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    • Hi, we are looking to get some opinions on weather or not to bother fighting this PCN. This comes from a very big retail park parking where there are restaurants, hotel, amongst other businesses. Apparently there is a max 3 hours limit which we were not aware of. This means taking kids to softplay and then having a meal on one of the restaurants will more than likely take you over the limit. Makes us wonder how they deal with people staying in the hotel as the ANPR seems to be in public street that leads to the different parking areas including the hotel.  1 Date of the infringement 26/05/2024 2 Date on the NTK  31/05/2024 3 Date received 07/06/2024 4 Does the NTK mention schedule 4 of The Protections of Freedoms Act 2012? [Y/N?]  YES 5 Is there any photographic evidence of the event? Entry and exit photos however, based on the photographs we are almost sure the photos are taken on public street. This is the location I believe photos are taken from.  https://maps.app.goo.gl/eii8zSmFFhVZDRpbA 6 Have you appealed? [Y/N?] post up your appeal] No Have you had a response? [Y/N?] post it up N/A 7 Who is the parking company? UKPA. UK Parking Administration LTD 8. Where exactly [carpark name and town] The Colonnades, Croydon, CR0 4RQ For either option, does it say which appeals body they operate under. British Parking Association (BPA) Thanks in advance for any assistance.  UKPA PCN The Collonades-redacted.pdf
    • Thank you for posting their WS. If we start with the actual WS made by the director one would have doubts that they had even read PoFA let alone understood it. Point 10  we only have the word of the director that the contract has been extended. I should have had the corroboration of the Client. Point 12 The Judge HHJ Simkiss was not the usual Judge on motoring cases and his decisions on the necessity of contracts did not align with PoFA. In Schedule 4 [1[ it is quite clearly spelt out- “relevant contract” 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; And the laughable piece of paper from the land owners cannot be described as a contract. I respectfully ask that the case be dismissed as there is no contract. WE do not even know what the parking regulations are which is really basic. It is respectfully asked that without a valid contract the case cannot continue. One would imagine that were there a valid contract it would have been produced.  So the contract that Bank has with the motorist must come from the landowner. Bank on their own cannot impose their own contract. How could a director of a parking company sign a Statement of Truth which included Point 11. Point 14. There is no offer of a contract at the entrance to the car park. Doubtful if it is even an offer to treat. The entrance sign sign does not comply with the IPC Code of Conduct nor is there any indication that ANPR cameras are in force. A major fault and breach of GDPR. Despite the lack of being offered a contract at the entrance [and how anyone could see what was offered by way of a contract in the car park is impossible owing to none of the signs in the WS being at all legible] payment was made for the car to park. A young person in the car made the payment. But before they did that, they helped an elderly lady to make her payment as she was having difficulty. After arranging payment for the lady the young lad made his payment right behind. Unfortunately he entered the old lady's number again rather than paying .for the car he was in. This can be confirmed by looking at the Allow List print out on page 25. The defendant's car arrived at 12.49 and at 12.51 and 12.52  there are two payments for the same vrm. This was also remarked on by the IPC adjudicator when the PCN was appealed.  So it is quite disgraceful that Bank have continued to pursue the Defendant knowing that it was a question of  entering the wrong vrm.  Point 21 The Defendant is not obliged to name the driver, they are only invited to do so under S9[2][e]. Also it is unreasonable to assume that the keeper is the driver. The Courts do not do that for good reason. The keeper in this case does not have a driving licence. Point 22. The Defendant DID make a further appeal which though it was also turned down their reply was very telling and should have led to the charge being dropped were the company not greedy and willing to pursue the Defendant regardless of the evidence they had in their own hands. Point 23 [111] it's a bit rich asking the Defendant to act justly and at proportionate cost while acting completely unjustly themselves and then adding an unlawful 70% on to the invoice. This  is despite PoFA S4[5] (5)The maximum sum which may be recovered from the keeper by virtue of the right conferred by this paragraph is the amount specified in the notice to keeper under paragraph 9[2][d].  Point 23 [1v] the Director can deny all he wants but the PCN does not comply with PoFA. S9 [2][a] states  (2)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; The PCN only quotes the ANPR arrival and departure times which obviously includes a fair amount of driving between the two cameras. Plus the driver and passengers are a mixture of disabled and aged persons who require more time than just a young fit single driver to exit the car and later re enter. So the ANPR times cannot be the same as the required parking period as stipulated in the ACT. Moreover in S9[2][f]  (ii)the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver, the creditor will (if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met) have the right to recover from the keeper so much of that amount as remains unpaid; You will note that in the PCN the words in parentheses are not included but at the start of Section 9 the word "must" is included. As there are two faults in the PCN it follows that Bank cannot pursue the keeper . And as the driver does not have a driving licence their case must fail on that alone. And that is not even taking into consideration that the payment was made. Point 23 [v] your company is wrong a payment was made. very difficult to prove a cash payment two weeks later when the PCN arrives. However the evidence was in your print out for anyone to see had they actually done due diligence prior to writing to the DVLA. Indeed as the Defendant had paid there was no reasonable cause to have applied for the keeper details. Point 24 the Defendant did not breach the contract. The PCN claimed the Defendant failed to make a payment when they had made a payment.   I haven't finished yet but that is something to start with
    • You don't appeal to anyone. You haven't' received a demand from a statutory body like the council, the police or the courts. It's just a dodgy cowboy company trying it on. You simply don't pay.  In the vast majority of these cases the company deforest the Amazon with threats about how they are going to divert a drone from Ukraine and make it land on your home - but in the end they do nothing.
    • honestly you sound like you work the claimant yes affixed dont appeal to anyone no cant be “argued either way”  
    • Because of the tsunami of cases we are having for this scam site, over the weekend I had a look at MET cases we have here stretching back to June 2014.  Yes, ten years. MET have not once had the guts to put a case in front of a judge. In about 5% of cases they have issued court papers in the hope that the motorist will be terrified of going to court and will give in.  However, when the motorist defended, it was MET who bottled it.  Every time.
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Fined for 'being parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours'


