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    • Northmonk forget what I said about your Notice to Hirer being the best I have seen . Though it  still may be  it is not good enough to comply with PoFA. Before looking at the NTH, we can look at the original Notice to Keeper. That is not compliant. First the period of parking as sated on their PCN is not actually the period of parking but a misstatement  since it is only the arrival and departure times of your vehicle. The parking period  is exactly that -ie the time youwere actually parked in a parking spot.  If you have to drive around to find a place to park the act of driving means that you couldn't have been parked at the same time. Likewise when you left the parking place and drove to the exit that could not be describes as parking either. So the first fail is  failing to specify the parking period. Section9 [2][a] In S9[2][f] the Act states  (ii)the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver, the creditor will (if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met) have the right to recover from the keeper so much of that amount as remains unpaid; Your PCN fails to mention the words in parentheses despite Section 9 [2]starting by saying "The notice must—..." As the Notice to Keeper fails to comply with the Act,  it follows that the Notice to Hirer cannot be pursued as they couldn't get the NTH compliant. Even if the the NTH was adjudged  as not  being affected by the non compliance of the NTK, the Notice to Hirer is itself not compliant with the Act. Once again the PCN fails to get the parking period correct. That alone is enough to have the claim dismissed as the PCN fails to comply with PoFA. Second S14 [5] states " (5)The notice to Hirer must— (a)inform the hirer that by virtue of this paragraph any unpaid parking charges (being parking charges specified in the notice to keeper) may be recovered from the hirer; ON their NTH , NPE claim "The driver of the above vehicle is liable ........" when the driver is not liable at all, only the hirer is liable. The driver and the hirer may be different people, but with a NTH, only the hirer is liable so to demand the driver pay the charge  fails to comply with PoFA and so the NPE claim must fail. I seem to remember that you have confirmed you received a copy of the original PCN sent to  the Hire company plus copies of the contract you have with the Hire company and the agreement that you are responsible for breaches of the Law etc. If not then you can add those fails too.
    • Weaknesses in some banks' security measures for online and mobile banking could leave customers more exposed to scammers, new data from Which? reveals.View the full article
    • I understand what you mean. But consider that part of the problem, and the frustration of those trying to help, is the way that questions are asked without context and without straight facts. A lot of effort was wasted discussing as a consumer issue before it was mentioned that the property was BTL. I don't think we have your history with this property. Were you the freehold owner prior to this split? Did you buy the leasehold of one half? From a family member? How was that funded (earlier loan?). How long ago was it split? Have either of the leasehold halves changed hands since? I'm wondering if the split and the leashold/freehold arrangements were set up in a way that was OK when everyone was everyone was connected. But a way that makes the leasehold virtually unsaleable to an unrelated party.
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Raising a claim for incomplete SAR disclosure. How to punish them?


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On 06/06/2019 at 19:32, BankFodder said:

The easier way is simply to bring a small claim for a nominal sum – maybe £25 – justified by the distress that you have suffered (presumably you haven't suffered any pecuniary loss). On the basis of what you say this would bring a judgement in your favour and there will be an implication that they were in breach of statutory duty and I would certainly send a copy of the judgement to the ICO. Because it will be subject to the small claims rules then even if you lost you

I mean this

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Ok, it's been suggested on several threads to take the company infringing the gdpr to court without giving them a chance to settle a nominal modest sum (£25/£50).

This to make them accountable for their failure to follow the law and i am all for it, however I don't know if that could backfire.

Hence my question.

 

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I don’t understand this point you keep making of ‘giving them a chance to settle out of court’, the process of going through the small claims court is (or should be) the last resort when an the defendant has failed to settle. Hence, their chance has been and gone.

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29 minutes ago, king12345 said:

Judge considering unreasonable taking a company to court for £25 without giving them a chance to settle out of court.

 

If it ever gets to a judge then every effort would have been made to settle prior to court, all pre application protocols will have been done and before that all evidence of non compliance from properly formulated requests.

 

Not sure you are understanding the process, no one would got straight to court without months of work which is what the claim is for. The £25 fee applies to all cases under a certain amount and its the costs of preparing the months of requests that we claim for. In reality based on what many of these companies charge us, £50 for a letter !, we should be claiming much more but its hard to quantify from an evidential point hence why I keep mine under £100. 

 

If all these so called reputable companies did what they claim they do such as help customers then none of this would be necessary.

