- Original Poster
- #1
Hi all, first post
I'm self-employed and I have a customer who won't pay some invoices.
There has never been a problem with the service provided or incorrect costs on the invoice. This customer provided all the purchase orders, I supplied the service direct to them and never dealt with any third parties.
They have terms in their purchase order saying they have ordered for someone else and they won't be liable (apologies I don't have the exact wording to hand). The customer is an estate/lettings agent and I have said the outstanding invoices are all with end-users they no longer trade with and the debt is nothing to do with them.
Is this a tactic that bigger companies use to fob off smaller businesses? It's about £400 so I'm trying to work out if its worth pursuing legally?
Thanks Paul
I'm self-employed and I have a customer who won't pay some invoices.
There has never been a problem with the service provided or incorrect costs on the invoice. This customer provided all the purchase orders, I supplied the service direct to them and never dealt with any third parties.
They have terms in their purchase order saying they have ordered for someone else and they won't be liable (apologies I don't have the exact wording to hand). The customer is an estate/lettings agent and I have said the outstanding invoices are all with end-users they no longer trade with and the debt is nothing to do with them.
Is this a tactic that bigger companies use to fob off smaller businesses? It's about £400 so I'm trying to work out if its worth pursuing legally?
Thanks Paul
