59 things you should know about uk law

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    59 Things You Should Know About UK Law

    By Lloyd Barrett (original Article by James Mather fromwww.expertanswers.co.uk)

    "English law" is a term of art. It refers to the legal system administered by the courts

    in England and Wales, which rule on both civil and criminal matters.

    English law is renowned as being the mother of the common law and is based on

    those principles.

    This a small selection of laws that you should know about and may be of assistance

    should you ever find yourself in need or you amaze your friends with your

    knowledge:

    Did you know?

    1. If your terms and conditions are printed on the back of an invoice they dontapply to the contract unless the parties have dealt with each other before over a

    regular course of dealings.

    2. Speeding is what is known as an offence of strict liability. This means that if

    you travel at 31 mph in a 30 area you commit an offence. It means that there is no

    defence to it. It doesnt matter that your partner is on the back seat of the car about to

    have a baby, you have got diarrhoea, your car is on fire and youre trying to get it off

    the motorway. You still are committing an offence. You may have what is known as

    mitigation or mitigating circumstances but you do not have an offence. There is

    no defence for speeding. Mitigating circumstances simply mean that you have a

    reasonable excuse.

    3. The definition of theft is appropriation of property: belonging to another:

    with the intent to permanently deprive:. Unless all elements are present then it is not

    theft. So, if someone you dont even know borrows your lawnmower and leaves a

    note which says, I have borrowed your lawnmower to mow my lawn and I will bring

    it back tomorrow, thatperson hasnt actually done anything wrong! Ironic but true.

    He doesnt intend to permanently deprive you of the lawnmower because he says he is

    bringing it back. No offence. No point calling the police.

    4. If you walk through the middle of a farmers field then thats trespass.However the remedy for trespass is damages (compensation). However to get

    compensation you have to have suffered loss. So, if all you have done is simply

    walked across the grass there is nothing that Mr Farmer can do. If you damage crops

    then that is another matter and you are liable to be prosecuted for criminal damage.

    Criminal damage is another subject altogether.

    5. If a parking or speeding ticket has an obviously wrong date on or has the

    colour of your car wrong or has the registration number written incorrectly dont think

    that you can necessarily get off on a technicality. If the registration number on the

    certificate is down as ABC123 and it should be ACB123 then Magistrates are likely to

    allow this under what is known as slip rule which allows minor errors in paperworkto be admitted. You can try it, but it wont work.

    http://www.expertanswers.co.uk/http://www.expertanswers.co.uk/http://www.expertanswers.co.uk/http://www.expertanswers.co.uk/
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    6. If you buy a house with someone on a joint mortgage and they go bankrupt

    then you remain liable for the whole mortgage. In addition, their half of the house (if

    its worth anything) then belongs to the trustee in bankruptcy. Ironically enough the

    trustee in bankruptcy doesnt have to contribute to the mortgage but can take any

    proceeds such as rent. Think carefully before you buy a house with anybody else ifthey are not of excellent financial standing.

    7. If you rent a house you are usually required to pay a deposit. Since the 1st

    April 2009 the landlord must put this in a Tenants Deposit Scheme. If the Landlord

    doesnt then the legislation provides for a Tenant whose landlord hasnt put a deposit

    into such a scheme to get three times the amount of the deposit as compensation. This

    does not mean that if the Landlord hasnt put your 500 deposit into a scheme you get

    1500 back. It means that if you have suffered any loss as a result of the Landlords

    failure to put the money in a scheme then he is liable to pay you compensation in

    respect of his failure. Please note that in English Law, to get compensation, you have

    to have suffered loss so that means that if you were to get 1500 compensation (foryour 500 deposit) you have to have suffered 1500 worth of loss. English Law does

    not punish it compensates.

    8. Technically, there is no such thing as an accident. Have you noticed that road

    traffic accidents are no longer called road traffic accidents but are called RTCs (road

    traffic collisions)? This is because nothing ever happens accidentally. If there has

    been a collision between two vehicles for example it has been caused by the

    negligence by either one party or the other. Sometimes they are equally to blame but,

    none the less, they have both been negligent.

    9. There is no such thing as a joint will. There is what is known as a mirror

    will where by two parties leave all their worldly wealths to each other in the same

    terms.

    10. If you write a will leaving everything to your spouse and then get divorced

    that money/those assets, which you left to your spouse will pass into the residue of the

    estate. Similarly, if you write a will leaving everything to the cats home and then get

    married, the will is void in its entirety.

    11. Beneficiaries of a will can be executors/trustees but can not be witnesses. Nor

    can spouses of witnesses (its debateable whether a non civil partner is included inthis definition but legally not) can not be witnesses either.

    12. Certain transactions (for example land) have to be done by deed. To make a

    document a deed it must say this is a deed or such like. Thedeed must be signed,

    witnessed and delivered. Actually it is sufficient for it to be intended to be delivered

    even if it never was. Prior to 1989 it had to be signed sealed delivered (as in the

    Stevie Wonder songIm yours). The rules changed in 1989.

    13. A will has been written to probate on the shell of an egg and on the side of a

    toilet. Not recommended but it can be done.

