Food & Drink0 min ago
My post in 'Motoring' section
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by kazzianne. 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.You also posted in that section that you had "a very good reason for wanting to find out" but you couldn't tell the DVLA
Forgive me for being suspicious here but if the DVLA won't release information on a private individual here I'm not sure we should help you!
Incidently I think releasing information like this would be illegal under the Data Potection Act.
I understand but people register cars expecting that that information is protected.
If the DVLA or other authorities made it available to everbody who had a dispute with their other half they might as well post the database on the internet!
Then everybody would be registerring vehicles under false names and there'd be chaos.
You are of course making the possibly erroneous assumption that your partners ex is behaving and updating the DVLA with new address in a timely fashion every move - loads of genuine people forget when they move and only realise when their tax disk runs out!
I think you're barking up the wrong tree here a bit, trying to solve the sympton not the root cause - sounds like more of a legal issue -has he no right of access established?
Whether you consider it right or wrong, this is precisely why this sort of information is not generally available. The DVLA keep these details so that motoring matters such as driving offences, road fund licence offences and the like can be legitimately pursued by those with the authority to pursue them. Of course they would also make such details available to enable criminal law enforcement even where the crimes committed are not motoring offences. The Data Protection Act makes provision for such exceptions.
However, the situation you describe is not a legitimate reason to make use of the details held by the DVLA and in any case you are not an authorised user of those details. It is true that, certainly recently, the DVLA has seen fit to make the details they hold more widely available and I am quite sure that it will not be too long before their more relaxed actions are challenged in the courts.
There us also a purely practical aspect of your problem as well. The accuracy of the details held by the DVLA depends upon their being promptly updated. If, as seems likely, your partner's ex is trying to make herself scarce, it is most unlikely she is going to make it easy for people to locate her by updating her details.
I work in Information Governance for the NHS and can assure you that the only way in which you could persuade DVLA or the police to yield this information would if if a crime had been committed or if it was 'in the public interest'. I suggest you examine your motives for wanting to catch your husband's ex. If they are causing any form of harassment, have taken something belonging to your husband or have kidnapped somebody then you should get the police involved. If not, then perhaps you should persuade your husband to let it drop. After all, he is supposed to be with you now so why go chasing round after his ex. If there are children involved then the answer is very simple. Get pregnant, frequently.
Morning Bob - well since I put this post on my boyfriend and I discussed it last night and have decided that we dont want to get ourselves into trouble - she is in the wrong - and so we have handed the entire thing over to his solicitor to find her thru the courts.It will cost a fortune,and take time,but hopefully will get results.
And a big thankyou for all who kindly offered advice and opinions - 3 starts to all of you!