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    • T911, Nick, thanks, I got there in the end! Without boring you with the details, it is precisely the most ridiculous cases that end up being lost - because the Cagger knows the other party's case is rubbish so doesn't do the necessary work on their own case. G24 are well aware of double dipping.  They have either done it deliberately or else have cameras which can't handle multiple visits to the car park which G24 happily leave malfunctioning so the £££££ keep rolling in. Sadly most people aren't like you.  I've just read various reviews for the Retail Park on TripAdvisor and Parkopedia.  Virtually all of them are complaining about these unfair charges for daring to spend time & money shopping in a shopping centre.  Yet no-one is refusing to pay.  They moan but think they have been fined and cough up. G24 are unlikely to do court, but it's not impossible with two tickets. Try to get evidence that you were elsewhere at these times. Often retail parks will intervene, but I've Googled & Googled and cannot find an e-mail address for the place.  Could the manager of one of your favourite shops give you a contact e-mail address for the company that run the retail park? Right at the moment I'm supposed to be teaching someone who runs two shops at the local shopping centre, but I'm not as he has had to go to a meeting with the company that runs the shopping centre, so I know for a fact that these business relationships exist!!!
    • Afternoon DX, The files were in date order. How would I put them into an acceptable format? I'm not that pc literate.  
    • I think you need to tell us what actually happened. Your original post gives the impression that you were taken to court for a speeding offence. But you go on to say that you received no paperwork. So you could not have been summonsed for a speeding offence because the police had no evidence that you (or anybody else) was driving (and it seems you were not anyway). You were probably summonsed (or more likely received a Single Justice Procedure Notice) for "failing to provide the driver's details." You would not normally be banned for this offence if you were convicted - it carries six points. So did you have any earlier points which meant you were liable to a "totting up" ban?  If you were originally convicted (as it seems you might have been) how was that conviction set aside? Did you perform a Statutory Declaration? There is simply too much missing for any meaningful help to be given. It seems as if there may have been an error by the DVLA but before you consider suing those idiots until the cows come home, you need to explain exactly what has happened.  
    • Point 4 and 10 duplicate Point 5 and 8 duplicate  Try to keep to one para with regards the agreement...various paras duplicating the same. Statement of truth is out of date refer to the claimants statement    
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Statutory Demand


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This Morning I Got A Statutory Demand By Post,am Not Sure Wether To Ring The Company Who Issued This & Come To Some Arrangment To Pay The £2000 I Owe Or Just Let It Take Its Course & See What Happens Next... My Only Worry Is That I Don't Want Some Tom Dick & Harry Gong To My Property And Taking My Belongings Away...it Shouldn't Be Allowed For Some One To Try & Delare You Bank Rupt...any Advise Would Be Greatful

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maxitrol,

A statutory demand requires that the debtor either:

Pays the relevant amount

Offers to secure it against property

Offers to repay the debt in a way that is satisfactory to the creditor. For example, by instalments.

Some creditors use statutory demands as a way of persuading debtors to pay off the debt, usually by borrowing elsewhere. However, statutory demands should be taken seriously. After 21 days the creditor can petition for a bankruptcy order. Therefore, it is usually worth contacting the creditor by telephone and asking them what their next step will be.

Ignoring a statutory demand may encourage the creditor to petition for bankruptcy. It is worth bearing this in mind, particularly if the debtor is contemplating petitioning for his own bankruptcy.

If the debtor wants to avoid bankruptcy he should consider:

Making payment(s) to reduce the debt to less than £750; or

Making an offer to pay by instalments; or

Making an offer of a reduced amount in settlement of the debt; or

Applying to have the statutory demand set aside

 

Setting aside a statutory demand.

21 days after the serving of the statutory demand, the creditor can petition for the debtor’s bankruptcy unless it has been ‘set aside’.

An application to set aside the statutory demand can be made if:

There is a substantial dispute about the money owed;

There is a counterclaim of more than the money owed;

The creditor holds security that equals or exceeds the debt in value;

On ‘Other Grounds’. Though not defined, these can include:

The demand was issued in error, e.g. for a secured debt or for an amount of less than £750;

Execution has been stayed on a judgement;

The debtor is complying with an instalment order (so the debt is not strictly due); and

The creditor failed to comply with the rules and prejudiced the debtor in the process;

An application to set aside must be made with 18 days of the statutory demand being served. Forms 6.4 (application) and 6.5 (affidavit) must be completed and taken to the court. However, the court can dismiss the application if there are no grounds.

If there are grounds, a hearing will be arranged at which the court will decide whether the demand will be set aside.

If the debt falls under the Consumer Credit Act 1974, the court should also consider if any relief is available to the debtor under the Act. This would include a time order application.

Hope that explains a statutory demand. Don't just sit on it, because the consequences are serious, but you can fight it using the information here, Good luck.

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A person is only as big as the dream they dare to live.

 

 

Good things come to he who waits

 

 

Its your money taken unlawfully from your account and you have a legal right to claim it back.

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