Morning All,
I would really appreciate some advice about a small claims court claim for which I am the claimant.
I purchased a service from a very well known national business which came with a no-quibble guarantee. The service (on this occasion only) turned out to be really poor so I tried to claim on the guarantee but the company refused to honour it and instead we had an exchange of emails in which each reply from the company was in broken English and full of cut and pasted cliché phrases. I got fed up with it so I sent a Letter Before Action and then started a claim when they still refused to honour it.
The court granted them extra time for whatever reason and now they have appointed a solicitor and sent me (and the court) their defence.
The defence alleges that the defendant is the not company responsible and the the case should be thrown out. The terms & conditions agreed to on the website do not mention any company name and do not provide an address. Furthermore there is no registered address listed on the website anywhere. So when I made the claim I searched for the company details on companies house and found a company which a) shares the exact brand name of the website I ordered from and b) has the same address as the parent company of this brand. The defendant claims the contract was actually with a different company. However, they did manage to respond to the letter before action and the solicitor claims to representing both companies in the defence.
Is there any legal requirement for a company to display it's registered name and address within the terms and conditions or on the website?
The defence goes on to suggest that "The Defendant avers that the Claimant has not complied with the provisions of Civil Procedure Rule (“CPR”) 16 and its Practice Direction in the pleading of its case. In particular, the Claimant has not:
4.1.1 provided a copy of the contract or the documents constituting the alleged agreement between the parties; and/or
4.1.2 provided any general conditions of sale incorporated in the contract, or those parts relied upon;"
In previous email communication with the company I have provided copies of the contract and highlighted the relevant parts, but the small claims court application didn't mention any need to supply this again at the time of making a claim.
What should I do now?
Thanks in advance!
E
I would really appreciate some advice about a small claims court claim for which I am the claimant.
I purchased a service from a very well known national business which came with a no-quibble guarantee. The service (on this occasion only) turned out to be really poor so I tried to claim on the guarantee but the company refused to honour it and instead we had an exchange of emails in which each reply from the company was in broken English and full of cut and pasted cliché phrases. I got fed up with it so I sent a Letter Before Action and then started a claim when they still refused to honour it.
The court granted them extra time for whatever reason and now they have appointed a solicitor and sent me (and the court) their defence.
The defence alleges that the defendant is the not company responsible and the the case should be thrown out. The terms & conditions agreed to on the website do not mention any company name and do not provide an address. Furthermore there is no registered address listed on the website anywhere. So when I made the claim I searched for the company details on companies house and found a company which a) shares the exact brand name of the website I ordered from and b) has the same address as the parent company of this brand. The defendant claims the contract was actually with a different company. However, they did manage to respond to the letter before action and the solicitor claims to representing both companies in the defence.
Is there any legal requirement for a company to display it's registered name and address within the terms and conditions or on the website?
The defence goes on to suggest that "The Defendant avers that the Claimant has not complied with the provisions of Civil Procedure Rule (“CPR”) 16 and its Practice Direction in the pleading of its case. In particular, the Claimant has not:
4.1.1 provided a copy of the contract or the documents constituting the alleged agreement between the parties; and/or
4.1.2 provided any general conditions of sale incorporated in the contract, or those parts relied upon;"
In previous email communication with the company I have provided copies of the contract and highlighted the relevant parts, but the small claims court application didn't mention any need to supply this again at the time of making a claim.
What should I do now?
Thanks in advance!
E
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