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    • Hi, I've been reading the invaluable advice on this forum and reading about the problems with Evri and lost delivery of items.  From what I gather the initial steps after having exhausted every's own lost item claim process is to draft a Letter of Claim, I think it is called and to register with the government Money Claims.  I have got a login for Money Claims and have made an initial stab at the letter but I'm not certain I have got it right. Am I right to assume that having exhausted Evri customer service's claims process and having received the denial of any compensation because the laptop I was sending is on the non-compensatory list that my next step would be to send the Letter of Claim to them? Let me provide some basic details which I hopefully have addressed in the letter. I purchased a laptop through Amazon.co.uk which a business in Belfast sold refurbished laptops through.  They had a 30 day money back guarantee for a full refund if you have any issues with the laptop.  I have the invoice from Amazon showing the purchase.  On 27 April, 2024 before the end of the 30 day period I used their ParcelShop (inside a Tesco) to send the laptop back and have the tracking reference mentioned in the letter.  As mentioned in the letter there was they advised they could not give me or sell me any insurance because laptops are on the non-compensatory list so I just paid the normal delivery cost.  It was scanned as leaving the ParcelShop on 29 April and the tracking has been like that ever since.  After a 28 working day Evri claim process they gave the expected response that they could not provide any compensation and simply could not proceed with my claim. I was hoping to get some advice on whether I go ahead now and email this to Customer Services straightaway and should I send a hard-copy to the Evri address as well?  Or are there any steps I have missed out on first?  I believe 14 days is the reasonable period of time for them to respond so if I were to send it tomorrow, for example 12 June then I should expect a reply by 26 June, is that correct and fair?  And assuming they don't reply with a full refund then I would then go down the government Money Claims site to proceed with that? Sorry for all the questions, I want to make sure I go about it properly.  I'll continue to read through other cases on here so I can get an even better handle on the process. I attached a LOC, happy for any edits or updates that will make it even better. Thanks so much for anyone's help! Regards, Matt Evri letter of claim.docx
    • The date was 3 June. Get on MCOL now. The legal principle is that, even if you defence is late, if the other party hasn't requested judgement, then your defence takes priority and is accepted. You might be in time. When I say now I mean now.  Recently we had someone who was nine days' late and this was pointed out to them at 5:30pm.  They faffed around till 11pm.  When they went on MCOl they saw that judgement had been entered at 7pm. Every minute is vital. File the below standard defence if you still can - 1.  The Defendant is the recorded keeper of [motor vehicle]. 2.  It is denied that the Defendant entered into a contract with the Claimant. 3.  As held by the Upper Tax Tribunal in Vehicle Control Services Limited v HMRC [2012] UKUT 129 (TCC), any contract requires offer and acceptance.  The Claimant was simply contracted by the landowner to provide car-park management services and is not capable of entering into a contract with the Defendant on its own account, as the car park is owned by and the terms of entry set by the landowner.  Accordingly, it is denied that the Claimant has authority to bring this claim.    4.  In any case it is denied that the Defendant broke the terms of a contract with the Claimant. 5.  The Claimant is attempting double recovery by adding an additional sum not included in the original offer.  6.  The Particulars of Claim is denied in its entirety.  It is denied that the Claimant is entitled to the relief claimed or any relief at all.
    • Hi friends,  I’m a bit worried I may have got confused with timings here. I thought I had 33 days from my acknowledgment to submit a defence but the date added above says 3/6/24.   have I missed the date?   if so how can I apply for an exception due to my disability and problems with deadlines and dates etc (ADHD)?   what should I submit as a defence?   I’ve had no reply from BW so far    just been back on MCOL and it says 28 days from service if I completed an acknowledgment of service so does that mean 28 days from that of acknowledgement (I.e. 16/5) which would make deadline for defence 14/6?   Thanks! Panicking here.
    • Normally we don't advise playing your cards early in a snotty letter, but as you have appealed we might as well use what you wrote in the appeal against them. There is no rush, you have until 6 July to get it to them.  See what the other regulars think too. How about something like this? -   Dear Rachael & Sean, cheers for your Letter of Claim.  I rolled around on the floor in laughter at the idea you'd actually thought I'd take such tripe seriously and would cough up! As usual you'll have been too bone idle to do any due diligence.  Had you done so you would have seen that I appealed to your client.  Indeed the driver on the day is a textbook example of having done exactly what you should do when you do not wish to be bound by the T&Cs in a private car park. Of course none of that mattered to the spivs you represent but do you really want to put such a useless case in front of a judge? To be fair, your clients are very useful members of the human race - as comedians.  How I loved the page turner of their antics at The Citrus Building in Bournemouth.  It was chuckle after chuckle reading about them, letter after letter, month after month, insisting they were legally in the right, even through someone who had done just the first day of a GCSE law course could have told them they weren't.  Until the denouement - BOOM - an absolute hammering in court.  In fact - SLAM, BANG - managing to lose twice against the same motorist for the same car park in front of two different judges. Your client can either drop their foolishness now or get yet another tolchocking* in court where I will go for an unreasonable costs order under CPR 27.14(2)(g) and spend the dosh on a nice summer holiday, while every day laughing at your clients' expense. I look forward to your deafening silence. COPIED TO COUNTRYWIDE PARKING MANAGEMENT LTD   *  This word is used under licence from Brassnecked
    • Well yes, ... and the tax dodgers ... Trump May Owe $100 Million From Double-Dip Tax Breaks, Audit Shows A previously unknown focus of an I.R.S. audit is a dubious accounting maneuver that effectively meant taking the same write-offs twice on a Chicago skyscraper. nytimes.com WWW.NYTIMES.COM  
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SIP Parking Issued Court Papers - Help **Discontinued**


