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    • further polished WS using above suggestions and also included couple of more modifications highlighted in orange are those ok to include?   Background   1.1  The Defendant received the Parking Charge Notice (PCN) on the 06th of January 2020 following the vehicle being parked at Arla Old Dairy, South Ruislip on the 05th of December 2019.   Unfair PCN   2.1  On 19th December 2023 the Defendant sent the Claimant's solicitors a CPR request.  As shown in Exhibit 1 (pages 7-13) sent by the solicitors the signage displayed in their evidence clearly shows a £60.00 parking charge notice (which will be reduced to £30 if paid within 14 days of issue).  2.2  Yet the PCN sent by the Claimant is for a £100.00 parking charge notice (reduced to £60 if paid within 30 days of issue).   2.3        The Claimant relies on signage to create a contract.  It is unlawful for the Claimant to write that the charge is £60 on their signs and then send demands for £100.    2.4        The unlawful £100 charge is also the basis for the Claimant's Particulars of Claim.  No Locus Standi  3.1  I do not believe a contract with the landowner, that is provided following the defendant’s CPR request, gives MET Parking Services a right to bring claims in their own name. Definition of “Relevant contract” from the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, Schedule 4,  2 [1] means a contract Including a contract arising only when the vehicle was parked on the relevant land between the driver and a person who is-   (a) the owner or occupier of the land; or   (b) Authorised, under or by virtue of arrangements made by the owner or occupier of the land, to enter into a contract with the driver requiring the payment of parking charges in respect of the parking of the vehicle on the land. According to https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2006/46/section/44   For a contract to be valid, it requires a director from each company to sign and then two independent witnesses must confirm those signatures.   3.2  The Defendant requested to see such a contract in the CPR request.  The fact that no contract has been produced with the witness signatures present means the contract has not been validly executed. Therefore, there can be no contract established between MET Parking Services and the motorist. Even if “Parking in Electric Bay” could form a contract (which it cannot), it is immaterial. There is no valid contract.  Illegal Conduct – No Contract Formed   4.1 At the time of writing, the Claimant has failed to provide the following, in response to the CPR request from myself.   4.2        The legal contract between the Claimant and the landowner (which in this case is Standard Life Investments UK) to provide evidence that there is an agreement in place with landowner with the necessary authority to issue parking charge notices and to pursue payment by means of litigation.   4.3 Proof of planning permission granted for signage etc under the Town and country Planning Act 1990. Lack of planning permission is a criminal offence under this Act and no contract can be formed where criminality is involved.   4.4        I also do not believe the claimant possesses these documents.   No Keeper Liability   5.1        The defendant was not the driver at the time and date mentioned in the PCN and the claimant has not established keeper liability under schedule 4 of the PoFA 2012. In this matter, the defendant puts it to the claimant to produce strict proof as to who was driving at the time.   5.2 The claimant in their Notice To Keeper also failed to comply with PoFA 2012 Schedule 4 section 9[2][f] while mentioning “the right to recover from the keeper so much of that parking charge as remains unpaid” where they did not include statement “(if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met)”.     5.3         The claimant did not mention parking period, times on the photographs are separate from the PCN and in any case are that arrival and departure times not the parking period since their times include driving to and from the parking space as a minimum and can include extra time to allow pedestrians and other vehicles to pass in front.    Protection of Freedoms Act 2012   The notice must -   (a) specify the vehicle, the relevant land on which it was parked and the period of parking to which the notice relates;  22. In the persuasive judgement K4GF167G - Premier Park Ltd v Mr Mathur - Horsham County Court – 5 January 2024 it was on this very point that the judge dismissed this claim.  5.4  A the PCN does not comply with the Act the Defendant as keeper is not liable.  No Breach of Contract   6.1       No breach of contract occurred because the PCN and contract provided as part of the defendant’s CPR request shows different post code, PCN shows HA4 0EY while contract shows HA4 0FY. According to PCN defendant parked on HA4 0EY which does not appear to be subject to the postcode covered by the contract.  6.2         The entrance sign does not mention anything about there being other terms inside the car park so does not offer a contract which makes it only an offer to treat,  Interest  7.1  It is unreasonable for the Claimant to delay litigation for  Double Recovery   7.2  The claim is littered with made-up charges.  7.3  As noted above, the Claimant's signs state a £60 charge yet their PCN is for £100.  7.4  As well as the £100 parking charge, the Claimant seeks recovery of an additional £70.  This is simply a poor attempt to circumvent the legal costs cap at small claims.  7.5 Since 2019, many County Courts have considered claims in excess of £100 to be an abuse of process leading to them being struck out ab initio. An example, in the Caernarfon Court in VCS v Davies, case No. FTQZ4W28 on 4th September 2019, District Judge Jones-Evans stated “Upon it being recorded that District Judge Jones- Evans has over a very significant period of time warned advocates (...) in many cases of this nature before this court that their claim for £60 is unenforceable in law and is an abuse of process and is nothing more than a poor attempt to go behind the decision of the Supreme Court v Beavis which inter alia decided that a figure of £160 as a global sum claimed in this case would be a penalty and not a genuine pre-estimate of loss and therefore unenforceable in law and if the practice continued, he would treat all cases as a claim for £160 and therefore a penalty and unenforceable in law it is hereby declared (…) the claim is struck out and declared to be wholly without merit and an abuse of process.”  7.6 In Claim Nos. F0DP806M and F0DP201T, District Judge Taylor echoed earlier General Judgment or Orders of District Judge Grand, stating ''It is ordered that the claim is struck out as an abuse of process. The claim contains a substantial charge additional to the parking charge which it is alleged the Defendant contracted to pay. This additional charge is not recoverabl15e under the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, Schedule 4 nor with reference to the judgment in Parking Eye v Beavis. It is an abuse of process from the Claimant to issue a knowingly inflated claim for an additional sum which it is not entitled to recover. This order has been made by the court of its own initiative without a hearing pursuant to CPR Rule 3.3(4)) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998...''  7.7 In the persuasive case of G4QZ465V - Excel Parking Services Ltd v Wilkinson – Bradford County Court -2 July 2020 (Exhibit 4) the judge had decided that Excel had won. However, due to Excel adding on the £60 the Judge dismissed the case.  7.8        The addition of costs not previously specified on signage are also in breach of the Consumer Rights Act 2015, Schedule 2, specifically paras 6, 10 and 14.   7.9        It is the Defendant’s position that the Claimant in this case has knowingly submitted inflated costs and thus the entire claim should be similarly struck out in accordance with Civil Procedure Rule 3.3(4).   In Conclusion   8.1        I invite the court to dismiss the claim.  Statement of Truth  I believe that the facts stated in this witness statement are true. I understand that proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against anyone who makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth.   
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      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

