You have to defend the case as presented in court.
The Claimant's case is as presented in the Particulars of Claim.
Those Particulars are defective, so I would take advantage of it and make a defence along the lines suggested in post 6.
The Court will probably give the Claimant the opportunity to correct matters, or you could yourself make a request for the information (a part 18 request)
Of course if you wish you can use the paragraph you suggest, but you would then need to delete the paragraph about the location not being identifiable.
Also your paragraph does not take advantage of the wording "no waiting" painted on the road as explained in post 4
It is completely up to you how you deal with this claim.
I can only say how I would approach the matter
The Claimant's case is as presented in the Particulars of Claim.
Those Particulars are defective, so I would take advantage of it and make a defence along the lines suggested in post 6.
The Court will probably give the Claimant the opportunity to correct matters, or you could yourself make a request for the information (a part 18 request)
Of course if you wish you can use the paragraph you suggest, but you would then need to delete the paragraph about the location not being identifiable.
Also your paragraph does not take advantage of the wording "no waiting" painted on the road as explained in post 4
It is completely up to you how you deal with this claim.
I can only say how I would approach the matter
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