Galway Advertiser Christmas Crossword,...
Crosswords1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by missey123. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."you won't accept that your wrong even when your told it by a Lawyer!"[sic]
Firslty, there is a difference between someone who has studied law for 6 years and someone who is a lawyer (they can be one and the same, but they can also be different).
Scondly, at what point has erimus said that I was wrong?
So anyway, gammaray, how are those links to websites that agree with you going?
Here are some for you:
jersey citizens advice bureau (who mention that the HP Act does not apply there)
how about the law commssion
HPI - a slightly misleading slant on the aforemtnioned Hudson / Shogun Finance case to quote Professor Iwan Davies, who holds the Sir Julian Hodge Chair in Asset Finance Law at the University of Swansea: ""As is widely known, there is a defence of "innocent purchaser" available in law under the 1964 Hire Purchase Act. However, this may not apply where the person selling the vehicle could never have obtained good title to it - as would be the case with a thief." - but then I beleive I mentioned that previously.
Still awaiting your links to back up your argument - guess it may well be along wait ...
erimus1 - you are striving for credibility with your answers, but you can't spell careful, proper or separate correctly. How is anyone supposed to take seriously the argument of someone who can't even spell properly?
And what kind of authority does wikipedia have? No-one in their right mind is going to consult wikipedia on any kind of legal matter.
My point is that you and one of your sources have no credibility. Is that so difficult to work out?
I deliberately ignored the spelling mistakes that were clearly typos. That excuse can't be used for everything you spelled incorrectly. If you take no care over your spelling, how are we to believe that you know the law accurately?
No need to be rude Vic!
If a car is stolen and then sold on HP it's still a stolen car! Simply selling something on HP doesn't erase the fact that it's stolen property! One thing doesn't cancel out the other. That's all I'm saying. No web site on the planet will tell you that you can steal something and then sell it on HP to avoid prosecution.... Perhaps that's where I'm going wrong Vic, you not from this planet are you!!
You know what, I think I know where the confusion is here.
Vic, you assume that the previous owner had the HP agreement but sold it on to missey123 anyway (that�s how I read the question too). Therefore your �innocent purchaser� stuff possibly applies, depending on the exact circumstances.
Gammaray, you assume that missey123 bought a (previously stolen) car on HP from a dealer, in which case you misread the question and answered something completely different.
Am I right???