The Commissioner concluded that the MDB Logistics Limited had
- allowed its operator’s licence to be used by another entity,
- failed to comply with fundamental licence undertakings,
- failed to ensure vehicles and drivers were properly managed,
- and could no longer be trusted to meet the requirement of good repute.
While acknowledging the company’s previously clean regulatory history and the open engagement of Mark Dawson Bevis as director, the Commissioner found that the long term lending of the licence and the subsequent absence of oversight represented serious and persistent failings that could not be mitigated.
As the nominated Transport Manager on the MDB licence, Mark Dawson Bevis has been issued with a formal warning. The Commissioner found that while Mr Bevis maintained generally acceptable standards in respect of vehicles legitimately operated by MDB, he failed in his statutory duty to ensure continuous and effective management of the transport operations relating to the two J&M vehicles unlawfully operating under MDB’s authority.
His good repute is therefore recorded as “severely tarnished but not lost.”
On the matter of the application submitted by J&M Plant Hire Ltd for a Restricted Goods Vehicle Operator’s Licence, the company failed to satisfy the Commissioner that the directors could be trusted to comply with the operator licensing regime. The key factors he cited included
- continuing to operate after the expiry of the directors’ previous licence,
- failure to disclose the liquidation of an associated company with significant debts,
- evidence of prolonged unlawful vehicle use,
- a failure to respond to case management directions,
- and an absence of any demonstrable compliance systems or financial evidence.
In his written decision, Traffic Commissioner Mullan emphasised that trust is fundamental to operator licensing
“Traffic Commissioners must be able to trust operators to comply with the laws, rules and regulations. Any practice that undermines that trust damages road safety, fair competition and public confidence in the licensing regime.”
The Commissioner further noted that while MDB engaged constructively with the DVSA investigation and the Inquiry process, the licence lending arrangement required a regulatory response that sent a clear message to the wider industry.
For full details of the decision, visit the Traffic Commissioner Regulatory Decisions page
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