Payments
When imposing a financial penalty, the court can order:
Magistrates’ courts are discouraged from inviting applications for time to pay and usually ask the client how much can be paid immediately. The court can search the client for any money that could be used to meet the financial penalty, but this power is rarely used.
Guidance to magistrates’ courts from the Sentencing Council is that financial penalties should normally be capable of being paid within 12 months. That also applies to payment of compensation orders, although in exceptional cases it may be appropriate to allow payment over a period of up to three years.1R v Olliver and Olliver [1989] 11 Cr App R (Sentencing) 10. See also the section on payment in the Sentencing Council’s guidance at If the client is unable to pay, this might be because there has been a change of circumstances since the penalty was imposed or that it was fixed without adequate financial information. In either case, consider asking for all or part of the financial penalty to be remitted – ie, totally or partially written off – at a means enquiry (see here). However, when applying for further time to pay or a remission, bear in mind that financial penalties are a priority debt and that they were imposed as a punishment, and this affects the court’s attitude to their recovery. Non-payment of a fine can be viewed as an attempt to avoid punishment.
The current fines enforcement scheme attempts to remove the need for hearings by giving fines officers the power to decide on the level of instalments and the enforcement step(s) to be taken.
Payments are applied by the court in the following order:
•compensation orders;
•costs;
•fines.
If the client defaults on payment, this affects any term of imprisonment s/he is also ordered to serve. However, if the magistrates’ court is collecting a Crown Court fine, the Crown Court will already have fixed the term of imprisonment the client must serve for defaulting on the payment of the fine, but not of any costs or compensation. The magistrates have no power to vary the sentence, although it can be reduced proportinately by remission or by part payment.
Problems can arise if a client has more than one fine or compensation order. Courts do not always make it clear to clients how their payments will be applied, which can lead to enforcement action being taken on one matter, even though regular payments are being made in respect of another. Financial penalties can be paid either:
•consecutively, with the client allowed to clear the oldest first with no enforcement action taken on later ones; or
•concurrently, with payments credited to each outstanding financial penalty.
The client should be advised to request whichever method is in her/his best interests.
Debt advisers are likely to be concerned with the client’s difficulty in paying financial penalties after they have been imposed, rather than with the conditions attached on the day of sentence. You may, therefore, have to negotiate with HMCTS staff or enforcement agents (bailiffs) about unpaid financial penalties.
Fines (except parking or other fixed penalty offences) can be paid online using a debit or credit card. The client must have the letter giving notice of the fine to pay in this way, as it contains the relevant references.