If You Could Live In Another Decade,...
ChatterBank2 mins ago
The bailiff turns up on your door steps and demands you pay �500 for an unpaid traffic volation you are unaware of.
The bailiff explained the fine was for driving on the bus lane. There had been letters of the fine sent and warning of court action but the person DID NOT recieve any such letter from the post. Had he recieved the fine notice he would willingly pay up.
Where does he stand on this matter? Can he appeal?
No best answer has yet been selected by Beswad. 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.Considering about 6 letters would have been sent before the bailiffs turned up at the door to enforce the charge why is this the first they've heard of it? Have the letters gone to the wrong address of have they just been ignored? (it does happen)
Would have thought that at least one of these letters would have been sent by recorded mail.
I'd have to say that the chances of appealing this are pretty slim, as the chance to say 'no letters have been received' would have been several letters back (when the debt notification was sent).
Might be worth a try though. They'd need to speak nicely to the bailiffs and hope that they refer it back to the authority who issued the fine in the first place.
This happened to one of my relative. It seems foolish not to pay the orginal fine in the first place, why would anyone want court action and a vist from the bailiffs. It seems the letters have been sent to the wrong address if so I was wondering if he can contest in court that he did not recieve any letter.
He already paid the bailiff and is rather depress about it.
As someone pointed out, at least one of those letters will/should have been a recorded delivery,or whatever GPO have replaced it with. That being the case,someone will have signed for it and a record of the signature will around somewhere.
Not sure,but won't having bailiffs involved also put your credit worthiness at risk?.
Simple solution would have been to pay up if the person was caught commiting an offence,you know when your parking/speeding illegally,,just hold your hands up and take it as part of the chance taken
Thank you all for your input.
Keeprockin, knowing my relative he is more than willing to pay the original fine had he recieved the offence notice.
I can vouch they do get it wrong. Recently I've been recieving fines through the post which isn't in my name or my flat neighbours, it was the right street but wrong house number, I can see this same thing will happen to the owner of that vechicle.
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