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.
Hi, I've received a summons for a speeding fine for last year, but on looking closer at it, the offence date seems wrong.
I did travel to Scotland with my family to surprise mother-in-law near that time but believe it was a few days after the speeding occurred.
Could I reply saying that I was not in the area on that date?
I think would have to very carefully check your dates of travel to ensure you were 100% sure you weren't there at that time. If so, you should be able to legal reply "the offence did not occur" and put the onus back on them to prove it.
Remember though that if you subsequently lost your costs/penalty may be higher than admitting guilt at the start. If you are correct that their date is wrong, irrelavent as to whether you were actually speeding on that road on another day, then AFAIK the case cannot go ahead.