Some more developments. Firstly, I have had a bill from the energy supplier this morning which includes the amount they have put into Court as a brought forward and incorporates demands that I pay the lot. I was under the impression that making demands for payment of money which was already the subject of Court proceedings was not permitted and would probably be contempt. Anyone agree that is right or not?
I have now filed the acknowledgment of receipt for both claims.
While doing research for my defence I came across the PRE-ACTION PROTOCOL FOR DEBT CLAIMS which, if I read it correctly, should have been sent to me as part of the proceedure prior to the issue of proceedings and which I have not seen before. The relevant bit here is that my last letter to the claimant set out exactly what the problem was and why I believed I couldn't be required to pay the disputed part and also what they needed to do to put it right. I was expecting or at least hoping for an explanation of why they felt it was payable but never had a reply to that - it was sent by special delivery so signed for so they can't claim they didn't get it - which means they appear also to have not complied with the pre-action protocol.
Does anyone have any cogent advice about how I would go about working out the sort of sum I could get if I made a counterclaim for damages. The claimant has ruined the first 3 years of my retirement by failing to deal with this when it first arose. They are supposed to deal with complaints in 8 weeks - 30 months later I am still arguing about the same thing.
I have now filed the acknowledgment of receipt for both claims.
While doing research for my defence I came across the PRE-ACTION PROTOCOL FOR DEBT CLAIMS which, if I read it correctly, should have been sent to me as part of the proceedure prior to the issue of proceedings and which I have not seen before. The relevant bit here is that my last letter to the claimant set out exactly what the problem was and why I believed I couldn't be required to pay the disputed part and also what they needed to do to put it right. I was expecting or at least hoping for an explanation of why they felt it was payable but never had a reply to that - it was sent by special delivery so signed for so they can't claim they didn't get it - which means they appear also to have not complied with the pre-action protocol.
Does anyone have any cogent advice about how I would go about working out the sort of sum I could get if I made a counterclaim for damages. The claimant has ruined the first 3 years of my retirement by failing to deal with this when it first arose. They are supposed to deal with complaints in 8 weeks - 30 months later I am still arguing about the same thing.



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