I've received a 2nd letter from a debt collection agency stating further action will commence in 7 days without further notice unless I pay in full and need advice on whether I should pay or if I have a viable defence/counterclaim. This relates to an unpaid vet's bill of less than £1,000.
In summary, the vet performed surgery on my dog's fractured leg in Oct 2020. The vet asked about insurance and I confirmed I had cover of £3.5k the estimate for the original surgery was £2.3k. The surgery failed and the recommended option was bandage treatment to heal the fracture.
In March 2021 I received an invoice for £1.4k, the outstanding amount on top of the insurance already claimed of £3.5k. I wrote to the practice to raise my concerns over the transparency of the costs, bandaging and other treatment issues.
Although the dog is now mobile following referral to an animal hospital and further treatment costing £2.5k, the bandaging treatment has resulted in permanent soft tissue damage to the dog's paw, all of the foot pads were affected and the metatarsal pad was destroyed, The deterioration occurred when the leg was bandaged and we were told to return in 2 weeks which was too long. In their reply letter "they accepted that the dog should have been booked in for repeat dressing changes and they appreciate my point of the soft tissue complications but cannot establish how it happened as the member of staff no longer works for them" and as a gesture of goodwill they reduced the bill by £600 relating to costs and treatment as a result of the dressing.
I wasn't satisfied with their response so I contacted the VCMS (Vet Client Mediation Service) to lodge my concerns. VCMS responded in May 2021 that the practice had refused to take part in mediation. I received a letter from the vet practice in July 2021 about the outstanding invoice to which I replied saying I had attempted to resolve but they had refused mediation and then heard nothing until the debt collection agency contacted me on 02/03/24.
The amount outstanding has increased by circa £200 due to interest charges in this period. If it went to court, I would have to defend this myself and I have copies of my letter and response from vet, response from VCMS and photo's of the damage done.
How should I respond to the debt collection agency?
Can I defend/counterclaim because they caused permanent soft tissue damage from their bandage mismanagement for the value of the outstanding invoice amount?
If I go to court and lose, would I have to pay their costs?
I would appreciate any advice on how to proceed with this.
In summary, the vet performed surgery on my dog's fractured leg in Oct 2020. The vet asked about insurance and I confirmed I had cover of £3.5k the estimate for the original surgery was £2.3k. The surgery failed and the recommended option was bandage treatment to heal the fracture.
In March 2021 I received an invoice for £1.4k, the outstanding amount on top of the insurance already claimed of £3.5k. I wrote to the practice to raise my concerns over the transparency of the costs, bandaging and other treatment issues.
Although the dog is now mobile following referral to an animal hospital and further treatment costing £2.5k, the bandaging treatment has resulted in permanent soft tissue damage to the dog's paw, all of the foot pads were affected and the metatarsal pad was destroyed, The deterioration occurred when the leg was bandaged and we were told to return in 2 weeks which was too long. In their reply letter "they accepted that the dog should have been booked in for repeat dressing changes and they appreciate my point of the soft tissue complications but cannot establish how it happened as the member of staff no longer works for them" and as a gesture of goodwill they reduced the bill by £600 relating to costs and treatment as a result of the dressing.
I wasn't satisfied with their response so I contacted the VCMS (Vet Client Mediation Service) to lodge my concerns. VCMS responded in May 2021 that the practice had refused to take part in mediation. I received a letter from the vet practice in July 2021 about the outstanding invoice to which I replied saying I had attempted to resolve but they had refused mediation and then heard nothing until the debt collection agency contacted me on 02/03/24.
The amount outstanding has increased by circa £200 due to interest charges in this period. If it went to court, I would have to defend this myself and I have copies of my letter and response from vet, response from VCMS and photo's of the damage done.
How should I respond to the debt collection agency?
Can I defend/counterclaim because they caused permanent soft tissue damage from their bandage mismanagement for the value of the outstanding invoice amount?
If I go to court and lose, would I have to pay their costs?
I would appreciate any advice on how to proceed with this.
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