anotheruser1
New Member
Hi All,
My daughter (18) recently was on the train, she had purchased a ticket via the app and had accidentally selected the 16-17 discount rather than the 16-25 one (one is directly below the other). When the ticket inspector checked her ticket (30th December 2023, 11:12) and asked her age, to which she of course answered truthfully, he than got rather bullish about her having got the wrong ticket and that he would have to write her up for it, leaving her nearly in tears, especially as she had seen him just kick someone else off the train so was quite worried about what was about to happen to her. He took all her details and subsequently a letter arrived allowing her to provide mitigation on the 08th of January, which she did, explaining that it was a genuine error. Another letter has now arrived stating that it is a Fixed Penalty Notice of £100 plus a full fare of £12.80 for the journey.
The ticket she purchased was £5.20 with the 16-17 discount, looking today for the same journey the ticket would have been £5.25 or £6.85 depending on the time of the train.
I looked up how to appeal (nothing was mentioned on the letter) and came across the governments website about the new independant appeals process, reading through the documentation linked to it I can see that there should also have been the ability to reduce that to £50 if paid within 21 days). I looked at the letter again and there is no mention of being able to appeal, or the reduced amount if paid quickly. So I tried ringing them and got the automated message to go to the appeals site, where I did, tried to enter the info only for it to say that the prefix is not valid. So back to Northern. When I eventually got through to someone they advised that it is a Travel Inident Report (TIR) rather than a Penalty Fare Notice(PFN), so she has no right of appeal and that they do not accept mistakes as allowed mitigation. When I mentioned again about the government website specifically stating that 'Penalty fare rules altered to offer greater protection to those making genuine mistakes.' She got rather short with me, once again telling me that the case had already been looked at that it was a TIR so PFN rules didn't apply and this was them being compassionate rather than going straight to court, that because it was a TIR my daughter wasn't allowed to appeal. I told her that it very much feels to me that this is being used unfairly by the rail company to bypass the independant appeals process and to remove the ability to pay a reduced amount, after which she did eventually say that she could 'appeal' by re-emailing the original email address from the first letter to include any additional mitigation, but that in her opinion they were being very generous already and it would be rejected.
There is also the threat on the letter stating that if it does go to court that they will stick on another £150 for costs.
I really can't afford to do it if it goes wrong, but the sheer bullying injustice of it makes me want to ask them to take it to court so it can be challenged. She would already going to be out of pocket £100 if she just pays up, for an innocuous error that would have 'lost' them a grand total of 5p revenue as she would have chosen the £5.25 ticket for her journey.
So, any help/suggestions before I email them back to challange them on their predatory behaviour?
My daughter (18) recently was on the train, she had purchased a ticket via the app and had accidentally selected the 16-17 discount rather than the 16-25 one (one is directly below the other). When the ticket inspector checked her ticket (30th December 2023, 11:12) and asked her age, to which she of course answered truthfully, he than got rather bullish about her having got the wrong ticket and that he would have to write her up for it, leaving her nearly in tears, especially as she had seen him just kick someone else off the train so was quite worried about what was about to happen to her. He took all her details and subsequently a letter arrived allowing her to provide mitigation on the 08th of January, which she did, explaining that it was a genuine error. Another letter has now arrived stating that it is a Fixed Penalty Notice of £100 plus a full fare of £12.80 for the journey.
The ticket she purchased was £5.20 with the 16-17 discount, looking today for the same journey the ticket would have been £5.25 or £6.85 depending on the time of the train.
I looked up how to appeal (nothing was mentioned on the letter) and came across the governments website about the new independant appeals process, reading through the documentation linked to it I can see that there should also have been the ability to reduce that to £50 if paid within 21 days). I looked at the letter again and there is no mention of being able to appeal, or the reduced amount if paid quickly. So I tried ringing them and got the automated message to go to the appeals site, where I did, tried to enter the info only for it to say that the prefix is not valid. So back to Northern. When I eventually got through to someone they advised that it is a Travel Inident Report (TIR) rather than a Penalty Fare Notice(PFN), so she has no right of appeal and that they do not accept mistakes as allowed mitigation. When I mentioned again about the government website specifically stating that 'Penalty fare rules altered to offer greater protection to those making genuine mistakes.' She got rather short with me, once again telling me that the case had already been looked at that it was a TIR so PFN rules didn't apply and this was them being compassionate rather than going straight to court, that because it was a TIR my daughter wasn't allowed to appeal. I told her that it very much feels to me that this is being used unfairly by the rail company to bypass the independant appeals process and to remove the ability to pay a reduced amount, after which she did eventually say that she could 'appeal' by re-emailing the original email address from the first letter to include any additional mitigation, but that in her opinion they were being very generous already and it would be rejected.
There is also the threat on the letter stating that if it does go to court that they will stick on another £150 for costs.
I really can't afford to do it if it goes wrong, but the sheer bullying injustice of it makes me want to ask them to take it to court so it can be challenged. She would already going to be out of pocket £100 if she just pays up, for an innocuous error that would have 'lost' them a grand total of 5p revenue as she would have chosen the £5.25 ticket for her journey.
So, any help/suggestions before I email them back to challange them on their predatory behaviour?