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I would have had to stand in the middle of the road to read this, in fact that's where I was standing when I took the photo. I have pasted the appeal and rejection below. Many thanks for looking. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- This is my appeal statement: As you can see from the image attached (image 1) I actually paid £18.50 to park my car in Gee st. I parked the car at what I thought was outside 55 Gee st as seen in image 2 attached. When I read the PCN issued it stated there was a parking suspension. There was no suspension notice on the sign that I used to call the payment service outside number 55 Gee st. I looked for a suspension notice and eventually found one which was obscured by a large van and generator parked outside 47 Gee st. As seen in images 3 and 4 attached. I am guessing the parking suspension was to allow the Van to park and sell Pizza during the Clerkenwell design week. I was not obstructing the use or parking of the van, in fact the van was obstructing the suspension notice which meant I could not read or see it without prior knowledge it was there. I would have had to stand in the road to see it endangering myself as I had to to take images to illustrate the hidden notice. As there was no intention to avoid a parking charge and the fact the sign was not easily visible I would hope this challenge can be accepted. Many thanks.   This is the text from the rejection: Thank you for contacting us about the above Penalty Charge Notice (PCN). The PCN was issued because the vehicle was parked in a suspended bay or space. I note from your correspondence that there was no suspension notice on the sign that you used to call the payment serve outside number 55 Gee Street. I acknowledge your comments, however, your vehicle was parked in a bay which had been suspended. The regulations require the suspension warning to be clearly visible. It is a large bright yellow sign and is erected by the parking bay on the nearest parking plate to the area that is to be suspended. Parking is then not permitted in the bay for any reason or period of time, however brief. The signs relating to this suspension were sited in accordance with the regulations. Upon reviewing the Civil Enforcement Officer's (CEO's) images and notes, I am satisfied that sufficient signage was in place and that it meets statutory requirements. Whilst I note that the signage may have been obstructed by a large van and generator at the time, please note, it is the responsibility of the motorist to locate and check the time plate each time they park. This will ensure that any changes to the status of the bay are noted. I acknowledge that your vehicle possessed a RingGo session at the time, however, this does not authorize parking within a suspended bay. Suspension restrictions are established to facilitate specific activities like filming or construction, therefore, we anticipate the vehicle owner to relocate the vehicle from the suspended area until the specified date and time when the suspension concludes. Leaving a vehicle unattended for any period of time within a suspended bay, effectively renders the vehicle parked in contravention and a Civil Enforcement Officer (CEO) may issue a PCN. Finally, the vehicle was left parked approximately 5 metres away from the closest time plate notice. It is the responsibility of the driver to ensure they park in a suitable parking place and check all signs and road markings prior to leaving their vehicle parked in contravention. It remains the driver's responsibility to ensure that the vehicle is parked legally at all times. With that being said, I would have to inform you, your appeal has been rejected at this stage. Please see the below images as taken by the CEO whilst issuing the PCN: You should now choose one of the following options: Pay the penalty charge. We will accept the discounted amount of £65.00 in settlement of this matter, provided it is received by 10 June 2024. After that date, the full penalty charge of £130.00 will be payable. Or Wait for a Notice to Owner (NtO) to be issued to the registered keeper of the vehicle, who is legally responsible for paying the penalty charge. Any further correspondence received prior to the NtO being issued may not be responded to. The NtO gives the recipient the right to make formal representations against the penalty charge. If we reject those representations, there will be the right of appeal to the Environment and Traffic Adjudicator.   Gee st pdf.pdf
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Clydesdale's detailed defence


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Received last week, this is Clydesdale's detailed defence to my claim. A bit disapointing to be honest, they seem to be going over ground that most of the other banks abandoned months ago.

 

ROBERTXC

 

PURSUER

 

Against

 

CLYDESDALE BANK PLC, a company registered under the Companies Acts and having its registered office at 30 St Vincent Place, Glasgow G1 2HL

 

DEFENDER

 

1. Admitted the parties are as designed in the instance. Admitted they have a place of business within this Sheriffdom. Admitted the Pursuer is a consumer within the meaning of paragraph 3 to schedule 8 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 as amended. Admitted the Pursuer is domiciled within the Sheriffdom of Fife. Admitted this court accordingly has jurisdiction. To the knowledge of the Defender there are no proceedings pending before any other court involving the present cause of action between the parties hereto. To the knowledge of the Defender there is no agreement between the parties prorogating jurisdiction of the present cause to another court. Quoad ultra denied except insofar as coinciding herewith.

