Hi all, In May of this year, I received correspondence and court documents from "BW Legal" representing "JC International Acquisition, LLC" who claimed to have been assigned a historic debt owing to Thames Water from a previous address, which I vacated on 31st March 2016. I believed the alleged debt of £1857.21 to be statute barred and the opinion was arrived at based on having read posts on this forum, and others, and also talking to National Debtline ,and Citizens advice.
Without wasting time, it would not have been possible for me to have legally acknowledged any such debt within the limitation period as lacked the account details in order to have been able to acknowledge any debt or to have been able to make any payments. My reasoning, such as it was, was based on information available to me at the time and assumed the claim was accurate.
I submitted the following as my defence:
"I do not admit any liability for the claim.
The Limitation Act 1980 Section 5 states: “An action founded on simple contract shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued.” If this time has expired, the debt becomes statute barred and unenforceable.
On that basis, I argue that the alleged debt in this case is statute barred; no correspondence, payment, or acknowledgement of this alleged debt has been made within the the prescribed time limit of the last six years, nor have the claimants taken any action to recover it within the prescribed period.
Therefore, under Section 5 of the Limitation Act 1980, I request that the court demand that the claimants provide evidence to the contrary; of payment or written contact from me within the relevant period, as proof to the court that their claim was legitimately brought in time. In the event of the failure of the claimants to provide any such evidence, I further request that the the court issue summary judgment to strike out the claimants’ case, and declare the alleged debt unenforceable, as it was issued out of time ."
I submitted my defence as pdf by email.
I have finally received a copy of their apparent evidence by post towards the end of last week and this is where things become messy. The debt agencies have advised me to seek urgent legal advice as in their opinions it has stopped being a purely a debt issue.
Their evidence, as enclosed in their letter is a copy of a closing bill for £1,662.21, in my name from Thames Water dated 28th June 2017 for the supply of water and wastewater services to my old address from 01 April 2017 to 07 June 2017.
Bear in mind that I vacated that property on 31st March 2016.
In the accompanying letter, their response to my defence that it is statute barred is as follows:
"S.5 of the Limitation Act 1980, provides a limitation period for claims in contract of six years from the date of
the last cause of action. The originating creditor sent a Final bill on 28 June 2017. Given that Our Client s claim
was issued on 4 April 2023, the claim was brought within the limitation period."
They also suggested I stop wasting court time, incurring further costs, and pointed me towards their already pre-approved payment plan of £50 per month...
I had been evicted by some shady developers/speculators who bought my 30 year sitting tenancy from my previous landlord after I threatened to have him prosecuted for disrepair/gas safety/and harassment. They were not the most reputable of individuals and I suspect that the closing TW Bill from 2017 was generated by the new owners of the property opening a Thames Water account following the sale of the property by the developers.
What concerns me is:
Can I be held liable for a debt incurred in my name originating well over a year after I lived in a property?
[The Thames water billing cycle runs from 1st April, so for a whole year and 3 months the developers enjoyed the facilities in my name and apparently it would seem at my expense]
Also, is the existence of a bill, alone, proof of cause of action?
Does a County Court claim have to be accurate in the amount claimed?
Is my already submitted defence still appropriate in light of the new information?
I'm at a loss for how to proceed and I'm under enormous time pressure and I have so many questions.
Hopefully I've given you all enough to understand the gist of my situation.
In their letter, BW Legal gave me until 1 August 2023 to contact them to resolve things on an amicable basis, however, closer inspection of the latest court documents - Form 419A "Notice of Proposed Allocation to the small claims Track" requires that I must complete Form N180 and file it with the court office by 24th July (Monday).
I am worried about the consequences of not responding in time, but hopefully I can file it electronically by Monday, but as my screen name suggests, I am completely out of my depth and no longer sure how I should be defending myself.
Without wasting time, it would not have been possible for me to have legally acknowledged any such debt within the limitation period as lacked the account details in order to have been able to acknowledge any debt or to have been able to make any payments. My reasoning, such as it was, was based on information available to me at the time and assumed the claim was accurate.
I submitted the following as my defence:
"I do not admit any liability for the claim.
The Limitation Act 1980 Section 5 states: “An action founded on simple contract shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued.” If this time has expired, the debt becomes statute barred and unenforceable.
On that basis, I argue that the alleged debt in this case is statute barred; no correspondence, payment, or acknowledgement of this alleged debt has been made within the the prescribed time limit of the last six years, nor have the claimants taken any action to recover it within the prescribed period.
Therefore, under Section 5 of the Limitation Act 1980, I request that the court demand that the claimants provide evidence to the contrary; of payment or written contact from me within the relevant period, as proof to the court that their claim was legitimately brought in time. In the event of the failure of the claimants to provide any such evidence, I further request that the the court issue summary judgment to strike out the claimants’ case, and declare the alleged debt unenforceable, as it was issued out of time ."
I submitted my defence as pdf by email.
I have finally received a copy of their apparent evidence by post towards the end of last week and this is where things become messy. The debt agencies have advised me to seek urgent legal advice as in their opinions it has stopped being a purely a debt issue.
Their evidence, as enclosed in their letter is a copy of a closing bill for £1,662.21, in my name from Thames Water dated 28th June 2017 for the supply of water and wastewater services to my old address from 01 April 2017 to 07 June 2017.
Bear in mind that I vacated that property on 31st March 2016.
In the accompanying letter, their response to my defence that it is statute barred is as follows:
"S.5 of the Limitation Act 1980, provides a limitation period for claims in contract of six years from the date of
the last cause of action. The originating creditor sent a Final bill on 28 June 2017. Given that Our Client s claim
was issued on 4 April 2023, the claim was brought within the limitation period."
They also suggested I stop wasting court time, incurring further costs, and pointed me towards their already pre-approved payment plan of £50 per month...
I had been evicted by some shady developers/speculators who bought my 30 year sitting tenancy from my previous landlord after I threatened to have him prosecuted for disrepair/gas safety/and harassment. They were not the most reputable of individuals and I suspect that the closing TW Bill from 2017 was generated by the new owners of the property opening a Thames Water account following the sale of the property by the developers.
What concerns me is:
Can I be held liable for a debt incurred in my name originating well over a year after I lived in a property?
[The Thames water billing cycle runs from 1st April, so for a whole year and 3 months the developers enjoyed the facilities in my name and apparently it would seem at my expense]
Also, is the existence of a bill, alone, proof of cause of action?
Does a County Court claim have to be accurate in the amount claimed?
Is my already submitted defence still appropriate in light of the new information?
I'm at a loss for how to proceed and I'm under enormous time pressure and I have so many questions.
Hopefully I've given you all enough to understand the gist of my situation.
In their letter, BW Legal gave me until 1 August 2023 to contact them to resolve things on an amicable basis, however, closer inspection of the latest court documents - Form 419A "Notice of Proposed Allocation to the small claims Track" requires that I must complete Form N180 and file it with the court office by 24th July (Monday).
I am worried about the consequences of not responding in time, but hopefully I can file it electronically by Monday, but as my screen name suggests, I am completely out of my depth and no longer sure how I should be defending myself.
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