      One of the points that the judge made was that the customers contract with the broker specifically refers to the courier – and it is clear that the courier knows that they are acting for a third party. There is no need to name the third party. They just have to be recognisably part of a class of person – such as a sender or a recipient of the parcel.

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      This is good ethical practice.

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      OT APPROVED, 365MC637, FAROOQ, EVRi, 12.07.23 (BRENT) - J v4.pdf
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A few weeks ago in response to the claimants amendment of case application Fred submitted some applications of his own.

Four of them if I remember correctly

Obviously he applied to file an amended defence particularised to respond to the new drastically changed POC he is defending.

Absolutely, and, in the unlikely event that the court refuse, Fred gets very good grounds to appeal.(1/4)

LD don't seem to think he should be allowed to amend his defence to cater for the new POC.
Hahahaha. Really? Can't think why

 

Fred also raised concerns about the accuracy of certain statements and provenance of certain evidence.

LD don't seem to think there are any issues.

I look forward to the detail when this is all done and dusted (2/4)

 

Fred applied as fully entitled under CPR that the claimants POC be amended to reflect the agreement made between all parties and the judge on 1st July.

Quite right too (3/4)

 

LD seem to ignore the existence of this agreement yet clearly remember Freds app for a stay being refused (upon the basis of it).

LD have complained about the costs involved, the time involved, the timing of the apps, the merit of the apps, the manner in which the apps should be dealt with etc. etc. They've called the apps 'unwarranted', 'unfortunate', stated they should have been given the opportunity to address them directly, said 2 weeks (4 weeks shurely) is not enough notice, blah, blub, blah, blub.

 

It is a blubfest of staggering proportions and does not actually cover any of the points ordered by the court, concentrating as it does on portraying Fred as the villain and themselves as victims....... But then the Court has almost a whopping 50 pages more evidence in support of any allegations made by Fred than the claimant has so is perfectly able to see who plays which part in proceedings to date.

 

The judge has ignored all their protests, all their attempts at belittling Fred or the issues and ordered a hearing to be held immediately prior to the small claims hearing in order that these applications may be addressed.

 

Fred wants them addressed, the claimant quite patently does not so we have to take this as a small preliminary victory and a point in the bag.

 

So now there are two hearings planned for tuesday. This doubles the chances of Fred winning and the second hearing could prove very interesting if say for example Fred were to blurt out his 'little secret' in the first hearing....:shock:

Are you at liberty to divulge 4/4?

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Are you at liberty to divulge 4/4?

The 4th application was for his fully particularised counterclaim to be accepted.

His original counterclaim was ignored by the claimant, who didn't see fit to bother defending against it.

