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    • a 'witness' to it not arriving till the 15th is sadly immaterial too. regardless to the above anyway, the PCN remains valid. 
    • Hmm yes I see your point about proof of postage but nonetheless... "A Notice to Keeper can be served by ordinary post and the Protection of Freedoms Act requires that the Notice, to be valid,  must be delivered either (Where a notice to driver (parking ticket) has been served) Not earlier than 28 days after, nor more than 56 days after, the service of that notice to driver; or (Where no notice to driver has been served (e.g ANPR is used)) Not later than 14 days after the vehicle was parked A notice sent by post is to be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to have been delivered on the second working day after the day on which it is posted; and for this purpose “working day” means any day other than a Saturday, Sunday or a public holiday in England and Wales." My question there is really what might constitute proof? Since you say the issue of delivery is a common one I suppose that no satisfactory answer has been established or you would probably have told me.
    • I would stand your ground and go for the interest. Even if the interest is not awarded you will get the judgement and the worst that might happen is that you won't get your claim fee.  However, it is almost inevitable that you will get the interest.  It is correct that it is at the discretion of the judge but the discretion is almost always exercised in favour of the claimant in these cases.  I think you should stand your ground and don't give even the slightest penny away Another judgement against them on this issue would be very bad for them and they would be really stupid to risk it but if they did, it would cost them far more than the interest they are trying to save which they will most likely have to pay anyway
    • Yep, true to form, they are happy to just save a couple of quid... They invariably lose in court, so to them, that's a win. 😅
    • Your concern regarding the 14 days delivery is a common one. Not been on the forum that long, but I don't think the following thought has ever been challenged. My view is that they should have proof of when it was posted, not when they "issued", or printed it. Of course, they would never show any proof of postage, unless it went to court. Private parking companies are simply after money, and will just keep sending ever more threatening letters to intimidate you into paying up. It's not been mentioned yet, but DO NOT APPEAL! You could inadvertently give up useful legal protection and they will refuse any appeal, because they're just after the cash...  
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daughter died in hospital


hayesharry
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hi all,

 

I hope this is the correcct place ....

 

a friend of mine's daughter died in hospital 3 years ago.

her records r lost, as far as the hospital is concerned.

this woman ( the mother) has and is tireless putting all the effort 2 prove that the doctors / nurses has by mistake given an over dose of medicine, that killed her.

she is on retired and lives on pension, therefore she can not afford 2 pay for a solicitor.

can any one help or point to a link where we could look at a medical test cases ?

this will help her 2 present the case in court with more legal technicality ???

infect any help is so much appreciated.

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I would imagine your first port of call, would be to take a free half hour with a solicitor who specialises in medical negligance, although how you would proe anything if the records are missing I don't know.

 

I'm afaraid this is not my area of knowledge but I will move this post to the NHS forum where you hopefully will get some support.

 

I hope you get the advice you need - good luck.

Consumer Health Forums - where you can discuss any health or relationship matters.

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Don't know much about this, sounds awful.

Found another thread on here with a posting that may be of help.

 

http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/nhs/23570-hospital-loses-all-medical.html#post306074

 

It's by battleaxe and could also possibly help in your situation, though my husband used to work for a hospital and tells me that it is very unusual for the notes to be lost since they are tracked using computers and it is more likly that someone has filed them in the wrong place rather than actually losing them.

 

Hope this helps.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Did your friend's daughter have a post mortem? And did the case go to the coroner? If so, they will have determined the cause of death, which will help.

 

I would advise your friend to get in touch with the Law Society, who have information about specialist solicitors, who will give her a free appointment, when they can find out the facts, and if she can proceed.

 

The coroner should have copies of the notes pertaining the the lady's death- worth a try.

 

I hope this helps.

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