When a vehicle is legally 'abandoned' under the 1978 Act
The Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978 (England and Wales) gives councils the power to remove vehicles that appear to be abandoned on public land or highways. A vehicle appears to be abandoned if it is in a condition suggesting the owner has no intention of returning (no road tax, no MOT, flat tyres, broken glass, weathering consistent with weeks or months of immobility).
The council does not need proof that the vehicle is abandoned; it needs reasonable grounds to believe it is. A car parked legally on a residential street with a valid tax disc is not abandoned even if it has not moved for months. A car on a verge with no wheels, a smashed windscreen and no SORN marker is abandoned on its face.
In Scotland the equivalent power is in the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982, sections 99 to 103. In Northern Ireland the Pollution Control and Local Government (NI) Order 1978 applies.
