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PostPosted: Mon Jul 16, 2018 9:40 am 
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Some interesting pieces on the Taxi Defence Barristers' site - hadn't seen it before.

This one's about the conundrum of short-term suspensions, and how they look like punishments rather than to protect the public. Didn't Bolton recently suspend a driver for two weeks? As Sussex often asks, how can someone be considered not fit and proper today, but fit and proper in a fortnight?

But the piece outlines the concept of utilitarian punishment - ie it's not simply for the sake of punishing the driver (which is the responsibility of the criminal courts, not licensing committees) but so that a short-term suspension will deter/rehabilitate the driver and thus make him fit and proper again. In a couple of weeks. There is a certain logic to it...


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 16, 2018 9:40 am 
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Licence suspensions: Punishment or public safety?

http://www.taxidefencebarristers.co.uk/ ... ic-safety/

There have recently been media reports of a licensed hackney carriage driver who have had their taxi driving licence suspended by Bolton Council following a case of “misconduct” by the driver.

It appears from the minutes of the Licensing and Environmental Regulation Committee that these suspensions were imposed as a punishment.

What does the law allow licensing authorities to do when considering a suspension for a taxi or private hire driver’s licence?

Misconduct in Bolton

According to the minutes of the committee, the first case involved a hackney carriage driver who was convicted of an offence under the Equality Act 2010 for overcharging a person in a wheelchair.

In this case the committee resolved: “That the licence to drive a hackney carriage vehicle be suspended for a period of five weeks on the basis that the Committee is not satisfied that the driver is a fit and proper person to hold a licence at this time.”

The Law

It is a well-known and established fact that a licensing authority can only licence a person who they are satisfied is a fit and proper. The “fit and proper” test exists to ensure the public are protected.

Licensing authorities used to use the power of suspension as an interim measure, for example, I cases where serious complaints and/or allegations have been made in relation to a licensed driver. In these circumstances, a licensing authority will suspend a licence until the outcome of an investigation has been reached.

This approach was ruled unlawful by Mr Justice Singh in the case of R (application of Singh) v Cardiff City Council [2012] EWCH 1852 (Admin). Mr Justice Singh said that the power to suspend a licence should be “a final determination on the fitness and propriety of the driver.”

This naturally raises the question of what a licensing authority can do. There will be instances where misconduct by a licensed driver is not sufficiently serious to warrant a full revocation. The only alternative – unless they chose to take no action – will be a suspension of the taxi/PH driver’s licence.

Mr Justice Singh suggested in his ruling that a suspension may be appropriate ” if misconduct has been established” if something “less than complete revocation” is appropriate and suspension “will constitute sufficient sanction in the interests of the public”

This therefore makes it possible for a licensing authority to use the power of a suspension as a punitive measure – but only under certain circumstances.

Bolton Council’s minutes stated: “There is therefore reasonable cause to suspend the hackney carriage licence as a warning and a deterrent.”

Punishment

There is an important legal difference between retributive punishment and utilitarian punishment. Utilitarian punishment seeks to punish offenders to discourage or deter future wrongdoing. Retributive punishment on the other hand seeks to punish offenders because they deserve to be punished (legally sanctioned retribution).

In the context of taxi/PH licensing, the power of suspension can only ever be imposed as a utilitarian punishment because licensing exists to protect the public.

Therefore if the conduct of a taxi/PH driver has not been that of a fit and proper person, but complete revocation is seen as a disproportionate response, it may be considered that a defined period of suspension will act to deter the driver from misconduct in the future and so render them once again fit and proper.

In practice there may often be a fine line between what constitutes a retributive or utilitarian punishment. Each case will have to be determined on its individual merits and in view of the evidence.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 16, 2018 9:39 pm 
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Very interesting.

The Singh judgement hasn't done us or councils any favors.

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