I have spoken with trading standards, had people investigated, sued people, spoken in person with a judge in the small claims courts, have a family member who is a lawyer in London, had confidential correspondence with pharmaceutical companies over new drugs and on...
This thread is a joke.
He's been asked, multiple times, by different people, to describe the complaints and work in more detail.
None of that has been answered. Which, for me, is a strong warning sign that he's messed up and is looking for moral support, not legal help.
He says he's taken a camera into there. Part of judging a legal case like this is whether or not the majority of other people doing the same job would say it was acceptable. So those descriptions and the photos need to be seen by others. In fact, for a court case to work on quite a lot of cases like this, she'll need to get someone from somewhere like the Master Builders round to assess the quality, as an independent reference for the judge (who's not likely a decorator).
The cat on the window sill thing, that's entirely her problem. She should have kept it out of the room because even a judge will know it's reasonable to expect fresh paint to not be cat proof immediately. ***
But I seriously doubt someone would go to this much bother if paw prints (that had been repainted) where the only problem. Something is telling me there are other, not mentioned, problems.
I've met a lot of guys who say they're professionals or skilled, and genuinely believe it, and genuinely aren't. I very rarely bother using the word professional or any other superlative anymore with regards to work I do, because it's meaningless.
Long delays are encouraging, but they don't mean it's not still going to happen. It takes time to read the advice on filing court claims, time to speak to a lawyer and time for the court to reply.
Being paid for the work means nothing if you were paid as it was being done or if the problems were found / occurred after it was finished. It will mean even less if it was cash in hand and you weren't declaring it as income, as that's then tax evasion - which they can check by asking the bank for your statements for that period of time (the bank has to give those to the court, so it's not really a request).
Ignoring someone when they send you a letter, especially one relating to a legal complaint and signed for, is a VERY bad idea. The judge doesn't want to see small claims cases, because it's usually boring and petty, and wastes the time he could be spending on more serious problems (murder, child abuse etc).
They want you to have as much proof as possible that you tried to sort the problem out first - e.g. a photocopy of the letters you send back, with the receipt from posting it as proof it was sent to that address. They even advise you to speak to an arbitrator or a Guild before the court.
A judge will decide who owes what after hearing the case (and seeing photos). He can ask for 100% of the charge back, the court fees AND any expenses she's incurred as a result of your work and the court case (time off work / stress / paint for redoing things). Or, he can choose a small charge to repair SOME of the work.
The amount is based on what other people involved in that area think of your work. If 3 different guys come in and say, that's horrendous and it may as well all come off, you'll get raped on the money. Your mates, and hers, are not an unbiased reference, and kind of pointless in a court case. It has to be someone most people agree has some idea of what they're talking about and doesn't really care who wins or looses.
If you ignore the court or don't pay up, they'll issue a bailiff order against you to seize assets and immediately auction them, with no reserve. So you can have paid £1k for a new TV and have it cover £0.01's worth of the order if no one at the auction happens to want it. Leaving you down £999.99 on the TV and with the rest of it to pay. Declaring bankruptcy will entirely wreck your chances of getting a loan, mortgage or credit again and they will seize the assets as well, and won't go away - they'll still want it back decades later.
The most important point out of all of this is..... WHAT IS SHE COMPLAINING ABOUT?
Need VERY specific details about ALL of the faults she's suggesting suing you for - preferably in her words. Not "I think I did a good job". Photos would be good too. I thought I did a good job fixing up our back garden, then realized I'd put a gully in without a trap.
If this kind of thing happens to you, you have two options.
1.) You're 100% confident that the work would be passed as okay by a lot of the good people in your area of work. So you reply saying, "I believe this work is up to the standard of ...[well known, reliable reference - e.g. Part P requirements for electrics]... I would correct it if found not to be but would recommend you consult [that standard]"
2.) You're not sure (e.g. it's a decorating job, where there's no black and white standard defined for the neatness of your work), so you DESCRIBE IN DETAIL and show photographs of it to other people.
I can't stress that enough. You're asking for advice on something that could cost you your house, without actually mentioning anything to do with what it is she's not happy with.
***We had some builders round who fitted the kitchen. Before the doors got on, they went home and the cat ****ed in all of the units to mark them. I woke up and found one of the builders was cleaning the insides. I said thanks for that, knowing that was my fault and nothing to do with their work.