Episode 6

A (fast) moving story


Like all unfinished stories, you can never tell how they will continue, far less end. This one is no different. But there has been an important development: On Friday June 5th, I requested a copy of the document advising me that Ombudsman Services: Energy (OS) “…could not help [me] with my complaint” which BG had assured OS it had provided me (cf. Episode 4). Approximately four hours later, a BG agent responded to my enquiry thus:

[BG]  Is not able to locate the document you request but suggest that the Ombudsman might still retain a copy in their case file [sic].”

This is a very significant response to a request for a specific and important document. It is clearly important because BG could only suggest the Ombudsman might still retain a copyif it had, in fact, provided OS with the document in the first place.
Of equal significance is BG’s tacit revelation that the functionality of its “data storage system” is less than 100% accurate: If BG considered the “document” to have been important enough to refer to it in an Appeal to OS - which was made with the stated purpose of having a formal Investigation stopped - it necessarily must have been important enough to file safely.

However, if BG’s position on this matter is “The document was fabricated by BG, and was forwarded to OS but cannot now be located”, that in itself would be of profound moment given Angus MacNeil MP’s assertion that over forty his constituents were refused access to its Sainsbury’s Energy tariff when they “calledBG to do so. Because BG’s response to that assertion by a sitting Member of Parliament was: “[It] could find no record of any of these calls.This response, which was accepted, indeed relied upon, by Ofgem during a 2017 Investigation, clearly requires BG’s “data storage system” to be 100% reliable.  So If BG cannot “locate” a document as important as one which it used to support an Appeal to stop an OS Investigation, its claim to have found no record of any of Angus MacNeil’s constituents’ calling to access a more economic tariff cannot be deemed proof positive that no such calls were made. To do so would require separate interpretative logics to be applied to each case:

Case 1

 When no data relating to customer calls can be found, that signifies these calls were never made. (British Gas 2017

                                                        Case 2

When an important document British Gas produced and forwarded to OS cannot be found, that signifies the document is lost. (British Gas 2020)


So let’s recap: In March 2017, Angus Brendan MacNeil MP released a press statement which began thus:

“Between £600,000 and £1million a year has been overcharged on up to a thousand gas customers in Stornoway who have been wrongly denied access to the cheapest available tariff.”

That declamation was predicated on the MP’s claim that his constituents were being prevented from accessing the most economic BG tariffs which were available to mainland customers. Subsequent to the release of this statement, his office was, “inundated by calls from [his] constituents” complaining that when they had called BG to access the Sainsbury’s Energy deal, they too had been refused. Mr MacNeil informed Ofgem of the large number of his constituents who claimed to have been told by BG that, “Sainsbury’s Energy does not supply propane gas to Stornoway.” In response after having “investigated” the MP’s allegations, Ofgem apprised the MP thus:

Our evidence review focused on customers who complained via your office that they had been denied the best tariff because of where they lived. However after listening to call recordings and reviewing contact notes held by Scottish Gas, we have not been able to identify any other instances of consumers requesting and being denied access to a Sainsbury’s Energy tariff…

Ofgem’s “evidence review” as is implicitly revealed, depended on BG providing it with the call-recordings of the forty plus constituents who had contacted the MP. Not one single recording which BG provided Ofgem revealed any customer to have been denied access to a cheaper tariff.

The MP’s constituents, including those who chose not to contact him, but claimed they too had been denied access to BG’s cheapest tariffs, were not being truthful – because the calls which they claimed resulted in BG advising them that Sainsbury’s Energy did not “deliver propane gas to Stornoway” were never made. Had they been, BG would have “located” those call recordings.

Conclusion: It is no small matter that BG cannot produce information it should have in its “data storage system”. If BG forwards documentation to Ombudsman Services: Energy for the specified purpose of having an Investigation into an allegation that it was “withholding a certain tariff” from customers halted, that documentation is of consequential importance. Therefore, if in response to a request for a copy of that consequential document, BG states: “…[It] is not able to locate the document..” that raises legitimate questions as to its ability to “locate” any requested data. Including recordings of customer phone calls.

