Observer wrote:
Richard C wrote:
WRONG WRONG WRONG ! Your advice Observer is michieveous and an incitement to PCJ.

If mikeramsden names his wife when he has no knowledge as to whether his wife or his wife's sister was the driver then he has no business to do so and should confine himself to the true facts. In naming BOTH, he has complied with S172 2) a)
the person keeping the vehicle shall give such information as to the identity of the driver as he may be required to give by or on behalf of a chief officer of police How to proceed after the truth has been given to them is then entirely up to the authorities. They can interrogate both ladies and if they then secure sufficient evidence to support a case against one then they should prosecute that case. If they can't then they can't proceed and without evidence the case should get dropped.
Just because the connection between the RK and his wife seems to be stronger than the RK and his sister has no relevance.
You don't know what you're talking about. Who the fxxx do think you are to tell me I'm wrong when you can't spell correctly or use everyday words in correct context (check dictionary for distinction between "infer" and "imply").
The OP's circumstance are analogous to those of (say) a ompany that is the RK of a vehicle which is a company car of an employee whose spouse/partner also drives the vehicle. If the RK (in this case the OP) receives a s.172 notice and is not the "keeper", he should nominate the person who is the keeper (the employee). If the employee was not the keeper at the relevant time, he should nominate the person who was. In the OP's case, the 'keeper' on the day in question was his wife and he should nominate her. That nomination has no evidential effect. The OP had no need to enquire whether his wife was driving or not. As far as he knew (before enquiring), she was driving or was certainly in the best position to know who was. His wife would receive a second s.172 notice and can then raise the issue (if she chooses) that another person could have been the driver at the time in question. The OP opens himself to a s.172 charge by obfuscating and it achieves nothing. If neither his wife nor her sister can remember who was driving then they have to say so (starting with his wife who (almost certainly) was 'in charge' of the car) and be prepared to give evidence to that effect. The OP cannot do so (because he wasn't in the vehicle) so there is absolutely no point in him getting involved.
Far from inciting PTCOJ, I am trying to make the OP aware of the possible risk of that offence if he tries to be clever.
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OK Observer …Lets not lower ourselves to using 4 letter words or criticizing each others spelling. Indeed, last time I looked in the dictionary, Company was spelt with a ‘c’…...
OK replying to your comments. S172 has 4 sections that apply to registered keepers who are not corporate bodies and the OP has not indicated that he is. I fail to see that the analogy you draw is relevant. Registered Keeper is a legal term and the RK is named on the V5C document. S172 refers to ‘the person keeping the vehicle’. I understand that as there is an absence of a definition of ‘the person keeping the vehicle’ in the Act such person must be the registered keeper. If the RK fails to respond, in practice he is the person on whom a S172 a) charge will be served and it will be served on the address in the V5C. The term “keeper” has no legal significance. The OP, we are agreed, has no knowledge of who the driver of the vehicle at the time of the offence. He has stated that 2 persons were using the car and neither can remember with certainty who was the person driving the vehicle. I maintain that by naming both persons the OP has discharged his obligations under S172. He is not being clever and neither is he obfuscating, he simply has no further relevant information to give. There is no difference between the OP loaning his car under the same circumstances to his wife’s two sisters or his wife and one of her sisters. If he accepts that neither person can remember who was driving the vehicle, he may not make assumptions as to who was the more likely person and name them. A weakness of the process by which S172 is used by the authorities is that the forms maintain the official pretence that a RK will always be able to nominate one person and indeed many believe that they do not really care if that one person is guilty beyond reasonable doubt as long as they pay and submit their licence for endorsement. So in this case the RK must explain the information he has given us to the authorities in a covering letter.
The authorities have two choices; they can accept that submission and proceed or not against the two nominees or they can reject that submission and bring a S172 2a) charge against the RK. The submission will be his evidence in defence for having complied and the prosecution case will have to be based around an argument that he did not exercise reasonable diligence or that he has lied in evidence and did know which of the two nominees ( or another ) was driving at the time of the offence. Which will be difficult, but certainly not impossible given the attitude of some magistrates.
If they accept the submission, then the authorities will have to seek further evidence
themselvesbefore they can charge one of the two nominees. They may send police to interview each nominee and I have experience of this. Clearly the authorities are prepared to expend considerable police time in pursuing this kind of case. But if the RK has give the authorities all the facts he cannot give anything further and has no legal obligation as far as I can see to assist the authorities further.
Observer wrote:
Richard C wrote:
;]You are just trotting out the frighteners used by the SCPs here Observer It may well be that the car is insured for any user and quite possible that the wife's sister has an "any car not the property of the insured...." clause on her own insurance. Provided the wife asked the wife's sister and she responded in the affirmative that should be quite sufficient as far as the wife is concerned.
Don't be stupid. I'm pointing out the possible weakness in the case. If a s.172 case ends up in court, the OP or his wife will need to convince the court that he/she is telling the truth. If the OP has an expensive car which he insures comprehensively, the court may find it unusual that he (or his wife) allows it to be driven by another with third party only cover. Not conclusive but a possible weakness. .
I would argue that should the insurance issue be mentioned it should be robustly refuted as a red herring. It might be that you have experience of this and we’d be pleased to hear this from you. The driver at the time of the offence is either legally insured under the RTA or not. Third party liability is sufficient. Provided I am satisfied that a person is a competent driver, I am happy to allow people to drive a car that I legally own ( even if I am not the RK of any of the cars I use ). If they are not I will not permit them to drive. If they suffer an own fault accident, I expect them to pay up for the damage. Same for me driving vehicles not my property and not loaned or hired to me under a hire purchase agreement. And the same applies to my wife and daughter and their friends.
Its all about risk which is the decision of the legal owner. Surprisingly fully comp insurance costs less than TPFT in many cases. And it covers a car for a full 8760 hours while the risk from driving is confined to a few hundred hours. Loaning a car is going to be a small fraction of that few hundred.
Observer wrote:
You appear to think you know about this stuff. You clearly don't. Classic case of a llittle knowledge being dangerous. What qualification do I have? Well apart from extensive professional experience of law, I kept a magistrates court tied up for two complete days on my own speeding case - and won.
Classic case could well apply to your goodself, but we do seem to have very similar qualifications. I have to deal extensively with law in my business and my last speeding case, which I also won, tied up a court for only five of six hours over four separate days.
