by Mac-the-Wrench »
Thu May 29, 2008 10:21 am
[quote="Barry Bunsen"]Hi
Im no expert but I can give you some thoughts.[/quote]
Hi Barry, thanks for your reply.
"If I understand correctly during a job yourself and 2 others were told by your client to invoice and leave for reasons unknown."
Almost right but not quite. The plasterer was in the middle of his job, he'd taken the plaster off the wall. He got paid, but I don't think he was charging very much in the first place. The tiler wouldn't start his work until the plasterer was finished, and as he was subbing for me, he didn't have anything to bill them for; and then all that was left was for me to connect the suite to the pipework that I had already put in place. I was asked to invoice for the work carried out by me and parts and materials that I had supplied.
"Following that 2 or more leaks allegedly developed and so you received no payment. Your client must be thinking the cost of the leaks matched the cost of your invoice."
This part became a bit of a saga. The first leak took 5 weeks for them to tell me about, it allegedly happened 2 days after I left the property, and they spoke to me the day after that, but never mentioned it. The second alleged leak was mentioned 2 months after I left the property. Two weeks after that, I was informed that the ceiling was damaged by the second alleged leak, but was never mentioned at the time they informed me of the 2nd alleged leak. All of this was done by letter, which took them weeks to respond to, and in one case, my letter was completely ignored.
"Clearly if this went to court it would get messy and no doubt expensive."
I've already had the first hearing, and will have a final hearing in a couple of weeks. It's all small claims, so the costs are minimal; the hassle is a bigger trial, along with the time having to do all of this.
"Without admitting liaibility you could ask the client to prove those 2 costs balance (ie receipts etc)."
I did, see my reply to bob above.
"You could also ask for the return any of your materials if you paid for them. If your client knows he is in the wrong he wont want the hassle or the thought of legal action and may reach a compromise to avoid it."
I think they have let things go too far, and the guy is now bloody minded about it all, so compromise is out of the window. The judge told them they need more proof than they have provided so far, and to lodge it with the court. I am watching this space with interest.
"However, I would first chat to the tiler and the plasterer to share thoughts and find if they actually got paid or have been treated similarly to yourself. If that is the case a joint plan of action would be a good idea."
Already covered this above. :o)
"I hope you get a satisfactory outcome. "
Thanks so do I
Mac