Written by John Kruse, one of the leading experts on Bailiff Law, this consumer friendly guide is essential reading for anyone who comes into contact with a bailiff.
The book is easy to understand and clearly explains the rights
a bailiff has, and also what they cannot do when collecting debts and repossessing goods etc.
I got stopped a few weeks back in the Highlands, 44mph in a 30. Small village less than 1/4 stretch of 30 zone. Own fault and accept the blame.
when charged the officer said I would be reported for the offence as he had no fixed penalty tickets left....buzy mr plod
However, today a neighbour handed me a letter she thought may have been for me. My house is No13 the letter was No73. When I opened it it has all my details and the offence, including mg dvla driver number. Its giving me the option of the 3 points and £60.
My question is do I forget about the letter as technicaly I havent received it and let the work out where they went wrong.
Clean licence for longer !!
did i read somewhere they must charge within 6months or was that for gatso offences
you received it at the roadside ! verbal NIP means they don't need to send a written one. the 14 day rule does NOT apply. Was the letter you now have a COFP ? Ignore it and you will just get a summons and have to pay more.
However, the summons also has to be served and presumably that would also go to the wrong address.
Clean licence for longer !!
did i read somewhere they must charge within 6months or was that for gatso offences
For speeding, points on the licence run from date of offence, not date of conviction.
In Scotland, the 6 month limit is to get to the first court hearing (pleading diet); in England/Wales it is to lay information for the issue of the summons. This applies to summary offences generally.
they would just convict in absence. cheaper to pay the CoFP (unless there is a totting up issue at the back and overlap means something to the poster).
they would just convict in absence. cheaper to pay the CoFP (unless there is a totting up issue at the back and overlap means something to the poster).
Any conviction where the summons was not served would be set aside on application. It may then be too late to issue a new summons.
Even if the Court allows the new summons as a 'continuation', the OP can argue that he is being unfairly penalised by the failure of both the PC concerned to have FPNs and the failure of the system to serve an FPN - which he would argue he would have paid at that time. The Court should then revert to the FPN penalty. As this is Scotland, I am pretty sure that there are no costs awards involved.
IOW, it may be worth the risk to ignore at this stage.
Well, if I didn't know about the letterto start with I would be in the dark of its excistence. Then non the wiser I would have assumed the pf didnt procced with the case? I think its a 50/50 gamble tho. Clean licence never been charged before.
HGV driver so clean ticket is amust in todays climate