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Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 16:51 #43610 | |
Copping
95 posts |
" said:If the guard does not accept the ticket, can I just buy a single to Swansea? Or would it be a fine?Worst case scenario would be that you would have to buy a new ticket. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:20 #43611 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
So then... Quote: Penalty fares are a civil matter not a criminal one.- Yes, but this isn't a penalty fare area, so he'd be in the breach of bylaw 18 (1), which is a criminal matter. Quote: In any area not designated as a compulsory ticket area, no person shall enterNext... Quote: Burden of proof lies with the plaintiff - Not in this case, strict liability Onto... Quote: You won't actually need to buy an extra ticket. True, but he will need to buy a ticket, his current one is worthless. Quote: If the guard does not accept the ticket, can I just buy a single to Swansea? Or would it be a fine? You'd get your name and address taken and your ticket withdrawn, it'd be up to the operator as to whether they want to take you to court or not. Court would be a fine, as well as victim fees and court costs, and probably a very easy win for them. ... Quote: I'm not sure how lenient Arriva Trains Wales are. Me neither, but I wouldn't like to test them if I was in the wrong. Quote: Worst case scenario would be that you would have to buy a new ticket. No, that's the second best situation (after being allowed to use the already purchased ticket) If you have any more questions about fares and ticketing, RailForums.co.uk has a Fares & Routeing Experts Exchange which is visited by people knowledgeable in this kind of thing and would be a more suitable place to ask. Also if you do get asked to buy a new ticket, that would be £65.75, make sure you carry the funds. Last edited: 17/04/2013 at 17:25 by Sacro Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:30 #43612 | |
Copping
95 posts |
" said:I've been a Ticket Office clerk for the past 9 years. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:34 #43613 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:" said:Depending on which TOC that could work for or against you.I've been a Ticket Office clerk for the past 9 years. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:40 #43614 | |
Gwasanaethau
509 posts |
" said:…With respect, you didn’t quote the whole byelaw: Quote: 18.Most of the stations on the Habrough-Cleethorpes route fall into (3) as they have no ticket machines or desks, and I would say a lot of Welsh stations do too. A lot of stations in these areas state that you may purchase the ticket from the guard on board the train. Obviously needs to be checked out beforehand. It might be worth calling Arriva Trains Wales and explaining the situation. You may comply with (3)(iii) in that case. Log in to reply The following user said thank you: McBoo |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:44 #43615 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
The station he is starting at has a ticket office, so that means that (i) isn't helpful. I don't think I've seen (ii) usable, (iii) might be useful if he can get the ticket endorsed *prior* to travelling.
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Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:51 #43616 | |
McBoo
29 posts |
The ticket office will be closed at the time I intend to travel, but there is a ticket machine. Not sure if that makes a difference.
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Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:53 #43617 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:The ticket office will be closed at the time I intend to travel, but there is a ticket machine. Not sure if that makes a difference.Depends if it's a card-only one or not. If it takes cash and you have cash then you're expected to use it. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 17:57 #43618 | |
McBoo
29 posts |
I'm not quite sure how 3(i) can help? ATW let you buy a ticket on the train even if there are facilities to buy at the station. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 18:07 #43620 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:I'm not quite sure how 3(i) can help?3(i) probably doesn't help. Just because they let you doesn't mean it's allowable, and doesn't mean they can't prosecute if they suspect foul play, and it also doesn't mean they'll sell you discounted tickets. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 18:11 #43621 | |
McBoo
29 posts |
OK, thank you very much everyone for your help. I feel I have gained all the information I need now on what to do. Many thanks, Eden Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 22:13 #43625 | |
headshot119
4869 posts |
