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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Hunter v Registrar of Approved Driving Instructors [2025] UKFTT 76 (GRC) (04 February 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2025/76.html Cite as: [2025] UKFTT 76 (GRC) |
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General Regulatory Chamber
Transport
B e f o r e :
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JUNIOR HUNTER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGISTRAR OF APPROVED DRIVING INSTRUCTORS |
Respondent |
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Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is allowed but no further trainee licence is granted.
The Appeal
a. The Appellant seeks an extended further trainee licence to enable him to book and take the instructional ability test and to continue gaining experience necessary for his career as a driving instructor.
b. There has been a lack of available dates for the Appellant to undertake his instructional ability test in Bishop's Stortford where the appellant has been training. He has been checking regularly, but there have been no available tests up to and including September 2024 making it impossible to complete his training within the initial six month period. An extension of time will allow the Appellant to take his test in an area close to him.
c. The Appellant failed his first test of instructional ability as he had to take it in an unfamiliar area due to the lack of available test slots in his locality. Currently the waiting list for tests in his area exceeds six months which is beyond his control.
d. To maintain his skills and continue training new drivers, it is crucial for him to have a valid licence; the only way he can afford the vehicle used for training is by continuing to work and get paid.
a. the Appellant had failed to comply with the conditions of his first licence as he had returned the training record form AD121AT but had not completed all his training objectives.
b. the purpose of the provisions governing the issue of trainee licences is to afford applicants the opportunity of giving instruction to members of the public whilst endeavouring to achieve registration. The system of issuing licences is not an alternative to the system of registration.
c. the licence granted is not to enable for the instructor to teach for however long it takes to pass the exams but to allow a confined period of experience of instruction. Six months is ordinarily a very reasonable period in which to reach the necessary standard and in particular to obtain any necessary practical experience in tuition. The Appellant has already had a trainee licence, and by virtue of his appeal in respect of his latest application, his first licence has remain in force until the determination of that appeal, which allows him to continue to give paid instruction until determination of the appeal.
d. Since passing his driving ability test, the Appellant has failed the instructional ability test once. Despite ample time and opportunity the Appellant has not been able to reach the required standard of driving for qualification as an Approved Driving Instructor.
e. The refusal of a second licence does not bar the Appellant from attempting the instructional ability test. He does not need to hold a licence for that purpose, nor is it essential for him to give professional tuition under licence in order to obtain training.
The law
The evidence
Discussion and Conclusion
a. Paragraph 3 of the Registrar's response states that the Appellant's first licence was valid from 30 October 2024 to 29 April 2024. Clearly this is not possible. The Tribunal works on the presumption that the first date was intended to be a reference to 30 October 2023 as this fits the broader chronology.
b. Paragraph 4 of the Registrar's response states that the Appellant applied for a second licence on 19 October 2024. Again this cannot be right. It is likely to be a date in April 2024, but the Tribunal should not be left to guess.
c. The third sentence of paragraph 4 of the Registrar's response is incomplete and it is not immediately apparent what point is being made.
d. While paragraph 5 of the Registrar's response acknowledges that the Appellant had completed the ADI21AT form, the Registrar now adopts a new criticism namely that not "all training objectives" had been completed. He does not specify which objective(s) were not completed. None of the purported reasons for refusing the application in paragraph 6 of the Response relate to this specific issue at all.
e. Paragraph 6(ii) of the Registrar's response says that the Appellant has applied for his second licence before the expiry of the first licence, but no date is given in the papers for the Tribunal to verify this.
Signed: Judge Jonathan Scherbel-Ball
Date: 20 January 2025