I've got an impending court case coming up on the 11th July and in preparation I've been reading a lot on LegalBeagles about Notices of Assignment and the requirements for notices to be considered served as required by the Law and Property Act 1925 s.196(4) which says:
From what I've read, the general consensus is that the most important element of the requirement is that notices are sent via the postal service and the requirement to send by some kind of recorded/signed for delivery is not; the notice just needs to be sent in the post and not returned to be sufficient for a DJ looking at a claim and are usually happy to accept one has been served.
The claimant's solicitor in my case however has submitted, as part of their witness statement, that the Notice of Assignment was sent via email. On the face of it, this would seem to be an admission that service of the notice of assignment was deficient because it failed to meet the requirements of the LPA 1925 s.196(4) meaning that any assignment was equitable only and the original creditor would need to be a named party in the claim. The email they claim to have sent it to hasn't been in use for years.
Obviously, I'm not a solicitor so I'm hoping someone with a more thorough understanding of the law might be able to shine some light on this for me.
Thanks
MC
Any notice required or authorised by this Act to be served shall also be sufficiently served, if it is sent by post in a registered letter addressed to the lessee, lessor, mortgagee, mortgagor, or other person to be served, by name, at the aforesaid place of abode or business, office, or counting-house, and if that letter is not returned [F1by the postal operator (within the meaning of [F2Part 3 of the Postal Services Act 2011]) concerned] undelivered; and that service shall be deemed to be made at the time at which the registered letter would in the ordinary course be delivered
The claimant's solicitor in my case however has submitted, as part of their witness statement, that the Notice of Assignment was sent via email. On the face of it, this would seem to be an admission that service of the notice of assignment was deficient because it failed to meet the requirements of the LPA 1925 s.196(4) meaning that any assignment was equitable only and the original creditor would need to be a named party in the claim. The email they claim to have sent it to hasn't been in use for years.
Obviously, I'm not a solicitor so I'm hoping someone with a more thorough understanding of the law might be able to shine some light on this for me.
Thanks
MC
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