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Jury Service

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    Jury Service

    Result

    Wifey has been called for jury service

    Don't like the "The court may pay you up to the maximum allowance"
    But
    £59.96@day to the 10th day
    £119.93@day 10th to 200th day
    £210.54@day above 200 day

    all plus travel

    Every little helps

    Kerrrrrching - & praying for a complex fraud trial a-la-Guiness lasting years

    Means I'll have to make me own tea when I get home but hey ho
    How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

    #2
    I got called up for jury service in the late 80's. I was a marine engineer working Tugboats out of alexandra dock at the time, for Ocean shipping.
    They contacted the crown and got me an exemption as essential manpower.
    told them that operations would cease in the port etc.
    Sw!ne. It was the worst stormy weather in years.
    I really wanted that seat on the jury.
    Confusion is a natural state of being

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Troll
      £59.96@day to the 10th day
      £119.93@day 10th to 200th day
      £210.54@day above 200 day

      No wonder the self employed avoid jury service

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Troll
        Result

        Wifey has been called for jury service

        Tell her not to forget her iPod and hijab

        Comment


          #5
          Can you say you don't want to do jury service ?? or is this why you need to get jury service insurance incase you do have to do it. Don't think i could survive if i was out of work for 100 days. Plus i would loose my contract is that not a good reason why i could say no.
          Thats the way the cookie crumbles

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Cooperinliverp00l
            Can you say you don't want to do jury service ?? or is this why you need to get jury service insurance incase you do have to do it. Don't think i could survive if i was out of work for 100 days. Plus i would loose my contract is that not a good reason why i could say no.
            You can say it but you still have to do it. Jury service is a civic duty and it is a good citizen's responsibility to arrange his affairs in such a way that he can discharge his civic duties.

            I.e. when you work out how much money you can spend, and how much you need to have aside for a rainy day, you need to take the possibility of jury service into account.

            Yes you might lose your contract. That's one of the differences between contracting and being employed. It's one of the many reasons why contract rates need to be higher than salary rates (or else you are being complicit in driving down wages and performing underpaid disguised employment).
            Last edited by Euro-commuter; 12 July 2007, 08:16.
            God made men. Sam Colt made them equal.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Cooperinliverp00l
              Can you say you don't want to do jury service ?? or is this why you need to get jury service insurance incase you do have to do it. Don't think i could survive if i was out of work for 100 days. Plus i would loose my contract is that not a good reason why i could say no.
              You can defer it, if they agree with your reasons, but you still don't avoid it.

              I tried it some years back, as my client was going live at the time and I was the only one who knew anything about part of the system. Didn't work - they gave me the option of arguing it in front of a judge, or turn up.

              Client didn't go live, as they needed me on-site and I couldn't be. Not happy all round - although the look on the PM's face when I told him I'd been called for jury duty for two weeks was fairly amusing.
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              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Burdock
                Tell her not to forget her iPod and hijab
                Already cracked that one... I see double bonus here if she's out earning, she's not at home watching daytime telly or out spending in shops
                How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Troll
                  Already cracked that one... I see double bonus here if she's out earning, she's not at home watching daytime telly or out spending in shops
                  She must be a very lucky lady.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Troll
                    Result

                    Wifey has been called for jury service

                    Don't like the "The court may pay you up to the maximum allowance"
                    But
                    £59.96@day to the 10th day
                    £119.93@day 10th to 200th day
                    £210.54@day above 200 day

                    all plus travel

                    Every little helps

                    Kerrrrrching - & praying for a complex fraud trial a-la-Guiness lasting years

                    Means I'll have to make me own tea when I get home but hey ho
                    Hate to break this to you but they will only compensate for expenses and actual lost earnings up to £59.96 per day, they will want to see proof. So it will only help if Mrs Troll is on your company payroll.

                    I had to do Jury Service last year, after 7 days on a trial I handed in my evidence of earnings and the clerk's jaw hit the floor. She said "You do realise that the most we can pay out is £59 a day?". I was discharged after that.

                    Comment

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