Crime Cases Still Using Cassettes
Technology45 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by CornwallAndy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't think you have a good case. I assume you mean that the road hasn't been "adopted" yet by the council.
Unfortunately, if the road is a public right of way (ie open to use for anyone), then it won't be construed as a private road.
For the definition of private road in insurance terms, the road would have to be a self contained drive-way of a large country house estate or such.
I'm almost 100% certain that the police are well within their rights to act in this situation.
Where I used to live was a new housing estate, and the road stil hasn't been adopted (6 years later), but for all intenets and purposes, this is a public road
If it accessible from a public highway then yes they do. On your private driveway, a private parking area etc etc.
The only way they do not have the power or when it would be questionable, is if the area containing the private road is gated off. For example a large private estate with gates at the entrance.
As the others have said, a road for the purposes of the Road Traffic Acts is a road to which the public has access, whether on payment or not. Near my home there is a large country house, standing in its own grounds and with a long drive on each side leading to the normal roads. Local people use these drives as a short cut and the owner does not stop them. The police would be able to act on these drives in the circumstances that you describe.
I live on an estate that has private open areas and roads. I help pay for the upkeep. There is no public right of way and I can and do turn people away who are not residents or do not have any legitimate business with a resident, they are trespassers. Their presence is no different to a stranger in your garden. It is not open to the general public at large and therefore it is not a public place.
The Road Traffic Act does not apply and we do not need a driving licence, insurance, MOT, tax or speed limit to use cars on our roads. The police are also trespassers if they do not have legitimate business on our estate. If they followed a drunk driver on to the estate then that would be legitimate but there is no offence commited on the private land although there is an offence, not a traffic offence as such, of furious driving that could be used.
A public place is somewhere the general public can drive unhindered by right or are invited. If we had a shop or pub etc. open to all, then the situation could change.
For many years drink/driving offences have applied on roads and public places. In 1991, public place was added to sections 1 to 3 of the Road Traffic Act (dangerous/careless driving). The fact remains though that a road or public place (in this case a road) are public if the public have access to them. Ownership of the land has nothing to do with right of way, and many older roads are still owned by the adjoining landowners. The road is private if people are prevented from using it, e.g. with a gate.
I don't have any sympathy for drunk drivers but if this person did not drive on the public roads but may have moved a car on private land and there are no witnesses, it doesn't sound like much of a case. It could be they have a case for false arrest and trespass.
There has been a lot of tosh about ungated private residential land being a public place but no hard evidence to back these claims. It is actually an offence to drive a motor vehicle on to private land and on a public footpath that a private drive can also be, the exception being the land owner and his guests. I know from experience a gate does not always stop the public from trespassing. Am I expected to put a gate on my drive to stop it becoming a public place? I don't think so.
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.