I'm going to try and tackle as many of the questions as possible - let me know if I miss anything.
"It sounds like a terrible experience and set of circumstances for her, but ultimately, it is her error and she’ll need to accept that and face the consequences."
100% and she accepts this, and attempted to pay at the time, but wasn't able to. It was particularly traumatic (which is why I’m tackling this rather than her to try and remove emotion from the answers).
“It’ll be a standard case of apology, accepting fault and requesting a settlement.”
Thank you – I think that was what I was trying to get to is the correct response.
"Also noting the post above, that settlement will likely include any other fares where she accidentally applied the railcard whilst expired."
The route was 05:30 Euston-Preston (Avanti) 08:41 Preston – St Annes-On-The-Sea £29:30 (plus Trainline Booking Fee I’ve ignored). The railcard expired 29 Aug 2024. There were 6 previous journeys taken since then. The new railcard was purchased on Trainpal (my instructions as was discounted – but done that evening).
“She had over 2 hours on the train after she was instructed to renew, and agreed to renew, her Railcard, and did not do so. She could have easily purchased a digital Railcard online during that time.”
She agrees, but she didn’t until that evening. The two guards who let her through at Euston did not instruct her to purchase railcard there and then (direct quote from them “it’s fine let her on”) – this I know will end up being irrelevant, but just adding. Her ticket was scanned at Preston but they did not say anything. This was at the ‘Northern Block’.
When she was challenged on her Northern Train and she showed the railcard and realised it was expired she said “can I buy a new railcard now and apply to the new ticket” and was told no.
“Both Euston and Preston gatelines saw a 4 month old railcard, noticed it was 4 months old, and specifically said to your friend "that's ok. just promise us you'll buy a railcard at some point today?"
For clarity – Euston saw railcard was expired and just let her through as train was about to go, they didn’t use those words. Preston just saw the ticket.
“I'm actually not so sure about this if handled correctly. Seeing ones parent for the last time is something where ones head is going to be all over the place and reasonable people will understand that railcards are not going to be part of the agenda.
On the other hand credibility (both factual and emotional) is absolutely crucial for something like that. There are plenty of people who would either claim this when it wasn't the case or even worse see it as an opportunity to get away with a completely unrelated ticketing issue. So far this thread isn't really screaming credibility.”
Thank you – this is a key point. I’m 100% here to provide as much factual information as possible – obviously she can provide her father has subsequently passed away (last week). Agree may not look credible but all can be proven – and apologies as I appreciate the importance of factual information on here as simply want to help her tackle with the minimal amount of issues. This is not her priority at this moment but I know it can escalate if not tackled urgently, I’m not best friends with Northern Rail! Please keep asking if you need any specifics clarified.
“Possibly. That would also rely on this being a one off and no other tickets purchased during the 4 month period of the card expiring.”
As per above – which clouds matters. The facts as per this trip are as per above and true and provable. However the previous journeys may make these irrelevant in their eyes. Therefore we’d like to shut this down as painlessly as possible. I promise you it’s entirely possible for a 24 year old to not pick up that her railcard is out of date (especially if a 3 year railcard) and Trainpal does not alert you if it was going to expire.
“There isn't a £100 limit on Apple Pay. The £100 limit only applies to physical bankcards. Apple pay is different because biometrics are used to authenticate. There is a limit but it's something like £10,000.”
Quite simply they tried 4 times and it failed to work. There were witnesses (sadly don't now have) and this is where she broke down.
“I'm wondering if the guard tried to sell an Off Peak Single (given it was a Friday when Off Peak tickets are valid all day on Avanti set fares) which costs £85.30 or £121.90 for a return.”
She says £85.30 is possibly the figure – she remembers it being close to £100 (but not over it)
“One key thing for us is precisely what happened in respect of the railcard at both Euston and Preston. Treating each separately, who said what and in what sequence.
Also was it an e-ticket with a scannable bar code or not?
Was the expired railcard digital or not?”
It was an e-ticket with a scannable bar code, the expired railcard was digital – both on Trainline. As per above Euston picked up on the railcard and just let her through (it could have been the early time who knows”. Preston just let her through.
“How about “Your ticket is invalid, so you cannot board. Either purchase a railcard online now, or go to a ticket machine and purchase a new ticket for your journey. The machine is over there. Or you can buy a new ticket online. Your choice.””
Reading this she says she wish this had happened.
“It’s a reasonable possibility, but:
1. OP’s friend will have no proof of this conversation or able to evidence they were given permission to travel.
2. It’s extremely unlikely the same thing happened at Preston.
3. The OP’s friend then had a number of hours on the train to purchase the railcard and failed to do so.”
1. Correct in that there is no proof
2. Correct – see above she was just let through, there was no conversation about the railcard.
3. Correct in everything you say.
I think I've tackled all questions - please let me know if anything not covered.
I will clarify there was no deliberate attempt to defraud. There was willingness and (several) attempts to pay Northern Trains via Apple Pay, an offer to pay by bank transfer immediately. None of these were possible.
The facts concerning her father are all true. Hope you understand that with everything else concerning her at the moment with her father passing last week (which of course can be provided if important to a defence) you'll understand why i'm assisting. It's not her priority - but I do not want her to miss deadlines and for further escalations (and definitely not a criminal record etc). She has willingness to accept a degree of fault, and to pay the fine requested.
So what do you think the quickest and easiest way you would advise to shut this down at this time (or delay for a couple of months) with response. Yes, finances are important as well.
Ask anyway anything else that may not be clear - and thank you ALL for your input, it's appreciated.