The Sunday Post (Dundee)

– Shattered Angela Macgillivr­ay

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to the Macgillivr­ays, the insurance firm decided their six- acre croft was a business run from their home, making their claim invalid. The couple say the insurers accused them of running a business from the house and not declaring it before, after months of negotiatio­ns, passing to the matter to Trinity’s lawyers.

The pair who – work full- time with the NHS – said they keep two rescue donkeys, five dogs, three rescue cats, 11 hens, a cockerel, and 43 sheep - to keep grass under control – on the land.

Donald, 57 – who works with the Scottish Ambulance Service, and Angela, 51, who before the fire worked at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary and is now a primary care nurse – insist their croft, run from an outbuildin­g – is a hobby and costs, rather than makes, them money.

They also claim they insured only the three- bedroom house with Trinity and not the outbuildin­gs and land that surrounds it, which are uninsured, in line with legal advice contained in guidance provided by the law firm handling the conveyanci­ng.

The Macgillivr­ays – who married in 2013 and who between them have seven children – drafted in their own solicitor at the end of June 2018 to contest the decision.

Angela – who with Donald bought the policy online – claimed: “Trinity accused us of running a business from the house that we did not declare when we took out the policy. They said it was up to us to prove we were not running a business.”

“We got a letter from them saying we had misreprese­nted ourselves. We were angry and bewildered. How could we walk away? We have done nothing wrong.

We are paying £ 1,700 a month in mortgage and still have 12 years to go. We cannot afford to walk away.

“Trinity have not said ‘no’. They have not, as yet, refused to pay. If they had that would be a step forward. Our solicitor says then we could then go to the ombudsman.

“But by passing it to their lawyers for an indefinite period they have left us in a legal limbo with nowhere to turn.”

“We truly appreciate all the help we have had from our family and friends, but living here is having a profound effect on our relationsh­ip and on our physical health. Sunnyside was the home of our dreams. It was where we were going to be spending the rest of our lives. Now we can’t bear to be here.”

Donald admits he was given a business reference number by the Department of Agricultur­e but says the croft has never been more than a hobby or made money, adding: “They are saying the house and the farm are one and the same, and we are saying the house is separate from the farm.”

Trinity Claims said no decision has been taken on whether the couple’s claim is valid or not and denied that they had been advised to withdraw it.

A spokesman said they were waiting for more informatio­n before taking a decision, adding: “It is a matter of public record that the farm is a registered business.

“We are sympatheti­c to Mr and Mrs Macgillivr­ay’s position and have been seeking an early resolution by offering alternativ­e suggestion­s to obtain the informatio­n about the business, required by insurers, in order to bring the matter to a conclusion.”

‘ We were angry and bewildered. How could we walk away? We have done nothing wrong

 ??  ?? Donald and Angela Macgillivr­ay outside their fire-ravaged home near Fyvie, left, and, right, beside the caravan where they have had to spend the last 18 months
Donald and Angela Macgillivr­ay outside their fire-ravaged home near Fyvie, left, and, right, beside the caravan where they have had to spend the last 18 months
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs tackle the blaze
Firefighte­rs tackle the blaze
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