Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Tracing Tradesman
My wife hired a man from the Yellow Pages to fix her computer. He made a hash of the job and refuses to come back and rectify the matter.
Cutting a long story short, Trading Standards advised us to write to him, but we don't have his address, just a seemingly fictitious house name although we've got a post code, a mobile number and a land line number.
We didn't have his surname, but we managed to get that from the Thompson Directory. He doesn't appear to be on the electoral register and he doesn't appear in the phone book.
Short of hanging about around the postcode and hoping to catch him leaving or entering his house, is there any other way of finding out his address?
Cutting a long story short, Trading Standards advised us to write to him, but we don't have his address, just a seemingly fictitious house name although we've got a post code, a mobile number and a land line number.
We didn't have his surname, but we managed to get that from the Thompson Directory. He doesn't appear to be on the electoral register and he doesn't appear in the phone book.
Short of hanging about around the postcode and hoping to catch him leaving or entering his house, is there any other way of finding out his address?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by pompei595. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Which electoral register have you checked? The online version (at 192.com, or wherever) is the edited roll, from which anyone has the right to be excluded. However, the paper version (which anyone may consult at their local council office) is the full roll, listing the name of everyone who has complied with their legal obligation to vote. (Since the majority of people now remove their names from the edited roll, the full roll has over twice as much information)
A postcode is only ever allocated to a single road (or, in the case of very long roads, to just a part of that road). So putting the postcode into Multimap (or similar) will show the street. The full (paper-based) electoral roll is listed in street order so, if the guy has registered to vote, you should quickly be able to find the house number. So perhaps a visit to your local council office might help?
Chris
A postcode is only ever allocated to a single road (or, in the case of very long roads, to just a part of that road). So putting the postcode into Multimap (or similar) will show the street. The full (paper-based) electoral roll is listed in street order so, if the guy has registered to vote, you should quickly be able to find the house number. So perhaps a visit to your local council office might help?
Chris
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