Hello all, hope everyone's well. Not sure if this is the right forum, please tell me if not.
A few months ago we were organising an event and wanted to hire some garden equipment. We found a company that were able to supply the items and negotiated a price for the date, via email. The company said they would send us a contract. As the event got closer, the weather looked like it wasn’t going to be favourable, so we decided not to go ahead with the party and as we hadn’t received a contract, let alone signed one, or paid any money, we guessed we wouldn’t be receiving the equipment anyway. I emailed the company about 4 days before the event was supposed to happen to say that regretfully the event was off and we wouldn’t be needing the equipment. The day before the event date, I realised I hadn’t heard back from them, so I rang the company to confirm they had received the email and that we weren’t having the equipment. They were shocked. They said they hadn’t received the email and even if they had, they said, it would have been too late - the equipment was ordered and I had to pay the full amount. I explained we never received a contract, hadn’t signed anything and hadn’t paid anything. It never occurred to me that a company would supply anything without those things in place.
I said I'm sorry but there's no way I can pay the full amount, especially if the event is not going ahead. They have subsequently emailed that they have no choice but to pursue me through the courts to recover their costs - which is the full amount (about £1125)
Do I have any rights here? Were my emails confirming address and date enough of a legally binding contract to mean I have to pay? Or without a signed contract will it not stand up in court? Are they just hoping I will hear the words 'legal proceedings' and be scared enough to pay?
A few months ago we were organising an event and wanted to hire some garden equipment. We found a company that were able to supply the items and negotiated a price for the date, via email. The company said they would send us a contract. As the event got closer, the weather looked like it wasn’t going to be favourable, so we decided not to go ahead with the party and as we hadn’t received a contract, let alone signed one, or paid any money, we guessed we wouldn’t be receiving the equipment anyway. I emailed the company about 4 days before the event was supposed to happen to say that regretfully the event was off and we wouldn’t be needing the equipment. The day before the event date, I realised I hadn’t heard back from them, so I rang the company to confirm they had received the email and that we weren’t having the equipment. They were shocked. They said they hadn’t received the email and even if they had, they said, it would have been too late - the equipment was ordered and I had to pay the full amount. I explained we never received a contract, hadn’t signed anything and hadn’t paid anything. It never occurred to me that a company would supply anything without those things in place.
I said I'm sorry but there's no way I can pay the full amount, especially if the event is not going ahead. They have subsequently emailed that they have no choice but to pursue me through the courts to recover their costs - which is the full amount (about £1125)
Do I have any rights here? Were my emails confirming address and date enough of a legally binding contract to mean I have to pay? Or without a signed contract will it not stand up in court? Are they just hoping I will hear the words 'legal proceedings' and be scared enough to pay?
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