Hi Carlos,
The comments provided by Diana M regarding the issue of S87(1) DN and the Cause of Action are important.
District Judges are going off the date on the S87(1) DN as the Cause of Action. They aren't considering the last missed payment to be the date of accrual for the Cause of Action. This is vital to consider when using the Statute Barred defence.
If the S87(1) DN was issued within six years of the date on which legal proceeding began, then the Statue Barred defence is almost bound to fail, even if the last missed payment was outside of the six year time limit. What is important is whether or not a copy of the S87(1) DN is contained in the claimants evidence bundle. You wont have that yet, but they only need to enclose a reconstituted copy, which will almost certainly guarantee its presence in the evidence bundle once they proceed to that stage.
I am speaking from recent experience. On December 2017 in County Court I lost in a claim brought by Cabot's via Restons Solicitors. This was originally a Capital One debt sold to Cabot.
My defence was a Statute Barred defence, and I had proof of the last missed payment which was four months outside of the six year time limit. The S87(1) DN was issued within six years of the date on which legal proceedings began, and the Judge ruled in favour of the claimant.
They sent a Barrister from Temple Row Chambers in Birmingham. It was far from one sided but the Courts seem to be going with the date on the S87(1) DN and not the last missed payment date.
The claim had been stayed for almost two years. The stay was lifted without question.
There is a lot of debate regarding the accrual of the Cause of Action date for a Statute Barred defence, but the S87(1) DN is what is being accepted by the District Judges. Try finding anyone online who has used the defence successfully in Court where the S87(1) DN was issued within six years from proceedings and you will draw a blank. There is a reason for that.
There are a lot of misleading posts titled "WON" regarding Statute Barred claims, when in fact all were discontinued by the claimants. That's not the same as winning an argument in court.
In most of the discontinued claims the S87(1) DN was issued and dated outside of the six year time limit from when the legal proceedings began, and therefore the claim in those cases would not have succeeded in court where a Statute Barred defence was raised. That's the big difference.
Things to consider and I hope this helps.
Regards and good luck.
The comments provided by Diana M regarding the issue of S87(1) DN and the Cause of Action are important.
District Judges are going off the date on the S87(1) DN as the Cause of Action. They aren't considering the last missed payment to be the date of accrual for the Cause of Action. This is vital to consider when using the Statute Barred defence.
If the S87(1) DN was issued within six years of the date on which legal proceeding began, then the Statue Barred defence is almost bound to fail, even if the last missed payment was outside of the six year time limit. What is important is whether or not a copy of the S87(1) DN is contained in the claimants evidence bundle. You wont have that yet, but they only need to enclose a reconstituted copy, which will almost certainly guarantee its presence in the evidence bundle once they proceed to that stage.
I am speaking from recent experience. On December 2017 in County Court I lost in a claim brought by Cabot's via Restons Solicitors. This was originally a Capital One debt sold to Cabot.
My defence was a Statute Barred defence, and I had proof of the last missed payment which was four months outside of the six year time limit. The S87(1) DN was issued within six years of the date on which legal proceedings began, and the Judge ruled in favour of the claimant.
They sent a Barrister from Temple Row Chambers in Birmingham. It was far from one sided but the Courts seem to be going with the date on the S87(1) DN and not the last missed payment date.
The claim had been stayed for almost two years. The stay was lifted without question.
There is a lot of debate regarding the accrual of the Cause of Action date for a Statute Barred defence, but the S87(1) DN is what is being accepted by the District Judges. Try finding anyone online who has used the defence successfully in Court where the S87(1) DN was issued within six years from proceedings and you will draw a blank. There is a reason for that.
There are a lot of misleading posts titled "WON" regarding Statute Barred claims, when in fact all were discontinued by the claimants. That's not the same as winning an argument in court.
In most of the discontinued claims the S87(1) DN was issued and dated outside of the six year time limit from when the legal proceedings began, and therefore the claim in those cases would not have succeeded in court where a Statute Barred defence was raised. That's the big difference.
Things to consider and I hope this helps.
Regards and good luck.
Comment