" said:" said:It depends whether or not the Clunderwen - Swansea leg is a reservable train, if it is, you are not technically allowed to take any other train than the one you are booked on. A good example of this is a Wrexham General - London Terminals advance ticket. You will get issued a "Coach * Seat **" reservation and must travel on that train, even though the ticket is route VT&Connections.You won't actually need to buy an extra ticket. I presume the train your taking from Llanelli would of been the same train from Clunderwen?If the first train is the "and connections" bit then it is not limited to a specific train. But it IS limited to a particular station pair - and according to the rules I posted earlier, boarding at a different station is not allowed on that particular type of ticket. As for the rest of the thread I must echo Sacro's comments. Also do not be fooled into thinking ATW are happy for you to buy on board if there was an opportunity to buy before boarding. It is something they have recently started cracking down on hard, especially in South Wales. At best expect to be charged the full anytime single to your destination £65.75, and at worse be reported for prosecution. " said: " said:Whatever else it is it's not fare evasion within the meaning of Section 5 of the Regulation of Railways Act 1889. "Passengers for New Lane, should be seated in the rear coach of the train " - Opinions are my own and not those of my employer Last edited: 17/04/2013 at 22:17 by headshot119 Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 17/04/2013 at 23:12 #43627 | |
postal
5264 posts |
" said:At best expect to be charged the full anytime single to your destination £65.75, and at worse be reported for prosecution.What is the legal position if the potential traveller in this instance then said when challenged after boarding the train at Llanelli with a pre-booked ticket from Clunderwen that he/she had been caught out by not understanding the small print and would only go to Swansea as he/she wished to return home as he/she could not afford the full excess of £65.75 to Padd? “In life, there is always someone out there, who won’t like you, for whatever reason, don’t let the insecurities in their lives affect yours.” – Rashida Rowe Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 00:01 #43628 | |
headshot119
4869 posts |
" said:" said:That I am not sure of, it's not a situation I've ever thought of. I suppose it can go one two ways, either the guard still charges the £65.75 as the passenger clearly had intent to travel to Paddingtion based on the fact that's where the original ticket was to, perusing this through an Unpaid Fare Notice. Or charges the appropriate anytime single fare to Swansea.At best expect to be charged the full anytime single to your destination £65.75, and at worse be reported for prosecution.What is the legal position if the potential traveller in this instance then said when challenged after boarding the train at Llanelli with a pre-booked ticket from Clunderwen that he/she had been caught out by not understanding the small print and would only go to Swansea as he/she wished to return home as he/she could not afford the full excess of £65.75 to Padd? "Passengers for New Lane, should be seated in the rear coach of the train " - Opinions are my own and not those of my employer Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 00:21 #43629 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:" said:Realistically they'd have no leg to stand on, lack of understanding the small print isn't generally accepted as a valid excuse.At best expect to be charged the full anytime single to your destination £65.75, and at worse be reported for prosecution.What is the legal position if the potential traveller in this instance then said when challenged after boarding the train at Llanelli with a pre-booked ticket from Clunderwen that he/she had been caught out by not understanding the small print and would only go to Swansea as he/she wished to return home as he/she could not afford the full excess of £65.75 to Padd? Whether they choose to go to Swansea or Paddington or anywhere else, the offence has been committed and the small matter of fares owed turns into a larger matter of it being taken to court. I think that you can excess an advance fare to the cheapest walk up fare, that would probably be the best option, better to go and do it at the ticket office as well, get it sorted before boarding. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 01:15 #43631 | |
postal
5264 posts |
" said:Realistically they'd have no leg to stand on, lack of understanding the small print isn't generally accepted as a valid excuse.An answer m'learned friends would respect and it completely addresses the situation until you are a conductor faced with the problem. The imagined passenger is clearly in error. However, once informed that he is liable to a full excess for the fare from Clunderwen to Padd what is the situation if the imagined passenger then does not wish to pay that amount but is willing to pay the full fare for the use he is making of the railway (i.e. a trip from Llanelli to Swansea) as he now no longer wishes to travel to Padd due to the cost. At that stage our passenger is no longer wishing to use his/her pre-booked ticket. How is that legally differentiated from another passenger who boards at Llanelli without a ticket wishing only to travel to Swansea? The National Rail Conditions of Carriage only