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    14. A soldiers will (about to go into action) does not need to be witnessed and

    can be written in pencil.

    15. The shortest provisions in any will are all to wife. The will must still revoke

    earlier wills, appoint executors, be dated and be signed and witnessed.

    16. If you leave somebody an asset (as apposed to the use of an asset) you can not

    dictate what happens to it after your death. For example you can not say that my son

    can have my house but if he gets married he has got to sell it and have the money

    instead. This amounts to an instruction form the grave and is not allowed.

    17. You can not give an asset away but retain an interest in it to avoid inheritance

    tax. Either you give the asset away or you dont. If you transfer your house to your

    children but continue to live in it rent free then the revenue are likely to view this as

    a gift with reservation and treat it as though you still owned it for inheritance tax

    purposes. There is no way of giving assets away but retaining control of them. And,

    yes, if you give all your assets away to your children they can spend them, sell them,or do whatever they like with them. Thats what giving them away means.

    18. If you make a nut and bolt costing 10p and you know that it is going to be

    used in an airplane and the airplane falls out of the sky because the bolt broke, then

    the measure of damages can be totally disproportionate to the value of the faulty item

    provided that it was within the contemplation of the parties what it would be used

    for.

    19. If youre getting divorced then English courts no longer apportion blame. It

    doesnt matter that you actually catch your partner in a compromising situation it will

    not affect the financial outcome of any divorce settlement. The only time that a court

    will apportion blame in divorce is if conduct of one party has affected children.

    20. Once a will has been admitted to probate it becomes it becomes a public

    document. Anybody can obtain a copy from the Probate Registry for a fee of 5

    providing they know the place and date of birth. For that reason it is probably a good

    idea, if youre excluding somebody from your will not to mention why. That would

    usually be dealt with by a separate letter of wishes.

    21. If you are a UK resident and you also have property in France or Spain then

    you should also have French or Spanish (or any other country for that matter) will todeal with those countries assets. Other countries inheritance laws often completely

    different from those of United Kingdom.

    22. If you tear up a will by accident, and not intending to, that doesnt revoke a

    will.

    23. If your partner, in the middle of a heated argument tears your will, than that

    doesnt revoke it either.

    24. If you leave someone your house in a will then they inherit the house that you

    live in at the date that you wrote the will. The same goes for any other assets. It is theassets that you own at the date that you wrote the will. So, if you leave my house and

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    car it is the house and car that you own at the date you wrote the will. If you

    subsequently sell the house and move into another one or you sell the car and buy

    another one then the person you thought was going to get the house and the car wont.

    It should say the house and car I own at the date of my death.

    25. If you put words in the will to the effect of the will being un-contestablethey are of no effect. There is no such thing as an un-contestable will.

    26. If you die without making a will then your assets go to survivors of your estate

    under the rules of intestacy. They dont necessarily go all to your spouse. Hence it is

    so important to write a will.

    27. If you leave something in your will to (for example) your son and your son

    predeceases you then the asset left to your son does not automatically go to his

    children (if he has any) unless the will specifically says so.

    28. A will must have two witnesses who should sign their name, print their nameand add their address and occupation. Both witnesses must be present when the

    testator (the person writing the will) or testatrix (if female) signs the will.

    29. Any agreement to transfer a property must be in writing to be enforceable.

    30. In addition to the agreement to transfer the property being in writing the actual

    document doing the transfer from one person to another must be a deed.

    31. A freehold flat is virtually unmortgagable and therefore unsaleable. It is

    however possible to mortgage (and sell) a freehold flats in Scarborough, Glasgow and

    Edinburgh. Its all to do with a freehold not benefiting from (amongst other things)

    the right of support. You may ask therefore, why Scarborough, Glasgow and

    Edinburgh. Quite simply because some lenders will take a commercial view on

    properties in those areas. With regards to Scarborough for example the list of lenders

    that will lend on a freehold flat in Scarborough comes down to a short list of one. For

    the rest of the country, freehold flats are simply unmortgageable and therefore

    unsaleable.

    32. If you sign a document agreeing to some terms and conditions without

    understanding or reading that document then you are bound by those terms and

    conditions even though you didnt understand them or read.

    33. A sign which says trespasses will be prosecuted is nonsense. A prosecution

    is a criminal matter whereas trespass is a civil matter. You can not prosecute

    trespasses. You may be able to sue them for damages but you can not prosecute them.

    34. There is nothing in law which says that on the road you have to drive on the

    left. If you decide to drive on the right however (apart from probably causing an

    accident) you are likely to be charged with careless, reckless, dangerous, or such like

    driving. There is also driving without due care and attention which is somewhat

    milder.

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    35. It is not an offence to use your mobile telephone to call the emergency

    services, while you are driving. Not recommended but not illegal.

    36. Driving a car on tyres with a tread depth below the legal minimum of 1.6mm

    is an endorsable offence for which you will get three points minimum. You will also

    get a fine.

