23.6 C
London
Thursday, July 9, 2026

Pensioner convicted of motoring offence after getting letter wrong

A pensioner struggling to cope with household bills has been convicted by a fast-track court of a motoring offence after she accidentally got one letter wrong on her car insurance papers. 

The 86-year-old woman, from York, accidentally put down an F instead of an S when registering her number plate with Swinton Insurance. 

Unaware of the mistake, she assumed she had been complying with the law and paid for a year’s worth of cover for her Suzuki Splash car. 

But the pensioner realised her error after a letter from the DVLA came through the door revealing that she was facing a criminal prosecution for keeping a vehicle without insurance. 

In a desperate bid to avoid conviction, she wrote to magistrates explaining her mistake along with her niece, who penned a letter saying that the family was stepping in to help as they ‘did not know it had got to the stage where she can’t cope’. 

However the controversial Single Justice Procedure (SJP), which sees magistrates hand out convictions and punishments in private hearings, ultimately fast-tracked the woman’s conviction. 

The scheme has proven problematic in recent years with numerous wrongful prosecutions handed out, including charges against people who are ill or have died. 

Yet still it persists, with hundreds of prosecutions handed down in the United Kingdom every single week. 

An 86-year-old woman struggling to cope with household bills has been convicted by a fast-track court of a motoring offence after she accidentally got one letter wrong on her car insurance papers

The pensioner’s letter to the SJP read: ‘I understood my car was fully insured with Swinton Insurance, from April 1 2025 to March 31 2026.

‘I did not notice the registration printed wrongly had an F instead of an S.’

While her niece penned: ‘All the paperwork for insurance has been found to be one letter incorrect.

‘No-one had picked up on this. I am now helping her with her paperwork as we (the family) did not know it had got to the stage where she can’t cope.

‘She has tried to complete the form as best as possible.’

The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency said it will contact the woman to check her insurance paperwork and will seek to have the conviction overturned if the registration typo was indeed to blame. 

The SJP was invented in 2015 as a cheaper way of handling low-level criminal cases, allowing a magistrate sitting alone in private to take decisions instead of three magistrates deliberating together in open court.  

Cases are decided based on written evidence alone, and there is no prosecutor present to see the mitigation and other correspondence sent in by the defendant.

The design of the fast-track process means prosecutors are unable to review new evidence that has come to light, or take a decision to withdraw a case that is no longer in the public interest.

In the pensioner’s case, David Pollard, a magistrate sitting at Teesside Magistrates’ Court, opted to accept the written guilty plea and impose a conviction, rather than asking the DVLA to do further checks on the public interest in the prosecution.

He sentenced her to a three-month conditional discharge instead of a fine, but also ordered her to pay a £26 victim surcharge.

It comes after a 51-year-old woman was last month convicted in the SJP courts over a £35 bill on her dead husband’s car which went unpaid in the weeks after he passed. 

The anonymous woman was taken to court by the DVLA over the slip-up, which happened last July when she was in mourning and arranging her husband’s funeral.  

She wrote a letter explaining she does not drive herself, has never owned a car, and mistakenly did not pay £35.84 in vehicle tax on her husband’s Jaguar car when it came into her possession after his death.

But her tragic circumstances were not enough to avoid a criminal conviction, after the case was brought through the SJP courts.

She was sentenced to a six-month conditional discharge with an order to pay £85 in costs and the £35.84 car tax bill. 

Amid complaints and media coverage over such convictions, The Labour Government conducted a consultation on possible changes to the Single Justice Procedure system between March and May last year.

However so far no plan for change has emerged. 

Yet the Lady Chief Justice Baroness Carr revealed at her annual press conference in March that Lord Justice Green, the Senior Presiding Judge for England and Wales, is leading a ‘nuts and bolts audit’ of the Single Justice Procedure.

A working group, comprising of judges, magistrates, and justice officials, ‘will soon conclude’ the audit, the Judicial Office said, with recommendations set to go to the Interim Magistrates Executive Board.

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The best places to live in Britain’s idyllic national parks

Many of us toy with the idea of moving somewhere close to nature, with a friendly community, where the pace of life is more civilised. But where to find such a place? A national park could be the answer.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Thinking Out Loud! Ed Sheeran thinks it’s coming home after playing a private gig for the squad

Sunday's thrilling 3-2 victory against adversity at the Estadio Azteca set up Saturday's quarter-final clash between Thomas Tuchel's side and Norway in Miami.

Demi-goddess! Moore and her daughter steal the show

Demi Moore and Tallulah Willis, her daughter with Bruce Willis, posed hand in hand at Balenciaga's Paris Couture Week presentation, where they saw Pierpaolo Piccioli's autumn collection.

Carbon emissions at controversial ‘green’ Drax power station hit record high

A report by energy think-tank Ember revealed the biomass power station in North Yorkshire generated record emissions of 14.1million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) last year

Meet Daphne! At 25cm tall, she’s Britain’s most unlikely sheepdog

Daphne, seven, has been helping to move a flock of 1,200 sheep at a farm in South Lakes, Cumbria, for the past five years - gaining international social media fame.

German serial killer doctor who murdered 15 patients with sedatives is jailed for life amid fears he was behind dozens more deaths

The court in Berlin convicted the 41-year-old doctor, identified only as Johannes M., of killing 12 women and three men during home visits between September 2021 and July 2024.

Deadly bacteria found in major US city’s wastewater system tied to Mark Zuckerberg’s $800m data center

Meta has come under fire after its data center contaminated a major US city's water system with a rare bacteria, months before the facility is set to go online.

Trump launches ferocious bombardment on Iran after regime placed deadly bounty on his head

Donald Trump has unleashed a fresh wave of airstrikes on Iran after the regime attacked commercial ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

He’s done it again! Brit sensation Arthur Fery becomes first wildcard to reach Wimbledon semi-final in 25 years with straight-sets win over No9 seed...

MATTHEW LAMBWELL AT WIMBLEDON: The 23-year-old world No114 had never previously passed the second round but is now just one match away from the final.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img