I have read , until I am sick of reading, arguments about when the limitations act starts i.e the cause of action on a debt. I have also read that some DCA's are saying it is the default but I was looking for a case to reply to another thread and I thought it may be relevant
Swansea city council v Glass 1992 ( sorry I don't understand the technical way to quote it ) seems to be relevant. Surely then the dfault notice is only a procedural step on the way to court and not the cause of action in itself, the cause of action would be doing something that started the process such as missing a payment or maybe missing two payments depending on the contract. If a contact says they could issue a default after two missed payments, why would you have to wait for them to get into gear and actually do it.
Maybe I should never have asked as I am sure there will be some strong opinions.
Maybe it is something that will get some rulings although I doubt the debt industry want it in black and white when judges can make up the rules as they go along (or so it seems)
Swansea city council v Glass 1992 ( sorry I don't understand the technical way to quote it ) seems to be relevant. Surely then the dfault notice is only a procedural step on the way to court and not the cause of action in itself, the cause of action would be doing something that started the process such as missing a payment or maybe missing two payments depending on the contract. If a contact says they could issue a default after two missed payments, why would you have to wait for them to get into gear and actually do it.
Maybe I should never have asked as I am sure there will be some strong opinions.
Maybe it is something that will get some rulings although I doubt the debt industry want it in black and white when judges can make up the rules as they go along (or so it seems)
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