ArthurWankspittle wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 8:38 am I'm looking for N49 details with "the manner in which possession was taken" where the judge has written things like "the use of trebuchets is permitted".
Fetchez la vache!
Moderator: ArthurWankspittle
ArthurWankspittle wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2019 8:38 am I'm looking for N49 details with "the manner in which possession was taken" where the judge has written things like "the use of trebuchets is permitted".
Crabby got plenty of letters explaining why the house was being possessed, and under what laws. Seems to me that would be solid evidence against any claim to an honest misunderstanding. Especially conaidering the tone of Crabby's responses to them.
Nobble is what gangsters do to highly favored racehorses or their jockeys.
Oh, I wouldn't mind if they tried "nobling" a jury. I'm sure that the UK courts would consider that to be jury tampering; and I don't think that they like that anymore than US courts do.
So 9 months behind then.Em Ward
Conversation Starter · 15 hrs
Got a house repossession for what amounts to under ten missed payments and a buy to let mortgage issue, anyone on hand, going public with this sick of the corruption guys xx
2 or 3 years worth. Nice.Bastards ,,,,, I’m at court for council tax on owing £5000 ???
It’s all fuked
TR1? One of these https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... ansfer-tr1James Paul Get a tr1 form and give it to the land registry and give it to the trustee to hold
Paul Davies what is a tr1 form not heard of this
Fair question. Lee Daniel explainsSo appoint a trustee? What will this accomplish? Sorry for my ignorance, thank you for your knowledge.
You get the drift.Have you read
Collateral Reuse in Shadow Banking and Monetary Policy
Ameya Muley∗
7th January 2016
Job Market Paper
Rehypothecation is the practice of the direct reuse by lenders of the collateral posted with
them to borrow on their own account. This is different from securitising the cash flows from
the debt and and using them as collateral, or “pyramiding” as it is called by Geanakoplos and Zame (2009), Kilenthong and Townsend (2011) etc. In rehypothecation, the received
collateral itself is directly repledged. In securitisation, the entire debt contract is posted as.......
He's not done yetEm Ward the collateral is the documents and you want them back but by selling them they have isolated themselves from the contract that's why within the TGBMS argument they ask for a contract as per the relevant act
That's enough Lee, you shouldn't have watched that DVD.A bill of exchange has real cash value and for the purpose of banking it is recorded on the banks ledger as an asset allowing them to extend credit. No consideration a requirement in contract law and a breach of trust and misrepresentation...
Then we get the revealIs this you Em or someone else?
Gone for the old 2nd house buy to let me thinks. Nothing wrong with that, but as the freetards always say - "Do your research".Colin Alexander me, my other house x
After Lee Daniel witters on about birth certificates blah blah blah we get this interesting snippet, so he’s well on his way to Crawfords £90k legal feesAll first attempt possession orders can easily be stopped, all it needs is a few people standing together and making it public. The bailiffs won't try anything if they see opposition and the police won't get involved. After that it gets tougher, just make sure you have video evidence of the first attempt. It won't be easy and you have to be strong and determined. Those of us that have been there know about the fraud, proving it in the corrupt courts is not easy, but that's no reason to give in. Different areas in the country seem to have different ways, it shouldn't be like that if what they are doing is lawful, which it's not lawful. If it was every possession order would have set rules, but they don't. If you do get evicted don't give up, that's not the end of it, make a plan and get back in. Don't try doing on your own, get a team together in your area and lose the fear and work together. When the police get involved they haven't got a clue what they're doing, they're just following orders from the scum above.
Interesting, I'm only at the 2 year stage at the moment. The latest with my 3 month mortgage statement is around £60k in litigation fees. Probably different with my case to yours, don't know about your case.
He's not wrong there, they can be easily stopped, but his method is utter garbage and doomed to fail. A lot of the morons following their advice would be better off being told to contact Shelter or the Citizen's Advice Bureau.
However, even after reaching that stage, court action has to be suspended if:Your mortgage lender must consider any proposals you make for repaying your mortgage arrears.
If your lender doesn't accept your suggestions, they must write to you within 10 working days to explain why.
Your lender must also look at any other reasonable suggestions for keeping your home. Your lender's proposals for clearing your arrears should be easy to understand. You should be given a reasonable amount of time to consider their proposals.
Keep to any agreement you make with your lender. If you don't your lender can give you 15 working days' notice then take you to court.
