Courts: Fines

(asked on 17th February 2023) - View Source

Question to the Ministry of Justice:

To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what estimate he has made of the total value of court fines that have been written off in each year since 2010.


Answered by
Mike Freer Portrait
Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
This question was answered on 27th February 2023

The table below details the net value of the fine element of an imposition that has been administratively written off/ (written back) for each financial year from 2010-11 to 2021-22. Judicial cancellations are not included as these are a direct instruction from the court to amend the value of the imposition.

Financial year

Net fine impositions written off/ (written back) in each year £000

2010-11

38,685

2011-12

48,802

2012-13

53,663

2013-14

68,214

2014-15

45,345

2015-16

29,728

2016-17

(17,728)

2017-18

(44,441)

2018-19

(8,332)

2019-20

9,458

2020-21

8,797

2021-22

8,480

Financial penalties imposed by the courts will often consist of multiple elements including, amongst others, compensation, victim surcharge, prosecutor’s costs and a fine.

The Government takes the recovery and enforcement of all financial impositions very seriously and remains committed to ensuring impositions are paid. The courts will do everything within their powers to trace those who do not pay and use a variety of sanctions to ensure the recovery of criminal fines and financial penalties.

In very limited scenarios HMCTS may decide to administratively write-off the debt, the circumstances in which this can happen are severely restricted and occur only when there is no opportunity for the debt to be collected, for example, when a company has been dissolved with no distributable assets. The debt is written off for administrative purposes only, the imposition is still legally enforceable and if in the future it becomes apparent that assets are available to pay the debt then the account is written back. In 2016-17, HMCTS commenced a project to enforce accounts that had previously been written off, this resulted in a period of three financial years where a large number of accounts were written back. There also remain specific and limited situations where the Court can legally cancel any debt.

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