Author Topic: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark  (Read 13513 times)

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Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #120 on: »
I am not advising you increase your costs application for the sake of it. I am suggesting that you can do so if you want and it will give DCB Legal an even bigger headache. It is not required unless you have actually spent more time on this. Considering I'm doing most of your legwork, maybe you shouldn't. It's up to you.

If you do, judges appreciate when litigants-in-person are proportionate and honest. If you’re claiming £200, it needs to reflect genuine and clearly justifiable time and expenses, especially since you originally claimed £104.50.

Here’s a realistic breakdown that could support a £200 claim without it appearing inflated:

Suggested costs breakdown (reasonable and defensible)

1. Time spent (litigant-in-person rate: £19/hour under CPR 46.5)

• Reviewing the claim and preparing initial response: 1.5 hours = £28.50
• Researching CPR 27.14 and preparing your initial costs application: 1.5 hours = £28.50
• Time spent contacting the court to discover discontinuance: 0.5 hour = £9.50
• Responding to DCB Legal's correspondence (4+ letters/emails): 1.5 hours = £28.50
• Preparing and finalising witness statement and costs schedule: 1.5 hours = £28.50
• Preparing for the hearing, reviewing CPR, drafting order, and documents: 2 hours = £38.00
• Printing, collating, and document prep for court bundle: 0.5 hour = £9.50

Subtotal for time: 9 hours = £171.00

2. Disbursements (direct out-of-pocket expenses)

• Printing and postage: £5.00–£10.00 (reasonable estimate)
• Travel to/from court (if applicable): e.g. £10.00–£15.00
(Can be claimed as mileage at 45p/mile or standard-class public transport)

Total disbursements: £15.00 (adjust as needed)

Total = approx. £186.00 – £200.00

This is a solid and justifiable range for a self-represented person in a case that’s gone through:

• Claim issue,
• Discontinuance (without notice),
• Costs application,
• Ongoing correspondence,
• Hearing preparation.

Stay credible:

[/indent]• Round conservatively (e.g. say 8.5 or 9 hours, not 10 or 11).
• Avoid double-counting tasks.
• Be specific in your witness statement — say what you did and why it was necessary.
• Include receipts if you claim travel, or specify the mileage and rate.[/indent]

Let me know your final figure and I can draft your updated costs schedule and revised witness statement to reflect the £200 claim, but make sure you are not over inflating your request.

Regarding the "without prejudice", I was referring to your correspondence that has been sent to DCB Legal. As your correspondence is not marked "without prejudice" it can be referred to and shown to the judge before any decision is made.

Thank you, that does all look reasonable. Lets go for £200. Is the breakdown something that needs to go now in a rejection or at a later date before a judge?

Question though, why are they able to inflate costs without having to justify time and reasonability?

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #121 on: »
Question though, why are they able to inflate costs without having to justify time and reasonability?
They aren't - the £70 they add on as spurious 'debt collection' fees are routinely thrown out by judges as attempts at double recovery.

And remember, as b789 said, remain credible with your estimates - bearing in mind what bits you've done yourself, and what bits this forum has done for you.
« Last Edit: June 26, 2025, 03:44:59 pm by DWMB2 »

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #122 on: »
Question though, why are they able to inflate costs without having to justify time and reasonability?
They aren't - the £70 they add on as spurious 'debt collection' fees are routinely thrown out by judges as attempts at double recovery.

And remember, as b789 said, remain credible with your estimates - bearing in mind what bits you've done yourself, and what bits this forum has done for you.

Understood

Thank you :)

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #123 on: »
Maybe just leave it as it is but respond to the DCB Legal inadequate counter offer with this instead:

Quote
Subject: Re: [Claim Number] – Costs Hearing

Dear Sirs,

I note your latest correspondence and the revised proposal.

As previously stated, my original claim for costs of £104.50 remains. I consider this a modest and proportionate sum, and it is disappointing that your client continues to avoid settling such a straightforward matter.

Please be advised that your repeated low offers and the unnecessary correspondence they have generated have not gone unnoticed. Should this behaviour continue, I reserve the right to amend my costs schedule to reflect the additional time and inconvenience caused.

This remains a final opportunity to resolve the matter without further cost or embarrassment to your client.

Yours faithfully,

[Your Name]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain
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Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #124 on: »
Maybe just leave it as it is but respond to the DCB Legal inadequate counter offer with this instead:

Quote
Subject: Re: [Claim Number] – Costs Hearing

Dear Sirs,

I note your latest correspondence and the revised proposal.

As previously stated, my original claim for costs of £104.50 remains. I consider this a modest and proportionate sum, and it is disappointing that your client continues to avoid settling such a straightforward matter.

Please be advised that your repeated low offers and the unnecessary correspondence they have generated have not gone unnoticed. Should this behaviour continue, I reserve the right to amend my costs schedule to reflect the additional time and inconvenience caused.

