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On 17/01/2022 at 12:38, FTMDave said:

t's still unclear to me how the relationship between you and the builder broke down.

 

21 September, you sent the snagging list.

There was no money issues between us as I always gave money when he asked and he did ask in accordance with the contract agreement, when he went out of contract agreement was when he was begging to want to pay staff on Project2, I was not happy but had sympathy. I was not happy that he slapped the cheques in my face but  i didn't get upset because I wanted him to finish his work. Relationship never broke down as such, he wanted more money than I gave him because he never complete the work and trying to want payment,  but he didn't know how to go about it, and this frustrate him i believe.  I would say i noticed his discomfort with me around the 18/09/2020.

 

I am looking for Quantity surveyor to assess the cost of restoration of the uncompleted work. Dont know how soon i can get this done but I am racing.

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So what happened to their claim ...as per my last post?

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5 hours ago, FTMDave said:

unless simeon1964 explains, with copies of the correspondence, how the relationship with the builder broke down, then IMO we are at an impasse.  The defence does not defend the substance of the builder's claim.

These are all copies of correspondence to the claimant

Letters sent aut 2020Cag.pdf

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Are my posts invisible ?  :???:

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On 18/01/2022 at 19:40, Andyorch said:

So what happened to their claim ...as per my last post?

Don't know the answer to this one,  Andyorch. cant remember. Claimant's  solicitor was not helping either when I asked last week. 

 

On 18/01/2022 at 20:08, Andyorch said:

Are my posts invisible ? 

Cant re-all about the claim and the defence at all

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May be worthwhile given that Solicitors were dealing with the initial claim /defence...although I'm sure it must be one of the above reasons I have referred to already as the counter claim couldn't proceed on its own alone.

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So apart from drafting a counterclaim that explains why he's suing his builder for £16000, what else do you think @simeon1964 should be doing?

 

I freely admit I'm well out of my depth here and I don't want to inadvertantly guide simeon off in the wrong direction.  And I think FTMDave probably feels the same way.

 

I'm a bit concerned that it will turn out that there has never been any "real" evidence to support the value of the counterclaim and that at the time it just seemed like a "good idea" to both simeon and the legal friend who helped him draft the original defence and counterclaim.

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On 13/01/2022 at 12:53, Andyorch said:

You will have to add a little more detail/breakdown to the counter claim to quantify loss...don't forget to request interest also section 69 @ 8% 

 

 

As above....the court now require a full particularised counter claim (in a statement form) along with evidence (exhibits) and the claimant part 20 Defendant will have to respond with a fully particularised defence....by the dates stated in the order.

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A breakdown should be given within the particularised claim to quantify the losses claimed along with whether in negligence of breach of contract......breach of duty causation and loss as the Defendant Part 20 Claimant must be in a position to be able to plead with fact given that counterclaim has already been submitted earlier albeit with no great detail or support but now the court wish to test the counter claim.

 

Its no use now rushing around to try and get expert testimonial and what it will cost to correct....that should have all been finalised at the time the counter claim was initially filed....after all the OP was prepared to plead this last year at the time of the claimants claim and all though we are not aware of what happened to the claimants claim....if it had proceeded to a hearing he would have had to plead the counter claim with supporting evidence.

 

The fact is that the OP got judgment on a technicality ...the claimant did not file a defence so the counter claim was never challenged..

 

Point 5 of the court Order confirms that Directions Questionnaires must be submitted by 4.00pm 28th Feb and he can request permission for expert testimony report at this stage so the claim will then move to allocation  which will then allow further directions with regards to submitting witness statement and evidence at a date to be confirmed.

 

Hope that clarifies

 

Andy

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15 minutes ago, Andyorch said:

we are not aware of what happened to the claimants claim

We are aware - well, sort of.

 

The claimant didn't bother to abide by court orders, multiple times.

 

Eventually there was a default judgement both ways - the claimant's case struck out, the counter claim allowed.

 

The builder then applied for set aside for (1) his case to be reinstated and (2) the counter claim to be set aside, but only (2) was granted.

 

I agree with everything you have posted that evidence for the counter claim should have been there when it was filed and in any case the OP has had nigh on a year to get such evidence together.

 

So now up to the OP to prepare the best itemised counter claim they can by the court's deadline.

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Thanks FMT...glad someone knows what happened to the initial claim.....given the OP has no idea  :roll: 

 

 

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Thanks Andy

 

Whether that makes things clearer for simeon or not, I don't know...

