I think you have hit the nail on the head in that you don't know what you are doing so you are basically taking a punt in the hope something goes your way. Your chances of appeal are severely reduced if permission is granted by the court and you choose not to attend.
I'm not going to respond to every point in your last few posts but I will reply to the key issues below:
1. Unless the court orders otherwise, time for filing your permission to appeal runs 21 days after the date of the court decision.
2. You have to request permission to appeal by filing out Form N164 for small claims. You then have 35 days to file your appeal bundle and the relevant CPR link I gave explains what needs to be included.
3. Normally the permission to appeal will be heard on papers but a judge may order a hearing. If permission is refused, that is the end of the road generally.
4. The appeal will only be granted if the judge considers that there is either a real prospect of success or there is some other compelling reason why permission to appeal should be granted.
5. Grounds of appeal are limited to: A finding of fact, an error in the law or some serious irregularity in the procedural process.
6. It is not necessary for a transcript to be obtained under a small claims case, but the court normally orders one where the appeal relies on what the judge has said or decided in the hearing. The request for a transcript form lists the authorised transcribers for court hearings. The costs of transcripts vary and are charged per 'folio'. A folio consists of 72 words and as a rule of thumb, for a 30 minute hearing I would expect an invoice to be anywhere from £40 to £60, give or take.
So that's a high level overview of the process and now to your points. It's really difficult to give you a step by step process because you need to draft the wording and application and prepare your bundle which you have already admitted is not something you are capable of doing so is it even worth pursuing or are you just wasting everyone's time? That's something you need to consider.
You most definitely need the transcript because you didn't attend the hearing. Any appeal would need to be based around the refusal of your application to extend time for filing your defence and counterclaim. By the way just to be clear, it is not an automatic right for an extension of time, your application is your request for the court which may be refused on a number of grounds. Without the transcript, I cannot see what legal basis you have for challenging the judges refusal.
At best, without the transcript your appeal application would have to say you are challenging the decision for refusal to appeal but because you did not attend you require an extension of time to be able to review the transcript and consider whether there are grounds for appeal. If I remember there is a section on the form that says if you require an extension and give reasons for doing so.
Being a litigant in person is not an excuse, the courts have consistently stated that everyone has to follow the rules and there is no special treatment. I already said before that if you have health issues then you need something substantive to persuade the court. It's not good enough for you to just say you have health issues as anyone can say that as an excuse, so you need something concrete like a medical report that attests to what you are going through.
I'm sorry but I just do not have the time to sit here and prepare your appeal, it requires full knowledge of the facts of your case which I don't have and a lawful basis for bringing the application in the first place. I have a full time job and whilst I am willing to assist where I can, drafting appeals is not something I do especially if its a speculative one.
Personally, I think you are trying to delay the inevitable and whilst I do sympathise with your situation, I would strongly recommend you try to get some support from debt charities or similar organisations.
If you complete the form I will have a look and give pointers as best I can but I'm not going to complete it for you. The questions are pretty straight forward should just read the carefully and answer as best you can - that's if you still want to proceed.
I'm not going to respond to every point in your last few posts but I will reply to the key issues below:
1. Unless the court orders otherwise, time for filing your permission to appeal runs 21 days after the date of the court decision.
2. You have to request permission to appeal by filing out Form N164 for small claims. You then have 35 days to file your appeal bundle and the relevant CPR link I gave explains what needs to be included.
3. Normally the permission to appeal will be heard on papers but a judge may order a hearing. If permission is refused, that is the end of the road generally.
4. The appeal will only be granted if the judge considers that there is either a real prospect of success or there is some other compelling reason why permission to appeal should be granted.
5. Grounds of appeal are limited to: A finding of fact, an error in the law or some serious irregularity in the procedural process.
6. It is not necessary for a transcript to be obtained under a small claims case, but the court normally orders one where the appeal relies on what the judge has said or decided in the hearing. The request for a transcript form lists the authorised transcribers for court hearings. The costs of transcripts vary and are charged per 'folio'. A folio consists of 72 words and as a rule of thumb, for a 30 minute hearing I would expect an invoice to be anywhere from £40 to £60, give or take.
So that's a high level overview of the process and now to your points. It's really difficult to give you a step by step process because you need to draft the wording and application and prepare your bundle which you have already admitted is not something you are capable of doing so is it even worth pursuing or are you just wasting everyone's time? That's something you need to consider.
You most definitely need the transcript because you didn't attend the hearing. Any appeal would need to be based around the refusal of your application to extend time for filing your defence and counterclaim. By the way just to be clear, it is not an automatic right for an extension of time, your application is your request for the court which may be refused on a number of grounds. Without the transcript, I cannot see what legal basis you have for challenging the judges refusal.
At best, without the transcript your appeal application would have to say you are challenging the decision for refusal to appeal but because you did not attend you require an extension of time to be able to review the transcript and consider whether there are grounds for appeal. If I remember there is a section on the form that says if you require an extension and give reasons for doing so.
Being a litigant in person is not an excuse, the courts have consistently stated that everyone has to follow the rules and there is no special treatment. I already said before that if you have health issues then you need something substantive to persuade the court. It's not good enough for you to just say you have health issues as anyone can say that as an excuse, so you need something concrete like a medical report that attests to what you are going through.
I'm sorry but I just do not have the time to sit here and prepare your appeal, it requires full knowledge of the facts of your case which I don't have and a lawful basis for bringing the application in the first place. I have a full time job and whilst I am willing to assist where I can, drafting appeals is not something I do especially if its a speculative one.
Personally, I think you are trying to delay the inevitable and whilst I do sympathise with your situation, I would strongly recommend you try to get some support from debt charities or similar organisations.
If you complete the form I will have a look and give pointers as best I can but I'm not going to complete it for you. The questions are pretty straight forward should just read the carefully and answer as best you can - that's if you still want to proceed.
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