Today I Heard My First . . . . .
ChatterBank0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by mandy123. 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.Quote the Data Protection Act back at him.
Undersection 7(1) of the Data Protection Act 1998, he must supply you with relevant material they hold about you (and therefore, by implication, your property).
If, for some reason, it contains personal information about other parties (eg your tenants) then this information must be obscured (eg by making a photocopy but obscuring the personal information (eg an account number / date of birth etc.) He cannot simply remove the whole document because one page happens to have this item of personal information on one line.
Separate to the DPA, since you are involved in a 'commercial transaction', you have a 'contract' with the Estate Agent, and as such, you are also entitled to some form of Bill, Statement or Receipt that sets out charges / commission / monies received / monies paid out etc.
Who is asking you to confirm the work done has been paid for - the Estate Agent? Sounds a bit dodgy to me.
If you need to see copies of documents that you have already been supplied copies of, then he is entitled to make a 'reasonable charge' for the costs incurred (time, photocopying etc) - just like a bank charges for a duplicate statement etc.
However, applying under the DPA, you will pay a fixed fee of (I think it's now) �12. They then have 40 days in which to comply with your request.