 

Yes - simeon should have ensured long before arriving at this point that he had an accurate breakdown of the uncompleted work, the damage caused by the builder and what it will cost to put that damage right.  Why he didn't have that before he submitted the counterclaim is unclear.  But that's where he appears still to be even now.

 

The only possible explanation as I see it (and I have no idea if this is true or not) is that simeon's solicitor seemed to advise him not to bother to get a surveyor's report before the court hearing. 

On 12/01/2022 at 15:58, simeon1964 said:

I remember the former [my solicitor] saying that i should wait till we go to court before I get a surveyor to give assessment of the damage and that the judge might say both parties would pay for the cost, But am not very clear on this.  

 

I'm also wondering whether because of the excessive delay in the solicitor enforcing the original default judgment and simeon's subsequent dismissal of the solicitor, that the need to back up the counterclaim was overlooked.

 

Of course, that's all pure speculation on my part, and I have no idea whether it might help simeon buy more time or not?

 

[Edit:  I was replying to Andy's #71 and I see I've cross-posted.  I think I agree with FTMDave that simeon can only do the best he can and hope...]

Edited by Manxman in exile
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Well he has already stated a ball park figure so has some idea...as said this statement does not need to include expert proof...estimates will suffice...but more importantly the legal basis of the counterclaim clarified.

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My fear is the ball park figure being claimed has been based onthe dimensions of a polo field when it should have been based on the size of a snooker table.  I don't think we've seen anything that justifies £8k let alone £16k.

 

I'm not sure simeon has any idea of the real value of his counterclaim.  Sorry.

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Will I be able to ask the court to amend the defence alongside the application to extension the counterclaim .

 

Yes <Manxman in exile, I need something evidential. The figures were not plucked from thin air, whey were based on searches for estimate from online tradesmen. You hammered on 16k of which I have supported 3.3k receipt  leaving 13k to prove, and two quotes one, from a plasterer to re-do the plaster work for about 3k via my email and another another Handyman for a little over 10K figure over his phone, having come to inspect the job. I agree my resource is running out getting anything that can buttress this claim as reasonable. Do i now go for survey, assessor but at what stage of this claim are these professional needed. I do not like the condition and the state of my home now as I can not do any more building work, since the guy walked away. Help please

 

What evidence and  in what format, a builder, a surveyor, assessor or a contractor. I am not plucking figures off the tree. I have a table of schedule of loss. They are quotes for work not yet done except for two items, underpinning and dumping the rubble. total £3387.12 . This is 16k-3.4K. The point is; is this evidence needed at this stage as some people on the platform are saying to the contrary. If yes tell what it and will invite the profession to value the damage.

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Hi simeon - ok maybe that sounds a bit more promising.  Let me have a quick think about this and I'll get back in 30 mins or so.

 

But remember - I'm not a lawyer and as I've said before I have absolutely no knowledge or experience whatsoever of civil court rules and procedure.  I can't give you legal advice on the best or the correct way of doing this.  As I've said before, if you want legal advice you can rely on, then you need to pay a solicitor.  If you can't afford that you are going to have to make your own decisions having already decided to sue your builder for £16k.  I've already suggested you speak to Citizens Advice Bureau or ask if your local university law school provides a free legal clinic.

 

All I can tell you is what seems like common sense to me.  I suspect Andyorch is the person you need to be asking what you should and should not be doing from a legal procedure point of view.  But at the end of the day it's only you who knows exactly what has happened and you have to make the decisions.

 

I'll be back shortly.

 

On 19/01/2022 at 07:01, simeon1964 said:

Will I be able to ask the court to amend the defence alongside the application to extension the counterclaim .

 

I don't know because I wasn't there when the judge delivered their verdict.  I think I've already suggested you ring the court and ask them if you need to submit a re-drafted defence to the original claim or did the judge dismiss the application to set aside.  Tell them English is not your first language and that you are confused as to what you need to submit next week (or whenever the deadline is).  Ask them to explain what you are required to do and what more you are allowed to do.  OK?