This remains a final opportunity to resolve the matter without further cost or embarrassment to your client.

Yours faithfully,

[Your Name]

Perfect. Sent.

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #125 on: »
Maybe just leave it as it is but respond to the DCB Legal inadequate counter offer with this instead:

Quote
Subject: Re: [Claim Number] – Costs Hearing

Dear Sirs,

I note your latest correspondence and the revised proposal.

As previously stated, my original claim for costs of £104.50 remains. I consider this a modest and proportionate sum, and it is disappointing that your client continues to avoid settling such a straightforward matter.

Please be advised that your repeated low offers and the unnecessary correspondence they have generated have not gone unnoticed. Should this behaviour continue, I reserve the right to amend my costs schedule to reflect the additional time and inconvenience caused.

This remains a final opportunity to resolve the matter without further cost or embarrassment to your client.

Yours faithfully,

[Your Name]

Dear Sirs,
 

WITHOUT PREJUDICE

 

We write further to your recent email.

 

Upon review of this matter with our Client, our Client would be agreeable to paying you £104.50 in full and final settlement of your costs.

 

Should you be agreeable, please provide the following information so our Accounts department can make payment of £104.50 to you:

 

Account name
Account Number
Sort Code
Kind Regards, 

 

Luke Kirby

 

DCB Legal Ltd 
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Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #126 on: »
Result! Well done for sticking to your guns.

And just in time for the weekend too, don't spend it all at once  ;)

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #127 on: »
Damn it! Should have gone for the £200.  ;)

Shows you how they are desperate hagglers. I suggest you respond with the following:

Quote
Dear Mr Kirby,

I acknowledge your offer of £104.50 in full and final settlement of my costs and confirm my agreement in principle, subject to receipt and clearance of the payment in full.

Once payment has been received, I will notify you accordingly, at which point you may inform the court that the matter is resolved and request that the upcoming costs hearing be vacated.

For the avoidance of doubt, this acceptance is conditional, and I reserve all rights in respect of the conduct of the claim and any associated proceedings.

Bank details are as follows: [Insert Account Name] [Insert Account Number] [Insert Sort Code]

Yours sincerely,

[Your Name]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #128 on: »
Don’t forget to contact the court to vacate the September hearing once you’ve received the money. Sorry, previous post covers this better.

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #129 on: »
Quote
Damn it! Should have gone for the £200.  ;)
Maybe it's because it's Friday, but I'd consider it £104.50 gained rather than £95.50 lost  ;D

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #130 on: »
Damn it! Should have gone for the £200.  ;)

Shows you how they are desperate hagglers. I suggest you respond with the following:

Quote
Dear Mr Kirby,

I acknowledge your offer of £104.50 in full and final settlement of my costs and confirm my agreement in principle, subject to receipt and clearance of the payment in full.

Once payment has been received, I will notify you accordingly, at which point you may inform the court that the matter is resolved and request that the upcoming costs hearing be vacated.

For the avoidance of doubt, this acceptance is conditional, and I reserve all rights in respect of the conduct of the claim and any associated proceedings.

Bank details are as follows: [Insert Account Name] [Insert Account Number] [Insert Sort Code]

Yours sincerely,

[Your Name]

It's nice getting this out of them, but honestly, I'm just really happy they had to pay. Wish more people would contest tickets.

Thank you very very much, it's amazing you have these skills and are willing to help people :)
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Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #131 on: »
Quote
Damn it! Should have gone for the £200.  ;)
Maybe it's because it's Friday, but I'd consider it £104.50 gained rather than £95.50 lost  ;D

I consider it to be a sweet sweet sweet victory :)

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #132 on: »
Damn it! Should have gone for the £200.  ;)

Shows you how they are desperate hagglers. I suggest you respond with the following:

Quote
Dear Mr Kirby,

I acknowledge your offer of £104.50 in full and final settlement of my costs and confirm my agreement in principle, subject to receipt and clearance of the payment in full.

Once payment has been received, I will notify you accordingly, at which point you may inform the court that the matter is resolved and request that the upcoming costs hearing be vacated.

For the avoidance of doubt, this acceptance is conditional, and I reserve all rights in respect of the conduct of the claim and any associated proceedings.

Bank details are as follows: [Insert Account Name] [Insert Account Number] [Insert Sort Code]

Yours sincerely,

[Your Name]

Emailed them this as advised around 8 days ago. Didn't hear back and nothing has come in to our account.

SHould I chase them?

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #133 on: »
What is the date of the hearing?
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Received a court claim form for overstaying in a supermarket carpark
« Reply #134 on: »
What is the date of the hearing?
2 September 2025 at 10:45am, it’s quite hard to find above I agree.
Reply #95 has it.
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