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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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Natwest refusing to re-issue credit card


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I seem to have gotten into a spot of bother with Natwest.

In August I moved house and contacted NatWest to have my address updated.

I asked for all the accounts I had to be updated which the person on the phone advised she would do.

My credit card was due to expire in Novbember, i called them and chased them to see where the card was.

I was told they didn't update the address on my credit card, the person claimed to do it and then said she had ordered a new card.

A week later I called to ask where is my new card to find out the lady never updated my address or re-issued my card. 

I was then told they were unable to re-issue my card due to their lending policy, debt on the card is around £6k and I have been making payments to the card via direct debit.

I was a bit surprised at this as it came out of the blue.

They said they will continue to take payments from me via direct debit and offered £50 compensation credited to the credit card account.

I made a complaint to them about this but I got the same response and £80 credit to my account.

They said they would just leave the account as it is

I am worried this is going to mess my credit score up.

Any advise would be appreciated. 

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only if they send a default notice.

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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Lot of credit card providers doing this atm
Virgin are well known for it
They of course have the “right “to do it under their t and cs, whether they are treating you fairly or not is another matter entirely 

PLEASE HELP US TO KEEP THIS SITE RUNNING

EVERY POUND DONATED WILL HELP US TO KEEP HELPING OTHERS

 

 

 

 

Any help I am able to give is from my own experience only. Should you have any doubt you should contact a qualified professional.

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No they didn't send a default notice and seem to have kept my credit line intact as it says I still have available credit on it.

I feel it is a little unfair as i generally kept the account within its credit limit.

Yes I did switch bank away from them about 2 years ago as I was unhappy with the service plus I had a loan with them I settled early in the 2nd year of its 5 year term as the interest was insane at 21%.

This credit card on the other hands interest rate is only 7% I am doing a tactic of paying down things with higher interest first.

I think I am being responsible to them but they don't seem to think so or care.

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If you sign in to the Natwest banking mobile app, can you see whether they have now updated your address?

If they haven't, do you have the ability to order a replacement card in the app? My thinking (although I accept it might be a bit wild) is that your change of address has somehow caused them to effectively treat your request as a new credit application, which is being declined because you've "generally kept the account within its credit limit", or in other words, you were at times in breech of their terms and conditions because you didn't always keep it within its credit limit.

If you could order the new card via the app, then arrange to collect or have the card forwarded by the new occupiers of your old address, it might just about be a way around the issue.

Does your credit card account have any warnings or status messages against it in the app?

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