Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980

[F116MPowers to set aside a conviction or replace a penalty etcE+W

(1)A magistrates’ court may set aside a conviction under section 16H if it appears to the court that the conviction is unjust.

(2)Subsection (1) does not affect the validity of a written charge or a single justice procedure notice.

(3)A magistrates’ court carrying out functions under subsection (1) may be composed of a single justice.

(4)But if a magistrates’ court composed of a single justice is minded to refuse to set aside a conviction—

(a)the decision must instead be referred to a magistrates’ court that is not so composed; and

(b)the parties must be given the opportunity to attend at, and make representations to, the magistrates’ court making that decision.

(5)A magistrates’ court—

(a)may set aside any penalty imposed on a person under section 16I if it appears to the court that the amount of that penalty is unjust; and

(b)if it does so, may impose any sentence that it could have imposed for that offence if the person had pleaded guilty before it at the earliest opportunity.

(6)The reference in subsection (5)(a) to the amount of a penalty is to be read, in relation to penalty points, as a reference to the number of penalty points imposed.

(7)A magistrates’ court may exercise a power conferred by this section—

(a)on an application by the person convicted,

(b)on an application by the relevant prosecutor who initiated the proceedings, or

(c)of its own motion.

(8)In this section—

  • penalty” and “penalty points” have the meanings given by section 16L(4);

  • relevant prosecutor” has the same meaning as in section 29 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003.]

Textual Amendments

F1Ss. 16G-16M and cross-heading inserted (7.11.2023) by Judicial Review and Courts Act 2022 (c. 35), ss. 3, 51(4); S.I. 2023/1194, reg. 2(a)