Jump to content


Apnr-ltd photo'd me in the car


style="text-align: center;">  

Thread Locked

because no one has posted on it for the last 3841 days.

If you need to add something to this thread then

 

Please click the "Report " link

 

at the bottom of one of the posts.

 

If you want to post a new story then

Please

Start your own new thread

That way you will attract more attention to your story and get more visitors and more help 

 

Thanks

Recommended Posts

We came back to our car in a shopping centre car park to find a guy taking photos of the car> I thought someone had damaged my car but realised he was a APNR employee (jacket logo). He put a ticket on the car and then photograghed it with us both sitting inside before we drove off.

The ticket wording says they have been "contracted by the proprietor...." causing them to be in breach of contract..... The fine is £100 or £50 if I pay within 14 days.

My concern is can I be found "guilty" if taken to court, as I was photo'd sitting at the wheel with the notice on the windscreen?

 

What to do - I still have 7 days left but I'm going on holiday for 2 weeks this Friday. That's why we were in the shopping car park; to pay for the holiday!!

Link to post
Share on other sites

So what were you supposed to have done which contravened any parking restrictions?

 

It matters not anyway because this is a private parking invoice, not an enforceable parking ticket, so you needn't pay it.

 

You can either ignore it, or use their 'appeals' process on the basis of whichever condition of parking you did not break, and WHEN they reject it, for they surely will, they must give you a POPLA code to appeal to the independant arbitrator, which you would then use to argue that the amount that ANPR are trying to charge you does not represent a genuine pre-estimate of any loss that was incurred.

Any advice given is done so on the assumption that recipients will also take professional advice where appropriate.

 

PLEASE HELP US TO KEEP THIS SITE RUNNING

EVERY POUND DONATED WILL HELP US TO KEEP HELPING OTHERS

DONATE HERE

 

If I have been helpful in any way - please feel free to click on the STAR to the left!

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

What to do - I still have 7 days left but I'm going on holiday for 2 weeks this Friday. That's why we were in the shopping car park; to pay for the holiday!!

If you are the reg keeper, you go on holiday and don't worry about it...

After 28 days of the windscreen ticket, but before 56 days, you should receive a notice to keeper. Come back here then, but you have plenty of time to read up on the parking 'industry'.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Thanks,

The contravention was over-staying the 1 hour by 17 minutes! Our fault as we shopped longer than planned. The "ticket" does state the over-staying period but considering the charge rates then £100 is a bit steep. I should have paid for another hour I guess.

 

Should I still ignore it?

Link to post
Share on other sites

Definitly ignore it. It's nothing more than a speculative invoice. It has fine written on it then contact the BPA and report them. This is not a fine and they are not allowed to tell you it's a fine or a penalty on private property. Firstly do they have written authority from the land owner to invoice you or is their contract just to provide parking services which I would guess would be the case. As others have stated £100 is not a fair reflection and they have no hope. It depends if you want the fun of playing with them or not. If not just ignore them.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Definitly ignore it. It's nothing more than a speculative invoice. It has fine written on it then contact the BPA and report them. This is not a fine and they are not allowed to tell you it's a fine or a penalty on private property. Firstly do they have written authority from the land owner to invoice you or is their contract just to provide parking services which I would guess would be the case. As others have stated £100 is not a fair reflection and they have no hope. It depends if you want the fun of playing with them or not. If not just ignore them.

 

No don't ignore it , appeal to popla! . Wait until you get the letter in post as suggested. Do your appeal to anpr then popla.

 

Why risk a court claim for up to six years when you can effectively see if if and cost them money

Link to post
Share on other sites

Whilst you are waiting for the parking co to do their thing write to the store head office and tell them that it is ridiculous to expect people to find somewhere to park, shop and return within an hour and that you feel you are being penalised for being a good customer. Thyen ask them for a copy of the agreement that allows the parking company to pursue you in their own name by the application of a contracvt you had no intention of entering into just by spending money at their store. Tell them that you felt threatened by the action of the ANPR employee standing in front of your car and photographing you and the other occupants and preventing you from leaving the site for good measure Ask them for what purpose is the photograph to be used and did the store give express permission to ANPR to prevent you from going about your lawful business and is the supermarket registered under the DPA to photograph its customers in this manner and for what purpose is this very sensitive personal data intended to be used for as you did not and do not give your permission for a photograph of you inside your private property to be used at all. Tell them that you expect them to instruct ANPR to destroy the images collected in this manner as they are intrusive, not relevant and not being processed fairly as required by law.

When ANPR contact you in a couple of weeks time you can ask them the same questions about their unfair and unlawful data processing.

As for legality of tickets they are nothing to do with criminal law so you cannot be found guilty of anything and there is a long way to go down the appeals route before your options are exhausted.

  • Confused 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

"The ticket wording says they have been "contracted by the proprietor...." causing them to be in breach of contract....."

Utter piffle from them, and proven to be false in other cases.

Demonstrably piffle - just 'do the math' as our American cousins say.

Contact the landholder, get written evidence that the claim is false then report the PPC to all and sundry. Personally I would sue them but that is not a suggestion that you should.

The owners of this company hide themselves. Why they do that seems obvious !

Link to post
Share on other sites

"The ticket wording says they have been "contracted by the proprietor...." causing them to be in breach of contract....."

Utter piffle from them, and proven to be false in other cases.

Demonstrably piffle - just 'do the math' as our American cousins say.

Contact the landholder, get written evidence that the claim is false then report the PPC to all and sundry. Personally I would sue them but that is not a suggestion that you should.

The owners of this company hide themselves. Why they do that seems obvious !

 

Thanks. Not sure why the landlord will agree that the claim is false? What can he say to support a false claim if he is contracting APNR to effectively "fine" everyone; isn't he complicit in all of this. The pay station is how the landlord gets his money from us?

Link to post
Share on other sites

You do not ask his opinion about the claim ! That is all it would be, his opinion.

You seek the evidence to prove that it is false. Does the landowner get paid £100 per 'errant vehicle' ?

Establish the facts then apply the law.

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • Recently Browsing   0 Caggers

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Have we helped you ...?


×
×
  • Create New...