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    • Hi BankFodder, Thanks for the reply.  I will take your advice and read through more thoroughly. To answer your question, the value of the laptop is £255.  When filling in the online form to prepare the shipment it asked what the contents of the parcel was and the value and I specified "laptop" and "£255". Thanks.
    • Before you start this claim you need to have a lot more confidence in what you're doing which means that you need to understand the way forward in the principles involved more thoroughly. We will help you and you will probably get your money back but this is a self empowerment forum and so you have to do your bit as well. Please will you spend at least the next couple of days reading through the stories on this sub- forum. Try to understand them thoroughly. We have lots of stories very similar to yours but even those which are not similar, have principles in them which apply. In particular you need to read and understand the information in the pinned topics at the top of the sub- forum. I know that you have been reading around here for the past couple of hours but it needs a lot more. You aren't in a huge hurry. Wait a few days before sending a letter of claim and also that needs some amendment as well. Come back here when you've done your reading and then we will have a look at your letter of claim and help you to refine it Also, please tell us the value of the laptop. Was it properly declared as a laptop – and was the value properly declared
    • Unsure what would be classed as appeal I first contacted the applicant then IAS. I am not aware I could appeal again as Bank state I was informed that is news to me. I would have to look through the paper work, I apologise I forget so much due to my caring duties wish I had quality time to get so much done. Will try and look tomorrow, appreciate everyone's time and input.
    • Regular savings accounts are accounts designed for savers who put money aside every month and reward them with a generous interest rate.View the full article
    • Hi, I've been reading the invaluable advice on this forum and reading about the problems with Evri and lost delivery of items.  From what I gather the initial steps after having exhausted every's own lost item claim process is to draft a Letter of Claim, I think it is called and to register with the government Money Claims.  I have got a login for Money Claims and have made an initial stab at the letter but I'm not certain I have got it right. Am I right to assume that having exhausted Evri customer service's claims process and having received the denial of any compensation because the laptop I was sending is on the non-compensatory list that my next step would be to send the Letter of Claim to them? Let me provide some basic details which I hopefully have addressed in the letter. I purchased a laptop through Amazon.co.uk which a business in Belfast sold refurbished laptops through.  They had a 30 day money back guarantee for a full refund if you have any issues with the laptop.  I have the invoice from Amazon showing the purchase.  On 27 April, 2024 before the end of the 30 day period I used their ParcelShop (inside a Tesco) to send the laptop back and have the tracking reference mentioned in the letter.  As mentioned in the letter there was they advised they could not give me or sell me any insurance because laptops are on the non-compensatory list so I just paid the normal delivery cost.  It was scanned as leaving the ParcelShop on 29 April and the tracking has been like that ever since.  After a 28 working day Evri claim process they gave the expected response that they could not provide any compensation and simply could not proceed with my claim. I was hoping to get some advice on whether I go ahead now and email this to Customer Services straightaway and should I send a hard-copy to the Evri address as well?  Or are there any steps I have missed out on first?  I believe 14 days is the reasonable period of time for them to respond so if I were to send it tomorrow, for example 12 June then I should expect a reply by 26 June, is that correct and fair?  And assuming they don't reply with a full refund then I would then go down the government Money Claims site to proceed with that? Sorry for all the questions, I want to make sure I go about it properly.  I'll continue to read through other cases on here so I can get an even better handle on the process. I attached a LOC, happy for any edits or updates that will make it even better. Thanks so much for anyone's help! Regards, Matt Evri letter of claim.docx
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      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.
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Companies without postal address


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I notice that some companies do business online only with an email address but without putting forward a postal address in their website.

 

The question that I have is if a client of these companies is unhappy with the services or products received from these companies, how can this client take legal action against these companies if this client does not know the postal address of these companies which is necessary to issue a claim to the county court.

 

These companies received money from their clients so their clients should be able to procecute these company if something goes wrong

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Totally agree that these companies should provide a UK address.

 

The reason they don't is that sometimes they are foreign companies who just use a UK warehouse to ship goods to UK customers. And as they don't own the warehouse, they don't want mail to go there. Or the company does not have any office, as they work from home.

