JD wrote:
An application submitted on November 1st has a six month statutory expiry date which means it expires on May 1st. A licensing authority that refuses a license on the grounds of no unmet demand and then realises after the six months expiry date that it made a fundamental mistake in law when hearing the application, should in my opinion issue the license by default because the time for determination has expired. The council having admitted their mistake after the expiry date would have no defence in law and I believe a Sheriff would have no other option but to grant the license.
Any other course would be giving the council a second bite of the Cherry after the expiry date, which the law does not allow.
Regards
JD
I suspect this is why the council did this very thing. A deemed grant by a sheriff gets them off the hook. They can claim that it was all an error and their policy to restrict on the basis of the interim survey still holds. So, although Taylor's licence has been granted, don't bother applying boys, you won't be granted.
Except, we've asked what the current demand information is. Rather than just tell us that they have information that there is no unmet demand, the council have gone off on one to say they won't tell us what information they actually have. This errs in law, because they've got to, under FOI, divulge the info. We know they're sitting on a sud which will highlight sufficient demand to disburse the IPL. We've applied again. Another licence in the frame. They're fecked.
Now they can't say there is demand, they can't say there is no demand.
Anyone in the UK who wants an Edinburgh taxi licence which they could sell on at market rates, currently £50K, should apply now.
How can you sell this on? Quite simply because our council will never derestrict because it will feck their bus system, and the shiny new £600 million trams system.
Spend £1205 now, reap £50K soon. What a deal. Remember you heard it from me.
BTW It beats working for a living. All we have to do is play the system, and the system delivers £50K golden eggs.
BTW2 The application forms are on the council's web site www. edinburgh.gov.uk.
BTW3 It's easier to sell the company if you incorporate first. Just go to the Companies House site, the forms are there. It costs £20, £50 for the premium same day service. You can incorporate later, the council will charge you another £1205 for the privilege.
BTW 4 When you've bought the pad in Spain on the back of all your licence applications, remember to give me a good holiday rental rate. Zilch would be a good number.
