Okay, where do we start.
Telephone contact with Debt Collection Agencies (DCA)
It is often said that you should not speak to DCA or Creditors on the phone, why? I see no reason why you should ignore them, indeed if Mr Harrison did this in his case he would have lost on that point im sure!!!. Why? Well it seems the view coming from the Courts in light of Harrison is as follows.
Totally ignoring any and all contact will make you look like the “filthy debtor” who is hell bent on avoiding his debt at all costs. You do not want to look like this, do you?
First rule of telephone contact (and written contact too) is logging everything down, with written correspondence KEEP EVERYTHING including envelopes. With telephone calls, log date, time caller ID and the name of the person calling, they should not have an issue with giving you their name and the company they are calling from.
Be polite, the last thing you want is the transcript of you telling the DCA to go fornicate going before the judge in your trial, remember FILTHY DEBTOR vs WRONGED CONSUMER, I know who I would want the judge to look on me as
So, you need to explain to the DCA why you aren’t paying them, if you cant afford what they are asking for then tell them you cant afford it but you are prepared to offer £…….. as this is all you can afford. Why, well, we all know the breach of s78(1) Consumer Credit Act is NOT a valid reason to withhold payment nor is it recognised by the Office of Fair Trading as a basis for a valid dispute. I submit that this is the view the Court would take too.
You must be polite to these people even if you really hate them, it will benefit you in the end.
So, when you have finished with the call, write to the DCA confirming the contents of your telephone convestaion setting out what you can afford to pay their client or themselves. This will help later.
If they then start calling, which I expect that they will, politely tell them that you have already advised them of what you can afford, there is nothing more to discuss unless they are prepared to accept the offer.
My guess is that from here they will either A accept or B undertake lots of calls to you .
If they accept payment then happy days, if they start unreasonable telephone calls then happy days also. Why ? well lets go back to Harrsion v Link @ para 53
The calls were a form of torture oppressively frequent in amount and often without attribution to an identifiable number. I am unimpressed by suggestions that all that the Claimant had to do was to seek a meeting when the position was that those who called him would not listen to what he had to say of his difficulties. Nevertheless I am not entirely impressed by the Claimant’s failure to write a detailed letter in which he set out his position. I sense that the Claimant wished to engage upon his own terms albeit in no negative fashion.
And also Para 83
Cumulatively and damningly is what I find to be the way that MBNA and the Defendant went about recovering their debt. I am satisfied that the Claimant’s description of the way that he was hounded by his creditors is essentially correct not least in the use of “non-traceable” telephone calls. It seems to me that such conduct has no proper function in the recovery of consumer debt. Whatever the strength of the suggestion that the courts should only be a last resort, I can see no legitimate comparison between a series of measured warnings which, after full opportunity for response, lead to legal proceedings and what took place. Even more is the situation to be deprecated when it was only well into this action that the Defendant was able to comply with section 78 and thus able to pursue a claim. An inability to comply with section 78 can be no excuse for conduct of which it must be supposed the sole purpose must have been to make the Claimant’s life so difficult that he would come to heel. I cannot think that in a society that is otherwise so sensitive of a consumer’s position this is conduct that should countenanced.
The message of the Harrison judgment is don’t ignore and refuse to correspond with the opponents, they don’t have leprosy or any other disease, so there is nothing wrong in talking to them. At the end of the day, just keep in the back of your mind that each call adds to your evidence if they sue you and take you to Court.
As I said, writing to them to confirm the situation really does assist as HHJ Chambers QC pointed out in Harrison above.
That way, if you have told the DCA your financial situation and made it clear what you can afford, and written to the to say this is what I can pay you and they ignore this and engage the constant bombardment of calls then this will assist with evidence of their unreasonable conduct should the matter come to litigation later.
Also I would point out that if you find the calls (level and frequency or content) upsetting then make this clear to the person on the phone and put it in the follow up letter to the DCA making it clear but don’t be rude as this goes against you.
As I said, Mr Harrison would not have won his case if he had ignored every call and not spoken to the DCA, the Key is that he told then why he wasn’t paying, what had gone wrong, why he didn’t want the telephone calls and then wrote to the company to affirm that too.
I appreciate that these calls are upsetting but its far more upsetting if you lose in Court, Put yourself in the Judges shoes, who would you help, the Filthy Debtor intent on debt avoidance or the consumer who had tried to sort things out but had been ignored and harassed?
Also you should have regard for the new OFT Guidelines on irresponsible lending. They contain a section on dealing with people in debt and defaulted accounts.
http://www.oft.gov.uk/shared_oft/con...oft1107con.pdf
Page 44 onwards is where the guidance starts. Read it and understand it. If you need some assistance then ask and we will try and help.
I intend to cover a number of other points in this thread concerning Default notices, true copies of credit agreements under s78 and further points on dealing with DCAs. I simply have not had time to finish this as yet.
