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Private car park fine

Hi Everyone,

I was out shopping (Lancashire) and parked on a small private land and after 45 mins came back and got a ticket.

On the ticket the company is called (CPEC LTD) car parking enforcement ltd.

My friend said just ignore them ?

1)If they write to me shall I just keep ignoring them and after a bit they will get fed up ?

2)If they write to me shall I just say what you on about,
I dont know the car got a fine,provide me with proof of when it happened,who was the driver etc and say I will take it to court.

He said don't own up to who was driving the car and say send evidence
as they have to book the driver NOT THE REGISTERED KEEPER.

Pls give some advice pls.

Thanks Ash.

Comments

  • Browntoa
    Browntoa Posts: 49,622 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    ignore , ignore , ignore...........
    Ex forum ambassador

    Long term forum member
  • taffy056
    taffy056 Posts: 4,895 Forumite
    Just ignore them, and don't bother appealing as it will be turned down. Just read the sticky threads on here for reassurance
    Excel Parking, MET Parking, Combined Parking Solutions, VP Parking Solutions, ANPR PC Ltd, & Roxburghe Debt Collectors. What do they all have in common?
    They are all or have been suspended from accessing the DVLA database for gross misconduct!
    Do you really need to ask what kind of people run parking companies?
  • Don't do anything. Don't contact them at all. Don't acknowledge any communication from them.

    They will buy your details from the DVLA, itself a scandal, and will send you a series of threatograms which you should ignore.
  • Stephen_Leak
    Stephen_Leak Posts: 8,762 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    edited 15 July 2012 at 5:40PM
    Your friend is right.

    Firstly, the legal stuff.

    Only councils, the police, train operators and Transport for London can impose legally enforceable fines or penalties. A private company or individual can't. A private parking company (PPC) call their tickets “Parking Charge Notices”, not “Penalty Charge Notices”. In law, they’re called “speculative invoices”.

    Any warning signs are usually so badly positioned and worded, that they won’t have created a fair and legally binding deemed contract between the car park owner and a driver entering the car park in the first place. See The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1997 and Excel Parking Services vs. Cutts, Stockport, 2011.

    All the car park owner (CPO) can claim from a driver in damages for any alleged breach of any alleged contract is what they’ve lost as a result. If it’s in a free car park or the driver paid, this is £0.00. Demanding more has been judged to be unreasonable and therefore an unfair contract penalty under the terms of The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1997, which is not legally enforceable. See Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd. vs. New Garage & Motor Co. Ltd., House of Lords, 1914 and countless cases since.

    There are also now two recent landmark court cases, VCS Parking Control vs. Ronald Ibbotson, S!!!!horpe, 2012 and VCS Parking Control vs. HM Revenue & Customs, Upper Tax Tribunal, 2012. In both cases, the judges ruled that only the car park owner can take drivers to court. The Upper Tax Tribunal is a court of record, equivalent to the High Court, and therefore its judgement sets a legal precedent.

    What should I do now?

    We don’t condone not paying or overstaying in a pay car park. If you owe the CPO the original charge, then you ought to write to the CPO, offering this in “full and final settlement”. In any event, you should write to the CPO, advising them that they are "jointly and severally liable" for the actions of their agents, the PPC, and that any further actions by either of them would be regarded as harassment under the terms of The Protection from Harassment Act 1997. This ought to make the CPO call off the PPC and, hopefully, realise the potential cost of doing business with a PPC.

    Don’t appeal to the PPC. They always reject them. What’s in it for them to let anyone off? Actually, there is something in it for them: information. They need to know the identity of the driver of the vehicle involved at the time, because that’s who the alleged contract was with. If they don’t know who the driver was, they have to make do with harassing the registered keeper.

    With windscreen notices, an appeal letter will tell them your name and address, and maybe who was driving at the time. If they don’t know who the driver was, they have to buy the details of registered keeper from the DVLA. With postal notices, they’ve had to do this already. But they still need to know the identity of the driver.

    They sometimes say that they have the right to ask for this information. This doesn’t mean that you have to tell them.

    However, even if you’ve written and told them who the driver was, it just means that they can now harass the driver instead of harassing the registered keeper.

    How will they do this to me?

    The PPC, then a debt collector and then a solicitor will send you a series of letters. The debt collector and solicitor are usually also the PPC, but using different headed paper. These letters will threaten you with every kind of financial and legal unpleasantness imaginable to intimidate you into paying.

    But, they can't actually do anything, for the same reason that a blackmailer can't sue anyone who didn’t pay them.

    What should I do then?

    Continue to ignore everything you get from the PPC and their aliases. It does seem odd to deal with something like this by ignoring it. Eventually, they will run out of empty threats and stop throwing good money after bad.
    The acquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in my life. :)
  • ASH999
    ASH999 Posts: 44 Forumite
    Thanks everyone.
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