× Welcome to the late payment of commercial debts (interest) act. Forum!

Post questions here regarding the use of the Late Payment Legislation

Viewed as a penalty

More
14 years 4 months ago #41 by David J
Replied by David J on topic Re: Viewed as a penalty
Hello Patrick

Firstly thank you for the compliment.

Secondly, as you say, many businesses and start ups are unaware of the legislation. We hope to change that situation.

Part of the quote says "Where no credit period is agreed in a contract, the principal debt will still become due from the moment the goods are delivered or the service performed."

Although the legislation uses a default credit period of 30 days, this would make the overdue period six years and thirty days.

I would not like to say that the courts would take the 30 days into consideration when calculating the six year period. If I was you I would make sure that you make your claim before the 30th.

Chris who has more experience in this area will hopefully add something completely different and to the point tomorrow!

Regards

David

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

  • Chris Harvey
  • Visitor
14 years 3 months ago #42 by Chris Harvey
Replied by Chris Harvey on topic Re: Viewed as a penalty
Hi Patrick

There's nothing stopping you mutually agreeing shorter terms and a different late payment remedy than thirty days - or even no credit at all. After all, trade credit is not an automatic right - it is given by you on the basis of the deal you strike for the goods/services offered and the risk you incur by trading with any firm/organisation.

If no terms are agreed then the thirty day default can kick in if you choose to use it.

Best wishes



Chris

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Moderators: David JChris Harveyjames@cpa.co.ukralph@cpa.co.uk
Time to create page: 0.117 seconds