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Hi people, first ever post on here, I have been fined for the above offence and just wanted to get some advice on wether I have grounds to fight it? I have attached pictures so if people wouldnt mind glancing over them and let me know what they think.

 

The strange thing is, myself along with 2 others have regularly parked here for months without any problems at all and then we suddenly start getting ticketed. Could this be due to new rules? And if so would they not need to put a sign up to at least let people know about the rule changes?

 

Another issue I have is that the first time I was ticketed here I left the car there for 2 days without returning so consequently got two tickets, I have no problem with this if I am in the wrong, however the two tickets were issued to different roads even though the car had not been moved. As you can see from my pictures where I am parked is on a junction, 1 ticket was forMarshall Street the road along by the front of my car and the other was for Sweet Street the road a great distance from the back of my car.

 

What is the verdict here?

 

Many Thanks

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The single yellow line will apply to the area where you are parked also. Yellow lines apply to the adjacent footpath/verge up to a boundary with private land (i.e. a wall or fence).

 

 

Ok, Any idea why I wouldnt have been ticketed for parking there before, as I said Ive been parking there daily for a good 2 months with no problems, I had seen wardens look at the cars parked there and just walk past before.

 

Also the fact that I got ticketed on two different roads whilst being parked in exactly the same spot, do I not have grounds to appeal 1 of them?

 

Regards

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Ok, Any idea why I wouldnt have been ticketed for parking there before, as I said Ive been parking there daily for a good 2 months with no problems, I had seen wardens look at the cars parked there and just walk past before.

 

Maybe you were parked outside the restricted times? Is there a plate covering the lines? If not and it's not in a CPZ, then the lines would not be compliant.

 

Also the fact that I got ticketed on two different roads whilst being parked in exactly the same spot, do I not have grounds to appeal 1 of them?

