Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Notice Of Intended Prosecution.
I have received a note from the post office that a letter is being held for me that has not had postage paid and is available for collection on payment of £1.10
I haven't yet called at the post office or seen the letter but it is possible that this is a notice of intended prosecution for a recent speeding offence which I am aware of and was probably caught on camera.
If so, is the notice valid if I refuse to accept it and the post office returns it to the sender?
Answers
For goodness' sake, GlenB, get it sorted and have done with it! A speeding ticket isn't all that big a deal! You'll have a choice of penalties, one of which (and the easiest one to deal with) is you'll have to pay a fine and attend a Speed Awareness Course. After that, your slate will be wiped clean. I am currently on my third speeding ticket, and I shall have to attend a course that's about 90 minutes' drive from my house. It's no big deal.
You can simply refuse to collect it. It will be returned and may be reissued or not. If it is you have a defence against the speeding charge (though you will still have to respond to the accompanying "request for driver's details" as this has no time limit). Keep the evidence you have that a letter was undelivered in case the police try to insist that it was your fault that it was not served or try to insist that it was. You have no obligation to assist in that service.
Alternatively collect and pay for it after day 14 and get evidence of that transaction. That way you get to find out what it is in case it's anything else. Name yourself as the driver as per the accompanying request and you can then defend the speeding allegation on the basis that no NIP was served within the required 14 days (a requirement laid down in Section 1 of the Road Traffic Offenders' Act).