ChatterBank4 mins ago
Dispute Over Rent And Property Damage
84 Answers
I had a long running dispute over back rent and some property damage. My former landlords daughter takes care of the finances for him and she obtained a judgment from suing me for over £4000 in payments of back rent and the property damage.
She is now applying for an attachment of earnings order to ensure I have to pay her. This could be up to £200 a month I will have to pay and that will plunge me into a lot of financial difficulty.
The daughter seems quite ruthless and she says that putting me into deep financial difficulty is of no concern to her at all and she is ensuring I pay her in full, yet I know she is already raking in big profits from renting.
I ‘m not actually looking for legal advice, but I would like to know your views on how you see this. Is she right to show no concern about the financial difficulty she is putting me in despite already raking in good profits or is she just going about this is a business manner?
She is now applying for an attachment of earnings order to ensure I have to pay her. This could be up to £200 a month I will have to pay and that will plunge me into a lot of financial difficulty.
The daughter seems quite ruthless and she says that putting me into deep financial difficulty is of no concern to her at all and she is ensuring I pay her in full, yet I know she is already raking in big profits from renting.
I ‘m not actually looking for legal advice, but I would like to know your views on how you see this. Is she right to show no concern about the financial difficulty she is putting me in despite already raking in good profits or is she just going about this is a business manner?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Rentingbob. 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.You can ask for a different repayment plan . Pay less over a longer time. Get in touch with the court that made the order and ask for an expenditure form to list your income and outgoings. Then make an offer you can afford. I have a judgement against me for £9,000 I owed a bank,I offered £2 a month as I only have a basic pension as income. They accepted. As long as I keep up the payments there is nothing more they can do . No interest is payable only what was originally owed.
If they do not accept the offer , they can come back and ask for more. But you do not have to accept their counter offer. You just make another slightly higher offer.(say £2 a month)
I also have another judgement for £5000 from a finance company. I pay £1 a month on that. I will be dead long before it is payed off. But the debt dies with me.
If they do not accept the offer , they can come back and ask for more. But you do not have to accept their counter offer. You just make another slightly higher offer.(say £2 a month)
I also have another judgement for £5000 from a finance company. I pay £1 a month on that. I will be dead long before it is payed off. But the debt dies with me.
She would argue that her superior financial position is down to her proper management, and your inferior position is down to the opposite.
In business relationships, sentiment rarely plays a part.
This woman does not know you personally, she does not owe you anything, rather, you owe her, so the sympathy angle is unlikely to work.
Approach this from a practical angle.
Advise her that a lower payment over a longer period is less likely to jeopardise the plan in the future, and make payment a seamless painless process for her.
In business relationships, sentiment rarely plays a part.
This woman does not know you personally, she does not owe you anything, rather, you owe her, so the sympathy angle is unlikely to work.
Approach this from a practical angle.
Advise her that a lower payment over a longer period is less likely to jeopardise the plan in the future, and make payment a seamless painless process for her.
Bazile, I do appreciate Eddie posting information about his situation, but you are right that my question was is my former landlords daughter right to show no concern at all about the bad financial situation she is putting me in rather than how I might proceed with this. I'm just interested to know honest views on this whichever side they might see with this.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.