Hi there, I am a relative newbie so please bear with me!
To give a bit of background:Vehicle keeper received a parking charge notice in September last year after parking at a 'Sainsburies local' to assist an elderly gentleman who suffers from Alzheimers with shopping. Car park is not owned by Sainsburies or Civil Enforcement Ltd (The Claimant.) Car park signs state 'free parking 45 minutes.' It is alleged that the vehicle outstayed the 45 minute period by 18 minutes.
Up until now January 2018 all correspondence was ignored, an appeal was then submitted directly to CEL which was rejected. Since then all subsequent correspondence has been ignored until this week when a County Court Claim form was received from Northampton Business Centre
Defendant has submitted an AoS stating intent to defend the claim. Below is an initial draft of the defence. Any comments/critique would be very much appreciated! Points to note re the Claim:
1. CEL is not the land owner nor have they evidenced permission to bring charges on behalf of the landowner
2. BPA CoP states that BPA Code of Practice Section 20 (20.5a) states: ‘when issuing a parking charge notice you may use photographs as evidence that a vehicle was parked in an unauthorised way. The photographs must refer to and confirm the incident which you claim was unauthorised. CEL has failed to provide any evidence that the car was even in the car park. The photgraphs sent simply show the vehicle on a stretch of road which could be anywhere
3. CEL is claiming £136 in 'debt and damages' over and above the initial £100 parking charge. These charges are unqualified.
Thanks advance for reading
I XXX Defendant in this matter was the authorised registered keeper of the vehicle in question at the time of the alleged contravention. I deny that the Claimant is entitled to the sum or any part of the amount claimed, and deny liability for this claim in its entirety.
The defendant believes that the claim has no merit or reasonable prospects of success and invites the court to strike out the claim.
I believe the facts stated in this defence are true
To give a bit of background:Vehicle keeper received a parking charge notice in September last year after parking at a 'Sainsburies local' to assist an elderly gentleman who suffers from Alzheimers with shopping. Car park is not owned by Sainsburies or Civil Enforcement Ltd (The Claimant.) Car park signs state 'free parking 45 minutes.' It is alleged that the vehicle outstayed the 45 minute period by 18 minutes.
Up until now January 2018 all correspondence was ignored, an appeal was then submitted directly to CEL which was rejected. Since then all subsequent correspondence has been ignored until this week when a County Court Claim form was received from Northampton Business Centre
Defendant has submitted an AoS stating intent to defend the claim. Below is an initial draft of the defence. Any comments/critique would be very much appreciated! Points to note re the Claim:
1. CEL is not the land owner nor have they evidenced permission to bring charges on behalf of the landowner
2. BPA CoP states that BPA Code of Practice Section 20 (20.5a) states: ‘when issuing a parking charge notice you may use photographs as evidence that a vehicle was parked in an unauthorised way. The photographs must refer to and confirm the incident which you claim was unauthorised. CEL has failed to provide any evidence that the car was even in the car park. The photgraphs sent simply show the vehicle on a stretch of road which could be anywhere
3. CEL is claiming £136 in 'debt and damages' over and above the initial £100 parking charge. These charges are unqualified.
Thanks advance for reading
I XXX Defendant in this matter was the authorised registered keeper of the vehicle in question at the time of the alleged contravention. I deny that the Claimant is entitled to the sum or any part of the amount claimed, and deny liability for this claim in its entirety.
- The Claim form issued on 17th October 2018 by Civil Enforcement Ltd has been incorrectly filed under The Practice Direction. Which states that The Statement of Truth, where the Claimant is a registered company or corporation must be signed by either a director of other officer of the company. Practice Direction 22 requires that a statement of case on behalf of a company must be signed by a person holding a senior position and state the position. If the party is legally represented, the legal representative may sign the statement of truth but in his own name and not that of his firm or employer. The Claim form issued on 17th October by Civil Enforcement Ltd is signed Civil Enforcement Ltd (Claimants legal representative)
- Civil Enforcement Ltd are not the owner or occupier of the land therefore they do not have the authority to bring charges on this land in their own name, they have no rights to bring this case, or even to allege any breach of contract CEL has failed to evidence a dated, signed contemporaneous copy of the actual agreement/contract with the landowner giving them the relevant authority to issues proceedings on behalf of the landowner as required by the British Parking Association Code of Practice.
- Furthermore the Claimant has provided no indication as to the legal basis of this claim, whether it be for breach of contract, contractual liability or trespass However it is denied that the defendant, or any driver of the vehicle, entered into any contractual agreement with the Claimant, whether express, implied of otherwise
- The Particulars of Claim state that Drivers are allowed to park in accordance with T+Cs of use. These assertions indicate that the Claimant has failed to identify a Cause of Action, and is simply offering a menu of choices. As such, the Claim fails to comply with Civil Procedure Rule 16.4, or with Civil Practice Direction 16, paras. 7.3 to 7.5. Further, the particulars of the claim do not meet the requirements of Practice Direction 16 7.5 as there is nothing which specifies how the terms were breached
- BPA Code of Practice Section 20 (20.5a) states: ‘when issuing a parking charge notice you may use photographs as evidence that a vehicle was parked in an unauthorised way. The photographs must refer to and confirm the incident which you claim was unauthorised. A date and time stamp should be included on the photograph. All photographs used for evidence should be clear and legible and must not be retouched or digitally altered.’ The images purporting to evidence the alleged contravention as supplied on the Parking Charge Notice do not sufficiently demonstrate that the vehicle was even in the car park, showing only the vehicle, the road and a brick wall. The images are not time stamped therefore are evidence of nothing more than the vehicle in question travelling in two different directions on a nondescript stretch of road at an undisclosed time. This is a clear breach of the Claimants obligations under the British Parking Associations Code of Practice
- The Claimant has given no explanation as to how they have arrived at the sum of calculated The additional sum of £136 for ‘debt and damages’ This appears to be a cost with no apparent qualification and an attempt at double recovery In accordance with The Protection of Freedom Act Paragraph 4 (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
- No figure for additional charges has been ‘agreed’ nor could they have been included as part of the alleged ‘contract’ because no such costs have been quantified on the signs or on any of the subsequent correspondence from the Claimant
- The defendant refutes that the Claimant is entitled to claim £50 legal representation costs CPR 27.14 does not permit these to be recovered in the Small Claims Court. In Ladak v DRC Locums UKEAT/0488/13/LA the Claimant can only recover the direct and provable costs of the time spent on preparing the claim in a legal capacity, not any administration cost.
The defendant believes that the claim has no merit or reasonable prospects of success and invites the court to strike out the claim.
I believe the facts stated in this defence are true
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