Firstly, I know this is not a programming related question at all, but I have done everything that I can, read every blog about this that google could show me, and tried half of it all but my client is just hard as a rock to get past.

I completed this website 4 months ago. (I would like to keep the website anonymous - if this post comes up on google search for his customers, it will have a negative impact on his business). We did several iterations, he was very demanding (and nosy), I complied with every single thing he wanted, including the font-size of the footer which destroyed the aesthetic looks by quite a bit. (and he messed with the colors too, making it look dangerously childish and unprofessional)

Anyway, he was very friendly during he whole process. After getting all the requirements I accepted to build the website for £950 and I charged him £150 in advance so he wouldn't want to bail out after I started the work. The requirements kept changing quite a lot, I made adjustments as and completed the website just 5 days late, w.r.t. the agreed date, in-spite all the changes in requirements.

that was four months ago. he has never returned my calls nor replied to my emails since then. How do I get the money back from him? I really need some advice on this, this is the second time someone has not payed me.

points to be noted:
1) we did not sign any contract.
2) I still hold the passwords for ftp, cpanel and everything. I dont want to bring the site down. somehow it doesnt seem ethical to me.

ps: sorry all you admins, i know this is not a programmatic problem but I dont know where else to seek help. If you want to delete this, of course, please do.

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Who owns the domain and hosting? As an aside, you may also want to try this on reddit.com – misha Dec 3 '10 at 13:41
This is, I think, off topic for this site. You might want to post the question to programmers.stackexchange.com - I think its more likely to be in-topic there. Alternatively, you should consider contacting a lawyer. – John Christensen Dec 3 '10 at 13:41
You didn't sign a contract? Bwah hah hah hah hah. – Paul Tomblin Dec 3 '10 at 13:42
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closed as off topic by LukeH, Paul Tomblin, Bill the Lizard Dec 3 '10 at 13:44

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3 Answers

we did not sign any contract

I think you have your answer right there.

this is the second time someone has not payed me

Get things in writing and hopefully there won't be a third.

Honestly, that's about all there is to it. You had an agreement, he backed out. There's no real legal defense against dishonesty or being a jerk.

I dont want to bring the site down.

Are you hosting it, or in some way in control of the hosting? If he hosts it, then it might not be a good move to bring it down because it could be seen (legally) as an attack on his property (the server/hosting). If you host it, you're well within your rights to shut it off for lack of payment. He doesn't have a contract requiring otherwise.

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i dont know, they didn't sign a contract, so does the developer still own it till he receives payment? – hvgotcodes Dec 3 '10 at 13:47
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@hvgotcodes: If it's hosted on a server not owned by the developer, and there's no contract to spell out access rights, it could be a significant risk to try to push the issue. Professionally it may be better to err on the side of prudence. I suppose the developer could FTP to the site and "take back the files" (not mess with the hosting, just reclaim his property) and stick with the defense that he was granted access rights, as evident by his username/password working. (Hopefully he has a unique username/password so it can't be argued that he used somebody else's.) Consult a lawyer, though. – David Dec 3 '10 at 13:50
that sounds reasonable. he should talk to a lawyer. – hvgotcodes Dec 3 '10 at 14:00
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Tell them you will have to bring the site down if they cannot pay your bill. Wait some time. Then bring it down, only bring it back up when they pay.
I'm not sure about your country but here lwayers would be out of the question for these kind of fees.

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I hate to say this, but I would chalk this one up to experience, and think about how you're going to avoid a situation like this for the next project you go into. Getting a contract in place would be a sensible place to start

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