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IQ Consultants, Felicitas Solutions, ECS Trustees - loan repayment demands

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    Well, just to add another voice to this unhappy choir, I too received a letter informing me of the transfer of ownership of the *ahem* debt, but not its companion offer of settlement one. I used Sanzar back in 2010 and for less than a year or so, so not the greatest exposure but even still, not inconsequential. I already settled with HMRC years ago, so that’s something. Been going through the contract bumf / P11D from back in the day and can’t find much useful though.

    Having read through the thread, I guess I’ll join either the Webberg group or the ETCtax one. Anyone got a preference for one over the other?

    I too am confused about how they got my fairly recent contact details though- to date, I’ve not engaged with any of the previous correspondence from The Trust Helpline etc. I actually now live abroad which they don’t seem to know. What would that mean for being chased for (alleged) debt, if it came to it I wonder? And what would it take for their cowboy solicitor firm to chase that alleged debt in the first place - would it have to be validated by a court before they could take action? We’re not anywhere near there yet I know, I’m just wary of ambulance chasing lawyers as I’ve had weary experiences with them in the past. Cheers all.

    Comment


      Originally posted by DG705 View Post
      Interesting Blog on my Accountants website:

      Spectre And The Payback | Warr & Co Chartered Accountants
      Read this over the weekend.

      "Finally, if all else fails and legal proceedings are issued, appoint a solicitor and ask him to seek security of costs. The court will almost certainly require a non resident newly formed company to deposit an estimate of your costs in defending the claim with the court. A sum of £100k per claim would not seem unreasonable."

      Brilliant!
      Scoots still says that Apr 2020 didn't mark the start of a new stock bull market.

      Comment


        Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View Post
        Read this over the weekend.

        "Finally, if all else fails and legal proceedings are issued, appoint a solicitor and ask him to seek security of costs. The court will almost certainly require a non resident newly formed company to deposit an estimate of your costs in defending the claim with the court. A sum of £100k per claim would not seem unreasonable."

        Brilliant!
        Hi Excuse my simplicity in this but what does that mean in Lay mens terms?

        Thanks

        Comment


          Originally posted by TZ46 View Post
          Hi Excuse my simplicity in this but what does that mean in Lay mens terms?

          Thanks
          You may be able to scare them off by asking for the IoM court to insist on Felicitas depositing your costs into an account before the court continues the case.

          It doesn't actually mean much - it just shows the level of stakes that this is being played for.
          merely at clientco for the entertainment

          Comment


            Just to let everyone know, I’ve distilled webberg, iliketax and eek’s advice here

            https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...-nutshell.html

            The thread is closed so questions remain here.
            "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
            - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

            Comment


              Originally posted by eek View Post
              You may be able to scare them off by asking for the IoM court to insist on Felicitas depositing your costs into an account before the court continues the case.
              Would it be an IoM court?

              I'm just wondering if the fact that Felicitas are using a mainland firm (Gladstones) to pursue the "debt" means any subsequent legal action would be in the debtor's country of residence ie. the English, Scottish or Welsh courts? That Warr&Co piece seems to imply that when they refer to a "non resident newly formed company".
              Scoots still says that Apr 2020 didn't mark the start of a new stock bull market.

              Comment


                Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View Post
                Would it be an IoM court?

                I'm just wondering if the fact that Felicitas are using a mainland firm (Gladstones) to pursue the "debt" means any subsequent legal action would be in the debtor's country of residence ie. the English, Scottish or Welsh courts? That Warr&Co piece seems to imply that when they refer to a "non resident newly formed company".
                I think this was covered elsewhere.

                Gladstone are probably working on a small / no fee basis with a percentage on top for money recovered.
                That doesn't work in the IoM where it seems lawyers need to be paid 100% for the work they do...

                Where the court case finally ends up is up to Felicitas and what the contracts say - I suspect the first defence approach in all cases would be to argue that they've picked the wrong jurisdiction.
                merely at clientco for the entertainment

                Comment


                  Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View Post
                  Would it be an IoM court?

                  I'm just wondering if the fact that Felicitas are using a mainland firm (Gladstones) to pursue the "debt" means any subsequent legal action would be in the debtor's country of residence ie. the English, Scottish or Welsh courts? That Warr&Co piece seems to imply that when they refer to a "non resident newly formed company".
                  Eek has it. IOM lawyers are not allowed to operate on a no win/no fee basis so they would want to be paid up front. Here's an IOM lawyer's website which explains the costs position quite well www.injurylawisleofman.com - Manx Law

                  <mod snip>

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by piebaps View Post
                    Eek has it. IOM lawyers are not allowed to operate on a no win/no fee basis so they would want to be paid up front. Here's an IOM lawyer's website which explains the costs position quite well www.injurylawisleofman.com - Manx Law

                    <mod snip>

                    deleted
                    Once again, can I suggest you delete the last paragraph - don't give them ideas on a public forum..
                    merely at clientco for the entertainment

                    Comment


                      Mod snipped
                      "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
                      - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

                      Comment

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