 

Regards

 

From the images, it looks like it's on a junction so perhaps each CEO has used the 2 different road names. Not sure that would be grounds for appeal providing the location given wasn't relative to where you were parked.

 

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Is there any possibility that the area the car is parked upon is private property. I ask this because from the photo their are 2 clearly separate areas of the footway 1) Tarmac Area 2) Brick paving. There is also a concrete edging kerb separating the 2 areas, which is something usually done to identify boundaries.

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Is there any possibility that the area the car is parked upon is private property. I ask this because from the photo their are 2 clearly separate areas of the footway 1) Tarmac Area 2) Brick paving. There is also a concrete edging kerb separating the 2 areas, which is something usually done to identify boundaries.

 

Agree this is a possible reason why PCNs were not issued before. The CEOs work on directions given by their office. They might have been told not to enforce that bit of pavement becuase it was considered private, and now it isn't. It's possible.

 

However it's clearly public access, whether or not it is privately owned, and as such forms part of the highway. A private property defence is unlikely to succeed.

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Agree this is a possible reason why PCNs were not issued before. The CEOs work on directions given by their office. They might have been told not to enforce that bit of pavement becuase it was considered private, and now it isn't. It's possible.

 

However it's clearly public access, whether or not it is privately owned, and as such forms part of the highway. A private property defence is unlikely to succeed.

 

 

There's a huge difference between a public highway which is private property but which the public has a right of way over, and a publically maintained highway which is owned by the highways authority and can take enforcement. I am not sure if the TMA can be enforced on a public highway without a legal order. I will check.

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That location does need an order for the TMA to be enforceable there.

 

However the distinction between private and public ownership has been shown several times at adjudication to be immaterial. In this case, you're on a bit of the path which the public would consider to be public access. If you were, for example, behind a fence, that would change things. This little strip is, to all intents and purposes, part of the public footpath.

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I would be curious to see where somebody has failed at adjudication whilst parked on private property. Surely the penalty is defined by "restricted Street" and that a restricted street ends at the boundary from highway authority land. I shall check with a colleague who is a parking manager and would know better.

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Robert White v City of Westminster

 

Now that is interesting and I'm lost for words. But here @ Marshall Street, is not:

a) Pavement already a big enough for public use. As OP is not aware of restrictions extending to private land, a case of de-minimis.

b) Any link to how "restricted street" is defined?? For a moment if we not look at Robert White case above, my understanding was that a carriageway ends where it is delineated. On google map plus OP's pics, it is clearly visible and any part beyond this "demarcation" is not a part of carriageway. Now back to Robert White doc where conclusion was

As the motor scooter was not parked on the carriageway a contravention took place.....
. Does it mean to say that private land as on Robert white case(and on OP's) is not part of carriageway? If yes then how can it be a restricted street??

 

Going through Robert White case, no doubt "that part" where OP parked is a part of highway (defined in common law as ” is a way over which all members of the public have the right to pass and re-pass without hindrance) and also public are tolerated plus not prevented for access and have no barriers ie public has access. But the question to me remains whether the PART is a part of carriageway for which it is believed to be in contravention?

 

Similar case as Rober White is of Copollino where it was concluded "it is clear that the place where bike was parked is that part of highway which is not part of the carriageway". IMO both above cases is not related to OP's as it's for different contravention but what if restricted street is defined as only part of carriageway.........

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Well, the restricted street designation simply means (in this instance) that parking is governed by a yellow line. And yellow line restrictions apply to the carriageway and footway. The vehicle was on the footway, whether it be owned privately or not.

 

Anyway, we're only speculating here. We don't really know why he was not ticketed before, or even whether this spot is privately owned at all.

 

I think it's certainly worth an appeal on the basis that it was honestly assumed not to be public highway (although that might be wrong) - and one of the PCNs could be challenged on the grounds that the location is wrong - and ask them to look at the other PCN for reference. Same spot, two different streets - stands a chance.

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Well, the restricted street designation simply means (in this instance) that parking is governed by a yellow line.

