grandad wrote:
ace of spades wrote:
If it's just a one-off, let's say the customer gets ill and needs to get home, and someone offers them a lift, does it really matter whether that person is another customer, or the restaurant manager? If that's something the restaurant offers as part of their normal service though, then I'd say the car should need to be licensed. Having said that, aren't there services operating already with unlicensed drivers and vehicles as "voluntary" even though the customers are paying for the journey?
You just seem hell bent on twisting this around to justify law breaking. In all the above situations the driver of the vehicle is being paid by the owner of a business to carry passengers. We are not looking at unpaid social kindness we are looking at the carriage of passengers for hire or reward. THEY NEED TO BE LICENSED. END OF!
I am not trying to justify law breaking, I am simply questioning the validity of the idea that provision of a free service, as a one-off, constitutes hire and reward. I understand that the drivers are being paid, but this is just a normal wage, driving these vehicles is not their everyday job, and the money they are paid would be paid regardless of whether they drove the vehicles or not. So although they may be "rewarded" for completing the work, the reward does not come from the passenger or any third party acting on their behalf.