Vehicle & Technical > Series Land Rovers

Legality Question.

<< < (2/3) > >>

robbie:
Tom, if you need a hand, let me know and I will help if I can

I reckon no one would miss it, and I think that in the eyes of the law, you can only steal something if you can be proved to be 'permanently depriving' its rightful owner.....

So I reckon if it can be seen you hav e tried ot fi nd out who it is, and cant, then as long as you document it well, you can always go to court with your head held high......

Let me know Tom

iianorthants:
was a thing about this on one of the series boards a few years ago. The main points is who's land is it on, cuss if left on theirs it's not a hard job to contact DVLA get last owner write to them, if no reply in certain time you get rights of the vehicle (normally people charge for storage to make sure the person isn't intreasted in claiming  :wink: )
 if not your land you will have to pay for last owners details and follow the same lines contact and give them a reasonable time to answer! but then you need the land owner permision to take

Joe King:
Thanks for all the replys
I will have another poke about this week

muddyjames:
would be interesting to see how this topic pans out. good luck. i bet you will make a mint on ebay selling that chassis. It could end up going to another persons allotment and rusting away then!!!

bezzabsa:
always thought that if you placed a notice on it for 21 days and no one lays claim then you can LEGALLY move it to a safe place , and contact dvla for log book..dvla send out form and if no reply in 2 weeks (i think) you legally stake claim!
.seems tea leafs were making the most of this, by breaking in and nicking keys when ppl were on holiday - and applying for log book ,

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version