3 years ago | 12 comments
Hello, a large London letting agent found and gave a glowing reference for a tenant, so we took her on. They stated that she was in a £90,000 pa job. It transpired that she was out of work.
They stated that she had only been late paying rent by one day on one occasion. Later, the previous landlord confirmed that he had evicted her for rent arrears.
They produced an employer reference. It transpired that this was a dummy reference from a one man band who was a friend of hers.
She got 2 months behind with the rent so I then investigated and found the truth.
We eventually get her evicted after 11 months and the court awarded us £21K in lost rent.
As the tenant has little assets I would like to make a claim on the letting agent but he says that they got a referencing company to do the reference so it has nothing to do with them and they will fight it through the courts if I pursue it.
My solicitor has been in touch with their solicitor and says it could well cost me £10,000 in legal fees and there is no guarantee that I will win.
Is it worth me risking this sum?
What else can I do to try and recoup the £21,000?
The letting/estate agent has mostly terrible reviews on Trust Pilot but this doesn’t concern them.
Thank you,
Trevor
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Member Since February 2016 - Comments: 194 - Articles: 1
9:56 AM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
First Question::
Which Ombudsman scheme are they members of?
Member Since April 2014 - Comments: 32
10:06 AM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Why not name the letting agent involved so other landlords can be made aware??
Member Since February 2019 - Comments: 5
10:16 AM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Reply to the comment left by martinB at 24/04/2023 – 10:06
If OP decides to pursue, there could be a counterclaim for libel.
Member Since July 2015 - Comments: 66
10:33 AM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Try the Small Claims Court. You can only claim up to 10k, but it will be you and the Agent together with a Judge in Chambers and a relatively small fee. Worth considering
Member Since September 2014 - Comments: 166
11:05 AM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
The letting agent chose the referencing company so that’s a very weak defence. More difficult legally will be the terms in your contract with the agency which will usually be one-sided to minimise their liability for any loss. The more you can show by way of evidence the better.
The Ombudsman’s process is more likely successful. The agent may push back but once they realise the next step is for you to refer to the ombudsman they should be prepared to compromise. A big agent has more to lose.
Member Since April 2014 - Comments: 32
1:04 PM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Reply to the comment left by SamJonesSMS at 24/04/2023 – 10:16
If the poster is not lying then it cannot be libel. The agent should be prosecuted for fraud
Member Since February 2016 - Comments: 194 - Articles: 1
1:53 PM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Trevor
Have you obtained a copy of the referencing report? If not, please obtain it and kindly post here what the report evaluated. Then let us know what the ‘Recommendations’ were and the concluding risk summary.
Providing this information is required to understand what the third party referencing company amounted to. Potential good advice awaits the sight of the report.
Lord
Member Since August 2016 - Comments: 508
5:27 PM, 24th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Reply to the comment left by SamJonesSMS at 24/04/2023 – 10:16
Trevor must decide if the ‘facts’ he alleges are true. If they are, the agent won’t sue, they must prove the alleged facts are untrue? Unlikely they would sue anyway, Bad Publicity smells and they would be advised by any competent lawyer that suing in such a case is far too risky?? Who trusts their trade anyway??
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 46
3:49 PM, 25th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Reply to the comment left by LordOf TheManor at 24/04/2023 – 09:56
Hi,
They are with The Property Ombudsman.
Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 46
3:51 PM, 25th April 2023, About 3 years ago
Reply to the comment left by martinB at 24/04/2023 – 10:06
Hi,
They are a Major London Estate and letting agent so if I named them they might sue me.