Attempted Robbery In Cape Town
ChatterBank3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Andy Boz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Surely though Waldo, if you have a car that is off the road and on your own property they can still fine you if you have not declared it off the road?"
Yes - if it's not taxed, because it is illegal not to do one of two things:
1) Tax it or
2) Get a SORN
"Why should we have to pay a fine when cars are not on the road and we haven't declared it?"
er.. because it's illegal. You don't have to agree with the system of car taxation, but that's still the law!
"Why is it up to us to tell them?"
Because it's a bit difficult for the DVLA to guess where you're keeping your car!
In addition to paying for road buliding and maintenance, road tax proves that a vehicle is insured and MOT'd and thus safe to drive on the roads, therefore it's in the public interest that cars that do not display valid road tax are not driven on the roads. However, its not illegal to keep a car which is not road worthy off the road. The SORN ensures that the DVLA's database of roadworthy cars is complete.
If it's on the road it needs tax, if it's off, it needs a SORN and if you don't have the appropriate one, you're commiting an offence, simple.
I do feel a bit downtrodden at times.
People who don't tax or insure their cars, most likely wont have the car registered in their name in the first place, so they're not going to get caught. Whereas people who have forgotten to tax their car, or haven't got the money till pay day will be punished.
I've never dropped litter, having had it installed in me not to, I'm basically a law abiding, tax paying member of society, but if I have a lapse in concentration and go 45 instead of 40 past a speed camera, or the wind catches my crisp packet, I'm the one going to pay, not the sods who regularly break the law.
It seems to me that the serious crimes get punished more leniently and the minor ones more harshly than previously. I know the argument, if you don't do anything wrong then you've got nothing to worry about, but are we all seriously that squeaky clean?
I'm afraid it's the tax paying 'middle classes' that end up feeling put apon and dejected, and many of which are leaving the country.
If you have your house broken into you're lucky to see a policeman and you can't get insurance on work tools because they're stolen so regularly, but god forbid you're 5 minutes over on your parking ticket, they come out the woodwork.
Thanks Waldo. I do understand all that. But in your original answer you only talked about cars that were on the road not having a licence. I was responding to that comment.
However, I still agree with Andy Boz about the innocent until proven guilty remark. To be fined for not declaring a car off the road is ludicrous - even if it is the law. If we were to get rid of our televisions would we have to declare it to the BBC or be fined.
Waldo. Sorry if I was unclear. I was trying to point out that Andy Boz, in my opinion, was talking about being fined for not declaring a car off the road (which I consider is somewhat unfair). Your original reply to was pointing out that if you have an untaxed car on the road it is an offence of which you are obviously guilty. Of course, I would agree with the justness of this.
The point I was attempting to clarify was that this gov't is too reliant on 'on the spot' fines . I am unconvinced that the gov't is fair, with regard to SORN, and TV licences etc. As far as I'm concerned, the gov't seems intent on imposing a 'Big brother' society (eg photocard driving licences) and we just all appear to lie down and get shafted.
I am familiar with the SORN rules incidentally, I was just using the example of SORN to illustrate the 'you are guilty, you will pay' attitude that seems so common from Mr Blair and Co.
Thankyou all for your replies