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That is truly disgraceful behaviour - and it happens year after year after year. I wondered if it would happen again this year.
Even if you accept that HMRC have a valid job to do - there is no justifiable reason for deliberately timing it to arrive just before the Christmas holiday. Seems it's done purely for reasons of spite.
That is truly disgraceful behaviour - and it happens year after year after year. I wondered if it would happen again this year.
Even if you accept that HMRC have a valid job to do - there is no justifiable reason for deliberately timing it to arrive just before the Christmas holiday. Seems it's done purely for reasons of spite.
It's a standard legal game unfortunately.
You send letters out to arrive on a Friday, or even better the day just before a weekend with one or more public holidays as it makes your opponent sweat through that time. It is suppose to make them more likely to give in.
The correct response is never to open correspondence from HMRC regardless of what it is or anyone you have could have a legal dispute with until the beginning of the next working week.
"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR
The correct response is never to open correspondence from HMRC regardless of what it is or anyone you have could have a legal dispute with until the beginning of the next working week.
The moment it lands on the doormat - you pretty much know what's inside. It aint gonna be a Christmas card is it
So whether you open it or not, the desired impact, be it spite or legal gaming - has been executed the moment it goes through the letterbox.
The full desired impact is when you open the letter and are not able to contact anyone at all to help you due to the fact it's Christmas.
This is what legal bods want and is a well known psychological game.
Or even better. Receiving correspondence from these useless <mod snip> abroad approx 5 weeks after the date on their letter, which states a response must be received within 30-days.
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