If they don't follow these rules, the judge is likely to:you're getting help from your local council under a mortgage rescue or homeless prevention scheme
your income is about to improve enough for you to pay your mortgage, for example you've been offered a better paid job or
you're taking in a lodger
you've made a complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) about how your lender dealt with your arrears
you are taking steps to sell your home at a realistic price
So to get to the stage of a judge actually issuing an order, you have already blown them off.delay the repossession court hearing to give you time to negotiate with your lender
order the lender to pay your legal costs
stop your lender from adding their costs on to what you already owe them
All first attempt possession orders can easily be stopped, all it needs is a few people standing together and making it public. The bailiffs won't try anything if they see opposition and the police won't get involved. After that it gets tougher, just make sure you have video evidence of the first attempt. It won't be easy and you have to be strong and determined. Those of us that have been there know about the fraud, proving it in the corrupt courts is not easy, but that's no reason to give in. Different areas in the country seem to have different ways, it shouldn't be like that if what they are doing is lawful, which it's not lawful. If it was every possession order would have set rules, but they don't. If you do get evicted don't give up, that's not the end of it, make a plan and get back in. Don't try doing on your own, get a team together in your area and lose the fear and work together. When the police get involved they haven't got a clue what they're doing, they're just following orders from the scum above.
AnOwlCalledSage wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 9:34 amHe's not wrong there, they can be easily stopped, but his method is utter garbage and doomed to fail. A lot of the morons following their advice would be better off being told to contact Shelter or the Citizen's Advice Bureau.
Let's say, "less than ten missed payments" is 9. That's not a lot in the lifetime of a 25 year mortgage. What will have happened is that, after a few missed payments, the mortgagee gets in contact. They will try to re-arrange matters. They have to do this and be seen to have done it before they are ever likely to get a repossession order. This is to prevent precipitous repossessions which are due to temporary circumstances (like unexpected unemployment), circumstances which on the face of it are perfectly within the mortgagees right to collect on.
However, even after reaching that stage, court action has to be suspended if:Your mortgage lender must consider any proposals you make for repaying your mortgage arrears.
If your lender doesn't accept your suggestions, they must write to you within 10 working days to explain why.
Your lender must also look at any other reasonable suggestions for keeping your home. Your lender's proposals for clearing your arrears should be easy to understand. You should be given a reasonable amount of time to consider their proposals.
Keep to any agreement you make with your lender. If you don't your lender can give you 15 working days' notice then take you to court.
If they don't follow these rules, the judge is likely to:you're getting help from your local council under a mortgage rescue or homeless prevention scheme
your income is about to improve enough for you to pay your mortgage, for example you've been offered a better paid job or
you're taking in a lodger
you've made a complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) about how your lender dealt with your arrears
you are taking steps to sell your home at a realistic price
So to get to the stage of a judge actually issuing an order, you have already blown them off.delay the repossession court hearing to give you time to negotiate with your lender
order the lender to pay your legal costs
stop your lender from adding their costs on to what you already owe them
But I think where we hit the motherlode is on why it's got this far is, it's a buy-to-let property. These rules don't apply as that's strictly a business to business transaction not a personal residence and one of the parties isn't paying their bills!
Which explains the rapid disappearance of Crabbie's BTL portfolio whilst hanging on to his domestic property.mufc1959 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 3:54 pm Buy-to-let mortgages (such as the one which is the subject of the Facebook post) are considered commercial loans and so the lender doesn't have to do any of those things, and, in addition, the court has no discretion to suspend possession of a BTL property if the mortgage is in arrears.
Final hurdle done. Fitted my own gas and electric meters today so no more bills to pay. EON and the National Grid are welcome to come and collect their property (meters) if they can confirm the serial numbers. I am now free of any utility bills on my home as the legal proprietor. No more electric, gas, water, council tax, mortgage or any other bills to pay. Don't copy me unless you're ready for it.
Can you say "grand larceny", boys and girls?D-C wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 10:31 pm Well he has finally done itFinal hurdle done. Fitted my own gas and electric meters today so no more bills to pay. EON and the National Grid are welcome to come and collect their property (meters) if they can confirm the serial numbers. I am now free of any utility bills on my home as the legal proprietor. No more electric, gas, water, council tax, mortgage or any other bills to pay. Don't copy me unless you're ready for it.
Why would he install meters at all? And why shouldn't someone copy him if he is right? Pressing [X] to doubt.D-C wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 10:31 pm Well he has finally done itFinal hurdle done. Fitted my own gas and electric meters today so no more bills to pay. EON and the National Grid are welcome to come and collect their property (meters) if they can confirm the serial numbers. I am now free of any utility bills on my home as the legal proprietor. No more electric, gas, water, council tax, mortgage or any other bills to pay. Don't copy me unless you're ready for it.
Agreed. Whilst illegal from the theft point of view, by-passing electricity meters is relatively safe process. By-passing gas fitting regulations will get you prison time. That's not gas I smell. It's bullshit. Inhaled by his credulous supporters.
It's a FOTL dream theory. If big bad capitalists can have meters so can I. I'll fit my own and not charge myself. This overlooks the obvious fact that the electric and gas has to be supplied from somewhere.