Obnoxious Trading Standards Officer won’t like this court decision!

legal updates

Regrettably, a significant minority like the power that they believe they have and start throwing it about somewhat recklessly.

Read our disclaimer keyboard_arrow_down

This website content is intended as a general guide to law as it applies to the motor trade. Lawgistics has taken every effort to ensure that the contents are as accurate and up to date as at the date of first publication.

The laws and opinions expressed within this website may be varied as the law develops. As such we cannot accept liability for or the consequence of, any change of law, or official guidelines since publication or any misuse of the information provided.

The opinions in this website are based upon the experience of the authors and it must be recognised that only the courts and recognised tribunals can interpret the law with authority.

Examples given within the website are based on the experience of the authors and centre upon issues that commonly give rise to disputes. Each situation in practice will be different and may comprise several points commented upon.

If you have any doubt about the correct legal position you should seek further legal advice from Lawgistics or a suitably qualified solicitor. We cannot accept liability for your failure to take professional advice where it should reasonably be sought by a prudent person.

All characters are fictitious and should not be taken as referring to any person living or dead.

Use of this website shall be considered acceptance of the terms of the disclaimer presented above.

For the most part, Trading Standards Officers do a good job in protecting the public and bringing the “bad boys” (and girls!) to task. 

Regrettably, a significant minority like the power that they believe they have and start throwing it about somewhat recklessly.

Take the officer from one Scottish Trading Standards who descended upon our clients’ business wholly uninvited.  The heinous crime seemingly committed by the garage was that they allegedly sold a car without their complainant being told that the car was once a “Cat C” and had been an insurance write off.  Our client showed them the advert on Auto Trader stating it to be so but the Officer was adamant that the consumer had not seen the advert and was not told it whilst at the garage.  Our client was equally as adamant that it was made clear to the intended buyer that this was the case, even pointing out the area that they believed had caused the vehicle to become a “CAT C” before proper repair.

I asked to speak to the Trading Standards Officer whose behaviour was aggressive and obnoxious.  She was going to ensure that this case was going to result in her legal dept referring it to the Procurator Fiscal (the equivalent of the Crown Prosecution Service) and that a successful prosecution was inevitable.  But it never was!

For some time later, our client received a letter from Trading Standards simply saying that THEY had determined that our client had committed an offence under the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 – specifically a misleading omission and THEY were writing to give our client a caution for it!

Fuelled by this outcome, their complainant issued separate legal proceedings to reject the car on the grounds that it had been misrepresented/misdescribed by not mentioning the Category C recording.  A claim denied by our client.  At the Sheriff’s court the claim was DISMISSED entirely and indeed, under cross-examination by the Sheriff, the complainant had to admit that he was not even present at the material time and that the car had actually been sold to his parents who had visited the garage!  As the parents were not in court they were incapable of being challenged and upon considering all of the points brought before the court, the Sheriff stated that there was little choice other than to find in favour of our client.

DMS NavigatorDealer Management System software for Car Sales, Aftersales and eCommerce

Our dealers use us to help them be more Efficient and Profitable!

You can use our Dealer and Lead Management software to integrate all dealership departments, both online and physical ; providing all in-house functions; Invoicing, Stock Management, Accounting and Marketing as well as interfacing for advertising, ecommerce and more.

Jason WilliamsLegal AdvisorRead More by this author

Related Legal Updates

Navigating the Return of Part-Exchange Vehicles

When a financed car sale is rejected, what happens to the part-exchange (and its cleared finance) is rarely straightforward.

Car Trouble Years Later: Who’s to Blame, the Customer or the Trader?

When a fault surfaces years after a sale, who carries the burden under the Consumer Rights Act 2015? Here’s the quick guide traders need to protect their position and respond confidently.

Rejection Rights Aren’t ‘Refund on Demand’: What the CRA 2015 Really Expects

A vociferous rejection doesn’t trump the trader’s right to inspect or make a fair deduction for use. We unpack what “agreement” really means under the CRA 2015.

Experts vs. “Garage Reports”: The evidence edge that could win your case

Garage reports can help, but only CPR Part 35 expert evidence tends to swing a dispute. Before costs spiral, here’s how and when to use experts to protect your position with consumers, businesses, and finance companies.

“Running Well”: Two words that cost a consumer £3,300

The judge found our member’s repairs were sound and ruled the email undercut the later allegations, dismissing the claim and awarding expenses.

The photo you didn’t take could cost you thousands

Proving a vehicle’s condition at handover is the difference between recovering costs and footing the bill.

They Broke It, You Don’t Pay: Intervening Acts that defend dealer claims

When damage stems from what a customer did after purchase, you may not be on the hook.

Get in touch

Complete the form to get in touch or via our details below:

Phone
01480 455500
Address

Vinpenta House
High Causeway
Whittlesey
Peterborough
PE7 1AE

By submitting this quote you agree to our Terms & Conditions and Privacy & Cookies Policy.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.