 

2. Admitted the Pursuer has a current account with the Defender under explanation that it is a joint account with Mrs Robertxc. Quoad ultra denied. Explained and averred that at all material times the contractual relationship between the pursuer and Mrs Robertxc ("the Customers") and the Defender was governed by the Defender's standard terms and conditions for current account customers from time to time in force. The terms and conditions have been amended from time to time, however at all material times these terms and conditions provided that:

(1) the Customers must obtain the Defender's agreement before overdrawing on the Account;

 

(2) If the Defender made payments from the Account or paid cheques which were guaranteed by the associated cheque guarantee card when there were insufficient funds available, any overdraft created or any overdraft which exceeded an agreed overdraft limit would be unauthorised;

 

(3) If the Customers drew cheques or authorised or made payments without sufficient money available in the Account, taking account of any overdraft Limit and allowing for uncleared cheques, the Defender might return the payments and make a charge for doing so;

 

(4) charges and interest applicable to the Account were published in the form of tariffs and up-to-date tariffs were available in branches;

 

(5) where appropriate, written details of overdraft charges and debit interest incurred on the Account during the previous charging period (i.e., the previous month) would be sent to the Customers at least 14 days before the charges and interest were deducted from the Account;

 

(6) If the Account had an unauthorised overdraft, additional charges might be levied which would be debited to the Account on the day on which the unauthorized overdraft was created;

 

(7) If the Defender increased a charge for a basic account service, the Defender would give the Customers at least 30 days' notice. At all material times the Defender's tariffs of charges for current account customers set out the charges from time to time applicable pursuant to its standard terms and conditions in respect of:
(1 ) unauthorised overdraft daily fees;

 

(2) unauthorised overdraft monthly fees;

 

(3) unpaid cheque or direct debit charges;

 

(4) card abuse fees (payable where a cheque or debit card is used to guarantee a transaction and payment would have been refused but for the guarantee).

3. Denied.

 

4. Denied. Castaneda and Others v. Clydebank Engineering and Shipbuilding Co. Ltd (1904) 12 SLT 498 is referred to for its terms, beyond which no admission is made. Quoad ultra denied except insofar as coinciding herewith.

 

5. Denied that the Defender's charges represent an unfair penalty charge in terms of theUnfair Terms in Consumer Contract Regulations 1999, 5.1. 1999 No 2083 ("the UTCC"). Explained and averred Paragraph 1 (e) of the Schedule 2 of the UTCC provides that "a term requiring any consumer who fails to fulfil his obligation to pay a disproportionately high sum in compensation may be regarded as unfair." The Charges are not compensation, but rather a fee for the service provided by the Defender in extending facilities to the Customers, all as envisaged by the agreement in place between the Defender and the Customers. Further and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing:

(1 ) the terms and conditions were fair having regard to the following matters:
(a) the cost to the Defender of maintaining administrative systems relating to unauthorised overdrafts, unpaid cheques and direct debits and abuse of cheque and debit cards for the purpose of keeping the level of overdrawing under review and controlled as far as possible;

 

(b) the increased risk of Loss to the Defender arising from such unauthorised transactions and the associated cost of enforcement and recovery systems;

 

© the need to operate standard procedures and to set standard charges in order to avoid the substantial costs of individual assessment in relation to each particular case;

(2) the terms and conditions complied with all relevant requirements of the Banking Code as the Banking Code was in force from time to time. Quoad ultra denied except insofar as coinciding herewith.

6. Denied.

 

7. Denied.

 

IN RESPEFT WHEREOF

 

Lyndsey M Solicitor

 

Solicitor

 

Clydesdale Bank Plc

 

30 S t Vincent Place

 

Glasgow

 

G1 2HL

 

SOLICITOR FOR DEFENDER

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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I am likely to receive a similar defence early next month - I take it that your argument will basically be that the charges are unfair under the UTCC, that they are a penalty rather than a "fee" and that the Bank should provide details of their true charging costs?

