Good morning all.
I'm hoping some of the experts present are able to offer their opinion on an incident I am currently dealing with and I hope this is the correct place to ask.
Just over a week ago I awoke to find that my car had been clamped by a bailiff under instruction of my local council authority. My car was parked in a private car park which is attached to my property (a flat) The car park is for the sole use of the property's residents. The car park contains individually numbered parking bays. The lease for my flat includes sole use of one specifically marked out parking bay within this private car park. The parking bay numbers do not match the flat numbers for security reasons.
So, for arguments sake, I live in flat number 1 and I own parking bay number 5.
There was a sticker attached to the windscreen of my car stating my car 'had been clamped...and was in the custody of the law'. I rang the bailiff on the contact number given and it turns out that an order was made to seize goods from flat number 5 and the bailiff wrongly assumed that parking bay number 5 belonged to the person they were after and so they clamped my car. The bailiff begun laughing which made me angry and in turn he refused to return to release my car on the grounds that there may be a breach of the peace (he never told me this at the time). Several calls to their office and the police later, as well as being asked to produce a council tax bill or lease to prove my identity, he eventually returned and released my vehicle.
I have complained to both the council and the bailiff company and have received an identically worded response separately from them both.
In their response they claim it was reasonable to assume that parking bay number 5 belonged to flat number 5 so, in turn, it was reasonable to assume that the car parked in parking bay 5 belonged to the person they were trying to recover the debt from. They state that they had no legal requirement to check the registration details or ownership of my vehicle before they clamped it as it was reasonable to assume it was owned by the owner of flat 5. They have admitted they were wrong in their assumptions and that they had no order to seize any goods from me.
I have requested that they compensate me for the half day salary I lost while dealing with the matter (I was leaving for work when I found the clamp and begun dealing with it) and also pay damages to reflect the emotional distress caused to me and the damage to my reputation in my local community they have caused.
Their response has been to offer without prejudice a 'gesture of good will' of £100. £100 doesn't cover a half day salary of mine nor address the other damages I feel are reasonably requested. At this point I'm unsure if the offer is £100 or £100 from each party as they both sent identically worded responses.
I don't feel they are right in saying it's reasonable to assume that parking bay numbers match flat numbers by default. Also, I feel that even if the parking bay numbers did match the flat numbers it isn't reasonable to assume that any vehicle left in that parking bay would automatically belong to the owner of the flat (it could have been a friend or family members car, somebody who parked in the bay by mistake, etc, etc).
While no material damage or injury was caused by this incident I actually feel it is a very serious matter when a private company or govt authority enter private land without permission especially when they follow this up by seizing goods which they had no right to do - so I would like to defend myself against this in the strongest terms possible. As a reminder, the individual parking bay (the land it occupies) is clearly marked out in my lease and deeds as belonging to the leaseholder for their sole use. It's private land within private land almost.
If you've read this far, thank you, I would like to hear your opinions on this matter, specifically if you think the council or bailiff may have acted illegally / unlawfully at any time. I would also be interested in hearing your opinions on their gesture of good will.
I understand that any opinion given is just that and will have no bearing on this matter.
Thanks in advance.
I'm hoping some of the experts present are able to offer their opinion on an incident I am currently dealing with and I hope this is the correct place to ask.
Just over a week ago I awoke to find that my car had been clamped by a bailiff under instruction of my local council authority. My car was parked in a private car park which is attached to my property (a flat) The car park is for the sole use of the property's residents. The car park contains individually numbered parking bays. The lease for my flat includes sole use of one specifically marked out parking bay within this private car park. The parking bay numbers do not match the flat numbers for security reasons.
So, for arguments sake, I live in flat number 1 and I own parking bay number 5.
There was a sticker attached to the windscreen of my car stating my car 'had been clamped...and was in the custody of the law'. I rang the bailiff on the contact number given and it turns out that an order was made to seize goods from flat number 5 and the bailiff wrongly assumed that parking bay number 5 belonged to the person they were after and so they clamped my car. The bailiff begun laughing which made me angry and in turn he refused to return to release my car on the grounds that there may be a breach of the peace (he never told me this at the time). Several calls to their office and the police later, as well as being asked to produce a council tax bill or lease to prove my identity, he eventually returned and released my vehicle.
I have complained to both the council and the bailiff company and have received an identically worded response separately from them both.
In their response they claim it was reasonable to assume that parking bay number 5 belonged to flat number 5 so, in turn, it was reasonable to assume that the car parked in parking bay 5 belonged to the person they were trying to recover the debt from. They state that they had no legal requirement to check the registration details or ownership of my vehicle before they clamped it as it was reasonable to assume it was owned by the owner of flat 5. They have admitted they were wrong in their assumptions and that they had no order to seize any goods from me.
I have requested that they compensate me for the half day salary I lost while dealing with the matter (I was leaving for work when I found the clamp and begun dealing with it) and also pay damages to reflect the emotional distress caused to me and the damage to my reputation in my local community they have caused.
Their response has been to offer without prejudice a 'gesture of good will' of £100. £100 doesn't cover a half day salary of mine nor address the other damages I feel are reasonably requested. At this point I'm unsure if the offer is £100 or £100 from each party as they both sent identically worded responses.
I don't feel they are right in saying it's reasonable to assume that parking bay numbers match flat numbers by default. Also, I feel that even if the parking bay numbers did match the flat numbers it isn't reasonable to assume that any vehicle left in that parking bay would automatically belong to the owner of the flat (it could have been a friend or family members car, somebody who parked in the bay by mistake, etc, etc).
While no material damage or injury was caused by this incident I actually feel it is a very serious matter when a private company or govt authority enter private land without permission especially when they follow this up by seizing goods which they had no right to do - so I would like to defend myself against this in the strongest terms possible. As a reminder, the individual parking bay (the land it occupies) is clearly marked out in my lease and deeds as belonging to the leaseholder for their sole use. It's private land within private land almost.
If you've read this far, thank you, I would like to hear your opinions on this matter, specifically if you think the council or bailiff may have acted illegally / unlawfully at any time. I would also be interested in hearing your opinions on their gesture of good will.
I understand that any opinion given is just that and will have no bearing on this matter.
Thanks in advance.
Comment