There are many ways to lose a legal case. You can lose because you’re wrong. You can lose because the evidence isn’t there. You can lose because you misunderstood the law.
Or, if you’re very lucky and living in modern Scotland, you can lose because the clock ran out and the law politely but firmly refuses to even look at what happened, no matter how egregious, no matter how obvious, no matter how much the legislation was supposedly designed to stop the exact thing you’re complaining about.
Yes, I recently took a tenancy deposit case all the way to the Upper Tribunal in Scotland, which sounds very dramatic and impressive and like the kind of thing that should come with robes, oak-panelled rooms, and someone asking “are you quite sure you wish to proceed,” when in reality what it came with was a very clear confirmation of something deeply uncomfortable: under current housing law, the courts have no discretion to consider a tenancy deposit claim once a short statutory time limit has passed, even if the deposit was never protected, never returned, and never accounted for at all.
Not “limited discretion.”
Not “rare exceptions.”
None.
Zero.
Zilch.
The door is closed, locked, and legally fireproof.
And to be clear (because this matters) the ruling was not about whether the landlord complied with the law. The court didn’t weigh evidence, didn’t assess behaviour, didn’t determine fault, didn’t make a moral judgment, and didn’t even get the chance to ask the obvious follow-up questions that any reasonable person would ask if they heard “the deposit was never protected.” The ruling was simply this: the law says the claim must be raised within X time, that time passed, therefore the court’s hands are tied, thank you for your interest in justice, please exit via the gift shop.
Which is impressive in a way, because it means we’ve successfully built a legal framework where compliance is technically mandatory, enforcement is theoretically strict, and consequences are entirely optional provided enough time passes and nobody trips over the stopwatch.
Kudos.
Now, before anyone gets excited, this is not a rant about judges, tribunals, clerks, or anyone wearing a lanyard or a wig. The Tribunal did exactly what it was required to do. Judges don’t get to freestyle legislation like it’s an open-mic night; they apply the law as written, even when the outcome feels deeply unsatisfying and vaguely absurd. This is a legislative issue, not a judicial one, and pretending otherwise is how nothing ever gets fixed while everyone argues on social media.
The real question (the uncomfortable one) is whether our tenancy deposit legislation is still doing the job it was created to do.
Because let’s remember the original purpose here. Tenancy deposit protection schemes were introduced to deter bad practice, prevent deposits from disappearing into the landlord equivalent of a sock drawer, and give tenants confidence that their money wouldn’t be treated as an optional donation to the rental economy. The threat of penalties was meant to encourage compliance, not act as a polite suggestion with an expiry date.
Yet here we are, in a system where a deposit can be mishandled entirely, the breach can be real and undisputed, and the deciding factor becomes not “did the law get broken” but “did you complain quickly enough.”
Which is fine, apparently, unless you think laws should protect people in real life rather than just on paper.
And yes, I can already hear the counterarguments forming: “Time limits exist for a reason,” “certainty matters,” “claims can’t hang over people forever,” and all the other things that sound very sensible until you realise we’re not talking about historic medieval land disputes here, we’re talking about someone else’s money that was supposed to be safeguarded under a statutory scheme and simply wasn’t. There is a difference between preventing endless litigation and creating a system where non-compliance becomes strategically survivable.
The problem isn’t that time limits exist. The problem is that they are absolute, inflexible, and entirely blind to the substance of the breach.
In other words, the law currently says: we care very much about tenant protection, unless it’s slightly inconvenient, in which case never mind.
What makes this particularly awkward is that most tenants don’t wake up the morning after a tenancy ends thinking, “I must immediately initiate tribunal proceedings to preserve my statutory rights.” People move house, start new jobs, deal with life, chase emails, wait for responses, assume good faith, and generally behave like normal human beings rather than litigation-ready paralegals with a countdown timer on their phone.
By the time they realise something is wrong, the legal window may already be closing, or worse, already shut, quietly, efficiently, and without any warning label.
And that’s the bit worth paying attention to, because it suggests the system may be optimised not for fairness or deterrence, but for procedural neatness, which is excellent if you’re a flowchart and less excellent if you’re a person.
So what now.
Well, contrary to the popular internet approach, the answer is not “more court cases,” not “angrier emails,” and not “naming and shaming until everyone is exhausted.” The Tribunal has made it clear: litigation will not fix this, because the law simply does not allow the courts to fix it.
The way forward is awareness, policy review, and engagement with MSPs and housing organisations who actually have the power to amend the legislation so that it reflects its original intent rather than its current loopholes. That might mean introducing limited judicial discretion, or pausing time limits where non-compliance is concealed, or at the very least acknowledging that a law designed to deter bad practice should probably be capable of responding to it.
Sometimes losing a case isn’t a failure; it’s a diagnostic tool.
This case didn’t expose a bad actor , it exposed a structural weakness, a quiet gap between what the law promises and what it delivers, and those are exactly the gaps that only get fixed when enough people notice and say, calmly and persistently, “this doesn’t quite work, does it.”
So yes, I lost.
But in doing so, something more interesting surfaced.
And if that leads to better law, better protection, and fewer people discovering that justice has a sell-by date they didn’t know existed, then maybe that’s a loss worth taking (even if it does come with a faint smell of irony and a very strong sense that the system could, with minimal effort, do better).
Tag: Controversial
-
Recently, we have had quite the stir in the news, common circles and nearly every internet outlet with some major speculations around the infamous 5G network. This has been quite the topic to research, and it is astonishing to see some of the first articles that appear in Google searches are in fact supporting these conspiracy theories. Moreover, celebrities that hold a huge following on every social media are backing this absurd concept. Ironic, considering it is those same celebrities, who are definitely not experts on the subject of the electromagnetic spectrum, also indulge in sunbeds, plastic surgery, and private jets, who some might argue are a lot more detrimental to one’s health. Nevertheless, instead of trying to debunk each article I feel I will just state some facts to allow you to develop an understanding to how outrageous this is. I am in no way an expert myself, nonetheless, I have a rudimentary understanding of the concepts due to my qualification in Advanced Physics and, as my research skills have developed in University, as any good graduate I did my research via supported peer reviewed articles through the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers aka the IEEE. If anyone would like the specific articles, feel free to message, however, I am deliberately not including them in an attempt to encourage you to do your own research, as being a natural sceptic of anything delivered to you to support your bias, is healthy. Always question what you support and why you support it, even this blog included.
(more…)