If BG, or any other company for that matter, can “lose” requested consequential data it would be simply outrageous if it (they) were allowed to dismiss that loss as unimportant whilst simultaneously claiming that its inability to find different, possibly incriminating, data is “proof” that it never existed. That would be the most explicit example one could ever find of “One rule for customers and a different rule for service providers”.



Addendum to Last Week’s Post following Newspaper Reports on Friday 12th June:


As many of you will have seen in the Press & Journal and Daily Mail, the claims that British Gas had “won” a “court fight over blog posts.” What can I do but come clean? Completely clean too, so I have no choice but to reveal the extent of British Gas’ overwhelming victory by quoting Lady Poole’s Adjudication.   
What British Gas asked for:

“…The [British Gas] summons had originally been concerned with a blog post of 2 May and further posts entitled “Preface to Episode 1” and “Episode 1” posted on 10 May 2020 (together, the “initial blog posts”). Further blog posts were added by the minute of amendment: one entitled “Court Decision” posted on 14 May 2020, another entitled “Episode 2” posted on 17 May 2020 and a post entitled “Episode 3” posted on 24 May 2020 (together, the “new blog posts”).
[British Gas] sought an additional interim order for the removal of the initial blog posts and the new blog posts (my italics here and throughout).

What British Gas got:

Regarding the initial blog posts:
“In my opinion the pursuers would be likely to succeed after proof in their conclusion for an order of specific implement for the initial blog posts to be removed.
 I also find, narrowly, that the balance of convenience favours grant of the interim order for the removal of the initial blog posts”.
                                                
Regarding the new blog posts:
“…Are the pursuers likely to establish at proof that publication should not be allowed? It is to be noted that the order which the pursuers currently seek in relation to the new blog posts is for removal in their entirety. I do not consider that the pursuers would be likely to obtain that order after proof.”
…I have already noted the difference in character between the initial blog posts and the new blog posts. There is extensive text in the new blog posts which, in my opinion, and without prejudice to whatever may be decided by a judge after proof, is unlikely to be found to be unjustifiably defamatory…
Accordingly I refused the order sought for interim removal of the new blog posts…”
                                                                                                            Lady Poole. 29 May 2020.

I have to admit, and I’m sure you, dear readers, will agree, British Gas’ overwhelming victory - as revealed above - is perhaps the greatest victory since Pyrrhus of Epiruswon” the Battle of Asculum nearly three hundred years before the birth of Christ.

Comments

  1. What are the papers playing at? WON? If both teams score a goal, nobody won.
    The information they printed was in the blog on May 14th but the P&J claims it was from last week! You should call the Press Complaints commission.
    In fact here's their number :-0300 123 2220

    ReplyDelete
  2. Was the "response" from British Gas by telephone and what was the position of the Agent? If you can't provide these details you could be in a spot of legal bother since stating British Gas has given such a response without proof could be interpreted as "defamatory".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The BG response was provided in writing by an agent who has been tasked with responding to any requests/allegations made by me regarding BG's business in Stornoway.
      Repeating verbatim, information provided by BG is not defamatory!

      Delete
  3. So the MP will now require a new investigation into the claims of all those constituents who BG says were lying because it "couldn't find records of their calls". And what about an investigation into who the "Local Resident" is that appears, insanely, to want British Gas to win. We could start that by looking at registered imbeciles!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes "Local Resident" does appear very odd given that a win would be a win for Stornoway residents. Of course as DJ Trump from Back has said before: it could just as easily be a 600 pound couch potato from anywhere who wrote it. My money's on an odious 800 pound tub of lard hundreds of miles from here.
      As to the MP: I have emailed his office to ask if he will request Ofgem re-open its original Investigation based on BG's new position regarding Data which cannot be "located".

      Delete
  4. According to you, when British Gas cannot find an "Important document", "that signifies the document is lost". I think it means British Gas is trying to keep the document hidden.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Deary deary me, but there really are some cynical people in this world! British Gas deliberately "trying to keep a document hidden"?
      I couldn't possibly comment!