Royal Bank of Scotland - Settled - Full Amount

GE Money - Settled - Full Amount

Tesco Personal Finance - Settled - Full Amount + Interest + Court Costs

Clydesdale Bank - Settled - Full Amount + Interest + Court Costs

Clydesdale Bank - Pre June 2005 Charges - Settled - Full Amount

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I am likely to receive a similar defence early next month - I take it that your argument will basically be that the charges are unfair under the UTCC, that they are a penalty rather than a "fee" and that the Bank should provide details of their true charging costs?
Pretty much. This is also known as the 'Rhubarb defence' (because it's a load of rhubarb). I'll be responding and asking for clarification of various bits. I'll post more later.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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Hi Robert and SR7133. I'm right behind you.

 

Apologies for the slight digression on the above, my preliminary hearing is in Edinburgh a week after SR7133 (I might just pop along!), and I today received my offer of settlement letter from Lyndsey M. The settlement letter was very similar to the one in Robertxc's original thread at http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/yorkshire-bank-clydesdale-bank/37345-robertxc-clydesdale-bank-court.html

Basically, they offered the total sum of the charges, but not the interest I calculated, nor the costs. Naturally, I don't intend to take them up on this. Did you write to them to state that you wouldn't take them up on the settlement offer Robert?

 

Back to their defence: I have used the same GovanLawCentre statement of claim with the detailed Scottish jurisprudence, so will no doubt receive the same defence as above.

Interesting how they are trying to pad out the defence to make it look more valid. The substance remains very insubstantial.

 

Will be very interesting to see how this pans out. Keep us posted.

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I rejected their first offer, and then accepted their second - almost identical one - as full and final for this case only.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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Thier second offer was pretty much identical to their first. I think the only difference was that they were offering to pay my costs as well. The proof is still on, unless they agree to settle on the basis of this claim only. I'm drawing up a detailed response to their defence with the help of some of the legally qualified Mods and Site helpers. In the meantime, if you get one of these, I'd appreciate t if you could let me know. I doubt you'll get one until after the preliminary hearing.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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Thanks for clarifying. I doubt I would receive this defence until after the preliminary hearing as well, but will let you know any further details I might get during the coming weeks.

 

I will write to them for now rejecting their offer of settlement. I calculated interest as part of my claim because for every charge interest will have been claimed untill the moment of repayment, and want to pursue this interest as well as the costs.

 

On a final note, I'm not 100% sure I understand how your proof hearing is still scheduled if you've accepted their second offer of settlement. Would they not inform the court that a settlement has been reached and the case taken off the rota? My settlement offer certainly includes a 'joint minute' for this purpose, to be signed by Clydesdale and me. I take it you didn't sign this joint minute then?

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Nothing's settled until I have cleared funds in my possession. Also, it's not for them to tell the court that it's settled - I'm the pursuer, so that's my job.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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Yes. Never phone. Always write.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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Excellent. However, don't you think then that even if both you and Clydesdale bank show up for the proof hearing, they will confirm to the sheriff that you have agreed to a settlement, and hence it is unlikely to come to arguing the legal points in the claim and their defence against it?

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My proof hearing isn't until December, so if it is settled, it will be done long before then. If you're close to settling (i.e. you're waiting for a cheque to clear), and the proof hearing date arrives, all that will happen is that it will be adjourned for a fortnight for settlement to happen. You should NEVER agree to end your case until you have actual cleared funds in your possession, because it's very difficult to get it back into court if for some reason payment doesn't arrive.

Robertxc v. Abbey - £3300 Settled in full

Robertxc v. Clydesdale - £750 Settled in full

Nationwide v. Robertxc - £2000 overdraft wiped out, Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Style Card - Default removed by order of the sheriff

Robertxc v. Abbey (1) - Data Protection Act action. £750 compensation

Robertxc v. Abbey (2) - Data Protection Act action. £2000 compensation, default removed

 

The opinions on this post are those of Robertxc and not necessarily the opinions of the group and do not constitute sound legal advice. You are advised to seek professional legal advice.

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