MR T wrote:
The point you are deliberately avoiding is that vehicles have to be serviced, and at times road tested, sometimes road-testing might be over a couple of days( intermittent fault). and that the council must recognise the fact that a mechanic is needed to ascertain and repair the vehicle so that it fulfils the council's conditions on safety, over riding factor public safety.
I am not deliberately avoiding any point. I have pointed out the law as it stands. If you wish to make assumptions of what a court of law might decide in these circumstances then so bit it, however I for one have no intention of second guessing what the high court might decide?
The only opinion I have on the matter is that which has already been stated in law and just so you fully understand what that is, my position is that until the relevant legislation is changed to allow unlicensed hackney carriage drivers to drive a hackney carriage when it is not being used in plying for hire, then I have no other alternative than to accept the ruling of the court.
Don't forget its you who wants to tinker around the edges with all this outdated legislation, the rest of us want a new modern act that will encompass the many different modes of hire and reward in one fell swoop.
I think that goes for the majority of people who frequent this website.
Quote:
in my opinion, the magistrate would have to consider whether it would be reasonable For every mechanic in the country to have to hold a licence both private hire and hackney from every licensed authority in the event that he would at some time or other have to road test a Hackney or private hire vehicle, the stupidity is beyond words, and it is obvious the Ministry of Transport hold the same opinion.
You are entitled to your opinion regardless of how informed or ill informed it might be? I am not going to war with your opinion, I presented the facts as they currently stand. You mention magistrates but I think you might find a case such as this might eventually go beyond the jurisdiction of the magistrates.
Quote:
Under sections 48 and 51 of the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976, the licensing authority is under a specific statutory obligation not to grant a PHV licence unless it is satisfied that the vehicle is safe and in a suitable mechanical condition
Section 48 refers specifically to the licensing of private hire vehicles and the reference to mechanical fitness is specific to them, you are going to have to search the appropriate legislation that defines mechanical fitness of hackney carriages if we are to concentrate our minds on accuracy?.
I think the person in question was driving a hackney carriage, wasn't he?
Section 48 describes an unlicensed vehicle obtaining a license but as we know this also includes renewal. However, in this particular case an unlicensed driver was driving a licensed hackney carriage. It is your understanding that he was legally entitled to do that because he says he was road testing the vehicle for mechanical defects. I can't find legislation that allows an unlicensed person to drive a licensed hackney carriage other than what is laid down in the relevant road transport act. We have already published that relevant section and if you can show me where it says an unlicensed person can drive a licensed hackney carriage then I might be persuaded that the person in this case has a valid reason in law for driving a licensed hackney carriage vehicle while being unlicensed.
You will know doubt notice that section 48 isn't about the legalities of who can drive a licensed vehicle that is fully explained in section 46. Section 48 only concerns the mechanical fitness of the vehicle when it is presented for test, how that mechanical fitness was arrived at is not the concern of the council.
section 46 in its entirety.
"(1) Except as authorised by this Part of this Act--
(a) no person being the proprietor of any vehicle, not being a hackney carriage or London cab in respect of which a vehicle licence is in force, shall use or permit the same to be used in a controlled district as a private hire vehicle without having for such a vehicle a current licence under section 48 of this Act;
(b) no person shall in a controlled district act as driver of any private hire vehicle without having a current licence under section 51 of this Act;
(c) no person being the proprietor of a private hire vehicle licensed under this Part of this Act shall employ as the driver thereof for the purpose of any hiring any person who does not have a current licence under the said section 51;
(d) no person shall in a controlled district operate any vehicle as a private hire vehicle without having a current licence under section 55 of this Act;
(e) no person licensed under the said section 55 shall in a controlled district operate any vehicle as a private hire vehicle;
(i) if for the vehicle a current licence under the said section 48 is not in force; or
(ii) if the driver does not have a current licence under the said section 51.
(2) If any person knowingly contravenes the provisions of this section, he shall be guilty of an offence."
The licences to which this section refers are issued by the district council for the area of each controlled district. They consist of a licence to use a vehicle as a private hire vehicle under s 48, a driver's licence to drive private hire vehicles under s 51 and a licence to operate private hire vehicles under s 55. Under ss 45(2) and 80(2) the application of the relevant part of the Act and the efficacy of licences issued under it are territorially limited. Section 45(2) reads:
"If the Act [that is the Town Police Clauses Act 1847] is in force in the area of a district council, the council may resolve that the provisions of this Act, other than this section, are to apply to the relevant area; and if the council do so resolve those provisions shall come into force in the relevant area..."
_____________________
In these circumstances private hire vehicle has no relevance whatsoever. This case involves a licensed hackney carriage vehicle and we should concentrate our minds on that alone.
Regards
JD