state "Before you travel you must have a ticket or other authority to travel which is valid for the train(s) you intend to use and for the journey you intend to make. If you travel in a train: (a) without a ticket; or (b) the circumstances described in any of Conditions 10, 11, 12, 18, 19, 22, 30, 35 and 39 apply; you will be liable to pay the full single fare or full return fare or, if appropriate, a Penalty Fare (see Condition 4) for your journey." The full single fare for what journey, the one on an invalid ticket, or the journey the passenger wishes to make once informed of the full cost of his original journey? If the latter applies then there can be no question of a court case as the passenger has discharged all of his/her responsibilities once the fare for the actual journey carried out is handed over. That is the question I originally posed and which has not yet been answered. “In life, there is always someone out there, who won’t like you, for whatever reason, don’t let the insecurities in their lives affect yours.” – Rashida Rowe Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 06:06 #43635 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
" said:Strict liability does not mean guilty unless you can prove you are innocent, it still requires the plaintive to prove guilt and does not require the defendant to prove anything. Strict liability just means that a mitigation argument is unlikely to succeed after guilt has been proven by the plaintive. Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 09:38 #43641 | |
kbarber
1742 posts |
" said:" said:Realistically they'd have no leg to stand on, lack of understanding the small print isn't generally accepted as a valid excuse.An answer m'learned friends would respect and it completely addresses the situation until you are a conductor faced with the problem. The imagined passenger is clearly in error. However, once informed that he is liable to a full excess for the fare from Clunderwen to Padd what is the situation if the imagined passenger then does not wish to pay that amount but is willing to pay the full fare for the use he is making of the railway (i.e. a trip from Llanelli to Swansea) as he now no longer wishes to travel to Padd due to the cost. At that stage our passenger is no longer wishing to use his/her pre-booked ticket. How is that legally differentiated from another passenger who boards at Llanelli without a ticket wishing only to travel to Swansea? I suspect the strictly correct thing for the conductor to do under those circumstances would be to issue the single fare for the journey the passenger says he now wishes to make and to withdraw the invalid ticket. Whether conductors are sufficiently trained & briefed these days I really wouldn't like to say - I suspect some TOCs are rather better than others in that respect. And of course they do have a degree of discretion (again something that will vary from one TOC to another and even one route to another); it would be unwise to rely too heavily on discretion both existing and being exercised in any particular situation though (and it is known that - especially, it seems, where there's a degree of payment by results - some conductors not only exercise no discretion at all, they seem to push the envelope of what they can legitimately enforce). Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 11:46 #43645 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
" said:" said:Realistically they'd have no leg to stand on, lack of understanding the small print isn't generally accepted as a valid excuse.An answer m'learned friends would respect and it completely addresses the situation until you are a conductor faced with the problem. The imagined passenger is clearly in error. However, once informed that he is liable to a full excess for the fare from Clunderwen to Padd what is the situation if the imagined passenger then does not wish to pay that amount but is willing to pay the full fare for the use he is making of the railway (i.e. a trip from Llanelli to Swansea) as he now no longer wishes to travel to Padd due to the cost. At that stage our passenger is no longer wishing to use his/her pre-booked ticket. How is that legally differentiated from another passenger who boards at Llanelli without a ticket wishing only to travel to Swansea? Advanced ticket rules say: Break of journey You may not start, break and resume, or end your journey at any intermediate station except to change to/from connecting trains as shown on the ticket(s) or other valid travel itinerary. But unlike other rules on the page it does not say it is "worthless" if you do, it just says you can't do it. But according to National Rail Conditions of Carriage Condition 16 (which is not cross-referred to 2(b) (above quote)) says: If you start, break and resume, or end your journey at an intermediate station when you are not entitled to do so, you will be liable to pay an excess fare. This excess fare will be the difference between the price paid for the ticket you hold and the price of the lowest priced ticket(s) available for immediate travel that would have entitled you to start, break and resume, or end your