When Fred submitted a judgment by default application as a result, that was ignored. In fact he sent two in just in case the first one had been overlooked.

At the Directions Hearing Fred asked what had happened to his default judgment requests and the judge supported the other side in saying that the counterclaim had been ignored because it wasn't sufficiently particularised.

Fred then submitted a fully particularised one and LD has studiously avoided even mentioning it and are obviously hoping they can pull off the same trick a second time.

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It's very tempting to reveal the 'little secret' on this thread at about 1:45 pm on tuesday just 15 minutes before the hearing is due to start. Just leaving them enough time for a panic call to the barrister but heck let them find it out at the application hearing when it's too late to withdraw.

 

The truth is all the pertinent facts were there before them but either they failed to pick up on it or more likely simply chose to ignore and/or deliberately suppress it. :eek:

 

Why not reveal it just as they are going into court, so the office has time to go into massive panic, but its too late to grab the Barrister ;)

 

Nothing does the heart better than seeing the "little man" running rings around trained professionals.

 

Solicitors and banks alike must rue the invention of the Internet. It also shows just how astonishingly complacent people have got.

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

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Solicitors and banks alike must rue the invention of the Internet...

 

...and let's not forget the wonderful people who give up their time freely to help people they don't know and have never met.

The REAL Axis of evil: Banks, Credit Card Companies & Credit Reference Agencies.

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Why not reveal it just as they are going into court, so the office has time to go into massive panic, but its too late to grab the Barrister ;)

 

Nothing does the heart better than seeing the "little man" running rings around trained professionals.

 

Solicitors and banks alike must rue the invention of the Internet. It also shows just how astonishingly complacent people have got.

 

Now that is an idea!! :D

 

You have no idea how beatifully poetic it would be if the entire staff of Lyons-Davidson Bristol were to clock on here at 14:00 hrs and read about 'Freds little secret' whilst the barrister is in Court unreachable.

 

It was after all the interference from the barrister which brought this otherwise very carefully suppressed fact to the knowledge of the Court, how just that Lyons-Davidson find out the mistake made by their barrister at exactly the moment it becomes too late to act upon it, and the barrister finds out too late that one of the biggest 'facts' she has been given to work with in Court erm ......... 'isn't'. :lol::lol:

Edited by Toulose LeDebt

You have the right to food money.

If you don't mind a little investigation, humiliation, and if you cross your fingers rehabilitation..............

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Poetry is nice, but there's a long term war going on here. After all, it's not guaranteed that anything that comes out at the hearing will immediately be disseminated everywhere. What if someone is embarrassed and doesn't want to draw attention to major booboos?

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Have someone on autodial on your phone, and press to ring just as you are called in for them to post it (To everyone else it will just look as though you are turning your phone off). That way there is no chance of there being a delay.

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FAQ SECTION HERE

 

Halifax Bank Claim filed and settled

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Argos Store Card settled

 

CCA requests sent to

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18/06/09

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Have someone on autodial on your phone, and press to ring just as you are called in for them to post it (To everyone else it will just look as though you are turning your phone off). That way there is no chance of there being a delay.

 

OOo yes..and leave it connected so the receiver of the call can record it and put the sound file on here for us all to listen and laugh... doubt that would be allowed though.

Do you like..get a print out of the case? It would be great for us all to read at the very least. mind you..I shall be on here on the day of the case awaiting the outcome to be posted.

Would of been even better if we had our very own UK Judge Judy and had it televised. Now that would be very interesting to watch :D

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Hi Everyone, I have just spent two days on and off reading this thread, I remember the first post and I thought at the time, oh, there isnt much that can be done about this, oh how wrong I was! Good luck to you all, sock it too em, it stinks to high heaven.

Lula

 

Lula v Abbey - Settled

Lula v Abbey (2) - Settled

Lula v Abbey (3) - Stayed

 

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Hi Everyone, I have just spent two days on and off reading this thread, I remember the first post and I thought at the time, oh, there isnt much that can be done about this, oh how wrong I was! Good luck to you all, sock it too em, it stinks to high heaven.

Lula

 

Lula v Abbey - Settled

Lula v Abbey (2) - Settled

Lula v Abbey (3) - Stayed

 

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Same here, following with great interest, as its so obvious that no crime or damage was done. The person who instigated what seems like a con to try and get money out of an innocent must be cringing and be very worried now?

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Hi Everyone, I have just spent two days on and off reading this thread, I remember the first post and I thought at the time, oh, there isnt much that can be done about this, oh how wrong I was! Good luck to you all, sock it too em, it stinks to high heaven.