      Delete
  5. I've been waiting all day to read that the MP has acted on the shocking information in this week's episode and requested OFGEM reinvestigate his claim that Scottish Gas were ripping off his constituents by up to a million quid a year. Has he?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No response as yet, but I don't expect an MP would ignore a constituent's request for assistance. I'll update when he does.

      Delete
    2. That's a completely different story in today's Press & Journal. Now it appears British Gas lost badly. What happened since last week? And where's 'Local Resident' gone?

      Delete
    3. Good question. Local Resident seemed ecstatic last week - almost as if he was some kind of British Gas cheerleader!
      The Reason the story was updated, I think, is that the P&J have, since last week, discovered that the Adjudication Local Resident found so climactic was actually over a month old and that a more recent Adjudication - BG had went back to Court to ask for the removal of all Posts "In their Entirety" - revealed a catastrophic defeat for BG.

      Delete
  6. Wow! Just read the story in today's P&J. You're absolutely on the money - British Gas did fail to get the Blog shut down. Even the little they did get is nullified by simply publishing the letter it's lawyer sent to the court as well as the MP's press release declaring British Gas was overcharging his constituents by up to £1million each year. That way I, and everyone else will decide if it's guilty of fraud and if it's lawyer is corrupt all by ourselves!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Just seen yesterday's Daily Mail. What a difference a few days can make. From 'British Gas wins' last Friday to 'British Gas fails' yesterday!!! That is something. A £70 billion company 'fails' to silence a small businessman! Local Residents must be happy though!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. All "Local Residents" I spoken with today are delighted. Don't know so much about the odious commentator calling himself (I'm certain it's a male) "Local Resident" - if the Daily Mail headline of yesterday had an equal and opposite effect on him as last week's, I'm guessing he's thinking about taking an evening stroll half-way across the nearest high bridge!

      Delete
  8. Never mind Mr "Local Resident" who obviously cares only for himself and his boyfriend!

    What about British Gas' very expensive legal representatives?

    I mean surely if the Daily Mail comments are not 100% accurate then British Gas will unleash their snarling dogs of war, upon it?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You seem to know even more than Mr "Local Resident" than me!!!
      As to BG's "dogs of law": I'll be watching closely. The Daily Mail has far too much legal wherewithal to write such a story without being on the most solid of ground.
      One interesting legal issue did arise today: After Monday BG's "Outside Counsel" (cf Episode 2) will no longer be representing BG.

      Delete
    2. How do you know that?

      Delete
    3. So who will be representing British Gas after Monday?

      Delete
    4. Don't know. Its Outside Counsel's response to my enquiry was: "we shall be using counsel to conduct the evidential hearing".

      Delete
    5. What is the reason for being in court on Monday?

      Delete
  9. yea right! so British Gas' outside counsel is using an outside counsel??

    Here's what I think! British Gas saw the Daily Mail headline, and thought, How much is this useless Git costing us? The answer to the question resulted in the outside counsel becoming the "GET YOUR ARSE OUTSIDE, Counsel"

    Look on the bright side, it might hire the Advocate who was responsible for the Mail story!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Replies
    1. To the question, "What is the reason for being in court on Monday": The Hearing is in response the British Gas' (ex) outside counsel's refusal to supply me with the "Client Instructions" requiring him to inform a Scottish Sheriff that his client's Executive Officer, Ms K White was only a "junior customer services manager". The Court will decide on Monday if it is perfectly acceptable to inform a Sheriff that an Executive Officer is a "junior customer services manager" so long as you "Capitalise" the information.

      Delete
    2. Regarding Monday's Case: How much are you after them for. And have they offered to settle?

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    3. I'm claiming for £2900,00. and have been offered £2045.62 to settle.

      Delete
    4. You cannot be serious! But if you are, British Gas will have spent in the region of 10 times the £855,00 which is the difference between their offer and your claim. There's something seriously amiss here. Remember this though, no-one will be on oath on Monday so make sure you call British Gas' ex counsel to the evidential hearing as a witness. That'll allow you to get to the real reason he miscalled the Executive Officer.

      Delete
    5. Thanks. That seems like good advice.

      Delete

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