Hi All
When I started to control my finances and started my DMP Mrs Crispy also announced that she was having debt issues. As she knew what the financial situation was she didn't want to add to my stress and tried to muddle on but started to fall into arrears too.
She managed to come to arrangements with most of her creditors except MBNA who hassled constantly so I decided to send them a CCA request.
The attachment is the letter we got back from them. Obviously, at the moment, they admit they have no CCA, therefore nothing enforceable.
We did this mainly to give her some breathing space, and it appears to be working as MBNA are now talking 'payment plans'. We are still filing their correspondence under I for the moment.
I'm not one for blindly following the hype thats been surrounding UE and have been doing a lot of reading to form my own judgement especially recent court cases where it seems creditors are fighting back (which is not surprising considering the number of debt management companies jumping on the UE bandwagon).
I don't want to potentially make our situation worse by entrenching us in a position that could be wrong.
It would seem that going to court on a defense of missing prescribed terms, not providing an original agreement etc may not enough any more.
Was just wondering what the Beagles thoughts were as this forum seems by a very long way the most legally 'technical' on the net (and at the same time some very heavy reading for a layman like me!) rather than the usual 'send them a CCA request and don't pay anything' response!
Many thanks
Crispy
When I started to control my finances and started my DMP Mrs Crispy also announced that she was having debt issues. As she knew what the financial situation was she didn't want to add to my stress and tried to muddle on but started to fall into arrears too.
She managed to come to arrangements with most of her creditors except MBNA who hassled constantly so I decided to send them a CCA request.
The attachment is the letter we got back from them. Obviously, at the moment, they admit they have no CCA, therefore nothing enforceable.
We did this mainly to give her some breathing space, and it appears to be working as MBNA are now talking 'payment plans'. We are still filing their correspondence under I for the moment.
I'm not one for blindly following the hype thats been surrounding UE and have been doing a lot of reading to form my own judgement especially recent court cases where it seems creditors are fighting back (which is not surprising considering the number of debt management companies jumping on the UE bandwagon).
I don't want to potentially make our situation worse by entrenching us in a position that could be wrong.
It would seem that going to court on a defense of missing prescribed terms, not providing an original agreement etc may not enough any more.
Was just wondering what the Beagles thoughts were as this forum seems by a very long way the most legally 'technical' on the net (and at the same time some very heavy reading for a layman like me!) rather than the usual 'send them a CCA request and don't pay anything' response!
Many thanks
Crispy
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