But the Council hasn't sold the debt has it? It issued a PCN and you didn't pay it, so it took the matter to court and obtained a court order for the debt. The bailiffs are appointed by the court to recover the debt set out in the court order - and the bailiffs' costs fall to the debtor.
I haven't said to give out address without checking. I've simply given my view as to why there are indications this might not be a scam (it might be), and should not be ignored. As you say - a check with the relevant council, or the traffic enforcement court, should shed light on it.
Incorrect. From gov.uk - If you do not let a bailiff in or agree to pay them: they could take things from outside your home, for example your car; you could end up owing even more money
Even if a scam did work like that, in that scenario you would still end up with a court order against you...
Not an expert by any means, but this is different to private parking companies trying it on. Sounds like a council issued parking ticket/fine - sent to the address the car was registered at at the time (OP's old address). Not forwarded to OP. Having not paid (because unaware) Council started...
Had a similar situation once with a driver driving out of a junction into side of me. Indicator had been on, but I'd turned it off well before the junction. Wasn't a lot of damage, so I suggested we sort it out ourselves (with him paying to fix damage to my car). He insisted it wasn't his fault...
None. Assuming the bottle holds the same volume as one glass, some of the liquid will remain in glass one below the opening to glass 3.
Although that answer doesn't hold if you have unlimited liquid to pour.
Great for kids' walking boots too. Don't do massive hikes with them, but winter countryside walks. Kids' walking boots were cheap and keep their feet bone dry in the mud/rain.
There's a massive Decathlon near where I live (one in Brighton seems very poky by comparison) and we get nearly all our...