Hi,
The company I work for made a fairly substantial claim against a customer who hadn't paid what was owed to us for work done. We had settled on a payment plan which soon broke down so decided to go the legal route.
In brief: we wrote several times asking to make further arrangements (we know all went to the correct address) which were not responded to; we filed a claim for judgment which he said he would contest but never did; we decided that an order to attend court for questioning about his finances would be a wise step before pursuing further.
We have now received the statement from the questioning and are 99% sure that some of what he said is untrue. At the end of the statement he has said he doesn't believe he owes what we are asking. (That may be his objecting to the interest added, which I guess could be waived if it helps the actual debt to be paid.)
Where do we go next? Taking the received statement at face value, attempting enforcement at this stage looks a bit pointless as he says he has no job or assets--at least one of those things we know to be not entirely true.
The letter from the court says if we are not satisfied with the information provided we can make a fresh application for questioning. Can we use that to contest his statements? Or is there another procedure that might be better?
Thank you in advance for any advice.
MrsSilver
The company I work for made a fairly substantial claim against a customer who hadn't paid what was owed to us for work done. We had settled on a payment plan which soon broke down so decided to go the legal route.
In brief: we wrote several times asking to make further arrangements (we know all went to the correct address) which were not responded to; we filed a claim for judgment which he said he would contest but never did; we decided that an order to attend court for questioning about his finances would be a wise step before pursuing further.
We have now received the statement from the questioning and are 99% sure that some of what he said is untrue. At the end of the statement he has said he doesn't believe he owes what we are asking. (That may be his objecting to the interest added, which I guess could be waived if it helps the actual debt to be paid.)
Where do we go next? Taking the received statement at face value, attempting enforcement at this stage looks a bit pointless as he says he has no job or assets--at least one of those things we know to be not entirely true.
The letter from the court says if we are not satisfied with the information provided we can make a fresh application for questioning. Can we use that to contest his statements? Or is there another procedure that might be better?
Thank you in advance for any advice.
MrsSilver
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