 

Hi Everyone, I have just spent two days on and off reading this thread, I remember the first post and I thought at the time, oh, there isnt much that can be done about this, oh how wrong I was! Good luck to you all, sock it too em, it stinks to high heaven.
Lula: So shocked she had to say it twice. :-D
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Hi Everyone, I have just spent two days on and off reading this thread, I remember the first post and I thought at the time, oh, there isnt much that can be done about this, oh how wrong I was! Good luck to you all, sock it too em, it stinks to high heaven.

 

You can say that again! :-)

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Here's an interesting little puzzle for any bored PCAD employees reading the thread.

 

The claimants representatives (Lyons-Davidson) have entered costs estimated at in excess of £10,000 and rising steadily.

 

Now this is a small claims track hearing and the costs claimable are very strictly limited by the Civil Procedure Rules.

 

In the hypothetical worst case scenario for Fred he might be ordered to pay certain costs to the value of possibly as much as five or six hundred pounds.

 

This leaves a shortfall on the costs incurred by Lyons-Davidson of approx £10k as it stands now.

 

Can you guess who they'll be looking at to meet these costs??? :-D:-D

 

Of course if as we plan Fred wins then the claimants reps will probably blame the defeat on misinstruction and misinformation from their client in which case you might well be looking at footing the whole bill. :eek::eek:

 

Oh dear somebody didn't think this through very carefully did they George?

 

Seems the very best you can hope for is to win £4500 and then have to write a cheque to Lyons Davidson for £10,500+

 

Of course this is the very best you can hope for imagine the expense if you lose and face the costs plus the counterclaim?

 

As above. Somebody didn't think this through very carefully did they George? :grin::grin:

 

27.14

 

(1) This rule applies to any case which has been allocated to the small claims track unless paragraph (5) applies.

(Rules 44.9 and 44.11 make provision in relation to orders for costs made before a claim has been allocated to the small claims track)

 

(2) The court may not order a party to pay a sum to another party in respect of that other party’s costs, fees and expenses, including those relating to an appeal, except –

(a) the fixed costs attributable to issuing the claim which –

(i) are payable under Part 45; or

 

(ii) would be payable under Part 45 if that Part applied to the claim;

 

 

(b) in proceedings which included a claim for an injunction or an order for specific performance a sum not exceeding the amount specified in the relevant practice direction for legal advice and assistance relating to that claim;

 

© any court fees paid by that other party;

 

(d) expenses which a party or witness has reasonably incurred in travelling to and from a hearing or in staying away from home for the purposes of attending a hearing;

 

(e) a sum not exceeding the amount specified in the relevant practice direction for any loss of earnings or loss of leave by a party or witness due to attending a hearing or to staying away from home for the purposes of attending a hearing;

 

(f) a sum not exceeding the amount specified in the relevant practice direction for an expert’s fees; and

 

(g) such further costs as the court may assess by the summary procedure and order to be paid by a party who has behaved unreasonably.

 

 

(3) A party’s rejection of an offer in settlement will not of itself constitute unreasonable behaviour under paragraph (2)(g) but the court may take it into consideration when it is applying the unreasonableness test.

 

(4) The limits on costs imposed by this rule also apply to any fee or reward for acting on behalf of a party to the proceedings charged by a person exercising a right of audience by virtue of an order under section 11 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 19901 (a lay representative).

 

(5) Where –

(a) the financial value of a claim exceeds the limit for the small claims track; but

 

(b) the claim has been allocated to the small claims track in accordance with rule 26.7(3),

 

the small claims track costs provisions will apply unless the parties agree that the fast track costs provisions are to apply.

Edited by Toulose LeDebt

You have the right to food money.

If you don't mind a little investigation, humiliation, and if you cross your fingers rehabilitation..............

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Does this mean the coffee from the vending machines will be going up in price next term?

 

Probably only those machines accessible by the students, obviously not the staff coffee machines.

You have the right to food money.

If you don't mind a little investigation, humiliation, and if you cross your fingers rehabilitation..............

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From the practice directions:

 

7.3

 

The amounts which a party may be ordered to pay under rule 27.14(3)© (loss of earnings) and (d) (experts’ fees) are:

(1) for the loss of earnings or loss of leave of each party or witness due to attending a hearing or staying away from home for the purpose of attending a hearing, a sum not exceeding £50 per day for each person, and

 

(2) for expert’s fees, a sum not exceeding £200 for each expert.

 

(As to recovery of pre-allocation costs in a case in which an admission by the defendant has reduced the amount in dispute to a figure below £5,000, reference should be made to paragraph 7.4 of the Practice Direction supplementing CPR Part 26 and to paragraph 5.1(3) of the Costs Directions relating to CPR Part 44)

 

When was this PD written?

 

Isn't it about time things like this and the LiP hourly rate of £9.25 was updated?

The REAL Axis of evil: Banks, Credit Card Companies & Credit Reference Agencies.

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