gusmac wrote:
Brummie Cabbie wrote:
Is there a legal definition of the word 'Taxi' in Scotland?
Civic Government Scotland Act 1982
23(1) In sections 10 to 22 of this Act:-
“taxi” means a hire car which is engaged, by arrangements made in a public place between the person to be conveyed in it (or a person acting on his behalf) and its driver for a journey beginning there and then; and
“private hire car” means a hire car other than a taxi within the meaning of this subsection.
Well, Gubber me!!!
Do you realise what the Scottish Act seems to imply?
How that reads to me is, that a Scottish 'cabbie' (driver) driving a hire car, standing & plying for hire at a rank or on a street & accepting a hiring
for a journey beginning there & then, is doing so as the driver of a 'taxi',
BUT if the person hiring the 'cabbie' (driver) hires him for a hiring that is
NOT for a journey beginning there & then,
but at a future time (pre-booking), then the 'cabbie' (driver) when picking up the booking at the appointed (future) time, will be acting
NOT as the driver of a hire car which is a 'taxi', by virtue of the fact that he has not been engaged for a journey beginning at the time the booking was made, i.e. there & then, but will instead be acting as the driver of a hire car other than a taxi (within the meaning of this subsection), which according to that subsection must be a Private Hire Vehicle.