Pretty sure that’s not correct. I was under the impression it couldn’t be kept/used on a public road (public being defined as a road maintained at the public’s expense).
I'm only going on what the RAC say.
RAC SORN info
Pretty sure that’s not correct. I was under the impression it couldn’t be kept/used on a public road (public being defined as a road maintained at the public’s expense).
@Glitch ,
I have just sped read your RAC link, and to quote;
You can declare a SORN under the following circumstances:
- If you intend to keep the vehicle in question on a driveway, in a garage, or on private land for a period of time. It cannot be parked on any kind of public road.
- If the vehicle is uninsured (even for a short time) because of a delay in renewing a policy.
- If you plan to salvage parts from the vehicle before it is scrapped.
- If you are buying a car and plan to keep it off the road.
not had any problems in that regard. I would imagine it's due to DVLA not receiving any challenge to the V5 request. In my case all the cars had been sitting for over 6 months in the jags case 5 years.as the v5 is not proof of ownership and has not proof or ownership written on it, wouldn't this be theft by finding and selling stolen goods?
adidat
I would suggest that whoever wrote that table, has made the errors.
Probably they should differentiate between public car parks and private ones.
My interpretation is that the spirit of this law lies in keeping a SORNed
vehicle on private property and not public property.
I agree it doesn't ring true but I can't find any definitive legislation on it.
I agree the spirit of the law is it can't go on the public highway.
Irrespective of location it either needs to be taxed or SORN in which case DVLA should have been interested.
If the car had been left there for some time then it could be defined as abandoned/dumped under the Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978 and the local council should deal with it.
(1)Any person who, without lawful authority,—
(a)abandons on any land in the open air, or on any other land forming part of a [F2highway][F2road], a motor vehicle or anything which formed part of a motor vehicle and was removed from it in the course of dismantling the vehicle on the land; or
(b)abandons on any such land any thing other than a motor vehicle, being a thing which he has brought to the land for the purpose of abandoning it there,
shall be guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine of an amount not exceeding £100
I have on 3 occasions done this with old abandoned cars, 2 Alfa GTV6s and an old XK120. They all made cracking winter projects and were sold quite legally once finished.
My driveway is on the same level as the estate road turning/parking area with just the top edge of sunken kerbing stones marking the boundary, so your theory does not apply, as I said earlier, my motorhome spent many months with the front wheels over this line - ignored by DVLA & nothing to do with local council. We did get two 'abandoned' cars removed from the splay of the junction with the main rd. ,co-operation with county council & West Mercia. One car was removed & parked in a pub car park 2 miles away, Foreign workers!Regarding SORN. I have one vehicle which is regularly SORN'd and it's always been parked on my drive. However, the owner of a vehicle is liable to prosecution for parking their vehicle even on their own their garden if the garden doesn't have dropped curbs for driveway access.
It's against the law to drive a vehicle across a pavement without a dropped curb and doing so would render the owner liable to prosecution and it does happen.
I wouldn't have thought it would affect the SORN statutory rights regarding the vehicle but it would be worth checking out to see if dropped curbs are a requirement for the land upon which the SORN'd vehicle is parked as I've no doubt some smart-*** council employee would be only too eager to add one to their list of catches for that day.
All I'm quoting are the rules regarding the offence of driving over footpaths which do not have lowered kerbs. That is why anyone parking on/over a footpath is liable to a fixed penalty fine if spotted by a warden etc.My driveway is on the same level as the estate road turning/parking area with just the top edge of sunken kerbing stones marking the boundary, so your theory does not apply, as I said earlier, my motorhome spent many months with the front wheels over this line - ignored by DVLA & nothing to do with local council. We did get two 'abandoned' cars removed from the splay of the junction with the main rd. ,co-operation with county council & West Mercia. One car was removed & parked in a pub car park 2 miles away, Foreign workers!
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