Hello! I could really do with some advice please: I’m in danger of having my S.75 claim against a bank struck out, as, having read the Defence, I realise that I’m out of my depth.
I instructed a barrister under the direct access scheme, and, to cut a long story short, he didn’t have experience in the area of law that pertained to my case and didn’t read the papers either, forcing me to adjourn the Hearing of my claim just a couple of days before trial, causing me financial loss. The experience was incredibly stressful.
I didn’t pay the barrister direct - I was introduced to him through a company that offers to match cases to a network of specialist barristers. My understanding is that this company charges customers a fee for this service and that, following the deduction of this fee, the bulk of the money the customer pays is remitted by the company to the barrister it introduces. It was necessary for me to provide paperwork and to stipulate what kind of barrister I needed in terms of expertise and to explain what work was needed to be done on my case.
The defence is quite difficult for me to understand, but I believe that the bank is trying to argue that there was no debtor creditor supply relationship that engages S.75, presumably on the basis that the supplier was the barrister, not the agency that made the arrangements for him to represent me.
Unfortunately, the whole thing was quite confusing as, coincidentally, the Chambers the barrister worked for had virtually the same name as the company that introduced him. As a result of this, I mistakenly thought that he worked exclusively for that company. In fact, before requesting the adjournment, I asked if they would be willing to substitute him with someone more suitable.
Do I argue that the company I paid was the supplier, and was in breach of contract, bearing in mind that the barrister it introduced was unsuitable and did not match my stipulated requirements? Alternatively, do I argue that the company was the agent of the barrister aka ‘the supplier’ and accepted payment on his behalf, and that this link is sufficient to engage S75?
Any observations/ideas would be most gratefully appreciated.
I instructed a barrister under the direct access scheme, and, to cut a long story short, he didn’t have experience in the area of law that pertained to my case and didn’t read the papers either, forcing me to adjourn the Hearing of my claim just a couple of days before trial, causing me financial loss. The experience was incredibly stressful.
I didn’t pay the barrister direct - I was introduced to him through a company that offers to match cases to a network of specialist barristers. My understanding is that this company charges customers a fee for this service and that, following the deduction of this fee, the bulk of the money the customer pays is remitted by the company to the barrister it introduces. It was necessary for me to provide paperwork and to stipulate what kind of barrister I needed in terms of expertise and to explain what work was needed to be done on my case.
The defence is quite difficult for me to understand, but I believe that the bank is trying to argue that there was no debtor creditor supply relationship that engages S.75, presumably on the basis that the supplier was the barrister, not the agency that made the arrangements for him to represent me.
Unfortunately, the whole thing was quite confusing as, coincidentally, the Chambers the barrister worked for had virtually the same name as the company that introduced him. As a result of this, I mistakenly thought that he worked exclusively for that company. In fact, before requesting the adjournment, I asked if they would be willing to substitute him with someone more suitable.
Do I argue that the company I paid was the supplier, and was in breach of contract, bearing in mind that the barrister it introduced was unsuitable and did not match my stipulated requirements? Alternatively, do I argue that the company was the agent of the barrister aka ‘the supplier’ and accepted payment on his behalf, and that this link is sufficient to engage S75?
Any observations/ideas would be most gratefully appreciated.
Comment