Headline: Motorist has to pay £135
Headline: Motorist has to pay £135
Author
Discussion

zoomzoomzoom

Original Poster:

27 posts

266 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
This is the headline in the court hearing section of my local paper. A 25 yr old driver admitted driving a car without insurance and otherwise than in accordance with a licence and failing to produce an MOT test certificate. He was ordered to pay £100 fine and £35 costs and had 6 points put on his licence.

Let me get this right... here's a driver with no MOT and no Insurance and he's fined about the same amount as 2 weeks insurance for the average young driver (last year, aged 24, I paid about £2000 in car insurance).

Where's the justice here? What incentive is there to insure or MOT (and hence maintain) your car? If I get caught 20 times a year (very bad luck) then I'm not out of pocket. The lad who has just received this fine is even less likely to buy insurance now that the cost will have spiralled with the 6 points he got, so he's probably going to go uninsured another year and risk another £100 (shock horror) fine.

I bet the fine dates back to 1950 when £100 was a lot of money. What's going on?

Daz
webmaster - barryboys.co.uk

dragstar

3,924 posts

271 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
#yeah zoom, zoom, zoom,

zoom, zoom, zoom,

ohhhh yeah, go zoom, zoom, zoom,

go zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom#

mazda advert

alans

3,629 posts

277 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
seems to be the going rate in Southampton magistrates court for no insurance, although a few weeks ago somebody got done for £25 I kid you not. my son is looking at paying 2.5K third party f&t for his first car

HarryW

15,776 posts

290 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
alans said:
seems to be the going rate in Southampton magistrates court for no insurance, although a few weeks ago somebody got done for £25 I kid you not. my son is looking at paying 2.5K third party f&t for his first car

Blimey alan, whats his first car then .
No 1 son (17) has quiet a few quotes around the £1K mark on a first car (pug306-1.4 £1.5K) in godsport.

Harry

Kinky

39,895 posts

290 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
hummmm, £135. That's £10 more than the woman who was done for drink driving, who knocked over and killed someone.

She also got a 12 month ban - but that was it.

As you correctly say - what is the incentive to be legit?

zoomzoomzoom

Original Poster:

27 posts

266 months

Wednesday 10th December 2003
quotequote all
It makes sense to be legit if you're fully comp, which I am on my 'zoom zoom' but my main car is 3PFT and costs me about £500 a year with a reasonably high excess too despite 4 yrs NCB. I could replace my car (just about) for £500 so surely I'm better off taking the risk of the £135 fine than renewing my insurance?

The problem is I'm old fashioned and have a conscience and couldn't brake the law in that way. However, I do see the motivation behind why so many do ....

count duckula

1,324 posts

295 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
quotequote all
Its all boIIocks IMHO, the law in this area is an ass.


Malc

The Wiz

5,875 posts

283 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
quotequote all
count duckula said:
Its all boIIocks IMHO, the law in this area is an ass.


Malc


Only in this area?

muley

1,453 posts

302 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
quotequote all
If he never had insurance and has no intention of getting insurance then the punishment is too lenient.

However, recently my son was asked to produce and discovered his MOT had expired (by 2 days) When he produced the documents he was cautioned for the offence of driving without insurance (because it was only valid if the car was MOT'd) In his case we're hoping for no points and less than £200 fine ....

roosevelt

396 posts

282 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
quotequote all
See this, you can get away with murder (almost) these days...
Different story for those caught speeding though, most would be happy with either ruling me thinks..


www.eveningnews24.co.uk/Content/News/story.asp?datetime=11+Dec+2003+12%3A06&tbrand=ENOnline&tCategory=NEWS&category=News&brand=ENOnline&itemid=NOED11+Dec+2003+12%3A07%3A50%3A080

count duckula

1,324 posts

295 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
quotequote all
The Wiz said:

count duckula said:
Its all boIIocks IMHO, the law in this area is an ass.


Malc



Only in this area?


good point

Malc

monster1

63 posts

266 months

Thursday 11th December 2003
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There doesn’t seem to be any consistency in sentencing. I stop a lad (18) who was riding a stolen moped. He failed to stop for Police, got chased for twenty minutes, cutting up every body. He was over the drink drive limit, no licence and no insurance.

He got a £75 fine and 12 month ban.

I got 2 ‘Police’ points on my licence for "ramming" him with the van !!

mcflurry

9,182 posts

274 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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I would have squashed him with the van

james_j

3,996 posts

276 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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Travel too fast and you may end up in prison!

Don't you just love justice?

g_attrill

8,650 posts

267 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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muley said:

However, recently my son was asked to produce and discovered his MOT had expired (by 2 days) When he produced the documents he was cautioned for the offence of driving without insurance (because it was only valid if the car was MOT'd) In his case we're hoping for no points and less than £200 fine ....


Did the police check the policy to see if the insurance would have been valid? Some only specify that the car must in a roadworthy condition, which is even sillier because the Road Traffic Act 1988 states that the condition of the vehicle cannot be used as a reason for insurers to invalidate third party liabiility, much the same way as they can't say that being drunk invalidates your policy.

Gareth

forever_driving

1,869 posts

271 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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It's cases like these that really makes me loathe being in law abiding citizen.

It makes you want to join the scrotes and not bother with all this MOT/insurance/Tax bullshe-et

Dwight VanDriver

6,583 posts

265 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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I agree it looks ridiculous when compared to the cost of Insurance.

Bear in mind that before Their Worships passed the sentence an enquiry would be made as to the financial standing of the accused. Prisons are full so no option there. What would be the point of fining him 1000 if he had no means to pay? Presumably they came up with a fiqure that he could pay with some hardship.

Our masters inform us that it is the fact that they are caught and convicted which is deterent/punishment in itself and the reason why hanging no longer applies for Murder.

DVD

knowley

145 posts

299 months

Monday 5th January 2004
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Its just plain ridiculous!

There should be FIXED punishments for all motoring offences.

zcacogp

11,239 posts

265 months

Monday 5th January 2004
quotequote all
Makes me sick to hear this sort of thing. The only up-side is that this particular pond-life specimen didn't (presumably) cause any damage to anyone else's car while driving without insurance.

The whole system sucks. A fine so small is stupid. Fineing the guy any more when he is impoverished is stupid. Car insurance going up as a result of being fined for not having car insurance is stupid, as he simply won't buy it next time. It is partially caused by car insurance being so pricey in the first place, but guess why this is - yup, it is because there are so many uninsured drivers driving around, causing hugely expensive claims!

The trouble is that people view being able to drive a car (and often a smart one at that) as a "Right", not a "Priviledge" (sp?). There should be some way of only allowing people with the necessary documentation to take to the road, and preventing the rest. (And I maintain, as with this and many other things, it is not the size of the punishment which will deter people from commiting crimes, it is the chance of them getting caught. While matey knows that he can drive for many years without insurance and get away with it, why shouldn't he? It makes astute financial common sense.)

And as for not being able to pay a larger fine ... it comes down to people being able to create more trouble than they can ever get themselves out of, financially. Bring back the poor-houses? What if this guy was given 6 months hard labour? Or publically flogged? (No, I'm not joking.)


Oli.

forever_driving

1,869 posts

271 months

Monday 5th January 2004
quotequote all
The fine should be twice the highest insurance quote (for said car and driver) that the prosecution can find.

If the scrote can't pay, they get community service for however many hours it would take to pay off the loan at minimum wage.