    37. A bailiff has no right to enter into your house unless you invite them in. Once you

    have invited the bailiff in they can then remove goods if they have an order. You can

    however withdraw the consent and ask them to leave. If they dont leave, you are

    entitled to call the police. They do not have the right to break in from the outside, they

    can only enter peaceably. Once inside, they can break internal doors to get access to

    goods. The moral therefore is to quite simply never let a bailiff over your doorstep.

    38. If you are passing an open window and you put your hand through the window

    and steel a cake (or anything else for that matter) you have committed burglary. You

    dont have to enter the building to commit burglary.

    39. Sending abusive or explicit/obscene text messages by mobile phone is an

    offence under the Wireless TelegraphyAct.

    40. Parking fines levied in private car parks are unenforceable in law in 99.9%

    of circumstances. This means that if you stay in the local supermarket longer than the

    allotted two hours (or whatever the period is) and you get a penalty ticket, although it

    may threaten to take you to court if you dont cough up, if they did take you to court

    they would lose.

    41. It doesnt matter what your rights may be or what youre entitled to if your

    opponent doesnt roll over or pay up, agree or whatever then you are faced with court.

    42. If you take somebody to court and it is allocated to the Small Claims Track

    (under 5000) and you lose then usually you will only pay any court costs and not

    legal costs. This is to encourage people not to instruct solicitors on small value claims

    and encourage mediation/settling out of court.

    43. If someone transfers their house to (for example) their children in anticipation

    of going into a nursing home then the local authority can still sell the house (even

    though it now belongs to somebody else) to pay for care fees. There is actually notimescale after which the house is safe from the local authority but the golden rule is

    the longer the better.

    44. A bus driver can refuse to accept anything other than the correct fare and can

    also refuse to give change. You are of course at liberty not to take up the bus drivers

    kind offer to take a 10 note off you for a 10p fare. In that particular case you have no

    absolute right to travel.

    45. Some criminal convictions do not have to be disclosed after a certain period of

    time under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act. Criminal convictions of 2.5 years or

    more are never spent for the purposes of the act and are always discloseable if you are

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    asked. Some convictions are never spent under the ROOA for certain occupations

    such as banking, teaching, the legal profession, accounting etc to name a few.

    46. If you park in an area which is pay and display and the machine is broken

    you still commit an offence b parking without paying the fee. You may be able to

    plead mitigation but none the less, you have committed an offence. Strictly speaking,you should find another machine and pay at that one.

    47. Land Laws in England & Wales and Northern Ireland are very similar

    although the procedures vary somewhat.

    Land Law in Scotland is completely different and uses completely different

    terminology.

    48. English lawyers can practice law in England and Wales but not in Northern

    Ireland or Scotland. Similarly, Scottish lawyers can only act in Scotland and Northern

    Irish lawyers only in Northern Ireland.

    49. If you take on the lease of a building and there is VAT on the rent and the

    value of the lease means that it is subject to stamp duty land tax then you pay stamp

    duty land tax on the VAT. Yes, you actually pay tax on tax which you have had to

    pay.

    50. If you die, your debts do not necessarily die with you. If you leave no assets

    money or house then your debts can die with you. If you leave any assets etc then

    your creditors have first call on them to pay any debts before any beneficiaries.

    51. Regardless of whether you are a trustee, a beneficiary, executor or related in

    some other way, if you arrange a funeral for somebody who has died, then you are

    responsible for paying the costs. These can sometimes be claimed back form the

    estate.

    52. If you let the deceased persons bank have the funeral bill, and provided there

    is enough money left in the deceased persons bank account, then the bank will

    generally pay the funeral account without any fuss and without waiting for grant of

    probate.

    53. If somebody you know has died any nobody is willing to arrange the funeral

    then rather than you do it and be stuck with the bill if there is not enough to pay for itthen you should first contact the local authority (before arranging it yourself) and get

    the local authority to arrange it. In that case, the local authority (only if there is no

    money or assets) will pay for it.

    54. If fatherhood of a child is in dispute and either the father or mother refuses a

    DNA test then the presumption is that the test would be in favour of the person who is

    asking it and not in favour of the person who is denying it. There is sound logic

    behind this in that if the person who refuses to test has nothing to hide then they

    should allow it because DNA tests, although personal are not invasive or intimidating.

    55. English law is the most widely quoted case law in the world. English case lawis often quoted in not only English speaking countries but also other languages. It is

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    possible to have a contract in (say) Australia which is governed by English law and

    for the English courts to have jurisdiction.

    56. Australian, al lot of African, Canadian, Bermuda, and various other countries

    laws mimic those of England & Wales.

    57. You do not have to help police with their enquires.

    58. A person still commits rape even if the other party consents to having sex if,

    the consenting person mistakenly believes that the other person was someone else.

    (that may seem a bit bizarre but there is actually a case where the couple had sex in

    the dark and the girl thought that the rapist was her boyfriend and when she put the

    light on it turned out to be somebody else.)

    59. If you are in business partnership with someone, then the partnership is

    governed by the provision of the 1895 Partnership Act still. The act says that if a

    partner dies or retires or leaves and the partnership is dissolved the surviving partnerdoesnt automatically take over.

    The Partnership Act 1895 says that profits are split equally.