 

On 19/01/2022 at 08:47, simeon1964 said:

Yes <Manxman in exile, I need something evidential. The figures were not plucked from thin air, whey were based on searches for estimate from online tradesmen. You hammered on 16k of which I have supported 3.3k receipt  leaving 13k to prove, and two quotes one, from a plasterer to re-do the plaster work for about 3k via my email and another another Handyman for a little over 10K figure over his phone, having come to inspect the job. I agree my resource is running out getting anything that can buttress this claim as reasonable. Do i now go for survey, assessor but at what stage of this claim are these professional needed. I do not like the condition and the state of my home now as I can not do any more building work, since the guy walked away. Help please

 

OK.  So if I understand you correctly you appear to have some information/evidence to support the amount counterclaimed.  You have:

 

  1. a receipt for £3300.  Presumably that is from the other people who did the underpinning/piling that your builder was meant to do and was included in Project 1, but he did not do the work and you had to pay someone else to do it?
  2. a quote from a plasterer for "about" £3000, and 
  3. a quote from a trader for a little over £10000 to do the remedial work.

Well that adds up to around the figure you are counterclaiming.  Surely all you need to do is to reference those three documents (the receipt and the two quotes) in the numbered particulars of your counterclaim and attach them as exhibits?  If I were you I would ideally want the quotes to be on headed notepaper identifying the tradesman or the business supplying the quotes, otherwise who is to say you haven't just made them up?  If they aren't like that already, ask them to provide quotes like that ASAP.  But if you can't obtain them, just go with what you have.  You appear to have no choice.

 

I have one query regarding the receipt for £3300 (item 1.).  If I have understood all this correctly, you had already paid your builder under Project 1 to do that work.  Correct?  But when he couldn't do it you had to pay someone else £3300 to do it.  So you are claiming the £3300 from your bulider because you had to pay that amount to someone else even though you had already paid the builder for that work.  Is that correct?

 

Can I also ask why you haven't posted up copies of this receipt and the two quotes earlier when you have been asked what evidence you have to support your counterclaim?  It might have saved some time and anxiety...

 

On 19/01/2022 at 11:23, simeon1964 said:

What evidence and  in what format, a builder, a surveyor, assessor or a contractor. I am not plucking figures off the tree. I have a table of schedule of loss. They are quotes for work not yet done except for two items, underpinning and dumping the rubble. total £3387.12 . This is 16k-3.4K. The point is; is this evidence needed at this stage as some people on the platform are saying to the contrary. If yes tell what it and will invite the profession to value the damage.

 

I don't know.  Andyorch has previously said that your earlier detail of the counterclaim was not good enough and he has also said that "... the court now require a full particularised counter claim (in a statement form) along with evidence (exhibits)... "  #69

 

I would take that to mean that you need to submit numbered particulars of your counterclaim and that included within those particulars you also need to itemise all the work that is needed to be done and which adds up to the total of your counterclaim.  You do that by referencing your particulars of counterclaim to the receipt and two quotes mentioned above, and you attach those three documents as exhibits to you particulars.

 

As regards an expert surveyor's report etc, I simply don't know.  FTMDave has previously suggested that an expert report may not be strictly necessary (#14) but might be agood idea, and Andyorch said this in #15  "You dont require an expert statement at this stage...simply start again from the beginning and replead ... your ... part 20 counter claim and submit by the date stated. Expert reports come at allocation stage when you will both have to submit a further DQ unless the judge dispenses with allocation....and lets the original DQs stand"

 

That is as much as I know and understand, but I think you need to incorporate the receipt and two quotes into your counterclaim to support the amount claimed.  Andyorch seems to be suggesting an expert report is not needed at this stage.

 

That's all I can suggest and it's based on a common sense interpretation of earlier posts in this thread.  As I said before I'm not a lawyer and I can't give you legal advice.  If you want legal advice you can rely on you need to pay a lawyer.

 

Again - have you approached citizens advice or asked your university law school?

 

I don't feel I can give any further help beyond the above...

 

 

simeon - just realised that you may also still have been asking about an extension to get expert reports etc?  I think that @Andyorch has already suggested a couple of times that that may not be necessary???

 

On 18/01/2022 at 14:40, Andyorch said:

Yes its possible to request an extension but it will cost an application and fee...and in reality of this matter and the length of time its being going on it shouldn't really be required...if your not ready by now you should never have counterclaimed in the first place...

 

 

On 18/01/2022 at 23:48, Andyorch said:

A breakdown should be given within the particularised claim to quantify the losses claimed along with whether in negligence of breach of contract......breach of duty causation and loss as the Defendant Part 20 Claimant must be in a position to be able to plead with fact given that counterclaim has already been submitted earlier albeit with no great detail or support but now the court wish to test the counter claim.

