Hi All, I hope everyone is keeping safe and well?
I wonder if anyone might have some advice on situation, that I am stumped on! I am an accountant, so this sort of law, is not my realm.
A friend drives Class 1 for a national firm. A few months ago, he walked into work and was told someone had called in and said he damaged their wall. He knew nothing of this, and that was the last he heard of it.
Last night, a police officer calls him to ask a few questions - which he had expected to happen months ago. After telling the officer he had no knowledge of hitting anything, the officer told him that his firm wouldn't pay for the damage, and so he had to - about £1000. The officer suggested this be through his own car insurance, or out of his own pocket. He wanted my friend to go to all the way over to the Yorkshire police station, to discuss it further. (a good hour drive).
I find this highly irregular... am I behind the times? I would have expected that, if anything, his firm would pay out and they would be the ones to take back any money, should that be appropriate. Or, perhaps a solicitor letter for a civil claim would land on his doorstep (assuming there is scope for that?). Certainly not the police telling him to pay.
I have advised him, in the first instance, to ask for all the officer's detail, and to request the officer put the situation in writing, with evidence of damage, proof it was him, and a copy of any invoices... and I advised him not to give out his address - the officer should know it. I've also told him to get in touch with his firm's head office to find out more, as no one has spoken to him about this.
ACAS told me this wouldn't be an employer/employee issue.
I just wondered if anyone had any knowledge of these situations? Why are the police asking my friend to pay for the damage? Shouldn't this be a civil court issue - if indeed the homeowner can prove my friend has done any damage? I am surprised his work haven't said anything - not even if there was any damage to the trailer he would have been transporting that day.
Any advice is greatly appreciated. This is a genuine friend situation, and I'd like to help as he isn't very good at this sort of thing. It might be that he needs a solicitor, I am just trying to get ahead of what he can do, at this stage.
I wonder if anyone might have some advice on situation, that I am stumped on! I am an accountant, so this sort of law, is not my realm.
A friend drives Class 1 for a national firm. A few months ago, he walked into work and was told someone had called in and said he damaged their wall. He knew nothing of this, and that was the last he heard of it.
Last night, a police officer calls him to ask a few questions - which he had expected to happen months ago. After telling the officer he had no knowledge of hitting anything, the officer told him that his firm wouldn't pay for the damage, and so he had to - about £1000. The officer suggested this be through his own car insurance, or out of his own pocket. He wanted my friend to go to all the way over to the Yorkshire police station, to discuss it further. (a good hour drive).
I find this highly irregular... am I behind the times? I would have expected that, if anything, his firm would pay out and they would be the ones to take back any money, should that be appropriate. Or, perhaps a solicitor letter for a civil claim would land on his doorstep (assuming there is scope for that?). Certainly not the police telling him to pay.
I have advised him, in the first instance, to ask for all the officer's detail, and to request the officer put the situation in writing, with evidence of damage, proof it was him, and a copy of any invoices... and I advised him not to give out his address - the officer should know it. I've also told him to get in touch with his firm's head office to find out more, as no one has spoken to him about this.
ACAS told me this wouldn't be an employer/employee issue.
I just wondered if anyone had any knowledge of these situations? Why are the police asking my friend to pay for the damage? Shouldn't this be a civil court issue - if indeed the homeowner can prove my friend has done any damage? I am surprised his work haven't said anything - not even if there was any damage to the trailer he would have been transporting that day.
Any advice is greatly appreciated. This is a genuine friend situation, and I'd like to help as he isn't very good at this sort of thing. It might be that he needs a solicitor, I am just trying to get ahead of what he can do, at this stage.
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