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| uk.legal.moderated (Legal Topics Relevant To UK Law - Moderated) (uk.legal.moderated) To enable contributors who have genuine legal problems to ask for practical advice from other people (lawyers or laymen) who have had to deal with similar problems in the past. Advertising is forbidden. |
| Tags: arrestable, offences |
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Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a
maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). These days all offences are arrestable. Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? |
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archytas wrote:
Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). These days all offences are arrestable. Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? Putting: "housing act" " arrestable offence" into Google produces a lucky first hit of http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2005...20050015_en_26 which includes among the many amendments: Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) 45 In Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985 (which sets out grounds upon which a court may, if it considers it reasonable, order possession of dwelling-houses let under secure tenancies), in Ground 2, in paragraph (b)(ii), for "arrestable" substitute "indictable". That the one you have in mind? -- Robin |
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Mon, 13 Oct 2008 06:30:06
uk.legal.moderated archytas Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). These days all offences are arrestable. Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? You've muddled up your latter. I am not sure what you are asking. -- Wm... Reply-To: address valid for at least 7 days |
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#4
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On Mon, 13 Oct 2008 06:30:06 +0100, archytas
wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). These days all offences are arrestable. Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? It isn't "all offences". It is "all indictable offences" - i.e. those which can be tried at crown court rather than only at magistrates court. But yes, the Act which changed that (Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) also amended all the other known laws which referred to "arrestable" offences so that they now refer to "Indictable offences". -- Alex Heney, Global Villager If a program is useful, it must be changed. To reply by email, my address is alexATheneyDOTplusDOTcom |
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On 13 Oct, 14:15, "neverwas" wrote:
archytas wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). *These days all offences are arrestable. *Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? Putting: "housing act" " arrestable offence" into Google produces a lucky first hit ofhttp://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2005/ukpga_20050015_en_26which includes among the many amendments: Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) 45 In Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985 (which sets out grounds upon which a court may, if it considers it reasonable, order possession of dwelling-houses let under secure tenancies), in Ground 2, in paragraph (b)(ii), for "arrestable" substitute "indictable". That the one you have in mind? -- Robin I think this is the other way round Robin. The 1985 act used the term indictable and this was later substituted with arrestable. We have criminal neighbours and are almost exhausted in trying to deal with the relevant authorities. |
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On 13 Oct, 21:35, Alex Heney wrote:
On Mon, 13 Oct 2008 06:30:06 +0100, archytas wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). *These days all offences are arrestable. *Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? It isn't "all offences". It is "all indictable offences" - i.e. those which can be tried at crown court rather than only at magistrates court. But yes, the Act which changed that (Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) also amended all the other known laws which referred to "arrestable" offences so that they now refer to "Indictable offences". -- Alex Heney, Global Villager If a program is useful, it must be changed. To reply by email, my address is alexATheneyDOTplusDOTcom By latter I meant to ask whether the term arrestable has changed away from (more or less) indictable - thus arrests for police assault and so on might count. I'll check out the SOSPC - it seems fairly typical of lack of clarity in law! |
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#7
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On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 17:30:12 +0100, archytas
wrote: On 13 Oct, 14:15, "neverwas" wrote: archytas wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). *These days all offences are arrestable. *Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? Putting: "housing act" " arrestable offence" into Google produces a lucky first hit ofhttp://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2005/ukpga_20050015_en_26which includes among the many amendments: Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) 45 In Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985 (which sets out grounds upon which a court may, if it considers it reasonable, order possession of dwelling-houses let under secure tenancies), in Ground 2, in paragraph (b)(ii), for "arrestable" substitute "indictable". That the one you have in mind? -- Robin I think this is the other way round Robin. The 1985 act used the term indictable and this was later substituted with arrestable. We have criminal neighbours and are almost exhausted in trying to deal with the relevant authorities. You think wrong. The term was arrestable prior to the 2005 Act. Since when, it has been all indictable offences, rather than "arrestable". -- Alex Heney, Global Villager User Error: replace user and press any key to continue. To reply by email, my address is alexATheneyDOTplusDOTcom |
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On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 17:35:07 +0100, archytas
wrote: On 13 Oct, 21:35, Alex Heney wrote: On Mon, 13 Oct 2008 06:30:06 +0100, archytas wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). Ā*These days all offences are arrestable. Ā*Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? It isn't "all offences". It is "all indictable offences" - i.e. those which can be tried at crown court rather than only at magistrates court. But yes, the Act which changed that (Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) also amended all the other known laws which referred to "arrestable" offences so that they now refer to "Indictable offences". By latter I meant to ask whether the term arrestable has changed away from (more or less) indictable - thus arrests for police assault and so on might count. I'll check out the SOSPC - it seems fairly typical of lack of clarity in law! This law is perfectly clear. Your idea of "latter" wasn't :-) The simple fact is that prior to the 2005 act, citizen's arrests were legal only for "arrestable" offences. Since the introduction of that act, they have been legal for all "indictable" offences, and the concept of "arrestable" offence has been removed from the statute books. And in particular, for the act in which you are interested, schedule 7 of SOCPA 2005 amends it as follows: --------------------------------------------------- Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) 45 In Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985 (which sets out grounds upon which a court may, if it considers it reasonable, order possession of dwelling-houses let under secure tenancies), in Ground 2, in paragraph (b)(ii), for āarrestableā substitute āindictableā. --------------------------------------------------- -- Alex Heney, Global Villager Give me ambiguity or give me something else! To reply by email, my address is alexATheneyDOTplusDOTcom |
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#9
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Alex Heney wrote:
On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 17:35:07 +0100, archytas wrote: On 13 Oct, 21:35, Alex Heney wrote: On Mon, 13 Oct 2008 06:30:06 +0100, archytas wrote: Back in the old days, an arrestable offence was one that carried a maximum sentence of 5 years or more (except for twoc). These days all offences are arrestable. Does anyone know if the use of the term arrestable offence in Housing Acts now means the latter? It isn't "all offences". It is "all indictable offences" - i.e. those which can be tried at crown court rather than only at magistrates court. But yes, the Act which changed that (Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) also amended all the other known laws which referred to "arrestable" offences so that they now refer to "Indictable offences". By latter I meant to ask whether the term arrestable has changed away from (more or less) indictable - thus arrests for police assault and so on might count. I'll check out the SOSPC - it seems fairly typical of lack of clarity in law! This law is perfectly clear. Your idea of "latter" wasn't :-) The simple fact is that prior to the 2005 act, citizen's arrests were legal only for "arrestable" offences. Since the introduction of that act, they have been legal for all "indictable" offences, and the concept of "arrestable" offence has been removed from the statute books. And in particular, for the act in which you are interested, schedule 7 of SOCPA 2005 amends it as follows: --------------------------------------------------- Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) 45 In Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985 (which sets out grounds upon which a court may, if it considers it reasonable, order possession of dwelling-houses let under secure tenancies), in Ground 2, in paragraph (b)(ii), for "arrestable" substitute "indictable". --------------------------------------------------- There is also the one I missed the first time around* which deals with assured tenanices: Housing Act 1988 (c. 50) 46 In Part 2 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1988 (which sets out grounds on which a court may order possession of dwelling-houses let on assured tenancies), in Ground 14, in paragraph (b)(ii), for "arrestable" substitute "indictable". *an eminent lawyer advised me always to read an Act from end to end before using any bit of it - but as I'm neither lawyer nor eminent .......... -- Robin |
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