Re: Discussion thread no. 78
Expose themselves, yes. But the A & E regulations don't forbid the council from pursuing the committal without trying an attachment first. That case (assuming you mean ex parte Massey - I have the case report for that one) found that the court was negligent in not considering alternatives before committal. It never said the council should have tried others first and it was the magistrates who got the kicking off the judge.
The LGO is only advisory - although most local authorities will follow it's recommendation.
Craig / lgfa92
Actually, it does. The Newcastle Under Lyme case has confirmed so. Were a council to go ahead with a committal hearing before attempting an attachment, they would expose themselves to at least the costs of the court hearing and possibly the debtors legal costs if (s)he was represented.
Furthermore, it is highly unlikely that an LGO finding would be in conflict of anything that was written in the practice notes.
Craig / lgfa92
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