Thank you for taking the time to read this. I'm in quite a panic as is the wife hence spending the day Googling my predicament and finding this forum. Last June 2018, I sold my car to a car dealer who came to my house to purchase it. The sale took place outside my house. I have a handwritten bill of sale which is signed, dated with the address of the dealer clearly written, a copy of the signed and dated V5 DVLA slip (sent to the DVLA a few months later), and a certificate of cancellation of my car insurance for this car. All these documents state a date on or before the sale of the car in June 2018. The sale was also witnessed by my partner and my neighbour. The dealer (who had dealer plates) stated that I just needed to hold on to the V5 as he was a dealer and he would change ownership with the DVLA by sending in the other part of the V5 (yes, I know, I shouldn't have listened to him, so the V5 slip I had, it didn't get sent in for a few months, lesson learnt).
Since the sale, the car has been used over 90 times by the current owner to cross a toll bridge without paying for the last nine months starting in July 2018, a month after I sold my car. Letters from the toll company were sent out to my OLD address as I have since moved. When they got no reply, the toll firm passed the debt to a debt recovery firm who did some 'detective work', and found my new address, and this week more then 90 letters of Notice of Enforcement dropped through my letter box!!
I immediately rang the debt recovery firm. I spoke to two ladies, both stated I need to produce three pieces of evidence - the receipt for the V5 from the DVLA (I can't find it in the house), so have requested a V888 from the DVLA), certificate of cancellation of car insurance and bill of sale, both of which I have. I was also further told that they have a strict policy, and that unless I produce this evidence, I am liable for £22,000's worth of unpaid toll and debt recovery fees which are going up everyday. I was also encouraged to pay over the phone, £150 payment 'to start the ball rolling'. When I (mildly) protested that I wasn't driving the car, I have no idea who owns the car, I was told that it doesn't matter, my name is the registered owner, so I have no choice other then pay the fines otherwise they'd start court action. I declined to pay.
I have rang the DVLA twice (in a panic) asking for the date the ownership changed on my old car, and was told yesterday that they couldn't release over the phone the information I required, that I had to request a form V888 from them (which I have done today), but I was assured by one of the call staff that I was NOT the current registered owner of the vehicle and haven't been since last summer. He believes that the debt recovery firm may be using old information for addresses hence the confusion.
Can anyone advise on my situation? As far as I'm concerned, I sold the car in June 2018 which was witnessed by two people so ceased on that day to own it. I have a signed bill of sale, cancellation letter for my car insurance and a copy of the signed and dated V5 in my possession. The sale was also witnessed by two people. Am I liable at the end of the day to pay for someone else? And the fact I never knew my old car was using a toll bridge, which if I did, I would have responded instantly to a demand for toll payment. Instead I get a batch of 90 letters of Notice for Enforcement this week, no chance appeal via the toll company just straight to enforcement albeit because the initial letters went to my old address! Any advice or experience of this would help as I'm literally losing all my hair worrying! Thank you.
Since the sale, the car has been used over 90 times by the current owner to cross a toll bridge without paying for the last nine months starting in July 2018, a month after I sold my car. Letters from the toll company were sent out to my OLD address as I have since moved. When they got no reply, the toll firm passed the debt to a debt recovery firm who did some 'detective work', and found my new address, and this week more then 90 letters of Notice of Enforcement dropped through my letter box!!
I immediately rang the debt recovery firm. I spoke to two ladies, both stated I need to produce three pieces of evidence - the receipt for the V5 from the DVLA (I can't find it in the house), so have requested a V888 from the DVLA), certificate of cancellation of car insurance and bill of sale, both of which I have. I was also further told that they have a strict policy, and that unless I produce this evidence, I am liable for £22,000's worth of unpaid toll and debt recovery fees which are going up everyday. I was also encouraged to pay over the phone, £150 payment 'to start the ball rolling'. When I (mildly) protested that I wasn't driving the car, I have no idea who owns the car, I was told that it doesn't matter, my name is the registered owner, so I have no choice other then pay the fines otherwise they'd start court action. I declined to pay.
I have rang the DVLA twice (in a panic) asking for the date the ownership changed on my old car, and was told yesterday that they couldn't release over the phone the information I required, that I had to request a form V888 from them (which I have done today), but I was assured by one of the call staff that I was NOT the current registered owner of the vehicle and haven't been since last summer. He believes that the debt recovery firm may be using old information for addresses hence the confusion.
Can anyone advise on my situation? As far as I'm concerned, I sold the car in June 2018 which was witnessed by two people so ceased on that day to own it. I have a signed bill of sale, cancellation letter for my car insurance and a copy of the signed and dated V5 in my possession. The sale was also witnessed by two people. Am I liable at the end of the day to pay for someone else? And the fact I never knew my old car was using a toll bridge, which if I did, I would have responded instantly to a demand for toll payment. Instead I get a batch of 90 letters of Notice for Enforcement this week, no chance appeal via the toll company just straight to enforcement albeit because the initial letters went to my old address! Any advice or experience of this would help as I'm literally losing all my hair worrying! Thank you.
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