I think this is something completely different.It depends. For instance when serving a notice to attend court for an oral examination, the paperwork has to be served directly to the defendant and must be witnessed.
I think this is something completely different.It depends. For instance when serving a notice to attend court for an oral examination, the paperwork has to be served directly to the defendant and must be witnessed.
Is this called "process serving" ....?
Thanks Sickpup, the proposal to sue papers we recently got documentation that said the address of the landlord on the rental agreement may change and you need to be aware of this & it's implications .Take a read of the interpretations act 1978 sec 7
You don't 'need' a signature as such but you do need proof of posting so regardless of whether the items are delivered you have served on the last known address.
What you can do is use a reputable overnight company or even a same day courier to serve documents. A bailiff will simply send by Royal Mail.
In a past life I used to serve documents all over the UK on behalf of law firms and Accountants so a courier is fine, they can even drop it through the letter box as long as they are willing to put it in writing as you don't serve on a person personally as such, just has to be at their last known address.
Is this called "process serving" ....?
Is that how the chocolate box delivery came about ...is it still valid ?Yes, I did a bit in the early nineties and it really was absurd some of the antics people got up to. There are a whole host of rules that must be followed, you cannot serve court papers on a Sunday as a for instance. The papers you are serving can be folded but must not be in an envelope (found that out the hard way).
I don't have any headroom inside so it would have to be an outdoor job.And the guys you can trust Brad are booked out weeks in advance, my 2 post lift has paid for itself already I’d say go for it if you’ve the space, actually it doesn’t take up much space
Friend of mine has a single phase 2 post lift in which will lift a Discovery so should manage a Transit. It does make a narrow spot in the garage when something is on the hoist, outdoors would cure this though.I don't have any headroom inside so it would have to be an outdoor job.
I've got the power though, 3 phase should make it easier to get something with the capacity for a van.
If it's aluminium clad you can make a nice hole with a Stanley knife, same with statics, instead the numpties attack the doors and windowsYou want a fun one someone went in the roof of a friends camper at xmas by just running up the sloped front and popping a hole in the roof with a tin opener.
im pulling this back for the above postim going to add to this as ive seen it happen
brand new van not a year old its a high top lwb van
security alarm and remote locking, no locks on doors except the rear door
ive seen it broken into due to them coming down the pathway and going back unlocking the van and stealing out if it
they used a scanner to recieve the keycode from the keys hence the reason they came down the pathway
this in turn unlocked the van doors but the security alarm triggered ( no key in the igniction lock so alarm went off )
yes they did get away with power tools
Put all electronic car keys in a hinged metal key press ( say 120 x 150 x 50mm thick after removing the guts and any sharp edges . Securely bolt it down in an airing cupboard etc and run a good sound earth wire to it . This makes a great Faraday's cage where any outside signals cannot get into clone your keys . Keep any unused keys in another same type box secured down the same , situated & hidden elsewhere that's not obvious and never blab about it to anyone what you have doneim going to add to this as ive seen it happen
brand new van not a year old its a high top lwb van
security alarm and remote locking, no locks on doors except the rear door
ive seen it broken into due to them coming down the pathway and going back unlocking the van and stealing out if it
they used a scanner to recieve the keycode from the keys hence the reason they came down the pathway
this in turn unlocked the van doors but the security alarm triggered ( no key in the igniction lock so alarm went off )
yes they did get away with power tools
Put all electronic car keys in a hinged metal key press ( say 120 x 150 x 50mm thick after removing the guts and any sharp edges . Securely bolt it down in an airing cupboard etc and run a good sound earth wire to it . This makes a great Faraday's cage where any outside signals cannot get into clone your keys . Keep any unused keys in another same type box secured down the same , situated & hidden elsewhere that's not obvious and never blab about it to anyone what you have done
Sale of Goods Act only applies to the private buyer (BEFORE 2015) (as he/she/it is deemed to be at an information & experience disadvantage to the business seller).
But most motortrade insurers - insist on floor safes concreted in for customers keys overnight - for this very reason.
Even the above - has only got insurance cover for a "day safe" within trading hours - no cover for overnight storage - customer keys have to go into a floor safe overnight.