Pretty much, yes. Horrid place to be with it hanging over your head, you've had this on hold for two years, and I'm not sure there is any time limit ( stupidly ) it can stay on hold in court - although they would have to apply to the court for permission to lift the stay and the longer it goes on, the less likely - but saying that I haven't seen any declined. Be a pain to have them pick it up if you couldn't get it settled outside court and have a CCJ on your file for 6 years after all this.
You have options ( probably the same you had previously mind)
* Just leave it and hope they don't find a decent / recon copy of the agreement with everything in order.
* Negotiate some kind of a reduced settlement to get it out your hair and save costs etc
* Consider seriously applying to court to strike out their case or for summary judgment. You could write to them first with a copy of your proposed application and invite them to withdraw to save costs. The application is £255 ( but you could check if you are eligible for fee remission). It does carry a risk of a) costs if you lost b) encouraging them to dig deeper for that agreement and then proceeding in the case but conversely could force their hand to withdraw or get them struck out for failure to comply with the CCA etc and abusing the court procedure.
I read back a fair bit of the thread but I can see you sent a CCA request in 2013 but just checking whether you actually sent it to the claimant and is that the one was replied to with the copy application? or was that to the original creditor / previous DCA ?
The claim is nearly 10k isn't it - you could consider getting a solicitors involved who'd likely be able to have more luck getting the claimant to agree to withdraw/discontinue. Might actually cost you same or less than the application depending who you can get. Might be worth investigating ( there's Joanna Connolly of Joanna Connolly Solicitors & Paul Tilley, Howlett Clarke on here who are both experienced in consumer credit agreement court claims - it might be worth having a chat with and at least finding out how much it might cost )
Just my thoughts anyway.
You have options ( probably the same you had previously mind)
* Just leave it and hope they don't find a decent / recon copy of the agreement with everything in order.
* Negotiate some kind of a reduced settlement to get it out your hair and save costs etc
* Consider seriously applying to court to strike out their case or for summary judgment. You could write to them first with a copy of your proposed application and invite them to withdraw to save costs. The application is £255 ( but you could check if you are eligible for fee remission). It does carry a risk of a) costs if you lost b) encouraging them to dig deeper for that agreement and then proceeding in the case but conversely could force their hand to withdraw or get them struck out for failure to comply with the CCA etc and abusing the court procedure.
I read back a fair bit of the thread but I can see you sent a CCA request in 2013 but just checking whether you actually sent it to the claimant and is that the one was replied to with the copy application? or was that to the original creditor / previous DCA ?
The claim is nearly 10k isn't it - you could consider getting a solicitors involved who'd likely be able to have more luck getting the claimant to agree to withdraw/discontinue. Might actually cost you same or less than the application depending who you can get. Might be worth investigating ( there's Joanna Connolly of Joanna Connolly Solicitors & Paul Tilley, Howlett Clarke on here who are both experienced in consumer credit agreement court claims - it might be worth having a chat with and at least finding out how much it might cost )
Just my thoughts anyway.
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