 

Its no use now rushing around to try and get expert testimonial and what it will cost to correct....that should have all been finalised at the time the counter claim was initially filed....after all the OP was prepared to plead this last year at the time of the claimants claim and all though we are not aware of what happened to the claimants claim....if it had proceeded to a hearing he would have had to plead the counter claim with supporting evidence....

 

On 18/01/2022 at 23:48, Andyorch said:

...Point 5 of the court Order confirms that Directions Questionnaires must be submitted by 4.00pm 28th Feb and he can request permission for expert testimony report at this stage so the claim will then move to allocation  which will then allow further directions with regards to submitting witness statement and evidence at a date to be confirmed.

...

 

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2 hours ago, Manxman in exile said:

Can I also ask why you haven't posted up copies of this receipt and the two quotes earlier when you have been asked what evidence you have to support your counterclaim?  It might have saved some time and anxiety...

I have posted it and explained in reply to the new  defence counterclaim I adopted from you. Its nightmare getting through to the court. the lady at the court office  told me that,  to submit N224 for extension will cost me £175.00, may be I didn't hear her well as I believe that, it might be more than that. Can anyone help on this. I have been on to the phone to the court house just to make the payment, cant get through and still on the phone as at this moment. I have however sent a cheque in the phone to the court. 

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I unexpectedly had a couple of hours free this afternoon and thought I would have a bash at helping simeon drafting his counterclaim.  Everybody please feel free to comment on and - hopefully improve it!  (In particular I am not sure if I've got the terminology correct vis a vis counterclaimant and defendant - so that may need correcting).

 

I am aware that Andyorch and BankFodder often stress the importance of keeping POCs to the bare minimum so as not to give away your case too much.  Whether I've given too much detail - or not enough - here, I don't know.  As I say, it's free to be pulled apart, but simeon seems to have nothing else.

 

Paras 1 - 16 (in black typeface) are simply a precis based on what has gone before and I've used them to put the counterclaim in context.

Paras 17 - 19 (in red typeface) are simply my attempt to provide a basis for simeon's counterclaim.

 

At the end of the day this is simeon's documant - nobody else's.  simeon has to satisfy himself that it is both accurate and true, and also says what he wants it to say.  He will also have to order and sort out any attachments.  As I said earlier, I'm NOT giving legal advice!

 

Here goes...

=====================================================================================================

Counterclaim

 

1.      The defendant agreed to undertake building work (Project 1) at the counterclaimant’s property in relation to 3 specific areas of work for an agreed price of £4300.  The work was:

 

a. To underpin the bay window at the property,

b. To replace and repair a previously removed chimney breast and,

c. To install a new beam to the patio door.

 

 

2.      It was agreed that Project 1 was to be carried out under the instructions of a structural engineer engaged by the counterclaimant and that the defendant’s work would be as a result of instructions received following the structural engineer's assessment of the property.

 

3.      Between June and July in 2020 the counterclaimant provided the defendant with a full copy of the structural engineer's report which detailed instructions to the defendant for the works to be carried out.

 

4.      It was agreed between the parties that the works would commence on 13 August 2020.

 

 

5.      It was agreed between the parties that payments for Project 1 would be made in three instalments. The first payment would be made at the start of the defendant's work. The second payment would be paid at the halfway point of the defendant's work. The final payment would be made on completion of the total works.

 

6.      The defendant commenced work on 13 August 2020 and the first instalment due was paid.  

 

7.      On 24 August 2020 the defendant asked the counterclaimant to arrange an inspection of his work by the Building Control Inspector.  The defendant also stated that Project 1 was approaching mid-way and the counterclaimant paid the second instalment due.

 

8.      The Building Inspector arrived to inspect the defendant’s work but the defendant was absent.  The inspector was obviously very displeased by the standard of the defendant's work.  The inspector spoke to the defendant by telephone, asking him why he was absent and interrogating him about the work he had done.  The inspector then gave him some instructions over the telephone and also left a list of instructions with the counterclaimant to be passed on to the builder.  The building inspector then said he would be getting in touch with the counterclaimant’s structural engineer with his findings and the counterclaimant should hear from the engineer soon.

 

9.      The counterclaimant passed on the Building Inspector’s instructions to the defendant who agreed to follow them.

 

10.  The structural engineer visited and recommended piling to complete the underpinning for Project 1.  The defendant explained that he could not undertake this work. The structural engineer then suggested an alternative company to the counterclaimant to do the necessary work and this company was engaged by the counterclaimant to complete the necessary piling at an additional cost to the counterclaimant of £3300. (See receipt at Attachment1).