Telephone contact with Debt Collection Agencies (DCA)
It is often said that you should not speak to DCA or Creditors on the phone, why? I see no reason why you should ignore them, indeed if Mr Harrison did this in his case he would have lost on that point im sure!!!. Why? Well it seems the view coming from the Courts in light of Harrison is as follows.
Totally ignoring any and all contact will make you look like the “filthy debtor” who is hell bent on avoiding his debt at all costs. You do not want to look like this, do you?
First rule of telephone contact (and written contact too) is logging everything down, with written correspondence KEEP EVERYTHING including envelopes. With telephone calls, log date, time caller ID and the name of the person calling, they should not have an issue with giving you their name and the company they are calling from.
Be polite, the last thing you want is the transcript of you telling the DCA to go fornicate going before the judge in your trial, remember FILTHY DEBTOR vs WRONGED CONSUMER, I know who I would want the judge to look on me as
So, you need to explain to the DCA why you aren’t paying them, if you cant afford what they are asking for then tell them you cant afford it but you are prepared to offer £…….. as this is all you can afford. Why, well, we all know the breach of s78(1) Consumer Credit Act is NOT a valid reason to withhold payment nor is it recognised by the Office of Fair Trading as a basis for a valid dispute. I submit that this is the view the Court would take too.
You must be polite to these people even if you really hate them, it will benefit you in the end.
So, when you have finished with the call, write to the DCA confirming the contents of your telephone convestaion setting out what you can afford to pay their client or themselves. This will help later.
If they then start calling, which I expect that they will, politely tell them that you have already advised them of what you can afford, there is nothing more to discuss unless they are prepared to accept the offer.
My guess is that from here they will either A accept or B undertake lots of calls to you .
If they accept payment then happy days, if they start unreasonable telephone calls then happy days also. Why ? well lets go back to Harrsion v Link @ para 53
The calls were a form of torture oppressively frequent in amount and often without attribution to an identifiable number. I am unimpressed by suggestions that all that the Claimant had to do was to seek a meeting when the position was that those who called him would not listen to what he had to say of his difficulties. Nevertheless I am not entirely impressed by the Claimant’s failure to write a detailed letter in which he set out his position. I sense that the Claimant wished to engage upon his own terms albeit in no negative fashion.
And also Para 83
Cumulatively and damningly is what I find to be the way that MBNA and the Defendant went about recovering their debt. I am satisfied that the Claimant’s description of the way that he was hounded by his creditors is essentially correct not least in the use of “non-traceable” telephone calls. It seems to me that such conduct has no proper function in the recovery of consumer debt. Whatever the strength of the suggestion that the courts should only be a last resort, I can see no legitimate comparison between a series of measured warnings which, after full opportunity for response, lead to legal proceedings and what took place. Even more is the situation to be deprecated when it was only well into this action that the Defendant was able to comply with section 78 and thus able to pursue a claim. An inability to comply with section 78 can be no excuse for conduct of which it must be supposed the sole purpose must have been to make the Claimant’s life so difficult that he would come to heel. I cannot think that in a society that is otherwise so sensitive of a consumer’s position this is conduct that should countenanced.
The message of the Harrison judgment is don’t ignore and refuse to correspond with the opponents, they don’t have leprosy or any other disease, so there is nothing wrong in talking to them. At the end of the day, just keep in the back of your mind that each call adds to your evidence if they sue you and take you to Court.
As I said, writing to them to confirm the situation really does assist as HHJ Chambers QC pointed out in Harrison above.
That way, if you have told the DCA your financial situation and made it clear what you can afford, and written to the to say this is what I can pay you and they ignore this and engage the constant bombardment of calls then this will assist with evidence of their unreasonable conduct should the matter come to litigation later.
Also I would point out that if you find the calls (level and frequency or content) upsetting then make this clear to the person on the phone and put it in the follow up letter to the DCA making it clear but don’t be rude as this goes against you.
As I said, Mr Harrison would not have won his case if he had ignored every call and not spoken to the DCA, the Key is that he told then why he wasn’t paying, what had gone wrong, why he didn’t want the telephone calls and then wrote to the company to affirm that too.
I appreciate that these calls are upsetting but its far more upsetting if you lose in Court, Put yourself in the Judges shoes, who would you help, the Filthy Debtor intent on debt avoidance or the consumer who had tried to sort things out but had been ignored and harassed?
Also you should have regard for the new OFT Guidelines on irresponsible lending. They contain a section on dealing with people in debt and defaulted accounts.
http://www.oft.gov.uk/shared_oft/con...oft1107con.pdf
Page 44 onwards is where the guidance starts. Read it and understand it. If you need some assistance then ask and we will try and help.
I intend to cover a number of other points in this thread concerning Default notices, true copies of credit agreements under s78 and further points on dealing with DCAs. I simply have not had time to finish this as yet.
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