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6. The Police (Property) Act:

Posted on April 1, 2026March 28, 2026 by 5@mwosb.co.uk

A route many may never hear about.

When police seize property that becomes the subject of competing claims, there is a legal mechanism designed to resolve those disputes. Yet many innocent purchasers are never told about it.

Some may come away believing the matter ends when the vehicle is taken into police possession. In reality, disputes about property held by police can be referred to a court under the Police (Property) Act 1897, a process that allows an independent authority to determine what should happen next.


The purpose of this article is to explain a little-known legal route available when property held by police becomes the subject of competing claims.

The Police (Property) Act 1897 allows a magistrates’ court to determine how property in police possession should be handled. Where multiple parties claim rights to the property, the court can decide which party appears entitled to possession or ownership.

Despite its importance, this route is rarely discussed publicly and many people are unaware that it exists. As a result, innocent purchasers may assume that a police decision about the future of the vehicle is final.
This article aims to explain why awareness of this legal mechanism matters.


The Police (Property) Act was designed to deal with situations in which property comes into the possession of the police and disputes arise about who should receive it. Under the Act, the police or an interested party can apply to a magistrates’ court for a decision about the property. The court may then order that the property be returned to a particular person or make another order it considers appropriate.

The existence of this mechanism reflects an important legal principle: disputes about property rights should ultimately be resolved by the courts, not decided informally by one of the parties involved.

In many vehicle recovery cases, however, the process may appear much more informal.

A vehicle is seized, administrative checks are carried out, and the vehicle may then be transferred to another claimant. The innocent purchaser may have little opportunity to understand the legal framework governing these decisions.

The Police (Property) Act provides a potential route for resolving such disputes in a structured and transparent way.

This does not mean that every recovered vehicle case must go to court. In many situations the outcome may be obvious and uncontested. But where competing claims exist, the availability of a judicial process helps ensure that decisions about property are not made solely on the basis of administrative convenience.


Before reading this article, had you ever heard of the Police (Property) Act as a route for resolving disputes about property held by police?

Next post – 7

The Series:

  1. 11/03/2026 – A Crime Report Is Not a Title Decision
  2. 13/03/2025 – The Innocent Purchaser: The Forgotten Victim in Vehicle Recovery
  3. Should the Original Police Force Normally Handle the Innocent Purchaser’s Crime?
  4. Police Powers to Seize Are Not Powers to Decide Ownership
  5. Do Police Hand Vehicles Over Too Quickly?
  6. The Police (Property) Act: A Route Many People Never Hear About
  7. Insurers Often Examine More Than the Police
  8. Theft to Recovery: The Longer the Gap, the Harder the Truth
  9. Trackers Do More Than Recover Cars
  10. The Badge, the Buyer and the Power Imbalance
  11. Good Faith Is Not Enough
  12. The Inexpensive Check That May Save Thousands
  13. What Better Practice Would Look Like

Reference & Relevant

  • The Devalued Crime Report
  • Crime Number Devaluation
  • Crime Recorded ≠ Crime Verified
  • Crime Reports – Duplication
  • ‘taking him at his word, they (the police) issued a crime reference number‘
  • When Recorded Theft Is Not Believed
  • L.I.E. – When Taking is not Theft: The Hidden Cost of Misreported Vehicle Crimes – Car Crime U.K.
  • Vehicle Theft Surge Demands Police Action on Crime Report Disclosures

Legislation – potentially relevant

  • Sale of Goods Act 1979, section 21: the basic nemo dat rule – a seller who is not the owner generally cannot pass better title than he has.
  • Consumer Rights Act 2015, section 17: where goods are supplied by a trader, the contract includes a term that the trader has the right to sell or transfer them; useful for the innocent purchaser’s civil remedies against the seller.
  • Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977: relevant to conversion and civil disputes over wrongful interference with goods; legislation commentary expressly uses the example of a good-faith buyer of a stolen car being sued by the true owner.
  • Police (Property) Act 1897, section 1: magistrates’ court power to order delivery of property in police possession to the person appearing to be the owner, or otherwise make such order as seems fit.
  • Criminal Procedure Rules 2025, rule 47.37: procedural mechanism for applications under the Police (Property) Act.
  • Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, section 19, and Theft Act 1968, section 26: police powers relevant to seizure/search of suspected stolen goods.
  • Human Rights Act 1998, Article 1 of Protocol 1: protects possessions and supports proportionality/procedure arguments where property is withheld or transferred.

Further case law and information can be found here


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