 

 

11.  The defendant asked if the counterclaimant needed any more work to be done and, despite the problems encountered on Project1, the counterclaimant agreed on 7 September 2020 to have more work done (Project 2) at an agreed price of £2580 and on similar payment terms to Project 1.

 

 

12.  As work commenced on Project 2 and was continued on the remaining work for Project 1, the counterclaimant had occasion to make several complaints to the defendant regarding the standard of his work.

 

13.   Barely a week after starting on Project 2, the defendant demanded payment for that work.  After a period of negotiation the counterclaimant agreed to pay him £2000 on 18 August 2020. 

 

14.  The counterclaimant subsequently paid the defendant  £1500 in cash.  Both parties agreed that this left a balance outstanding on Project 2 of £1080.

 

 

15.  It later came to the counterclaimant’s attention that the defendant had removed material (including a steel beam) from the counterclaimant’s property that the counterclaimant suspects either belonged to him or had been paid for by him in connection with Project 1.  When challenged the defendant admitted he had done this.  The counterclaimant has included the value of this material in his counterclaim detailed below.

 

16.    On 21 September 2020 the counterclaimant highlighted and sent a snagging list to the defendant (Attachment 2).  Over a month later the defendant sent an employee to attend to this work.  It was not carried out satisfactorily and resulted in an updated snagging list being sent to the claimant (Attachment 3).  All of this snagging work remains undone by the defendant.

 

 

17.  Apart from the outstanding snagging work referred to in para 16 above, the defendant also left other work from Projects 1 and 2 uncompleted.  That work which was not completed is listed at Attachment 4.

 

18.  During the course of carrying out work on Projects 1 and 2 the defendant also negligently caused substantial damage to the counterclaimant’s property (as itemised in Attachment 5) by not executing the work with the skill expected of a reasonable tradesman.

 

19.  The counterclaimant seeks an order from the court directing the defendant to pay to the counterclaimant the sum of £nnnnnnn {Simeon - put in the actual total amount here} in respect of:

 

(a)   the cost of the piling referred to in para 10 above which the defendant could not undertake and another contractor had to be paid to complete;

(b)   the cost of completing work the defendant had left undone from Projects 1 and 2;

(c)   the cost of remedial work to put right the damage negligently caused by the defendant and referred to in para 18 above; and

(d)    the cost of the steel beam referred to in para 15 above.

 

A receipt in respect of item (a) - see Attachment 1 - and two priced quotes in respect of items (b) and (c) - see Attachments 6 and 7 - are attached in support of this counterclaim.

 

 

=================================================================================================================

 

What I'm not entirely clear about are two points.

 

First, it's not 100% clear to me whether simeon can properly claim the £3300 in paras 10 and 19(a) or not.  What I mean is, simeon is arguing that this work required by his structural engineer was always within the agreed scope of Project 1.  But it's not clear to me if it was within scope or whether it was entirely new and unforeseen work.  As I see it simeon can only counterclaim this amount from the builder if it had already been incuded in Project 1.

 

Second, the basis of the counterclaim still seems extraordinarily thin to me.  Is it sufficient at this stage just to allege that the builder caused any damage negligently and is therefore liable to pay to put it right.

 

That's it from me I think...

 

 

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I am aware that Andyorch and BankFodder often stress the importance of keeping POCs to the bare minimum so as not to give away your case too much. 

 

Not in this instance...as the courts directed a particularised statement.

 

 

.

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1 hour ago, Manxman in exile said:

The defendant asked if the counterclaimant needed any more work to be done and, despite the problems encountered on Project1, the counterclaimant agreed on 7 September 2020 to have more work done (Project 2) at an agreed price of £2580 and on similar payment terms to Project 1.

 

The defendant at the time had excavated the front bay window which was filled with stagnant rainwater. Arguing about money paid out for the work he should have done at the time will only be messy when the project1 work was still there for him to do. Yes I agree to give more work to compromise by position on our  understanding of the of the payment i made. I have not queried his job up until 21/09/2020.  I just wanted him  to carry on doing the rest of the work . These were my reasons for giving project 2 to be better for both parties.

This counterclaim was excellently put together. I am beginning to feel you getting understand  this claim better. I am going to have a read again I come back to you while I wait for other to have their say, and thanks.

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