NIP/Dwight Yorke/Court Case etc
NIP/Dwight Yorke/Court Case etc
Author
Discussion

Golf_Fan

Original Poster:

45 posts

271 months

Wednesday 30th July 2003
quotequote all
Hello all,

There's so many threads concerning this now it's all getting a bit confusing!

Anyone know how the court case went? Has it passed yet?

Would be grateful for any help as I hate waiting and this NIP's (returned once) is just sitting there winking at me.

Cheers,

GF

FastShow

388 posts

272 months

Wednesday 30th July 2003
quotequote all
Judgement will be handed down tomorrow at 10am. That's about it at present.

Golf_Fan

Original Poster:

45 posts

271 months

Wednesday 30th July 2003
quotequote all
Great! Thanks. At least I'll know what to do with my NIP by then.

Wasted Bullet

426 posts

272 months

Wednesday 30th July 2003
quotequote all
don't hold your breath... I this is the 4th (I think) time they have set a date...

I think they are going to try to keep postpone untill they can hide the infomation under somthing...

SPIN SPIN SPIN...

onedsla

1,115 posts

276 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Does anybody know the website which will report the outcome?

FastShow

388 posts

272 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
And the result is...

Mawdesley - Conviction set aside - back for retrial at Warrington
Yorke - Conviction set aside

Costs granted for both!

I'd say we've done alright out of that little beauty!

gro

90 posts

281 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Well In theory something is definately happening this morning... Not sure how you get the judgement though..

Court 22
Before MR JUSTICE OWEN
Thursday, 31st July, 2003
At 10 o’clock
Application
for judgment
CO/823/2003 Mawdesley

Application
for judgment
CO/1041/2003 Yorke

www.courtservice.gov.uk/legal_pro/daily_lists/cause/divisional.htm

tonybav

14,397 posts

285 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Cannot see the judgement and have no idea why people are having a party. Unless I am mistaken this case is only an appeal against a speeding which was based on an unsigned NIP. This issue was also covered in R V Pickford so I would be very surpised if he did not get the decision over turned.

The question of whether a procecution under s172(1) for an unsigned nip will succeed is still open.



brigadier

21 posts

270 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all

Wasted Bullet

426 posts

272 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
brigadier said:
BBC News report

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/lancashire/3113107.stm

brigadier


manek

2,978 posts

304 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Pity I paid my NIP...

mondeoman

11,430 posts

286 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Sanity ... 1
New Labour ........ 0

john_p

7,073 posts

270 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
STOP!!!

Before we all get carried away..

According to the judgement:

"It follows that in my judgement a section 172 form completed with some or all of the information required to be given, but not bearing any signature or mark in the space designated for the signature does not satisfy the requirements of section 12"

This is info on the unsigned_nip yahoo group from someone who was at the court this morning and spoke to Mawdsley's brief .. more will probably follow on Safespeed but it seems that Yorke's NIP was overturned *because his agent filled in the form* and Mawdsleys will be retried because *he filled it in himself* but didn't sign it



So we'll have to wait for further analysis from people who know the law - I'm just passing on what someone at the court was told..

>> Edited by john_p on Thursday 31st July 13:02

chrisgr31

14,176 posts

275 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
john_p said:
STOP!!!

It's not good news!

According to the judgement:

"It follows that in my judgement a section 172 form completed with some or all of the information required to be given, but not bearing any signature or mark in the space designated for the signature does not satisfy the requirements of section 12"

This is info on the unsigned_nip yahoo group from someone who was at the court this morning and spoke to Mawdsley's brief .. more will probably follow on Safespeed but it seems that Yorke's NIP was overturned *because his agent filled in the form* and Mawdsleys will be retried because *he filled it in himself* but didn't sign it



Well not necessarilly bad news, just that there will be further delays. After all requiring signature of the form means that the owner of a car has to incriminate themsleves in order to complete it which may be against the human rights act. So we just move on the next stage. The interesting thing is that so far cases appear to be determined in favour of the motorist!

FastShow

388 posts

272 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
john_p said:

According to the judgement:

"It follows that in my judgement a section 172 form completed with some or all of the information required to be given, but not bearing any signature or mark in the space designated for the signature does not satisfy the requirements of section 12"

But it's the prosecution's job to satisfy Section 12, not the vehicle's registered owner.

The way I read it is that an unsigned NIP does not satisfy s12, and therefore is inadmissable as evidence. That's exactly what we wanted the judgement to say.

prelude4ws

592 posts

294 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
bbc news said:

The judge had been told similar cases were spreading "like a virus" to magistrates courts up and down the country


well we must be doing something right..

wonder how many of the "virus" ones are fellow pistonheaders?

>> Edited by prelude4ws on Thursday 31st July 13:08

_Al_

5,618 posts

278 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
FastShow said:

john_p said:

According to the judgement:

"It follows that in my judgement a section 172 form completed with some or all of the information required to be given, but not bearing any signature or mark in the space designated for the signature does not satisfy the requirements of section 12"


But it's the prosecution's job to satisfy Section 12, not the vehicle's registered owner.

The way I read it is that an unsigned NIP does not satisfy s12, and therefore is inadmissable as evidence. That's exactly what we wanted the judgement to say.




Phew. That stopped me mid-heart attack!


*not that I've had an NIP yet , but it's nice to know there's a defense if something bad happens!*


deltaf

6,806 posts

273 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Obviously the way to get around this little extra scam theyve tried to build in, is to simply get your lawyer to fill in the nip for you and send it back unsigned..... problem solved, case dismissed...next!

tonybav

14,397 posts

285 months

Thursday 31st July 2003
quotequote all
Please please please can we all read all the threads on this matter.

This case did not set a new president it just followed R V Pickford. It was never really in doubt that the case would go this way. All the rules of evidence require that a written statement of guilt must be signed, if it is not then the evidence is not admissable. So it proves what we already know you cannot be convicted on a speeding chrange on the basis of an unsigned nip.

What is still not been considered is whether if you do not sign the form can you be convicted of failing to identify the driver under s172(1).

Somebody has raised the ECHR Art 6 but Brown v Procurator Fiscal in the Privy Council in Scotland, the Scotish Appeal Court, has already decided in similar circumstances that the defendant had no right to silence. So all the CPS need to now is procecute D Yorke under s172(1) and win and all these threads are redundant.