journey at that station on the service(s) you have used. It seems clear to me that this is exactly what is happening, the journey is on the correct train starting at the wrong "intermediate" station. You are doing something that you are not allowed to do and Condition 16 sets out the consequences. The cheapest walk on fare from Llanelli on the 20th is £21.75, what was the fare paid from Clunderwen? Currently it's quoting £20.25 Advance! On the basis of these rules there could be a further liability to pay £1.50 and there is no reference to evasion or criminal prosecutions. Which goes back to what I intimated before - whatever the true position is it's not evasion. At worst, if there are alternative arguments based on other documents, it just shows the whole thing is confusing which must work in favour of the bewildered passenger. Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Last edited: 18/04/2013 at 11:50 by Peter Bennet Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 12:25 #43649 | |
jc92
3685 posts |
IF you were to apply common sense* to the situation, the ticket provides passage an a particular train from point A to Point C. If someone boards the correct train at an intermediate point, they are actually overpaying on their ticket, as they are occupying the same agreed space, but for a shorter period of the journey, thereby not inconveniencing the TOC. obviously common sense doesnt apply any more, and we have to get into a massive technical debate about it nowadays, but on a personal note I have done this plenty of times myself without issue, although thats no guarantee. (Probably becuase the conductors don't realise it's not allowed and just go along with it). *common sense was something that existed but seems to have been slowly phased out in the last 15 years or so. "We don't stop camborne wednesdays" Last edited: 18/04/2013 at 12:26 by jc92 Log in to reply The following user said thank you: Signalhunter |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 12:54 #43651 | |
headshot119
4869 posts |
" said:IF you were to apply common sense* to the situation, the ticket provides passage an a particular train from point A to Point C. If someone boards the correct train at an intermediate point, they are actually overpaying on their ticket, as they are occupying the same agreed space, but for a shorter period of the journey, thereby not inconveniencing the TOC.However with out rather bizzare way of structuring fares, you are not always overpaying for the ticket. "Passengers for New Lane, should be seated in the rear coach of the train " - Opinions are my own and not those of my employer Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 15:23 #43661 | |
GeoffM
6376 posts |
" said:IF you were to apply common sense* to the situation, the ticket provides passage an a particular train from point A to Point C. If someone boards the correct train at an intermediate point, they are actually overpaying on their ticket, as they are occupying the same agreed space, but for a shorter period of the journey, thereby not inconveniencing the TOC.I believe the restriction on station pairs is to avoid people finding a cheaper fare from another station and applying it to their journey. You're on their trains, they set the rules, you have to follow them. A similar thing happens with air tickets. There are often situations where it's cheaper to fly X-Y-Z than Y-Z but the rules say the Y-Z section is void if X-Y is not taken first. SimSig Boss Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 19:47 #43678 | |
Steamer
3984 posts |
" said:IF you were to apply common sense* to the situation, the ticket provides passage an a particular train from point A to Point C. If someone boards the correct train at an intermediate point, they are actually overpaying on their ticket, as they are occupying the same agreed space, but for a shorter period of the journey, thereby not inconveniencing the TOC.Agreed, however their argument will be that if they're giving you an advance fare for a cheaper price, you should have to 'pay' the difference in another way, in this case by lack of flexibility. "Don't stress/ relax/ let life roll off your backs./ Except for death and paying taxes/ everything in life.../ is only for now." (Avenue Q) Last edited: 18/04/2013 at 19:47 by Steamer Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 19:56 #43679 | |
Sacro
1171 posts |
" said:However if you don't have a ticket, the NRCOC might not actually apply to you, it would be a by-law offence that is committed. Log in to reply |
Advance Ticket Query 18/04/2013 at 19:59 #43680 | |
Peter Bennet
5402 posts |
Well from my conclusion above it kind of makes some logical sense: they recognise you have bought a ticket so you are not attempting to evade (as was asserted further above) the fare but you are not sticking to the rules; so they equalise the matter by charging you the difference between what it would otherwise have cost to dissuade you from abusing the system but not overly penalising you for doing so. Peter I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs! Last edited: 18/04/2013 at 20:37 by Peter Bennet Log in to reply |