For most of my life I've moved in circles where people honour their debts. My Dad didn't even have a credit card until recently, he insisted on paying everyone with cash or cheque, and this rubbed off on me.
Whittam International pays everyone to the agreed payment terms, and I fully expect my clients to do the same. But just recently I've noticed one or two companies playing silly buggers and trying to extend their terms without so much as a phone call to me.
Anyway, the worst of the lot was a car dealership in Manchester who owe me £17k for work we did for them a few months ago. The guy has been promising me the payment for weeks but I got tired of waiting. I took him to Court, he didnt even contest it, and when he failed to pay again I took it to the High Court and got a writ out against him.
I have just been informed by the sheriffs (like bailiffs but with more powers) that when they arrived at the dealership the guy tried to play hardball but when he realised the sheriffs were going to remove some of his cars he handed over £17k on the spot.
He clearly had the cash all the time, he just thought he could do nothing and it would go away. And I suspect it works a lot of the time, I shouldn't think many people want to take people to Court, particularly for smaller debts.
Since these problems I've looked deeper into people avoiding debts and the law makes it quite easy for people to run up huge debts and then not pay. They can make themselves bankrupt, they can change their company name, they can move assets into someone elses name to avoid goods being removed.
It really is a joke. People should be made to honour their debts, people shouldn't be able to hide behind limited companies or bankruptcy. The debt should follow them for life until it is paid.
Do you agree? Do you have any experience of people owing you money?
Whittam International pays everyone to the agreed payment terms, and I fully expect my clients to do the same. But just recently I've noticed one or two companies playing silly buggers and trying to extend their terms without so much as a phone call to me.
Anyway, the worst of the lot was a car dealership in Manchester who owe me £17k for work we did for them a few months ago. The guy has been promising me the payment for weeks but I got tired of waiting. I took him to Court, he didnt even contest it, and when he failed to pay again I took it to the High Court and got a writ out against him.
I have just been informed by the sheriffs (like bailiffs but with more powers) that when they arrived at the dealership the guy tried to play hardball but when he realised the sheriffs were going to remove some of his cars he handed over £17k on the spot.
He clearly had the cash all the time, he just thought he could do nothing and it would go away. And I suspect it works a lot of the time, I shouldn't think many people want to take people to Court, particularly for smaller debts.
Since these problems I've looked deeper into people avoiding debts and the law makes it quite easy for people to run up huge debts and then not pay. They can make themselves bankrupt, they can change their company name, they can move assets into someone elses name to avoid goods being removed.
It really is a joke. People should be made to honour their debts, people shouldn't be able to hide behind limited companies or bankruptcy. The debt should follow them for life until it is paid.
Do you agree? Do you have any experience of people owing you money?