Hi all,
Would appreciate any advice you have regarding the following situation:
I bought some vouchers from a retailer online, in July 2018, by debit card.
· I accidentally bought 2 vouchers instead of 1.I requested an immediate refund for the second voucher.
· After a week, I lodged a complaint with them for not actioning the refund. I then requested a refund for both vouchers, citing poor customer service.
· I demanded a refund, citing the "Consumer Contract Regulations Act of 2013".
· I called and emailed them weekly until mid-September, when they stated that the vouchers were actually non-refundable. I told them I would file a claim, they acknowledged this via email.
· I submitted a claim through the Small Claims Court. It was issued on the 20th Sept 2018. I used the Vendor's address as per the company website (instead of the one on Companies House)
· The Vendor did not respond, a CCJ was granted.
· I chased the Vendor for a response. On the 26th November, they responded to me, saying that they hadn't received the Claim notice since it hadn't gone to the address registered on Companies House. They said they had only just found the email from the Money Claims Service since it had gone into their Spam folder. They told me they would ask for the CCJ to be set aside and reheard.
· More than 2 weeks has elapsed since their last email. Money Claims have told me that the Vendor has not asked for the CCJ to be set aside.
I am not keen to request an address change for the claim, since this would cost me £100, which I understand would be non-refundable.
The vendor did acknowledge the claim more than 2 weeks ago, and the email he discovered on the 26th Nov would have given him all the relevant information about the claim (even though he hasn't received a paper copy in the post).
My questions:
1) Is his acknowledgment of the late receipt of the Money Claims email enough to show that he is aware of the claim, and has been aware for more than 2 weeks?
2) What's the best course of action in this circumstance, that doesn't involve me forking out for a fee (that the Vendor won't have to compensate me for even in the event of a victory).
Thanks for reading- and would appreciate any advice at all.
Would appreciate any advice you have regarding the following situation:
I bought some vouchers from a retailer online, in July 2018, by debit card.
· I accidentally bought 2 vouchers instead of 1.I requested an immediate refund for the second voucher.
· After a week, I lodged a complaint with them for not actioning the refund. I then requested a refund for both vouchers, citing poor customer service.
· I demanded a refund, citing the "Consumer Contract Regulations Act of 2013".
· I called and emailed them weekly until mid-September, when they stated that the vouchers were actually non-refundable. I told them I would file a claim, they acknowledged this via email.
· I submitted a claim through the Small Claims Court. It was issued on the 20th Sept 2018. I used the Vendor's address as per the company website (instead of the one on Companies House)
· The Vendor did not respond, a CCJ was granted.
· I chased the Vendor for a response. On the 26th November, they responded to me, saying that they hadn't received the Claim notice since it hadn't gone to the address registered on Companies House. They said they had only just found the email from the Money Claims Service since it had gone into their Spam folder. They told me they would ask for the CCJ to be set aside and reheard.
· More than 2 weeks has elapsed since their last email. Money Claims have told me that the Vendor has not asked for the CCJ to be set aside.
I am not keen to request an address change for the claim, since this would cost me £100, which I understand would be non-refundable.
The vendor did acknowledge the claim more than 2 weeks ago, and the email he discovered on the 26th Nov would have given him all the relevant information about the claim (even though he hasn't received a paper copy in the post).
My questions:
1) Is his acknowledgment of the late receipt of the Money Claims email enough to show that he is aware of the claim, and has been aware for more than 2 weeks?
2) What's the best course of action in this circumstance, that doesn't involve me forking out for a fee (that the Vendor won't have to compensate me for even in the event of a victory).
Thanks for reading- and would appreciate any advice at all.
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