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Ok, it's all mixed up as probably you haven't read the whole thread.

In a nutshell:

1.company has breached gdpr

2. I want to punish them by getting a ccj

3. If i follow the pre action protocol, they will surely pay up to avoid the ccj.

4. Someone on many threads said not to settle even if they offer whatever you're asking for

5. SO I ASKED: would it be unreasonable to take them to court for a small amount and not give them the chance to settle?

In other words, would the judge apply the law or kick me out of court?

 

P.S.: I am very familiar with pre action protocol,  done many many times.

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I think the confusion here is the process of making a claim for breach of GDPR.You should not be using a part 7 to make this type of claim or requesting any monetary value.

Part 8 claim is the correct process.

 

Part 7 is safe and small claim track...but part 7 requires a value to be claimed...even if the court allowed it and you did attain a judgment...its consequences are irrelevant and would not set a precedent of breach of GDPR.

 

It must be a Part 8 ....but the risk is considerable as it would be treated as a Multi Track claim......so you are open to very high costs risks....and of the course I wont mention the fees for processing a part 8 claim. :!:

 

Of course Pre Action Protocol and ADR applies to both type of claims.

 

Hope the above adds clarity.

 

Andy

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Firstly dont under any circumstances go into this as an act of punishment as a judge will pick up on it and most likely rule against you.

 

You are not applying for a CCJ, you are asking for the costs incurred in making the disclosure requests to be reimbursed and if they don't pay and don't defend then you can request judgement. Even then they can ask for it to be stayed so don't go thinking its a done deal.

 

As I have explained, work out your costs, I have kept mine low so that it doesn't suggest to a judge that anything actually costs £50 for a letter for example, as the main purpose is to get it in the system and potentially to a judgement. If they do pay up, and many will, my advice is not to cash the cheque until they send the info from the SAR and then only if your happy. If you don't get it then seek judgement and even if it goes to court you can ask the judge to increase the costs due to the extra work.

 

This will not be a case about GDPR etc as the judge will not make a decision on that, but it is great evidence of non compliance to take to the ICO. 

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3 hours ago, Andyorch said:

I think the confusion here is the process of making a claim for breach of GDPR.You should not be using a part 7 to make this type of claim or requesting any monetary value.

Part 8 claim is the correct process.

 

Part 7 is safe and small claim track...but part 7 requires a value to be claimed...even if the court allowed it and you did attain a judgment...its consequences are irrelevant and would not set a precedent of breach of GDPR.

 

It must be a Part 8 ....but the risk is considerable as it would be treated as a Multi Track claim......so you are open to very high costs risks....and of the course I wont mention the fees for processing a part 8 claim. :!:

 

Of course Pre Action Protocol and ADR applies to both type of claims.

 

Hope the above adds clarity.

 

Andy

Sorry for my inability on this, but I thought there was case law already re breaching (but not infringing) GDPR, to the tune of £750?

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An award is not case law and doesn’t set a precedent over other courts, it can be used during summing up of a case but any judge can choose to ignore what another had done, look at the bank charge cases from years ago.

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2 hours ago, jotty said:

An award is not case law and doesn’t set a precedent over other courts, it can be used during summing up of a case but any judge can choose to ignore what another had done, look at the bank charge cases from years ago.

Thank you, and I'm not doubting you but does this case not have much 'sway' if one was to make a similar claim:

 

The claimant was awarded £750 for distress for what the court held to be a minor breach. 

 

https://www.hempsons.co.uk/news-articles/damages-distress-awarded-breach-data-protection-act/

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54 minutes ago, craigten said:

Thank you, and I'm not doubting you but does this case not have much 'sway' if one was to make a similar claim:

 

The claimant was awarded £750 for distress for what the court held to be a minor breach. 

 

https://www.hempsons.co.uk/news-articles/damages-distress-awarded-breach-data-protection-act/

Of course it can be used in legal argument but it isn’t case law 

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I think its important to understand the full claim and context and how it arrived in the Court of Appeal...it was initially a default judgment for the claimant (Halliday) settled by consent and fresh proceedings brought by Creation and Halliday responded by way of a part 20 counter claim

 

https://app.croneri.co.uk/law-and-guidance/case-reports/halliday-v-creation-consumer-finance-ltd-2013-ewca-civ-333-ca

 

https://www.casemine.com/judgement/uk/5a8ff6fc60d03e7f57ea5497

 

 

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