Hi,
If a defence is served but is incomplete, does this constitute failure to serve?
The reason I ask is that a company liquidation has filed a defence but not included a signed statement of truth. Now I know a company in liquidation may not be able to be prosecuted, however as there its a dispute over who my contract was with, the directors of 3 businesses involved are all one and the same. They have filed the same defence for the other 2 business names and signed on behalf of those 2 but didn't provide a signed statement of truth for the company in liquidation, yet very recently have signed for post (recorded delivery) from that same company, so I am struggling to see the difference. Either they are or they aren't signatories for this business (in liquidation). They have also recently signed a different legal document using the same companies name, so again it seems they are signing when they feel like it, and failing to sign when they don't. Surely they can't have it both ways?
If a defence is served but is incomplete, does this constitute failure to serve?
The reason I ask is that a company liquidation has filed a defence but not included a signed statement of truth. Now I know a company in liquidation may not be able to be prosecuted, however as there its a dispute over who my contract was with, the directors of 3 businesses involved are all one and the same. They have filed the same defence for the other 2 business names and signed on behalf of those 2 but didn't provide a signed statement of truth for the company in liquidation, yet very recently have signed for post (recorded delivery) from that same company, so I am struggling to see the difference. Either they are or they aren't signatories for this business (in liquidation). They have also recently signed a different legal document using the same companies name, so again it seems they are signing when they feel like it, and failing to sign when they don't. Surely they can't have it both ways?
Comment