.00.

The guitar duly arrived Addressed to me at my address, it came with an invoice that listed the guitar and a price of £0.00.

 

2 weeks pass and the company have now emailed asking for the guitar back.

 

Im fairly certain that although they may have made an error, I am covered by the unsolicited goods act and am under no legal obligation to return it.

 

Can anyone help me clarify this ?

 

Firstly, did you contact them pointing out their error, and offering to return the goods (at their cost). If so: they are yours provided they didn't ask for them back within 2 weeks of that letter.

 

If not, then it will depend on if a court would decide these were truly unsolicited / sent as a marketing gimmick or s*c*a*m (where they will be yours), or if it was a genuine error by the company (who you have had previous business dealings with) where they can require them back, or for you to pay.

 

I suspect that legally (as well as morally!) the latter applies. Do the right thing, though you shouldn't be out of pocket for returning it, it should be at their cost and by a suitably insured method.

 

https://consumerarbitration.co.uk/2018/11/01/unsolicited-goods-your-rights/

Edited by BazzaS
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Guest Ibanez1070

Thanks for your reply and input.

It may well fall outside the scope of the unsolicited goods act. (which can be quite a grey area)

That does not mean I have a legal obligation to return the item or that this situation is not covered "by any other related legislation".

It was not misdelivered, it was sent in my name with a covering invoice.

 

The value is irrelevant at this point as it is supplied to me with an invoice stating its value is £0.00.

The invoice I possess and the entire electronic audit trail show that the goods were sent to me at £0.00 cost, ergo I am currently in legal possesion of the item in my understanding.

 

Be happy to hear your further thoughts. :-)

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Guest Ibanez1070

Thank you kindly.

 

Morally im not interested in doing the right thing with regards to commerce and legally I have a bill of sale so I would "suspect" that they dont have a leg to stand on.

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You've had 2 replies explaining why you can't just keep it. You haven't explained why you believe they are wrong.

 

It seems that you aren't actually after advice, but only validation of your (incorrect views). Legally, you are wrong. The fact that you are also morally wrong, and aren't interested in 'doing the right thing' either: I hope they sue you, and win. Good luck.

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Thread moved to the appropriate forum....Online Stores...please continue to post here to your thread.

 

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Thank you kindly.

 

Morally im not interested in doing the right thing with regards to commerce and legally I have a bill of sale so I would "suspect" that they dont have a leg to stand on.

 

Youre wrong. Totally, and if the company wanted to chase it up, theyd be quite right to go for legal action to recover it.

 

I dont think theres anything more to say as you have been given the correct advice regarding the law, but y ou want to completely ignore it. The law says that if the company is aware of their mistake and notify then they can recover. Youre just choosing to ignore that hoping for a free item.

 

Whatever you choose to do, good luck. Youll need it.

Any advice i give is my own and is based solely on personal experience. If in any doubt about a situation , please contact a certified legal representative or debt counsellor..

 

 

If my advice helps you, click the star icon at the bottom of my post and feel free to say thanks

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Just because the invoice says zero charge does not mean the item has zero value. You have had previously dealings with the company so they are classed as goods sent in error, not unsolicited goods

It may be a replacement for someone else and by human error sent to.you.

Send it back, at their expense.

Stop looking for a freebie.

Edited by sgtbush
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they were sent by mistake and you were a previous customer so NOT unsolicited goods.

Nothing to do with morals, it isnt yours and you must make it availbale for them to collect. they have a year to sort this out, not a fortnight.

a bill of sale merely includes the details of the transaction and it is correct, you havent paid for it and that is not the same as saying that it is of no value nor that monies are not expected. I suspect what you have been sent is actually an advice note or packing note and these are not part of the contractual terms. That makes it even harder to claim that the item is unsolicited.

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