the thinker wrote:
Thank you for that JD, I think the premise that our Lo is using is that all the business has been carried out BEFORE the person actually enters the vehicle, which was not the case in your enclosed article.
As if this situation is not bad enough we also have an out of area hackney who rides through the town displaying a door sticker with a mobile telephone number, our Lo tells us that if someone spots this and telephones him he can accept the booking, surely this is touting outside his area by displaying a mobile and not a land line number. The world certainly is a strange place.
I thought I had posted this but I can't see it? Anyway i'll post it again just in case it got lost?
It doesn't make any difference if the punter is in or out of the vehicle it is an offence to take a booking off the street and then take hire. Like I said, there is ample case law supporting this, not just Chorley and Knowsley.
In the Knowsley case the punter wasn't in the vehicle and he didn't even use the driver to phone the booking through to the office. The driver told the punter to go to the phone box, phone his firm and he would take him.
He was convicted of plying for hire and fined 1000 pounds.
The judge said the method used by the appellant was a sham, he could not flout the law for the price of ten pence.
Regards
JD