Freight Transport Association Ireland (FTAI) is backing an appeal in the Supreme Court today against prosecutions for motor tax offences by one Irish firm.

Perennial Freight is challenging prosecutions for breaching motor tax provisions relating to vehicle weight. FTAI’s national council voted to financially back the court action because of its implications for the freight industry in Ireland as a whole.

The company, which has over 50 trucks and more than 350 trailers on its fleet, was originally charged with technical offences relating to the unladen weight of the vehicle at the time it was taxed.
 

Chris Smyth, commercial director of Perennial Freight, said: “The laws for commercial vehicle motor tax were written in a different era. The mixed nature of our business means that, on some occasions, a tractor will have to pick up a trailer heavier than the one it was originally taxed with. If this happens, we could be prosecuted for an offence. 

"We think this is unfair and unreasonable. We don’t believe that the Oireachtas intended the law to be this way when they wrote it. That’s why we have asked the Supreme Court to consider the fairness of these prosecutions against us.”
 
The Irish-owned international transport firm is one of the largest transport companies in Ireland. It is a substantial employer in the Wexford area and also has offices in the UK, France, Holland and Poland.
 
Jon Goodaker, operations manager of Virginia International Logistics, and Chairman of the FTA Ireland National Council said: “Ireland has the highest rates of commercial vehicle road tax in Europe. The only way operators like Perennial Freight could be compliant with the law as it stands is for them to tax every single truck they have at €5,195 per year. This would make them even less competitive against UK and continental operators, and threaten employment in the company. The laws as they stand should be struck down.”
 

Neil McDonnell, General Manager of FTA Ireland, said: “This is a long-running issue for the freight industry in Ireland. We have pressed the Dáil and the Transport Minister on motor tax, to no avail. It is apparent that many international transporters are now registering their operations abroad to avoid the oppressive rates of taxation in this jurisdiction. This also means a loss of driver employment in Ireland.
 
“The Commission on Taxation, set up by the Oireachtas, identified the shortcomings in commercial motor tax and suggested remedies as long ago as 1984. There is no point in Dáil Eireann setting up high-powered commissions, and then ignoring their recommendations".

He continued: "Successive governments have done nothing to rectify the situation, leading to the ridiculous position today where thousands of prosecutions have been made against otherwise law-abiding employers. We believe it’s time the Supreme Court delivered a message to the legislators to get their house in order - 31 years of inaction on this issue is enough.”