The six minute train journey that became a long legal nightmare
It should have been a quick, simple rail journey.
Nearly two years ago, Sarah Cook hopped on a train at Wombwell Station, just outside her pet shop in South Yorkshire, to travel one stop to Barnsley. A mere six minutes.
âI tried to buy a ticket on the platform and the machine wouldnât accept my bank card,â she told the BBC. âI thought: âIt doesnât matter, the train is here, Iâll buy one on the train.'â
Unfortunately, there was no guard on the train and when Ms Cook reached the station, transport police were scanning everyoneâs tickets.
When she tried to buy a ticket she was told it was âtoo lateâ. So she was fined.
âThe fine I appealed cause it was ÂŁ20 which seemed a lot for a couple-of-pound journey and I never heard anything back.â
But that wasnât the end of the story.
Nearly a year to the day later in 2023, Ms Cook received a letter telling her she was being fined ÂŁ500.
âThat escalated to going to court,â she says. âFilling out a lot of forms, pleading guilty, pleading not guilty, the threat of a criminal record, the threat of a bigger fine, the threat of jail time, up to two years.â
In the end, she did have to fork out some money. âAfter the threat of everything else, it was a ginormous ÂŁ4,â she says.
It turns out Ms Cook wasnât the only one caught out.
Last week, a ruling by the chief magistrate for England and Wales found the prosecutions by rail companies against Ms Cook and five other people were âunlawfulâ and declared them void.
As a result, an estimated 74,000 other cases will be re-examined. If rail companies are found to have acted unlawfully in those instances, prosecutions could be quashed and fines could be refunded.
For Ms Cook the ruling âfeels goodâ.
âItâs a good win for all involved,â she says. âIâm just sad it took this long to get it sorted.â
So who could be in line to have their convictions quashed and get a refund?
What is the issue?
The ruling applies to prosecutions for alleged fare evasion made by seven rail companies: Arriva Rail Northern, Avanti West Coast, Greater Anglia, Great Western Railway, Merseyrail, Northern and Transpennine
The prosecutions took place between 2018 and 2023, and one of the key issues is that they used something called a single justice procedure (SJP).
Under this procedure, a case is dealt with by a single magistrate and a legal adviser behind closed doors.
This is in contrast to an open court where you might have three magistrates hearing a case and the public can attend.
SJPs were introduced in 2015 as a speedier way to prosecute âminorâ criminal offences.
The following year, rail companies were allowed to start using SJPs to privately prosecute people who they claimed had dodged fares.
The problem is rail that companies used the procedure to prosecute offences listed in the Regulation of Railways Act 1889.
They are not allowed to do this.
Rail companies can only use certain byelaws to pursue people they claim have not paid a rail fare â not the Regulation of Railways Act.
Iâve been fined, am I owed money?
That depends â and it is very specific.
In short, if you were prosecuted for alleged fare evasion through the single justice procedure for offences under the Regulation of Railways Act 1889 you may be entitled to a refund for fines you have paid.
The way to find out if you might be due a refund is to go back to your paperwork.
Nathan Seymour-Hyde, a partner at Reed Solicitors, says that the original court summons will say âsingle justice procedureâ on it.
Then check the charges.
He says to see if there are any Regulation of Railways Act offences listed on there.
But what if you donât have the documents?
Mr Seymour-Hyde says: âSometimes people just didnât get that paperwork. Theyâve moved addresses and then they eventually get chased by the court.â
If you do not have the relevant papers, you can contact the court and the rail company that prosecuted you. They should send you the documents.
Or you could wait until HM Courts and Tribunals Service contacts you to find out if you have been affected.
What should I do next?
You should wait â but donât expect a quick decision.
Mr Seymour-Hyde reckons it is a âbig mess to untangleâ.
âThere are costs, compensation and the fines that were paid by each person that need to be returned.
âMany people will have moved address. So itâs going to be a very challenging process to just pinpoint where people are and then try to return the money to them.â
Before all of that, the court services, the Department for Transport and the train companies have to agree a list of all the cases that could potentially be declared void.
The Department for Transport says that the courts services will use court records and case information held by rail companies âto contact those affected over the coming weeks about the hearing and decisionâ.
The government advises that people will be contacted directly and told what will happen next âincluding if you have paid some or all of a financial penaltyâ.
For those who havenât paid anything, they will also be contacted if their conviction is declared invalid and to confirm that the court record is corrected.