Re: Desperate for help please!
My understanding of the Interpleader provision is that it should apply in cases where an EA has made a genuine mistake in seizing third-party goods and has removed them. In the OP's case, it is more a case of the EA doing what I call the "I'll release it when he pays," number. My instincts are that forcing a person to go to Interpleader unnecessarily is an abuse of the legal process and I do know that reservations were voiced about the Interpleader provision in the lead-up to it coming into force.
If the EA knew the car that has been clamped did not belong to the debtor at the time of doing so, then the EA has acted in contravention of the "warrant" and, in doing so, acted without lawful authority. Under such circumstances, it can be argued that the clamping amounts to Wrongful Interference with Goods, which is a civil tort and is actionable.
Originally posted by Wombats
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If the EA knew the car that has been clamped did not belong to the debtor at the time of doing so, then the EA has acted in contravention of the "warrant" and, in doing so, acted without lawful authority. Under such circumstances, it can be argued that the clamping amounts to Wrongful Interference with Goods, which is a civil tort and is actionable.
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