Off Topic And Now for Something Completely Different

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
A DNA analysing company 23andme has been hacked and sensitive information of millions has been stolen. People had voluntarily given their DNA to be used for ancestry research reasons. The Google owned company advised those affected to change their password. <laugh>. Like that will help.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TQ5
Advice wanted please. We were due to be moving house tomorrow. Four people in the chain and we were all asked to agree the date which would have been tomorrow. 3'oclock today we get a call saying there is a problem at the start of the chain and 'something is missing to complete the final checks of the sale' So deal off. No-one is moving. Just left us hanging.
Hardakers removal firm already booked by us, cost just short of a grand, we have lost that, people buying ours also booked Hardakers and they have lost that too.
Its in the small print of Hardakers contract apparently and you pay in advance. 5hitty responce from them and not recommended.
In our case as we are downsizing and we have sold and given away a lot of our furniture. Not much we can do about that now. But surely someone is to blame for this? I would have thought all three sets of solicitors would have to agree that all is in place before they can ask for a completion date? Besides the lost removal firm money, a lot of other cash has been laid out thinking we were moving in the morning and none of it is returnable.
So are there any solicitors out there who can offer a bit of advice please?

Did you resolve this?

Don't you normally put up some sort of collateral when you exchange and then the rest when you complete?

Hard without details, but you could try and get your solicitors fees cut for bad advice, it would claw back some of the removals fee. Best of luck with it.
 
On November 7th, 1920, in strictest secrecy, four unidentified British bodies were exhumed from temporary battlefield cemeteries at Ypres, Arras, the Asine and the Somme. None of the soldiers who did the digging were told why.

The bodies were taken by field ambulance to GHQ at St-Pol-Sur-Ter Noise. Once there, the bodies were draped with the union flag. Sentries were posted and Brigadier-General Wyatt and a Colonel Gell selected one body at random.

The other three were reburied. A French Honour Guard was selected and stood by the coffin overnight of the chosen soldier overnight.

On the morning of the 8th November, a specially designed coffin made of oak from the grounds of Hampton Court arrived and the Unknown Warrior was placed inside.

On top was placed a crusaders sword and a shield on which was inscribed: "A British Warrior who fell in the GREAT WAR 1914-1918 for King and Country".

On the 9th of November, the Unknown Warrior was taken by horse-drawn carriage through Guards of Honour and the sound of tolling bells and bugle calls to the quayside. There, he was saluted by Marechal Foche and loaded onto HMS Vernon bound for Dover.

The coffin stood on the deck covered in wreaths, surrounded by the French Honour Guard. Upon arrival at Dover, the Unknown Warrior was met with a nineteen gun salute - something that was normally only reserved for Field Marshals. A special train had been arranged and he was then conveyed to Victoria Station, London. He remained there overnight, and, on the morning of the 11th of November, he was finally taken to Westminster Abbey.

The idea of the unknown warrior was thought of by a Padre called David Railton who had served on the front line during the Great War the union flag he had used as an altar cloth whilst at the front, was the one that had been draped over the coffin.

It was his intention that all of the relatives of the 517,773 combatants whose bodies had not been identified could believe that the Unknown Warrior could very well be their lost husband, father, brother or son...

THIS is the reason we wear poppies. We do not glorify war. We remember - with humility - the great and the ultimate sacrifices that were made, not just in this war, but in every war and conflict where our service personnel have fought - to ensure the liberty and freedoms that we now take for granted.

Every year, on the 11th of November, we remember the Unknown Warrior.

At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, we will remember them.

You must log in or register to see media
On November 7th, 1920, in strictest secrecy, four unidentified British bodies were exhumed from temporary battlefield cemeteries at Ypres, Arras, the Asine and the Somme. None of the soldiers who did the digging were told why.

The bodies were taken by field ambulance to GHQ at St-Pol-Sur-Ter Noise. Once there, the bodies were draped with the union flag. Sentries were posted and Brigadier-General Wyatt and a Colonel Gell selected one body at random.

The other three were reburied. A French Honour Guard was selected and stood by the coffin overnight of the chosen soldier overnight.

On the morning of the 8th November, a specially designed coffin made of oak from the grounds of Hampton Court arrived and the Unknown Warrior was placed inside.

On top was placed a crusaders sword and a shield on which was inscribed: "A British Warrior who fell in the GREAT WAR 1914-1918 for King and Country".

On the 9th of November, the Unknown Warrior was taken by horse-drawn carriage through Guards of Honour and the sound of tolling bells and bugle calls to the quayside. There, he was saluted by Marechal Foche and loaded onto HMS Vernon bound for Dover.

The coffin stood on the deck covered in wreaths, surrounded by the French Honour Guard. Upon arrival at Dover, the Unknown Warrior was met with a nineteen gun salute - something that was normally only reserved for Field Marshals. A special train had been arranged and he was then conveyed to Victoria Station, London. He remained there overnight, and, on the morning of the 11th of November, he was finally taken to Westminster Abbey.

The idea of the unknown warrior was thought of by a Padre called David Railton who had served on the front line during the Great War the union flag he had used as an altar cloth whilst at the front, was the one that had been draped over the coffin.

It was his intention that all of the relatives of the 517,773 combatants whose bodies had not been identified could believe that the Unknown Warrior could very well be their lost husband, father, brother or son...

THIS is the reason we wear poppies. We do not glorify war. We remember - with humility - the great and the ultimate sacrifices that were made, not just in this war, but in every war and conflict where our service personnel have fought - to ensure the liberty and freedoms that we now take for granted.

Every year, on the 11th of November, we remember the Unknown Warrior.

At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, we will remember them.

You must log in or register to see media
And still we treat unwelcome visitors with more compassion than our own military veterans.
 
Advice wanted please. We were due to be moving house tomorrow. Four people in the chain and we were all asked to agree the date which would have been tomorrow. 3'oclock today we get a call saying there is a problem at the start of the chain and 'something is missing to complete the final checks of the sale' So deal off. No-one is moving. Just left us hanging.
Hardakers removal firm already booked by us, cost just short of a grand, we have lost that, people buying ours also booked Hardakers and they have lost that too.
Its in the small print of Hardakers contract apparently and you pay in advance. 5hitty responce from them and not recommended.
In our case as we are downsizing and we have sold and given away a lot of our furniture. Not much we can do about that now. But surely someone is to blame for this? I would have thought all three sets of solicitors would have to agree that all is in place before they can ask for a completion date? Besides the lost removal firm money, a lot of other cash has been laid out thinking we were moving in the morning and none of it is returnable.
So are there any solicitors out there who can offer a bit of advice please?
Who ever pulled out, sue them for the costs involved, and tbf, it’s not Hardakers fault, they will still have to pay for the staff, vehicle etc, you should have hired a big Luton and done it yourself £100 a day, or kept it two days and took 40 lads in the back to West Brom