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Hi,

 

 

I had a pcn from SIP parking in Manchester,

 

 

It was not actually my fine but I decided to ignore it as given the circumstances

I didn't think it would go so far, but

 

 

today I received court papers from Northhamton.

 

The person driving first went into a SIP car park

got a ticket timed at 19.04

he was going to the cinema which is about a ten min walk,

 

 

the movie had started (due to messing about trying to get change for the car park) so

they looked for something else but then decided to go else-where

going back to the car,

they went to another location which would have taken appox 18 mins driving time, plus time taken for driving round and looking for a parking place.

 

 

They parked in another SIP car park leaving the ticket on display from the first car park

(which was still valid) there was only ten mins to go anyway before a ticket wouldn't be needed at 20.00.

when they got back to the car there was a pcn on the car.

 

It says the time first seen was 19.41 which is cutting it fine,

the time issued is 19.53.

that's why I didn't think they would bother 7 mins to go.

how wrong I was.

 

Can anyone tell me how to go about defending this one?

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Forgot to say on pcn it says INVALID TICKET DISPLAYED and

 

 

the court papers say

 

 

THERE WAS NO TICKET DISPLAYED.

 

 

it also says evidence consists of photographs,

 

 

can I not ask to see these,

 

 

be interested in time.

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OK without identifying yourself.

 

Was this incident after 1st October 2012?

 

Was this an ANPR issue or was it a ticket on screen?

 

If ANPR did the notice to keeper arrive with 15 days of the incident or 56 days if it was a ticket on screen?

 

SIP have just dropped a court case because they did not follow the necessary criteria.

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To reiterate the above, we need to see the time line for all of the correspondence. Was the original ticket stuck on the car? When did you receive any communication through the post and how did it address you, as the driver or registered keeper? Were you invited to name the driver? What other communicationd have you received before the court claim? the dates are important for these items as their claim is invalid of they have got it wrong.

After that we can look at the merits of their claim and their evidence to support that claim. For example do they say that the claim is for breach of contract and if so which particular contract have you breached and how? plenty to hit back with but need to get all the information gathered before you respond.

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oops.a bit slow on the send but if you can answer the other points it will help. If you received no other correspondence then the company cannot use the PoFA to chase you as RK of the vehicle, they may only sue the driver and they need to identify the driver for themselves as they are timed out. I would still gather all the other info and hit them back hard and possibly claim vexatious litigation as it has no chance of succeeding or no merit and it designed to harass or subdue you into paying up when you have no cause to. Unfortunately it needs a second case to go for the jugular and have them barred from using civil procedure so you might get lucky when you revisit the car parks to gather you photographs of the signs and machines/layout.

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All correspondence was addressed to me, There was notice to owner after 85 days it did say

 

We understand that you were the registered keeper or hirer of the vehicle at the time of the following contravention occurred. You are therefore notified under para 9(2)(b) of schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 that the driver of the motor vehicle is required to pay this parking charge in full. As we do not know the drivers details, if you were not the driver at the time, you should tell us the name and currant postal address of the driver and pass this notice to them. If you do not provide these details within 28 days or provide an incorrect address for service, we will pursue you for any Parking Charge amount that remains unpaid.

 

30 days after this I received a final notice 1 day later another one

14 days after this I received legal action immenent

 

court papers dated 27th Nov

 

They have stated I parked in contravention of our terms and conditions on the basis that there was no ticket displayed.

