Very stressed out at the moment; I've just come home with something pushed under my door for a council tax debt I've already paid
Ok, to start; a while back (15th April) I received a letter from Equita stating that I owed money for council tax. There was no information about what, when, or where it was for; just a figure (£566.27) saying I owed it to London Borough of Lewisham.
Naturally I was quite concerned about this as I was pretty sure all my council tax was up to date. After a bit of investigating (trawling through my paperwork and bank statements), I got in touch with the council and found out that the figure outstanding was actually £523.77, for the place I'm in now. There had been a bit of musical chairs with other tenants a couple of years ago and this turned out to be from a short term council tax account in just my name.
Anyway, I wanted to get this cleared asap so I paid £200 to LBL on 13th May and £323.77 on 26th May. Both times I phoned the council a few days later to confirm that they applied the payment to the account and on the second time they also confirmed that the account was clear.
I had no correspondence with Equita as I have no agreement with them, and I only received the one vague initial letter on the 15th April. (just stating a cost with no breakdown of it, no dates or property details saying I owed to Lewisham Council).
Today, I come home to find a signed note pushed under my door, saying an equita enforcement agent has called today to execute a liability order issued by LBL, and they're authorised to remove my goods / vehicle. "If you fail to contact me within the next 24 hours I will have no alternative but to re-attend your property to remove your goods."
On top of this, it's got costs of £523.77 (debt), £75.00 (compliance fee), and £235.00 (enforcement). Obviously, I'm going to get straight onto the council in the morning to ask what the hell is going on...
I wanted to ask the forum; is there any way that they can break into my flat? I've got work tomorrow and don't want to sort this out and then come home to find the place has been broken into.
Any advice is very welcome; sorry for the long read!
/Pete
Ok, to start; a while back (15th April) I received a letter from Equita stating that I owed money for council tax. There was no information about what, when, or where it was for; just a figure (£566.27) saying I owed it to London Borough of Lewisham.
Naturally I was quite concerned about this as I was pretty sure all my council tax was up to date. After a bit of investigating (trawling through my paperwork and bank statements), I got in touch with the council and found out that the figure outstanding was actually £523.77, for the place I'm in now. There had been a bit of musical chairs with other tenants a couple of years ago and this turned out to be from a short term council tax account in just my name.
Anyway, I wanted to get this cleared asap so I paid £200 to LBL on 13th May and £323.77 on 26th May. Both times I phoned the council a few days later to confirm that they applied the payment to the account and on the second time they also confirmed that the account was clear.
I had no correspondence with Equita as I have no agreement with them, and I only received the one vague initial letter on the 15th April. (just stating a cost with no breakdown of it, no dates or property details saying I owed to Lewisham Council).
Today, I come home to find a signed note pushed under my door, saying an equita enforcement agent has called today to execute a liability order issued by LBL, and they're authorised to remove my goods / vehicle. "If you fail to contact me within the next 24 hours I will have no alternative but to re-attend your property to remove your goods."
On top of this, it's got costs of £523.77 (debt), £75.00 (compliance fee), and £235.00 (enforcement). Obviously, I'm going to get straight onto the council in the morning to ask what the hell is going on...
I wanted to ask the forum; is there any way that they can break into my flat? I've got work tomorrow and don't want to sort this out and then come home to find the place has been broken into.
Any advice is very welcome; sorry for the long read!
/Pete
Comment