The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

St Andrews man’s audacious bid to overturn speeding fine fails

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A St Andrews businessma­n has failed in an audacious bid to avoid a speeding prosecutio­n on the grounds the letter informing him of the offence was signed by a retired chief constable.

John Scrymgeour-Wedderburn, 64, was charged with speeding at 55mph in a 40mph zone at the Balfarg Junction near Glenrothes on April 26 last year.

After the offence was caught on camera he was sent notificati­on of his intended prosecutio­n bearing the digital signature of chief constable Philip Gormley.

However, the letter was dated April 27 2018, several weeks after Mr Gormley stood down from the force’s top job on February 7.

Dr Scrymgeour-Wedderburn, who already had nine points on his licence and faced a further three, challenged the decision through the courts.

His sheriff court appeal was dismissed but he pursued the issue via the High Court.

Solicitors for Dr Scrymgeour-Wedderburn maintained a notice of intended prosecutio­n was a formal document which required to be served on an accused, suggesting the notice was invalid because it came from someone who was not entitled to give it.

However, Lord Carloway agreed with the stance of solicitors for the prosecutio­n who argued that the defect in the signature of the chief constables was “irrelevant” to the issue of whether Dr Scrymgeour-Wedderburn has been put on notice about his driving.

In determinin­g whether a particular document constitute­s a sufficient notice, Lord Carloway concluded “a modicum of commonsens­e” was needed.

He ruled: “The notice of intended prosecutio­n in this case came on notepaper headed ‘Police Scotland’ and bearing that institutio­n’s official crest.

“There was a specific reference to the East Safety Camera Unit and to the relative website which, if consulted, would have made it even clearer that the unit operated under the auspices of the police.

“All the requisite details of the alleged offence were given.

“The letter concluded with an electronic signature of a person who was not then the chief constable (a fact of which the appellant may, or may not, have been, aware).

“This was an error, but it was not one which affected the validity of the notice, which continued to meet the purpose of the statutory provision.

“It is not suggested that the error misled or prejudiced the appellant.”

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