Hello
On the moneyclaim uk website I made a small claim against a lady that pulled in front of me, causing me to crash my bicycle into her car. When I tried to claim for damages to my bike (2 wheels, front fork + labour), a total of £305, her insurer told me she disputed the event (even though police was present at the scene who gave me her details and told her she was at fault) and I should contact my solicitor.
So after a small claim on the website and a letter letting her know that I would gladly settle out of court if she pays me the money or accepts liability so that I can go through her insurer, I received a response.
I am dealing with her legal adviser, probably offered by her insurer. They have accepted that she was at fault at this point but they are asking me to provide proof of ownership of the bicycle and proof of damages claimed for, more specifically:
"It is admitted, for the purpose for these proceedings alone, that at the material location there was contact between the Claimant's vehicle and vehicle XXXX (the Defendant's vehicle). For the avoidance of doubt the Claimant is put to strict proof as to ownership of the particularised vehicle."
"For the avoidance of doubt, it is the Defendant's case that quantum remains to be in dispute between parties and the Claimant is put to strict proof as to any alleged loss and damage claimed for."
and
"The Claimant is put to strict proof as to each and every loss allegedly arising from this incident."
It sounds like the last two paragraphs ask for the same thing, proof of damage costs? Do I understand that correctly? I have already sent them a copy of the Accident Report (from the bike shop) and the receipt that details all the individual costs for the repairs, I guess I'll just send them again, what else can I offer as proof of damage?
However, I don't know what proof to send that the bicycle is mine. I bought it through an app called "Shpock" that defines itself as a "boot sale app" and shows you listings in your local area. The only proof would be screenshots of my phone that show the deal. The seller gave me no receipt (same as when going to a boot sale). I could maybe write to the seller through the app, ask him to write me a letter and hope he responds? Is that really necessary? Is it enough? No one took a picture of my bicycle when the incident happened anyway, so they don't know what bicycle was involved in the impact.
Another worry I've got is that I purchased the bike for £150 (and the price is displayed in the Shpock app screenshots), and repairs costed £300. I chose to do them because a bike like that is over £1000 new. And a second hand one is about £250. Will they grab on that to deny me the money?
I hope someone can help me out here.
Also, on the website it now states: "A bar was put in place for [Defendant]" and "DQ sent to [Defendant]" could someone tell me what that means? And when I send them letters, do I need to let the court know of anything?
Thank you very much.
On the moneyclaim uk website I made a small claim against a lady that pulled in front of me, causing me to crash my bicycle into her car. When I tried to claim for damages to my bike (2 wheels, front fork + labour), a total of £305, her insurer told me she disputed the event (even though police was present at the scene who gave me her details and told her she was at fault) and I should contact my solicitor.
So after a small claim on the website and a letter letting her know that I would gladly settle out of court if she pays me the money or accepts liability so that I can go through her insurer, I received a response.
I am dealing with her legal adviser, probably offered by her insurer. They have accepted that she was at fault at this point but they are asking me to provide proof of ownership of the bicycle and proof of damages claimed for, more specifically:
"It is admitted, for the purpose for these proceedings alone, that at the material location there was contact between the Claimant's vehicle and vehicle XXXX (the Defendant's vehicle). For the avoidance of doubt the Claimant is put to strict proof as to ownership of the particularised vehicle."
"For the avoidance of doubt, it is the Defendant's case that quantum remains to be in dispute between parties and the Claimant is put to strict proof as to any alleged loss and damage claimed for."
and
"The Claimant is put to strict proof as to each and every loss allegedly arising from this incident."
It sounds like the last two paragraphs ask for the same thing, proof of damage costs? Do I understand that correctly? I have already sent them a copy of the Accident Report (from the bike shop) and the receipt that details all the individual costs for the repairs, I guess I'll just send them again, what else can I offer as proof of damage?
However, I don't know what proof to send that the bicycle is mine. I bought it through an app called "Shpock" that defines itself as a "boot sale app" and shows you listings in your local area. The only proof would be screenshots of my phone that show the deal. The seller gave me no receipt (same as when going to a boot sale). I could maybe write to the seller through the app, ask him to write me a letter and hope he responds? Is that really necessary? Is it enough? No one took a picture of my bicycle when the incident happened anyway, so they don't know what bicycle was involved in the impact.
Another worry I've got is that I purchased the bike for £150 (and the price is displayed in the Shpock app screenshots), and repairs costed £300. I chose to do them because a bike like that is over £1000 new. And a second hand one is about £250. Will they grab on that to deny me the money?
I hope someone can help me out here.
Also, on the website it now states: "A bar was put in place for [Defendant]" and "DQ sent to [Defendant]" could someone tell me what that means? And when I send them letters, do I need to let the court know of anything?
Thank you very much.
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