Sorry Guy but it is not illegal.
As I said in May and as Salford Council have confirmed, the statutory duty is to supply a copy where application is made in person.
The Marriage Act 1949 and the Births and Deaths Registration Act 1953 are silent as regards application other than in person and, therefore, it is impossible for a duty to be imposed on the Council where such applications are received. Responding to such applications can, therefore, be nothing other than a discretionary service and charging for such a service is perfectly legal.
Graham
There is nothing in any of the Marriage Acts or the Births & Deaths Acts from 1836 to date the requires applications to be made in person.
If you are so sure that there is please quote from the relevant Act.
Your argument falls apart at the first hurdle as the wording for Superintendent Registrars is the same as the wording for the Registrar General.
For example the Marriage Act, 1949 states the following-
“64.-(I) Every superintendent registrar shall cause indexes of the marriage register books in his office to be made and to be kept with the other records of his office, and the Registrar General shall supply to every superintendent registrar suitable forms for the making of such indexes.
(2) Any person shall be entitled at all reasonable hours to search the said indexes, and to have a certified copy of any entry in the said marriage register books under the hand of the superintendent registrar, on payment to the superintendent registrar of the following fee, that is to say :-
65.-(I) The Registrar General shall cause indexes of all certified copies of entries in marriage register books sent to him under this Part of this Act to be made and kept in the General Register Office.
(2) Any person shall be entitled to search the said indexes between the hours of ten in the morning and four in the afternoon of every day, except Sundays, Christmas Day and Good Friday, and to have a certified copy of any entry in the said certified copies of marriage register books, on payment to the Registrar General or to such other person as may be appointed to act on his behalf of the following fee, that is to say :-“
If the statutory requirement is the application has to be made in person how does one search the index (which has to be kept with the registers) when the GRO no longer makes the indexes available to search.
This shows that either the GRO is acting illegally ( yet the GRO lawyers claim it is not) or the CRO is acting illegally as I claim.
Better still do as I have done on various occasions (such as when I queried the legality of Registrars refusing access to registers in their care) and ask the Registrar General for directions on that particular point.
Cheers
Guy