Manchester Evening News

Rogue builder is spared jail

- By JOHN SCHEERHOUT

A ROGUE builder who left his victim with a roof full of holes and more than £7,000 out of pocket has escaped jail.

Joseph Gerrard, 48, took £3,500 from Patsy Stevens for a new roof at her home in Little Hulton but abandoned the job before it was finished.

She had to take out a loan to pay another builder almost £4,000 to fix the mess he had left behind.

Patsy, who had just been the allclear from cancer, had saved for five years for the roof and Velux windows, and found what she thought was a reputable builder on the net.

Gerrard, who claimed to have been trading for 25 years although he had no qualificat­ions, quoted £3,820 and told the customer his work would be ‘guaranteed.’

Patsy handed over a £1,000 cash deposit - he refused to take a cheque - and then gave him another £1,000 when he turned up with two other workers to begin the job on July 12 last year, a court heard.

But Patsy found the gutters were blocked with rubble while roof tiles were missing and old tiles had been used, prosecutor Michael Blakey told Manchester Crown Court.

“The scaffoldin­g had disappeare­d which suggested the job had been completed,” said Mr Blakey. Patsy managed to call Gerrard but he demanded a further £2,000 and sent his workmen round again on July 21 last year, the day before she was due to go on holiday.

She didn’t have that much so she handed over £1,500 and was assured the work would be completed by the time she returned from her break.

When she came back a week later, she saw the roof still had not been finished. She found a huge wet patch in her bedroom.

The court heard she arranged buckets to catch the water and used a plastic sheeting to cover roof holes.

Patsy tried to contact the builder at the address he had given but the court heard ‘it didn’t exist.’

She called in trading standards, whose expert concluded Gerrard had left the roof in an unsafe condition, and eventually paid another builder £3,972 to fix it properly.

Gerrard claimed he had suffered a brain haemorrhag­e on August 28 last year which put him in a coma although he presented no medical documents to the court to verify this. He was due to be sentenced last month but didn’t turn up

Martin Pizzey, defending, said: “He regrets what has taken place. He took the job with the intention of fulfilling it but due to his deteriorat­ing health he was unable to do so.” Gerrard, of St Ledger Court, Accrington, who admitted one charge of unfair commercial practice and who has previous-drink-related conviction­s, was handed a two-year community order which includes 40 days of ‘rehabilita­tion activity.’

He must also carry out 150 hours unpaid work and must pay £3,500 compensati­on to his victim.

Judge Hilary Manley told the defendant: “This case is so serious it crosses the custody threshold, but I’m going to draw back from that because you have no previous conviction­s for similar behaviour or fraudulent activity.”

 ??  ?? Rogue builder Joseph Gerrard left water damage on a ceiling, left Patsy Stevens and how her roof was left
Rogue builder Joseph Gerrard left water damage on a ceiling, left Patsy Stevens and how her roof was left
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