We have today received a letter from a debt collection agency in pursuit of a specified though non-existent debt which doesn't actually use the word "debt" at all and doesn't mention "Court action" either.
The letter has arrived out of the blue in the wake of protracted correspondence with a major UK energy supplier which is seeking to extract from us monies to which it is not entitled and in respect of which to both its satisfaction and ours it has been demonstrated that no such entitlement exists.
The unmentionable "debt" stems from the aforesaid major UK energy supplier's erroneous billing -- or rather, absence of billing, seeing as we have yet to receive a detailed account rendering from either the supplier or, now, its agent, the debt collection agency.
Instead: the letter we received today is headed:
IMPORTANT MATTER THAT MAY AFFECT YOUR CREDIT RATING
weasel wording deliberately deployed for the purpose of contriving alarm and dismay.
The letter proceeds to identify the debt collector's client -- the aforementioned major UK energy supplier -- and then cites an "Account Balance" in a sum in excess of £200 in respect of supply to our address. It states:
"We have been appointed by (client) to recover the above outstanding amount. To avoid the possibility of further action, we strongly urge you to repay the amount (note the word: "repay") outstanding. You can pay by using any of the methods listed on the reverse of this letter."
After some markedly disingenuous tarradiddle about "if you are having difficulty in making payment", and then a list of external advisory services to whom we can turn, the letter concludes:
This may impact on your credit rating
Non-payment of the full outstanding balance may result in (client) registering a default with Credit Reference Agencies. Registration of a credit default will have an impact on your credit rating. You have the following options:
*Pay the £ (amount of "outstanding balance" in full immediately;
* Setup (sic) an instalment (sic) plan to pay the debt over a longer period."
The letter is unsigned. There is no attribution of authorship. A company unknown to us has therefore sent us a threatening letter without ever once resorting to the word debt nor mention of civil action. Rather, the correspondence is coy, disingenuous, manipulative, and oppressive. That it's also illiterate is, perhaps, to be expected: we doubt that fluency is a characteristic of any such enterprise.
Just to be clear: we do not, of course, owe the debt collector's client the "amount outstanding". If we did, we would've paid it. If we did, we wouldn't have expended so much of our own valuable time on (a) disputing it; (b) demonstrating beyond any and all misapprehension that the amount is wrong; and (c) coming on here to waste anyone else's time.
We have absolutely no intention of paying monies we do not owe to a giant energy company that has already been severely censured by OFGEM for both the mismanagement of its billing operation and the serial failures of its Customer Service Department.
As to today's hapless unsigned letter: it all too obviously seeks to create the impression of being correspondence about an established fact when no such establishment has occurred. The letter does not even include details of the "outstanding balance" nor how that "outstanding balance" has been calculated.
What is -- to us -- especially repugnant here is the debt collector's furtiveness: the reluctance to speak explicitly of debt or make any overt threat of civil action: extortion is less nauseating than gutlessness.
As we are content to proceed as far as may be necessary to assert as both individuals and as consumers our basic rights to fair play, decent treatment, and honest conduct, the long haul doesn't intimidate us -- and certainly not the size of the dysfunctional corporate monolith currently trying so contemptuously to crush us under its weight.
Bearing all that in mind, then, we wish to write back to the debt collector in a way that serves a purpose as suited to our own objective as it is for the record.
Advice appreciated.
Thanks, and apologies for any inconvenience inadvertently caused.
The letter has arrived out of the blue in the wake of protracted correspondence with a major UK energy supplier which is seeking to extract from us monies to which it is not entitled and in respect of which to both its satisfaction and ours it has been demonstrated that no such entitlement exists.
The unmentionable "debt" stems from the aforesaid major UK energy supplier's erroneous billing -- or rather, absence of billing, seeing as we have yet to receive a detailed account rendering from either the supplier or, now, its agent, the debt collection agency.
Instead: the letter we received today is headed:
IMPORTANT MATTER THAT MAY AFFECT YOUR CREDIT RATING
weasel wording deliberately deployed for the purpose of contriving alarm and dismay.
The letter proceeds to identify the debt collector's client -- the aforementioned major UK energy supplier -- and then cites an "Account Balance" in a sum in excess of £200 in respect of supply to our address. It states:
"We have been appointed by (client) to recover the above outstanding amount. To avoid the possibility of further action, we strongly urge you to repay the amount (note the word: "repay") outstanding. You can pay by using any of the methods listed on the reverse of this letter."
After some markedly disingenuous tarradiddle about "if you are having difficulty in making payment", and then a list of external advisory services to whom we can turn, the letter concludes:
This may impact on your credit rating
Non-payment of the full outstanding balance may result in (client) registering a default with Credit Reference Agencies. Registration of a credit default will have an impact on your credit rating. You have the following options:
*Pay the £ (amount of "outstanding balance" in full immediately;
* Setup (sic) an instalment (sic) plan to pay the debt over a longer period."
The letter is unsigned. There is no attribution of authorship. A company unknown to us has therefore sent us a threatening letter without ever once resorting to the word debt nor mention of civil action. Rather, the correspondence is coy, disingenuous, manipulative, and oppressive. That it's also illiterate is, perhaps, to be expected: we doubt that fluency is a characteristic of any such enterprise.
Just to be clear: we do not, of course, owe the debt collector's client the "amount outstanding". If we did, we would've paid it. If we did, we wouldn't have expended so much of our own valuable time on (a) disputing it; (b) demonstrating beyond any and all misapprehension that the amount is wrong; and (c) coming on here to waste anyone else's time.
We have absolutely no intention of paying monies we do not owe to a giant energy company that has already been severely censured by OFGEM for both the mismanagement of its billing operation and the serial failures of its Customer Service Department.
As to today's hapless unsigned letter: it all too obviously seeks to create the impression of being correspondence about an established fact when no such establishment has occurred. The letter does not even include details of the "outstanding balance" nor how that "outstanding balance" has been calculated.
What is -- to us -- especially repugnant here is the debt collector's furtiveness: the reluctance to speak explicitly of debt or make any overt threat of civil action: extortion is less nauseating than gutlessness.
As we are content to proceed as far as may be necessary to assert as both individuals and as consumers our basic rights to fair play, decent treatment, and honest conduct, the long haul doesn't intimidate us -- and certainly not the size of the dysfunctional corporate monolith currently trying so contemptuously to crush us under its weight.
Bearing all that in mind, then, we wish to write back to the debt collector in a way that serves a purpose as suited to our own objective as it is for the record.
Advice appreciated.
Thanks, and apologies for any inconvenience inadvertently caused.
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