It does make me wonder at times, at how people can get themselves into such a position, other than pure hubris of course.
jamesc1071 on
This is obviously ludicrous. I wonder on what basis the woman’s retired lawyer friend was helping her. I doubt he was formally acting for her, as an actual solicitor would have given warnings about costs and demanded payment on account. Paying out actual money might have had a sobering effect on this lady.
FelisCantabrigiensis on
When I look at the photo of the house (in the news article), I can definitely see how someone could park a car on the driveway by the house and block access, if they didn’t want to park on the street, didn’t want to park down the driveway by the garage or in the garage, and were too selfish to park off to one side of the driveway leaving room for another car to go past.
That is, if they were a complete knobend and wanted to lose their house on the legal fees in the end.
_CurseTheseMetalHnds on
>She sued at Bromley County Court and in August 2020 won around £30,000 damages, plus legal costs, which led to a charging order of around £70,000 being made against Mrs Potter’s house in December 2020.
Can someone explain the jump from a parking dispute to this? I’m sort of struggling to understand how you win 30k in damages on this type of thing.
callsignhotdog on
£70k owed against a £575k house, she could have done some refinance and kept her home but she dug her heels in, refused to pay and ended up evicted. She would still be due most of the proceeds of the sale but will have burned through a chunk of that continuing to fight the matter. She just keeps digging.
Gullible_fool_99 on
I am so glad that my wife and I did not buy the house we liked that had a shared driveway.
SwanLake74 on
Im not understanding how she was expected to park… if that’s a shared driveway, anyone parking on it would block access to the garage. So surely it can’t be a shared driveway to begin with.
369_Clive on
“Shared” driveways – this can be the cause of all sorts of neighbourly disputes. Even with people who are normally reasonable.
Mutual respect is ultra important.
Papfox on
> Representing herself with assistance from a retired solicitor who attends her church
That’s all you really need to know isn’t it?
Religious person thinks they’re in the right and that they can do no wrong.
oh_no3000 on
Headline should read neighbour keeps losing and keeps spending money
basicastheycome on
Fucking hell! All she had to do is to move bloody car a bit but no!
Plumb789 on
I think it’s possible that some (definitely not all) of these cases are a bit more like gambling than simple hubris. The person stakes out an amount of money on a course of action, gambling on the belief that they might win-and get back their original stake-plus extra payment.
They lose, and their lost stake is a LOT of money, so they decide to gamble big -still in the hope that they will get back that original stake and then some. They lose again.
Ultimately, they go for broke. They throw the dice one more time: double or quits because they are now in a desperate situation that they’ve lost everything if they don’t win. All this time, they are in denial that they’re going to lose.
Emergency-Nebula5005 on
If she wanted her car off the road, but either didn’t want to or couldn’t use her garage, it would have been a whole lot less hassle and cheaper to convert some of her front garden to hardstanding for a car.
A17012022 on
Looking at the picture of the property
I’m assuming the person who lost their house was on the left, where there’s a front garden and not a driveway.
I would say that there was enough space on the shared driveway NOT to block access for the neighbour.
But also…….I’d have just coughed up the money to turn the front garden into a driveway like the house on the right.
All of this was easily resolved, so I am slightly confused that it escalated to someone losing their house
CarlMacko on
I never realised shared drives were a thing.
Even then, surely you would expect to at least *occasionally* have to move your car. It literally takes 30 seconds.
philff1973 on
“Representing herself” it’s not very often that that seems to work out well for people.
PolarLocalCallingSvc on
I reckon I could park around 5 cars easily on her property in a way which doesn’t block her neighbour’s garage access at all. Not to mention the on street parking.
psrandom on
Ultimate FAFO
Genuinely wondering how such a small dispute ended up in court and resulted in £30,000 compensation. Remaining of £70,000 must be for lawyer fees
ExcitingCriticism524 on
Well atleast she doesn’t have to worry about blocking someone’s garage now.
Stage_Party on
Why is it so often the religious ones who are so hateful and spiteful?
20 commenti
It does make me wonder at times, at how people can get themselves into such a position, other than pure hubris of course.
This is obviously ludicrous. I wonder on what basis the woman’s retired lawyer friend was helping her. I doubt he was formally acting for her, as an actual solicitor would have given warnings about costs and demanded payment on account. Paying out actual money might have had a sobering effect on this lady.
When I look at the photo of the house (in the news article), I can definitely see how someone could park a car on the driveway by the house and block access, if they didn’t want to park on the street, didn’t want to park down the driveway by the garage or in the garage, and were too selfish to park off to one side of the driveway leaving room for another car to go past.
That is, if they were a complete knobend and wanted to lose their house on the legal fees in the end.
>She sued at Bromley County Court and in August 2020 won around £30,000 damages, plus legal costs, which led to a charging order of around £70,000 being made against Mrs Potter’s house in December 2020.
Can someone explain the jump from a parking dispute to this? I’m sort of struggling to understand how you win 30k in damages on this type of thing.
£70k owed against a £575k house, she could have done some refinance and kept her home but she dug her heels in, refused to pay and ended up evicted. She would still be due most of the proceeds of the sale but will have burned through a chunk of that continuing to fight the matter. She just keeps digging.
I am so glad that my wife and I did not buy the house we liked that had a shared driveway.
Im not understanding how she was expected to park… if that’s a shared driveway, anyone parking on it would block access to the garage. So surely it can’t be a shared driveway to begin with.
“Shared” driveways – this can be the cause of all sorts of neighbourly disputes. Even with people who are normally reasonable.
Mutual respect is ultra important.
> Representing herself with assistance from a retired solicitor who attends her church
That’s all you really need to know isn’t it?
Religious person thinks they’re in the right and that they can do no wrong.
Headline should read neighbour keeps losing and keeps spending money
Fucking hell! All she had to do is to move bloody car a bit but no!
I think it’s possible that some (definitely not all) of these cases are a bit more like gambling than simple hubris. The person stakes out an amount of money on a course of action, gambling on the belief that they might win-and get back their original stake-plus extra payment.
They lose, and their lost stake is a LOT of money, so they decide to gamble big -still in the hope that they will get back that original stake and then some. They lose again.
Ultimately, they go for broke. They throw the dice one more time: double or quits because they are now in a desperate situation that they’ve lost everything if they don’t win. All this time, they are in denial that they’re going to lose.
If she wanted her car off the road, but either didn’t want to or couldn’t use her garage, it would have been a whole lot less hassle and cheaper to convert some of her front garden to hardstanding for a car.
Looking at the picture of the property
I’m assuming the person who lost their house was on the left, where there’s a front garden and not a driveway.
I would say that there was enough space on the shared driveway NOT to block access for the neighbour.
But also…….I’d have just coughed up the money to turn the front garden into a driveway like the house on the right.
All of this was easily resolved, so I am slightly confused that it escalated to someone losing their house
I never realised shared drives were a thing.
Even then, surely you would expect to at least *occasionally* have to move your car. It literally takes 30 seconds.
“Representing herself” it’s not very often that that seems to work out well for people.
I reckon I could park around 5 cars easily on her property in a way which doesn’t block her neighbour’s garage access at all. Not to mention the on street parking.
Ultimate FAFO
Genuinely wondering how such a small dispute ended up in court and resulted in £30,000 compensation. Remaining of £70,000 must be for lawyer fees
Well atleast she doesn’t have to worry about blocking someone’s garage now.
Why is it so often the religious ones who are so hateful and spiteful?