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DVLA - unable to SORN taking me to court!
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My car blew a head gasket early in the year and so was off the road but with tax still on it, I transferred the insurance to another car then received a letter from the DVLA to SORN the other car which I did, then a month or so later I received a fine so I then tried to SORN the car a second time but was unable to (obviously because it was already SORNed) now I am being taken to court for £1000 can anyone please suggest something to stop this action.
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What was the timescale between transferring the insurance and declaring SORN on the car?0
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You need to SORN when either the tax or insurance runs out. So i think its because it was uninsured.
Thats what the fine applies to. I think you only SORN'd it when the tax expired.Censorship Reigns Supreme in Troll City...0 -
I can't remember the timescale as it was feb/march but I believe less than a month. The car was still taxed when the letters from the dvla came.0
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I don't understand your thread title.
Why were you unable to SORN the car?0 -
I'm posiive I did when the first request came, when a fine came I tried again but it wouldn't complete I suspect because I already had but their website may have had a computor glitch.0
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You didn't SORN it and return the tax when you cancelled the insurance.
Guessing the tax ran out a month later when you did SORN it? Still leaving the time between then and the date you cancelled the insurance.Censorship Reigns Supreme in Troll City...0 -
The first letter requested I SORN it by a certain date which I'm sure I did, the following letters included a fine and more requests to SORN the vehicle when I tried to a second time the transaction wouldn't complete. I have to wonder if they assume I didn't SORN simply because I didn't return the tax disc.0
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At the end of the day if you're claiming that you're sure you SORN'd the car by post, the DVLA have a duty to prove that you didn't.
When you post the paperwork, even if it gets lost, it is classed as having been delivered to the DVLA.
If you're sure you sent it then they either have to back down or prove you didn't - which they can't.
Linky:
http://www.volkszone.com/VZi/showthread.php?t=631542&highlight=dvla0 -
My car blew a head gasket early in the year and so was off the road but with tax still on it, I transferred the insurance to another car then received a letter from the DVLA to SORN the other car which I did, then a month or so later I received a fine so I then tried to SORN the car a second time but was unable to (obviously because it was already SORNed) now I am being taken to court for £1000 can anyone please suggest something to stop this action.:footie:
Regular savers earn 6% interest (HSBC, First Direct, M&S)
Loans cost 2.9% per year (Nationwide) = FREE money.
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If you did get one then have a short time to pay itand it won't affect your credit.
Just for clarification for the OP.
CheersThe difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits. - Einstein0
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