Speak to a BAILIFF Expert - £35
Evans v South Ribble Borough
Council [1992] QB 757
A liability order was made against Mrs. Evans
for unpaid community charge. When the bailiff
called at her home she was at work. After speaking
to her on the telephone he posted through her
letterbox a notice of distress and a draft
walking-possession agreement which he had signed.
She challenged the validity of this purported levy
by issuing a complaint under Regulation 40 of the
Community Charge (Administration & Enforcement)
Regulations 1989. The justices held that the
authority had validly distrained on the
complainant's goods; Mrs. Evans appealed to the
High Court and her appeal was allowed and the
following practices are questionable when a bailiff
makes a levy:
Levies of household goods carried out at a
bailiff's office or other premises
Levies of cars or other goods conducted merely
by driving past premises
Levies on vehicles conducted in communal car
parks at blocks of flats and with notices of
seizure left by communal entries
Levies based on generic lists of goods without
any detailed inspection of premises
Two stage levies which rely in part on the use
of "global seizures" of goods by "catch -all"
phrases on inventories and
Doorstep levies without full entry
This case was a first to deal with "Constructive Levies" and is defined in Paragraph 2 on Page 5 of this Local Government Ombudsman's report.
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