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| 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. |
| Tags: court, help, housing, possession, urgent |
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#1
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hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark.
if anyone has any advice or experiance on this matter please advise me! |
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#2
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On 10 Sep, 17:10, mcelec wrote:
hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark. if anyone has any advice or experiance on this matter please advise me! It would be a good idea if you could find a local law centre/advice centre (like the CAB) or free solicitor to help you out with this. Often someone coming along to court to put your case can help a lot. Ask the court if there is a "duty adviser" scheme, which can make a big difference. I'm not quite sure what kind of tenant you are. I'm guessing "assured". If that is right then the landlord cannot prove a mandatory ground for evicting you if you have no arrears, instead they have to prove to the judge that it is reasonable for there to be a possession order. From what you say, it should not be reasonable to make an outright order, but it might be reasonable to make a postponed one given your past arrears. I'd try to persuade the judge that, in the circumstances, no order is necessary as you are now back in work. If you didn't tell your landlord promptly that you weren't going to be able to pay (and why) you may have to explain that, also why you didn't obtain housing benefit/any other kind of benefit (it may not have been available to you but its worth explaining that). Francis |
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#3
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mcelec wrote:
hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark. if anyone has any advice or experiance on this matter please advise me! You can ask for any possession order to be suspended, this suspension lasts for 12 months but it does mean that if you don't follow the order made by the Judge then the housing trust can reapply for possession. There is a form (I forget the number) available from the local county court which you need to complete. Get the form ASAP, fill it in straight away and hand it back to the clerk. If you've never been in this position before I can't see how any judge would grant possession as opposed to suspending it. I know of people who have been in a far worse situation than yourself who have been to court 4 or 5 times and getting the possession suspended. I know I'm pointing out the obvious, but next time you get into financial difficulties you should approach your landlord straight away rather than letting it get to this stage - and you should have claimed Housing Benefit too if that was appropriate, it would have stopped the situation from getting out of hand. If your rent account is in credit, the judge may not even need to suspend possession. I know it's easy for me to say, but fill in that form and try not to get too worried, I'm sure it will all be OK. -- Robbie |
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#4
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mcelec wrote:
hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark. On the basis of the information provided, no court would evict you. |
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#5
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2008 18:25:12 +0100, "Steve Walker"
wrote: mcelec wrote: hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark. On the basis of the information provided, no court would evict you. |
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#6
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Cynic wrote:
On Fri, 12 Sep 2008 18:25:12 +0100, "Steve Walker" wrote: mcelec wrote: hi, im a housing trust tenent and my rent is £75 per week, due to the company i worked for going bust i suffered financial difficulties and so fell behind with my rent to the sum of £1600 and so the housing trust have applied for a outright notice seeking possession i have been given a court date which is next week, i have since gained new employment and therefore cleared my arrears and my rent account is now in credit, is it likely that i will lose my home? im concerned as it would render me my wife and our 3yr old son homeless. thanks for your time, regards mark. On the basis of the information provided, no court would evict you. Social landlords sometimes send such letters to intimidate a tenant into paying up. This you obviously couldn't do due to your circumstances. They wouldn't even get a court order let alone an eviction. |
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