grandad wrote:
The way that I read it is this. He appeared before the council and had his licence revoked. He appealed to the magistrates who upheld the decision. as for the £5,000 I think this is newspaper speak for he got a fine and costs were awarded to the Council and the total came to £5,000
Actually, there is another part of the article that I'd missed out, which does specifically say that the £5,000 was the council's costs:*
So maybe there wasn't a fine at all, and the driver was never prosecuted for the offence, which would thus answer my question, and then presumably the newspaper's use of the word 'fine' was simply a red herring.
Quote:
Councils have legal powers to suspend or revoke the licence of a taxi driver on certain grounds and all councils granting licences to taxi drivers need to be satisfied that the person is fit and proper.
The Equality Act 2010 sets out the legal duty of taxi drivers to carry assistance dogs ensuring they do not discriminate against any person because of disability and to carry a disabled person's dog by allowing it to remain with the person and not to make any additional charge for doing so. Refusal to carry registered assistance dogs without an exemption certificate is a strict liability offence.
Exeter magistrates found in favour of the council and the decision it had made to take Miah’s licence away.
He was ordered to pay the council’s costs of £5,000.
Following the court hearing, Cllr Steve Hall, chairman of East Devon District Council’s licensing sub-committee, said: “The council recognises the serious nature of these allegations and the impact upon those individuals being refused transport.
"I’m pleased to say that the magistrates agreed with our approach and we will not hesitate to defend further appeals of this nature to ensure that the public receives a fair service. The safety of our public is paramount.”
But note that the article also says that the Equality Act makes a refusal a strict liability *offence*, which the driver could thus be prosecuted for. (The words 'offence' and 'fine' specifically relate to criminal acts - councils have no power to mete out fines. Strict liability simply means that you don't have to actually intend to do the act in question for an offence to take place - it's like speeding, so even if you make a mistake you can still be prosecuted.)
So is it possible that the driver was never actually prosecuted for the offence, and that the word 'fine' and the talk of an 'offence' are just red herrings?
So maybe the driver just had his licence revoked by the council and then appealed to the magistrates, and there was no criminal prosecution for the offence, and thus no 'fine'?
*In my defence, it was one of those nightmare 'Live' sites, which can be very difficult to navigate/know when you're at the bottom of the article etc, and can freeze/crash my browser. Not that many of these newspaper websites are particularly easy to navigate with a modest laptop and internet connection, but the 'Live' ones tend to be the worst. The same template is also used by other newspapers that don't use the Live name, such as the Daily Mirror and Daily Record. They're all part of the same publishing group and thus use the same website design template - think it's what used to be called Trinity Mirror, but think they've changed their name now.