 

Not quite. Restricted street means that it is governed by a TRO/TMO. The existence of signage (including lines) is also subject to the same order.

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You can argue that having parked in that location for a significant period without penalty and seen other vehicles over a signiicant time parked without penalty that you had a "legitimate expectation" that it was lawful to park in such a manner. This is often acceptable mitigation at adjudication but don't expect a council to be reasonable.

 

Type in case 2110055104. The time establishing expectation may be much more but the principle is the same.

http://www.patasregistersofappeals.org.uk/StatReg/StatRegAdvanced.aspx

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Well I had quite a debate on the golf course with my friend who is a parking manager. We both agreed that the TMA does not cover private property and cannot be enforced. But he did say that he was aware that certain London Authorities were enforcing PCN on public rights of way land. He would not commite as to whether this was right or wrong (im guessing wrong as he did not commite to an answer). He did say that enforecement can be taken on public right of way land for obstruction, which I agreed but that is a different penalty from a PCN.

 

Of course we are all assuming that the area in question is indeed private forecourt.

 

I would challenge anyway as you have nothing to lose. And I would definately go along the lines of uneforceable and entrapment.

 

hopefully we shall be kept informed.

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Based on what?

 

Based on a lack of knowledge I suspect, the TMA doesn't actually differentiate between the two. The TMA permits enforcement of parking places and serveral other contraventions such as bus stops, footway etc it is the legislation that governs these 'offences' that determins if they can be enforced or not. For example my local Council has a traffic order to enforce the local Waitrose car park which is owned by Waitrose as the traffic order was correctly implemented under the RTRA 1984 the PCNs are perfectly legal, the same applies to the yellow lines on a posh private estate near me as the roads although owned by the residents are a public right of way and have a traffic order for them.

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Based on what?

 

I think I am being miss quoted, I clearly stated that a legal order was required for enforcement. No Order = No enforcement.

For example how many people are on here getting advise about crap tickets being given for parking in B & Q's car park which have no legal standing! Why because the TMA did not cover this area of land as it is private property. Would you get a pcn for parking on your driveway even though there is a double yellow line in front of it? NO, why? because it is private property. Now anyone who says the TMA applies to these situations is wrong. How about another example which is quite common. Car dealerships quite often have large forecourts behind footways, and they place all there cars on this forecourt, should all these cars get PCN's? NO. why? private property!, but surely the forecourt area is also a public right of way as it is open to public use 365 days a year. Now does the TMA apply? No. why? Private property.

 

There are of course examples where private property has a TRO attached, and thats fine. But these are very rare.

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I think I am being miss quoted, I clearly stated that a legal order was required for enforcement. No Order = No enforcement.

For example how many people are on here getting advise about crap tickets being given for parking in B & Q's car park which have no legal standing! Why because the TMA did not cover this area of land as it is private property. Would you get a pcn for parking on your driveway even though there is a double yellow line in front of it? NO, why? because it is private property. Now anyone who says the TMA applies to these situations is wrong. How about another example which is quite common. Car dealerships quite often have large forecourts behind footways, and they place all there cars on this forecourt, should all these cars get PCN's? NO. why? private property!, but surely the forecourt area is also a public right of way as it is open to public use 365 days a year. Now does the TMA apply? No. why? Private property.

 

There are of course examples where private property has a TRO attached, and thats fine. But these are very rare.

 

The key point is highlighted; BEHIND footways. The areas that you refer to normally have 'borders' which is usually a wall or fence. The area where the OP was parked is not behind the footway but part of it. If that area is maintained at the public expence (to which we don't know and is up to the OP to find out), then the lines will apply.

 

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Yep. It's not because they are privately owned - it's because they are not deemed to be part of the highway. There are publicly owned areas which are accessible by cars but not subject to the TMA; and there are privately owned areas (as we discussed above) which are.

 

If your parking manager friend is interested, ask him for something concrete which states private land forming part of the highway is exempt from the TMA where an order exists for that part of the highway. He won't be able to.

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