You would have to make an application to the court for an interim injunction and to deliver up the car pending the outcome of your claim. Where you make an application for an injunction, you need to also file a claim as soon as possible after that. It is possible to get an urgent injunction but in any event
injunction hearings can be heard as soon as 7 days providing all relevant documentation if correctly filed and served on Money Barn.
You may be wise to see if you can speak to a solicitor and get a fixed fee for making and issuing the application for an injunction. I've also tagged pt2537 who might be able to assist you in the first instance.
If injunction isn't the route you want to go down, then it would be the usual letter before action and then issuing a claim for delivery up and/or damages for trespass to the vehicle.
In the meantime, you might want to draft up an email to Money Barn and put them on notice of your intended legal action (whichever route you take). Their website lists a number of email addresses, presumably it is the recoveries email but I would probably suggest you also copy in customer service and complaints one - https://www.moneybarn.com/contact-us/
Just so they take notice, the subject line should be headed something along the lines of "Urgent: Immediate Legal Action Against Money Barn" followed by any reference number and details of what has happened and the intended action you are going to take.
It could very well be the case that the person with the tow truck is simply bluffing and waiting for you to hand over the keys or maybe there is another recovery vehicle on its way. Either way, I can't see how Money Barn are going to win this one and will most likely look to settle if a claim is issued. This is exactly the reason why you needed that letter from the seller as evidence in case something like this happened.
End of the day, if Money Barn were so confident of their ownership, they would have threatened you with legal action but they appear to be going through the back door, in the hope (perhaps) you'll do nothing about it. I don't like Money Barn, they are very underhand.
Also tagging Amethyst in case I am not around tomorrow.
injunction hearings can be heard as soon as 7 days providing all relevant documentation if correctly filed and served on Money Barn.
You may be wise to see if you can speak to a solicitor and get a fixed fee for making and issuing the application for an injunction. I've also tagged pt2537 who might be able to assist you in the first instance.
If injunction isn't the route you want to go down, then it would be the usual letter before action and then issuing a claim for delivery up and/or damages for trespass to the vehicle.
In the meantime, you might want to draft up an email to Money Barn and put them on notice of your intended legal action (whichever route you take). Their website lists a number of email addresses, presumably it is the recoveries email but I would probably suggest you also copy in customer service and complaints one - https://www.moneybarn.com/contact-us/
Just so they take notice, the subject line should be headed something along the lines of "Urgent: Immediate Legal Action Against Money Barn" followed by any reference number and details of what has happened and the intended action you are going to take.
It could very well be the case that the person with the tow truck is simply bluffing and waiting for you to hand over the keys or maybe there is another recovery vehicle on its way. Either way, I can't see how Money Barn are going to win this one and will most likely look to settle if a claim is issued. This is exactly the reason why you needed that letter from the seller as evidence in case something like this happened.
End of the day, if Money Barn were so confident of their ownership, they would have threatened you with legal action but they appear to be going through the back door, in the hope (perhaps) you'll do nothing about it. I don't like Money Barn, they are very underhand.
Also tagging Amethyst in case I am not around tomorrow.
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