Councils all over the country are issuing Hundreds of Summonses and seeking Liability Orders every week.. My local council brought 507 "cases" to Court this week..
Before the Summons Date:
- You should seek to make an arrangement with the Council. The money issue isn't going to go away: and staving off one Liability Order won't change the debt situation..
- You should contact your local Councillor(s) and local MP(s) and inform them that you have been summonsed. Ask them to acknowledge that they have this information from you. Ask them to investigate the use of Summonses as a method of chasing Council Tax Arrears.
Ask for their help in resolving the situation:
Even ( especially) if you have made an agreement - you should, if possible, attend court
- You can ask the magistrate to waive or reduce the court costs that the Council has added to your bill.
Councils cannot make a financial gain on legal proceeding. EG 100 summonses heard together in one Magistrate's court sitting @ £100 costs on each summons = Huge Profit.
The Magistrates cannot change that unless someone who has been summonsed asks them to..
- You can ask that the liability order against you should not be granted:
on the grounds that it is pre-emptive because you have put an agreement in place with the Council.. Therefore, on the day of the Summons, you are not under the new agreement liable for the amount quoted in the summons.
on the grounds that it is against justice
- You can ask for a ruling of "no case to answer". If the magistrates agree, then you will not be liable for costs and there will be no liability order issued.
- You can look for a technical fault in the paperwork that you have received (or the paperwork that the court has received). If there is one you can ask the magistrates to rule that you have "no case to answer" What the Council has done should be in compliance with " The Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations (1992)
Particularly Section 23..
- You have a right to Defend against the amount they are Claiming . If they are significantly wrong in fact, the magistrate can rule that you have "no case to answer"
- If the way the Council has dealt with you raises "issues of justice" they can rule that you have "no case to answer"
- You have a right to address the Court even if you have no defence..
This is all you exercising your rights as a citizen.
Remember - the Council has Summonsed You.. The Council has made a legal claim; the Council has to prove a) Their claim is just and accurate and b) they have made all reasonable attempts to come to an arrangement with you Before issuing the Summons.
BEWARE --
When you attend Court, there will be employees of the Council there. They may even have their own sign-in desk. The experience in many Counties is that the Council officials will try hard to dissuade you from going before the magistrates.
Remember:
- They summonsed you. You do not, on the court date, have to give them any details of your Council Tax history or your personal circumstances. They laid the claim against you. The onus to prove it lies with them. If they came to court without the details to prove their case -- they cannot reasonably expect you to fill in the gaps for them.
-- You are answering a summons for a Civil, debt-collecting matter. Imagine it was, e.g., your gas supplier who had issued the summons..
Anything you have seen on television about cautions etc. do not apply...
I hope the admin. are OK about me mentioning another non - party political site: [Link removed]I found it really helpful for how to address the Magistrates etc..
Before the Summons Date:
- You should seek to make an arrangement with the Council. The money issue isn't going to go away: and staving off one Liability Order won't change the debt situation..
- You should contact your local Councillor(s) and local MP(s) and inform them that you have been summonsed. Ask them to acknowledge that they have this information from you. Ask them to investigate the use of Summonses as a method of chasing Council Tax Arrears.
Ask for their help in resolving the situation:
Even ( especially) if you have made an agreement - you should, if possible, attend court
- You can ask the magistrate to waive or reduce the court costs that the Council has added to your bill.
Councils cannot make a financial gain on legal proceeding. EG 100 summonses heard together in one Magistrate's court sitting @ £100 costs on each summons = Huge Profit.
The Magistrates cannot change that unless someone who has been summonsed asks them to..
- You can ask that the liability order against you should not be granted:
on the grounds that it is pre-emptive because you have put an agreement in place with the Council.. Therefore, on the day of the Summons, you are not under the new agreement liable for the amount quoted in the summons.
on the grounds that it is against justice
- You can ask for a ruling of "no case to answer". If the magistrates agree, then you will not be liable for costs and there will be no liability order issued.
- You can look for a technical fault in the paperwork that you have received (or the paperwork that the court has received). If there is one you can ask the magistrates to rule that you have "no case to answer" What the Council has done should be in compliance with " The Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations (1992)
Particularly Section 23..
- You have a right to Defend against the amount they are Claiming . If they are significantly wrong in fact, the magistrate can rule that you have "no case to answer"
- If the way the Council has dealt with you raises "issues of justice" they can rule that you have "no case to answer"
- You have a right to address the Court even if you have no defence..
This is all you exercising your rights as a citizen.
Remember - the Council has Summonsed You.. The Council has made a legal claim; the Council has to prove a) Their claim is just and accurate and b) they have made all reasonable attempts to come to an arrangement with you Before issuing the Summons.
BEWARE --
When you attend Court, there will be employees of the Council there. They may even have their own sign-in desk. The experience in many Counties is that the Council officials will try hard to dissuade you from going before the magistrates.
Remember:
- They summonsed you. You do not, on the court date, have to give them any details of your Council Tax history or your personal circumstances. They laid the claim against you. The onus to prove it lies with them. If they came to court without the details to prove their case -- they cannot reasonably expect you to fill in the gaps for them.
-- You are answering a summons for a Civil, debt-collecting matter. Imagine it was, e.g., your gas supplier who had issued the summons..
Anything you have seen on television about cautions etc. do not apply...
I hope the admin. are OK about me mentioning another non - party political site: [Link removed]I found it really helpful for how to address the Magistrates etc..
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