 

There was a ticket displayed but it was for another of their car parks

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I have a photo of the sign, the lower sign is all about how to pay, the information part is way high, I can only see some wording because of enlarging, on the back of the ticket that was displayed it says not transferable, on the sign it says not transferable between vehicles doesn't say not transferable between car parks as far as I can see.

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They have timed out, now usually the BPA are useless but in this case I would email Steve Clark at the BPA SIP have been doing this a lot and have been told to stop by the BPA. [email protected]

 

The case I mentioned above was stopped for the same reason, they have no course of action against the keeper.

 

I would also complain to the DVLA as they are abusing POFA. [email protected] This is normally a waste of time but SIP have history for this.

 

Also is the claim signed by Natasha Sarwar as it also seems whoever that is is over stepping their authority ie: not a solicitor.

 

In the meantime acknowledge the claim and say you intend to defend in full.

Edited by esmerobbo
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No complain to the DVLA about them writing stating that they are pursuing you under POFA yet they did not meet the deadlines to issue a NTK. They can still request your details at any time but now they cannot use POFA keeper liability.

 

At this point you just need to state you intend to defend all of the claim.

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As the driver bought a ticket they paid the prescribed fee. SIP have not lost any money due to the action of the driver so any other claim is"de minimis" at best and vexatious at worse. They still have no claim against the RK of the vehicle and have to prove who the driver was at the time.

I would be tempted to counterclaim using the defence response form for defendant's litigant in person research costs of say 2 hours at £18 per hour. This will then mean that SIP will not be able to withdraw their claim without it costing them. This means that you will have to submit a bare bones defence at the time which will be basically what you have told us here. Claim against RK timed out for PoFA, SIP failed to use COP of BPA so not entitled to resort the civil procedures without exhausting the BPA code. Claim should be against driver, no liability on your part and therefore claim is an attempt to coerce you into paying someone else's supposed debts. No breach of contract anyway as the prescribed fee was paid and ticket displayed. (no need to mention the bit about transferring from 1 location, save that for full defence if you have to submit one).

Later on you can go into the detail of signage, meaning of words, wording of claim being at odds with that on screen ticket no breach of contract etc but I doubt if you have to go that far as it is likely that SIP wont pay the allocation fee when you submit your acknowledgement and hope that you forget about them.

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make sure you head it as such so SIP know they are going to be given a tough time when they have to make available all of their evidence.

I would put money on them not paying the allocation fee as said before so keep an eye on the clock and apply to court to have the case struck out for abuse of process as soon as they are a day late paying the fee.

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I have had a response from DVLA they have said they cannot assist unless I provide evidence that SIP parking are pursuing under POFA outside the permitted timescale, I'm not sure what evidence they require??? BPA have also replied they require a copy of NTK and parking charge notice which I will forward tonight.

Havn't sent in court claim form yet been looking on her of suitable way to word defence. What time line do they have for paying allocation fee?

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Your evidence is that they issued a NTK 85 days after the ticket was placed on the screen.

 

A Notice to Keeper can be served by ordinary post and the Protection of Freedoms Act requires that the Notice, to be valid, must be delivered either

 

(Where a notice to driver (parking ticket) has been served) Not earlier than 28 days after, nor more than 56 days after, the service of that notice to driver.

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SIP will be told to pay the allocation fee after you have responded to the claim. You have 14 days to get the paperwork back to the issuing court from the day it dropped on your mat. Part of the form you return it asks what court you wan the case to be heard in and you leave that blank if it is just your local court.

For the moment you can just return the form having ticked the box saying you are denying/defending in full and make the bullet points and add that a full defence will be submitted once the court allocation is made that gives you more time to submit a full defence.

This may well stop SIP in their tracks so then keep an eye on the clock and when their time to pay up the allocation fee has passed write to the court and ask that the claim be struck out.

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Going to put this in as my bare bones defence.

 

 

Sch.4. POFA (specifically para. 8(5) requires that to be able to make use of keepers Liability provisions, a notice to the keeper must be delivered within 56 days of the PCN. Sip Parking failed to do this by taking 85 days, which they themselves confirm in their POC.

 

 

A valid parking ticket was displayed on the dashboard and was not in contravention of their terms and conditions.

 

 

is this sufficient to put on claim to send in?

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As you have done it online you can follow the progress online as well. There will be a bar from certain actions taking place before time so you will know when it is too late as you will be able to apply for a strike out where you cannot at the moment.

The wording is fine, anything else you need is merely proving those points and adding a bit about SIP's lack of rights to claim if you can show that is the case (demand contract showing they may claim in their own name if they do pay up and go for it)

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