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Car sales/ Breach of contract by
Terri
I am looking for some advice on how to phrase a letter.
I bought a couple of months ago, which I bought it I also bought an
insurance policy that was meant to cover for all repairs that were
needed when an MOT takes place.
The problem is that the policy, as the first condition, specifies that
there is a limit on the mileage. The problem is that the car had done
more than this when they sold me...
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wrong %APR given - dispute with Bank by
fostertom
Hi everyone
I am presently in correspondence with my bank about the 12.9%APR they quoted
(and I agreed, at the time, without checking its correctness) for a Personal
Loan. I've been repaying on that basis for a couple of years. Now, looking
back at old leaflets they issued, I've seen that for a loan of that amount
at that time, the rate quoted was 8.9%APR. The leaflet is clear: 'these are
the...
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inns of court by
bryan
how on earth do they qualify for charitable status?
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June 16th 04 07:00 PM
by bryan
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Divorce Question by
The Grim Reaper
Is it legal to deny adultery in writing to a court even if the adlutery has
actually taken place but it is difficult, if not impossible, to prove? I
can't remember the form the denial was written on but it was essentially a
proposal to dismiss a claim of adultery.
Is this perjury? Or is this tactic perfectly proper?
Cheers
The Grim Reaper
( 1 2)
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Doctors refuse to treat Lawyers. by
Comfortably Numb
Short article in today's Daily Mail. (page 17 column 3)
Doctors in the US have declared war on lawyers who sue them for medical
malpractice.
Hundreds say they will refuse to treat lawyers and their families.
They claim this will not break their Hippocratic oath because their
obligation to treat patients applies only to emergency care.
The doctors say they have been pushed to the limit by...
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June 16th 04 05:45 PM
by Mike
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Driving licence by
GB
Out of interest, if you have your car driving licence suspended because of
too many points, are you allowed to apply for a motorbike/moped licence?
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June 16th 04 04:10 PM
by Fatso
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Not proven verdict by
Enrico C
rewboss |
alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage,uk.culture.language.english
in
snip
There have been campaigns to abolish the Scottish "not proven" verdict
precisely because it seems to run counter to the whole principle of
"innocent until proven guilty". Although "not proven" is, legally, an
acquittal and should be treated no differently to a "not...
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June 16th 04 03:50 PM
by Mike
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Technical problems by
The Todal
As you should all be aware, if you visit http://www.moderation.org.uk/ you
can see whether any posts are waiting for the moderators to deal with them
and you can also examine the rejected posts.
If you go to "Posting History - Any Group" you will see a detailed list of
the recent articles that have been accepted or rejected or are still waiting
in the queue. At the time of writing I see there...
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Bankruptcy Question by
¬ David ¬
Apologies if this is a duplicate - original posting has not shown up....
Here's one for an insolvency guru ...
Just had a meeting with a "potential client" {not sure if we want to take
him on}
Long story - but he was made bankrupt 3 years ago - ignored the whole
thing - did not acknowledge the papers or contact/attend the OR for
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June 16th 04 11:55 AM
by GB
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The strange dignity of a sex-murderer by
D.M. Procida
Francisco Arce Montes has been found guilty of murdering Caroline
Dickinson and sentenced to what will probably be the rest of his life in
prison.
I think most British people would find it strange that the jury got to
hear about previous convictions before delivering their verdict, but the
investigation of the case was also noteworthy for being so badly bungled
at critical stages. I am not...
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June 16th 04 11:40 AM
by Tracy
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Use of phone call in Final Hearing by
17
Final Hearing in family law case (Children Act)
If someone doesn't want to appear in Court as a witness or write a
statement, would it be worth phoning them, seeking permission to record,
then asking a set of questions?
Is there a chance the use of the recording/transcript would be allowed?
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Congratulations! by
Tracy
btw, guys! Just wanted to say CONGRATULATIONS on the new ng (ulm) - its a
pleasure to lurk and not have to wade through the swamp of "troll" stuff
(mention no names!).
I wasnt an angel in the uklaw but I do find the groups interesting,
informative and of help on many occasions - its just nice to have a place
where you can get what you want without getting incensed by the...
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Scarification and branding - is it illegal? by
Demetrius Zeluff
There is a type of body modification called "Scarification". This involves
making cuts into skin, and then aggravating the healing process so that a
scar forms.
Would it be illegal to perform this on another person (obviously with their
consent)? Would it be assault?
I'm asking because it was mentioned in another uk newsgroup, talking about
bodyart and I'd be interested in an accurate legal...
( 1 2 3 ... Last Page)
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Voting today - not confidential by
Martin
I just voted in the European elections this evening and i was very suprised
to see that when i was given my serial numbered voting paper the clerk wrote
on the counterfoil (also serial numbered with the same number) my electoral
roll number.
It seems to me that this serial number provides a direct link from my voting
paper to my electoral roll number and hence my name and address to any
person...
( 1 2 3 ... Last Page)
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June 15th 04 10:25 PM
by Cynic
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Immigration and Asylum Law by
funky mum
Could anyone tell me were would be the best place on the internet to get
information on Asylum and Immigration Law.
I have a job interview coming up, and one of the things they are looking for
is knowledge of both these area's of law. I did touch on it in University,
but would like to brush up some more on it.
TIA
FM
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What should the legal cost of remorgaging an unencumbered property be? by
Obolox
I'm in the process of remorgaging a letting house that I own.
My solicitor has quoted me £295 plus VAT, plus searches (plus anything else
he can dream up in the meantime no doubt) for doing the legal work. (The
lender is insisting I use a solicitor otherwise I'd do these relatively
simple tasks myself)
Since the house is presently unencumbered and thus the only real "work" will
be registering...
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How do I plead mistake/bad defence as point of appeal ? by
Bloomin Heck
I want to try and correct a bad position that I have
been put into in a case. I asked my solicitors, who
were defending a case, to let me have a copy of the
defence BEFORE they served it. They did not do that but
served it and when I saw it I was dissappointed but was
too late. I expressed this to the solicitors who said
"wait until you see the skeleton argument" . Effectively
the defence only...
( 1 2)
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Search and sieze powers by
A N Other
Suppose premises are entered, with a search warrant, and a number of
items removed on suspicion of containing illegal material (or because
the pig in charge happens to want one).
No arrests are made and no questions asked.
Is there a time limit on how long items siezed may be retained without
charges being brought? If so, would they be returned automatically, or
must they be claimed?
( 1 2 3 ... Last Page)
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June 15th 04 10:00 PM
by Cynic
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Question re unpaid debt by
Bob nospam
A question on behalf of a colleague who doesn't have net access...
A garage does £2,200 of approved work on a car and returns it to the client,
who subsequently puts a stop on the initial cheque for £1,500 and refuses to
stump up the £700 balance. Client appears to be mentally unstable and
unreceptive to reason, making outlandish and unproven accusations against
the garage about swapping parts....
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