Sorry OP - like DES8 I'm not a lawyer but I think I'm sensible enough to see that you aren't looking at this realistically.
You say you acknowledge the debt is valid but that you aren't going to pay it. Sorry but that's bonkers.
Pretty much all the 12 points you make in your defence are irrelevant, so what are the facts:
1. You've been overpaid for nine months over a period spanning 12 months.
2. You do not deny you have been overpaid
3. You agreed a repayment plan, but only paid one instalment and then stopped paying after you resigned
4. After 6 months or so your employer is pursuing you for repayment.
I think the only possible defence is estoppel/change of position, but I think you would find that difficult to make out. To be successful you would have to prove that you received and spent the overpayment in good faith thinking that you were entitled to it, and that in spending the money your financial position had changed such that you no longer had the money and could not repay it.
I fear that you would be likely to fall at the first hurdle - good faith. Please understand I am not questioning your honesty but I think you might have difficulty persuading a court that you didn't realise for such a long period that you were being overpaid. As both I and DES8 have previously posted, £375 a month is quite a lot of extra salary not to notice each month. I don't know anyone who, upon starting a new job, did not check their first payslip to make sure they weren't being paid correctly. Do you understand why a court might find your claim difficult to accept - on the face of it.
Whether the fact that the overpayment was only uncovered as a result of you querying your tax deductions could go for or against you. On the one hand it might demonstrate your honesty. On the other hand it perhaps shows that you were in the habit of checking your payslips...
Also as DES8 has already mentioned, you were employed as an Assistant Quantity Surveyor?! Quite a numerate and quantitative profession. I think a court would expect you to be able to check your payslip reasonably accurately.
I think your employer has acted quite reasonably in (1) giving you an immediate breakdown of the overpayment (the details of which you do not dispute) and (2) agreeing what seems to me to be a reasonable repayment plan. Not all employers would be so helpful or accommodating as yours seems to have been.
I don't want to comment on your claims of bullying and intimidation etc except to say that a court might again find it difficult to believe that a professional firm employing professional staff like quantity surveyors would behave like that. If you don't have really concrete evidence of the bullying, intimidation and threats of violence, it might be best not to go there. Similarly I would not be inclined to raise the issue of discrimination unless I had substantive evidence
The fact that the overpayment spanned over 12 months is irrelevant as is the fact it's taken six months or more to initiate action against you. They have six years in which to take action from the overpayment.
You say you've already sought legal advice. What was their opinion? It's probably worth more than any opinion you are likely to get on the internet.
At the end of the day it's up to you whetehr or not you defend the claim - but at the moment you don't seem to have the makings of a great defence. You either have to defend it - and risk losing, or approach the claimant and agree some kind of repayment plan.
Or get paid for legal advice - that's the only type really worth getting.
You say you acknowledge the debt is valid but that you aren't going to pay it. Sorry but that's bonkers.
Pretty much all the 12 points you make in your defence are irrelevant, so what are the facts:
1. You've been overpaid for nine months over a period spanning 12 months.
2. You do not deny you have been overpaid
3. You agreed a repayment plan, but only paid one instalment and then stopped paying after you resigned
4. After 6 months or so your employer is pursuing you for repayment.
I think the only possible defence is estoppel/change of position, but I think you would find that difficult to make out. To be successful you would have to prove that you received and spent the overpayment in good faith thinking that you were entitled to it, and that in spending the money your financial position had changed such that you no longer had the money and could not repay it.
I fear that you would be likely to fall at the first hurdle - good faith. Please understand I am not questioning your honesty but I think you might have difficulty persuading a court that you didn't realise for such a long period that you were being overpaid. As both I and DES8 have previously posted, £375 a month is quite a lot of extra salary not to notice each month. I don't know anyone who, upon starting a new job, did not check their first payslip to make sure they weren't being paid correctly. Do you understand why a court might find your claim difficult to accept - on the face of it.
Whether the fact that the overpayment was only uncovered as a result of you querying your tax deductions could go for or against you. On the one hand it might demonstrate your honesty. On the other hand it perhaps shows that you were in the habit of checking your payslips...
Also as DES8 has already mentioned, you were employed as an Assistant Quantity Surveyor?! Quite a numerate and quantitative profession. I think a court would expect you to be able to check your payslip reasonably accurately.
I think your employer has acted quite reasonably in (1) giving you an immediate breakdown of the overpayment (the details of which you do not dispute) and (2) agreeing what seems to me to be a reasonable repayment plan. Not all employers would be so helpful or accommodating as yours seems to have been.
I don't want to comment on your claims of bullying and intimidation etc except to say that a court might again find it difficult to believe that a professional firm employing professional staff like quantity surveyors would behave like that. If you don't have really concrete evidence of the bullying, intimidation and threats of violence, it might be best not to go there. Similarly I would not be inclined to raise the issue of discrimination unless I had substantive evidence
The fact that the overpayment spanned over 12 months is irrelevant as is the fact it's taken six months or more to initiate action against you. They have six years in which to take action from the overpayment.
You say you've already sought legal advice. What was their opinion? It's probably worth more than any opinion you are likely to get on the internet.
At the end of the day it's up to you whetehr or not you defend the claim - but at the moment you don't seem to have the makings of a great defence. You either have to defend it - and risk losing, or approach the claimant and agree some kind of repayment plan.
Or get paid for legal advice - that's the only type really worth getting.
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