 

Just because the website is co.uk, does not mean a company has any official office in the UK.

 

Perhaps always use a websites contact us option to ask for a UK customers services address before doing any business with a company.

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Thank you for the explanation. However some  British companies also  appear to be going along that route. I am thinking of certain parking companies that Eric's brother  pointed out  and alluding to the fact that with them they used PO box numbers as opposed to a proper postal address. He opined that their PCNs were not correctly issued and though I have searched the internet I can find nothing definitive as to the rules on business documents not being allowed to to use PO numbers or indeed email addresses.

Could you throw some light on that please Uncle Bulgaria.

 

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1 hour ago, today said:

The company is a British publisher of books. Do you know in which website I can find its address?

 

If it's a proper company then its details should be on the Companies House website with a registered address. 

 

HB

Illegitimi non carborundum

 

 

 

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Personally I would never buy anything online from a seller who does not provide a physical address on their website.

 

In any event, I always find it prudent to check a seller's online returns policy to see what address they give.  If they don't give a returns address or it's in Shanghaia - avoid!

 

2 hours ago, today said:

The company is a British publisher of books. Do you know in which website I can find its address?

 

I would not necessarily assume that that means they are a UK company subject to the laws of England and Wales... 

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There is nothing wrong with a company using a PO Box because we can use a PO Box in a claim form if we need to issue a claim because a PO Box is a legal address with a postcode. However,  this company even not uses a PO Box because it communicates with its clients using an online form.

 

I cannot use the website of the Companies House to find the address of this company because only limited companies i.e. which have been incorporated are in the Companies House Website. I have done search in the Internet and I found out that it is a British publisher.

 

If a British publisher sells book in the UK and as a consequence receives money from its clients, their clients should be able to issue a claim to the county court if they are unhappy with the quality of the book sold or for any other reasons.

 

This company sold books not directly but through Amazon so it does not have a return policy. The address of a UK publisher should be somewhere maybe in an association of uk publishers but I do not know where. The HMRC  should have the address because if it receives money in the UK it should pay taxes but this should be confidential

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dont bother going after them

go thru amazon, they are equally responsible.

 

lots of threads here of successes through them.

 

dx

 

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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The publisher is Indie Authors Press

it is British independent small press founded in 2011

I have a problem with them and not with Amazon

I would be grateful to you if you find their address

 

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The problem that I have with them is too complicated to explain

 

They should be also in the UK because they are a British publisher

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nope.not true.

 

oh well we'll just have to keep pulling teeth to get the info we need to try and  help you properly.

 

Dx

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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What makes you think they are a British publisher?  Is it because they have a .co.uk email address?  You can have one of those anywhere in the world.

 

Try answering some questions.

 

(DX  -  I'll get the novocaine ready while you find the pliers...

 

On second thoughts, give the painkiller a miss I think...)

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I cannot find any UK website for indie authors press.

 

If they are advertised in Amazon, they might be on their Marketplace and not have a separate UK website.

We could do with some help from you.

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Well that is what I've posted above, isn't it?

 

They also seem to be these people

 

WWW.SALGADO-REYES.COM

Spread the loveOUR CURRENT BOOKS MacGuffin $12.99eBook: $3.99 Hollywood, California, August 2005.The double murder of a Beverly Hills...

 

Do they owe you money?  Have you paid them to do something and they haven't delivered?

 

Do you want help or not?

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11 minutes ago, today said:

I have done search in the Internet where it is stated that they are an independent British publisher which is located in Pimlico London

 

Rather than us searching around the internet to be told it's the wrong people, couldn't you just link us to something on the internet that shows who you've dealt with?

 

HB

Illegitimi non carborundum

 

 

 

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It more complicated than owing me money but it is irrelevant to the issue of their address

 

I have simply Googled their name and I found Peabody Avenue and I looked in their Facebook page and I found Belgrave Road

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:frusty:

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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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Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, today said:

It more complicated than owing me money but it is irrelevant to the issue of their address

 

I have simply Googled their name and I found Peabody Avenue and I looked in their Facebook page and I found Belgrave Road

 

And the link[s[ please?

 

HB

Illegitimi non carborundum

 

 

 

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