![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| uk.legal.moderated (Legal Topics Relevant To UK Law - Moderated) (uk.legal.moderated) To enable contributors who have genuine legal problems to ask for practical advice from other people (lawyers or laymen) who have had to deal with similar problems in the past. Advertising is forbidden. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 9 Feb, 22:35, Jonathan Bryce wrote:
wrote: About 10 years ago I was in my early 20s' and flat sharing with friends and others. We generally neglected to pay council tax and other assorted bills (very guesstimated at £7000). Inevitably 10 yrs later I have ended up receiving letters from a debt buyer asking for information about my residence at one of my old address'. Would anyone offer any advice (apart from "Told you so!") as to my best course of action? I'm intending to contact the agency, but I wouldn't want to volunteer any more info than is necessary. I'm hoping to get an interview with Citizens Advice ASAP. Cheers 10 years later is well out of time. *They can't collect provided you don't admit to it at any point. Jonathan, Thanks for the help, I moved from the address 7 years ago and only recently appeared on council tax bills etc. This is the first time I have been approached by any agencies and have not admitted any ownership of the debt. Once again many thanks. Cheers |
|
#12
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 10 Feb, 10:50, "tim \(not at home\)"
wrote: "Peter Crosland" wrote in message ... Jonathan Bryce wrote: wrote: About 10 years ago I was in my early 20s' and flat sharing with friends and others. We generally neglected to pay council tax and other assorted bills (very guesstimated at £7000). Inevitably 10 yrs later I have ended up receiving letters from a debt buyer asking for information about my residence at one of my old address'. Would anyone offer any advice (apart from "Told you so!") as to my best course of action? I'm intending to contact the agency, but I wouldn't want to volunteer any more info than is necessary. I'm hoping to get an interview with Citizens Advice ASAP. Cheers 10 years later is well out of time. *They can't collect provided you don't admit to it at any point. They can if they obtained a Liability Order within the six years which they may well have done. See below. http://www.payplan.com/debt-library/...iability-the-l... In thought the rules for Council Tax (and Poll tax) were different and the debt doesn't expire. ISTR reading that there are some LAs still chasing Poll Tax debts. tim tim- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for taking the time to reply to my post Cheers |
|
#13
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 9 Feb, 19:00, "
wrote: About 10 years ago I was in my early 20s' and flat sharing with friends and others. We generally neglected to pay council tax and other assorted bills (very guesstimated at £7000). Inevitably 10 yrs later I have ended up receiving letters from a debt buyer asking for information about my residence at one of my old address'. Would anyone offer any advice (apart from "Told you so!") as to my best course of action? I'm intending to contact the agency, but I wouldn't want to volunteer any more info than is necessary. I'm hoping to get an interview with Citizens Advice ASAP. Cheers Many Thanks To All Any other advice is more than welcome |
|
#14
|
|||
|
|||
|
wrote in message ... On Feb 10, 9:35 am, Jonathan Bryce wrote: 10 years later is well out of time. They can't collect provided you don't admit to it at any point. Now quite right! If during the 1st 7 years they haven't found you...you might have a chance to get away with it, but and here's the rub, if you have simply changed your account to another branch and avoided re payment, you can be done even after 10 years, up to 15 years in fact.....so running away and not responding for 7 years wont always win, you need not have had any contact with any part of the group for 15 years to really get away with it. All the person who you owed money has to do is show that the debt owed was within the 15 years limit was to another unit of the same group and your done....he will point out that you simply did a runner and refused to acknowledge until you were tracked down, so admitting or not admitting wont come into it to help you and will cause further problems to you when you're finally brought to court I really would like to see some authority for this assertion because I do not think that it is right. This is a claim for a sum of money due under an enactment,a nd the limitation period appears to be 6 years from the date of accrual. If, as I suspect, the 15 years is intended to be based on section 14A of the Limitation Act 1980, then this does not apply to claims for sums dueunder an enactment, nor for claims in contract. It applies only to claims in negligence, which this is not. If there is a special limitation period for Council Tax claims, then I want to know about it. (I accept that a Liability Order, being a judgment can be ENFORCED within six years from its date, but that is a different point fromt he one being advanced here) Andrew McGee |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|