The Silent Revocation: Why You Need Solicitors for Driving Without Insurance (IN10)

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The Silent Revocation: Why You Need Solicitors for Driving Without Insurance (IN10)

It is often an honest mistake. A missed direct debit. A misunderstanding about "driving other cars." A policy that auto-renewed but failed. Suddenly, you are pulled over. The police checks show "No Insurance." You explain: "I thought I was covered." The officer replies: "It is your responsibility to know."

Driving without insurance (Code IN10) is a strict liability offence. This means your intent does not matter. The court does not care if you intended to drive uninsured; they only care that you were uninsured. The penalties are severe:

· 6 to 8 Penalty Points.

· Unlimited Fine (usually a week's wages).

· Disqualification (discretionary).

· Police Seizure: The police can seize your car instantly under Section 165A of the Road Traffic Act 1988. You have to pay significant release fees to get it back, or they may crush it.

At Motoring Defence, we know that an IN10 conviction is not just a fine; it is a permanent red flag to insurers. For the next five years, your premiums could triple. For "New Drivers" (within 2 years of passing their test), the mandatory 6 points trigger immediate revocation of your licence. You are back to being a learner. In this guide, we explain how we fight IN10 charges using technical arguments and "Special Reasons" to keep your licence clean.

The "Special Reasons" Argument: Guilty, But No Points

Because it is a strict liability offence, pleading "Not Guilty" is hard if you were factually driving without insurance. However, we can plead "Guilty with Special Reasons." This is a powerful legal mechanism. If successful, the court records a conviction but orders zero penalty points.

· The Scenario: You were driving your parent's or spouse's car. They told you: "Don't worry, I added you to the policy." You believed them. It turns out they forgot, or the insurer made an error.

· The Argument: We prove that you were misled. You had a genuine, reasonable belief that you were insured. We call the policyholder as a witness. We show the court that this was not negligence, but a genuine administrative failure by a third party. If the Magistrates agree, you walk away with no points and no ban.

The "Employee Defence" (Section 143(3))

There is a specific statutory defence for employees. If you were driving a company vehicle in the course of your employment, and you did not know it was uninsured, you have a statutory defence.

· The Test: You must prove that you were using the vehicle for work and had no reason to suspect the insurance was invalid.

· Our Role: We obtain your employment contract and correspondence. We prove that the duty to insure lay with your employer, not you. If successful, you are acquitted entirely (Not Guilty).

The "Driving Other Cars" (DOC) Trap

The most common cause of IN10 charges is the "Driving Other Cars" extension.

· The Myth: "I have Fully Comprehensive insurance on my own car, so I can drive any car third-party."

· The Reality: This is disappearing. Many modern policies exclude this extension, especially for drivers under 25 or in certain trades. Even if you have it, it usually only covers you if the other car is insured by someone else as well (a catch many miss).

· The Defence: If the policy wording was ambiguous or misleading, we can argue "Special Reasons." We analyse the "Certificate of Motor Insurance" in forensic detail. If the small print was contradictory, we argue that no reasonable person could have known they were uncovered.

The "Void vs. Voidable" Policy

Did your insurer cancel your policy without telling you?

· Void Ab Initio: If you lied on your application (e.g., about address), the policy is "void from the start." You were never insured.

· Voidable: If you simply missed a payment, the policy is "voidable." The insurer must follow strict procedures to cancel it (e.g., sending a registered letter giving 7 days' notice).

· The Defence: If the insurer failed to send the cancellation notice correctly (e.g., sent it to an old email), the policy might still be technically valid in the eyes of the law. We force the insurer to prove they served the notice. If they can't, the charge is dropped.

Why Motoring Defence?

· Insurance Knowledge: We understand the difference between "Social, Domestic & Pleasure" and "Business Use" better than the police do.

· New Driver Protection: We specialise in saving the licences of new drivers facing revocation.

· Asset Protection: We help you get your seized car released quickly, handling the complex police paperwork.

Conclusion

An insurance oversight shouldn't cost you your licence. Do not accept the points without checking if you have a "Special Reason."

Contact Motoring Defence today. Let us review your policy and fight for your driving future.

 

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