Re: RLP and the Oxford test case: The truth and the lies
In accordance with the ruling in Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd -v- New Garage & Motor Co. Ltd 1915, in civil claims, the claimant is only permitted to claim actual loss suffered. The claimant is not permitted to be better-off financially as a result of claiming. This precedent has stood good and firm for the last 97 years.
I have to agree with Dougal that there was an intention to mislead in the case of A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012, borne out by the security manager and security officer conceding, under cross-examination, that the actual costs and time spent dealing with Ms B and Ms K bore no relation to what was being claimed.
Because this came out under cross-examination in a court of law, the attempt to mislead would not, in my considered judgement, amount to Fraud by False Misrepresentation, but to Attempting to Pervert the Course of Justice.
As to whether any CR letters, sent out on behalf of retailers in the light of the ruling in A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012 amount to Fraud by False Misrepresentation, the ruling has now highlighted that the vast majority of CR claims sent out are potentially fraudulent if tested against the statutory definition of Fraud by False Misrepresentation. As to whether the letters CR operators send to people amount to Harassment, as provided by the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, once at least two letters have been sent and received, then a cause for action, in the form of an injunction, may well exist against the retailer and CR operator.
What of other offences or causes of action?
Sending a communication to another containing a threat is an offence under Section 1, Malicious Communications Act 1988. However, it is also an offence to make an unwarranted demand and at the time of doing so using menaces (threats) as a means of enforcing the demand. It is immaterial what the nature of the demand is.
Could retailers who use CR operators and the CR operators, themselves, find themselves coming under the scrutiny of formal investigation in the light of A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012? Quite possibly. There is nothing to prevent a person alleged to have committed a "wrongdoing" from seeking legal remedy against any retailer and CR operator who attempt to obtain money from them which a court has found a retailer is no entitled to claim. Although A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012 does not, in itself, set a precedent, the issues it brings forward are, in my considered judgement, a pretty strong basis on which to repudiate any arguments by a retailer and its CR agent that they are acting lawfully or reasonably when attempting to make a CR claim.
In accordance with the ruling in Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd -v- New Garage & Motor Co. Ltd 1915, in civil claims, the claimant is only permitted to claim actual loss suffered. The claimant is not permitted to be better-off financially as a result of claiming. This precedent has stood good and firm for the last 97 years.
I have to agree with Dougal that there was an intention to mislead in the case of A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012, borne out by the security manager and security officer conceding, under cross-examination, that the actual costs and time spent dealing with Ms B and Ms K bore no relation to what was being claimed.
Because this came out under cross-examination in a court of law, the attempt to mislead would not, in my considered judgement, amount to Fraud by False Misrepresentation, but to Attempting to Pervert the Course of Justice.
As to whether any CR letters, sent out on behalf of retailers in the light of the ruling in A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012 amount to Fraud by False Misrepresentation, the ruling has now highlighted that the vast majority of CR claims sent out are potentially fraudulent if tested against the statutory definition of Fraud by False Misrepresentation. As to whether the letters CR operators send to people amount to Harassment, as provided by the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, once at least two letters have been sent and received, then a cause for action, in the form of an injunction, may well exist against the retailer and CR operator.
What of other offences or causes of action?
Sending a communication to another containing a threat is an offence under Section 1, Malicious Communications Act 1988. However, it is also an offence to make an unwarranted demand and at the time of doing so using menaces (threats) as a means of enforcing the demand. It is immaterial what the nature of the demand is.
Could retailers who use CR operators and the CR operators, themselves, find themselves coming under the scrutiny of formal investigation in the light of A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012? Quite possibly. There is nothing to prevent a person alleged to have committed a "wrongdoing" from seeking legal remedy against any retailer and CR operator who attempt to obtain money from them which a court has found a retailer is no entitled to claim. Although A Retailer -v- Ms B & Ms K 2012 does not, in itself, set a precedent, the issues it brings forward are, in my considered judgement, a pretty strong basis on which to repudiate any arguments by a retailer and its CR agent that they are acting lawfully or reasonably when attempting to make a CR claim.
Comment