Legal proceedings should be the very last resort against a bank, basically what PayPal is. Having said that small claims are a pain in the arse to them, so their first line of defence seems to be to hide their UK office, like we don't live here etc.I've followed advice from an old thread on here I can't post the link due to account restrictions but here is where im at.
so far I started legal proceedings against "PayPal (Europe) S.à r.l. et Cie, S.C.A" and served legal notice to their 2 Whittaker House address.
Firstly a company called "Womble Bond ****son" acting on behalf of "PayPal (Europe) S.à r.l. et Cie, S.C.A"
I've today received a draft order stating two things:
The claimaint's claim is set aside, persuant to CPR 11.6(a)
The claimant do pay the defendant's costs of the application in the sum of: {£ ] (its blank)
and then in further in the packs I've received they're trying to dispute my claim based on be serving the claim to 2 Whittaker House who "forwarded" it and that Whittaker House does not carry any business activity for the "defendant".
Something about how I should have regards to CPR 6.33 6.34 and 6.40 and that here is a contractual provision of service, yet if they have terminated their relationship with me by suspending my account from a singular ebay sale the first time I've ever sold something on eBay and withhold my money for 180 days when the buyer of the item has also left extremely good feedback on the eBay and the item was delivered within a couple of days.
Any advice on how I counter this?
If they don't respond to a court case, the most likely outcome is a ruling in your favour. Hopefully the address is valid enough for bailiffs to gain access to.
You say you started "legal proceedings", which I assume is just sending them a letter, and hence the response you had. Only an actual court can set a claim aside, although the other party can ask the judge to do this or strike it, he or she should set a hearing to do this.
The preferred way to tack a bank is the Banking Ombudsman. So although their office is in Luxembourg, they still have to answer to the UK Ombudsman and the first approach should be to their relevant officer answering to the Ombudsman. They should treat your complaint a bit more seriously here as they are obliged to pay for the Ombudsman when an issue is raised.
Presumably after brexit they will have to use a UK head office more instead of lurking in Luxembourg.
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