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Trafford Council (Trafford MBC) - Charge Certificate - Match Day Restricted Streets


I received a council parking ticket some months ago and, following advice on here, submitted the appeal below. Subsequently the appeal was rejected and I now have a Charge Certificate for £105.
Can you please advise what I need to do? Do I just await the next stage and perhaps go to court?
Initially, I thought the car was off the road and not subject to parking restrictions but having read the ticket, it suggested the road was "Parked on a Restricted Street during prescribed hours (Code: 01 - 1 min obs). I think the code means that a ticket can be issued immediately (after a minute, which may be the time it takes) rather than being observed over a period. I was basing my appeal on information on the council website, which showed there were restricted zones on matchdays (Elsinore Road is close to Old Trafford Cricket and Football grounds) and it was clear to me that the car was not in any of the restricted zones.
The response to the appeal was along the lines that double yellow lines denote a 'restricted street' at all times, so the 'restricted streets map' for matchdays was something in addition.
I do intend to fight on, on the bases that:
a: the restrictions were unclear (I have attached the map and list showing restricted streets for matchdays) - The car was outside of all the Restricted Zones
b: the contravention, as per the excellent template, are unclear
c: the car is effectively not parked on the road/ yellow lines, but is parked in what used to be another road or entrance to a now blocked off drive
d: if the Trafford Order is correct, the alleged contravention is not on a 'permanently' restricted street because the measured distances do not stretch that far.
With that in mind, and the example in para 3 of the appeal template "“restricted street” means any street within the London Borough of Lewisham specified in Schedule 1", I have found the BOROUGH OF TRAFFORD (PROHIBITION OF WAITING AND LOADING AND PROVISION OF PARKING) ORDER 2001 lists Elsinore Road as being restricted "Mon - Sun At Any Time" from it's junction with Seymour Grove, for a distance of 63 metres on the Northbound carriageway (Image below) but, using an online measuring tool, I think the alleged contravention was over 100 metres from that junction (image below).
Original appeal wording:
Dear Sir/Madam
The alleged contravention did not occur. The traffic regulation order fails to
define what a “restricted street” is and it does not prescribe that it is a
contravention to park in a restricted street during prescribed hours.
Contravention code 01 was originally devised by the London Councils and
reflected the fact that London council’s traffic orders made specific reference
as to what is to be considered “restricted street”. This can be seen in the
example below (for reference, Schedule 1 concerned No Waiting restrictions);
“restricted street” means any street within the London Borough of Lewisham
specified in Schedule 1 (hereinafter referred to as a “scheduled street”) and
includes, except where the context otherwise requires, so much of every other
street within that London borough which is not a scheduled street or a street
specified in Schedule 4 and which joins any scheduled street as lies between
the kerb line of the scheduled street and a point 18.29 metres distant therefrom
and any reference in this order to any restricted street shall be construed
accordingly, provided that the expression “restricted street” shall not for the
purposes of this order include–
(a) any area on a highway or any place within the London Borough of Lewisham
for the time being designated or described as a parking place by any order made
or having effect as if made under section 6 or section 45 of the Road Traffic
Regulation Act 1984;
(b) in its application to a street specified in column (2) of Schedule 5, that
length of street which extends 18.29 metres measured in the direction specified
in column (3) of that schedule from the kerb line of the scheduled street
specified in column (4) of that schedule, and in this definition the expression
“kerb line” in relation to a scheduled street shall mean that imaginary line
which is the projection of the line formed by the edge of the main carriageway
of the scheduled street adjacent to its junction with the side in question of
any other street;
(c) any length of street designated as red route;
The London boroughs would not go to the trouble of taking great care to
specifically define what is a “restricted street” if it served no purpose and
was unnecessary. Without a traffic order defining “restricted street” then it
is reasonable to apply common language. The commonplace definition of
“restricted” is thus; “place limits on, confine, restrain”. Therefore, in
essence, the PCN informed me that I parked in a street during hours that the
street is subject to parking restraints. It does not however inform me of how
the vehicle contravened a particular parking restraint or even what parking
restraint was contravened. It is highly important to note that not all parking
restrictions prohibit parking (eg: parking place restrictions) and so parking
in a restricted street during prescribed hours is not a contravention by
default since it can be lawful. It is only a contravention if the traffic order
is drafted correctly in the manner exampled above.
A street is often subject to a number of differing parking restrictions. For
example, one particular parking bay in a street may be restricted to permit
holders only between the prescribed hours of 9am to 6pm while another parking
bay may be restricted to Pay & Display between the prescribed hours of 8am
to 6pm. However, a person who lawfully parks their vehicle in ether bay during
the prescribed hours is doing just as my vehicle was also doing, that being,
“parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours”. Quite simply, the
ground stated on the PCN is not fit for purpose since it does not distinguish
between a vehicle that is lawfully parked in a restricted street during
prescribed hours and one that is not.
The use of this equivocal ground is potentially prejudicial as a person may
prepare an appeal focusing on a parking restriction that is not actually
relevant to the reason why the PCN was served. For instance, many PCN’s are
served upon vehicles that are parked partly in a parking space with either
their front or rear end slightly overhanging an adjacent single or double
yellow line. Often where this happens a PCN is served upon the vehicle for
being “parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours”. However, due to
the diverse meaning in plain English of this ground, the recipient of the PCN
may wrongly but reasonably assume that they contravened the parking place
restriction rather than be aware that they fractionally infringed upon the “No
Waiting” yellow line restriction. In the interest of justice a person needs to
easily comprehend why their vehicle was not considered lawfully parked so that
they can either avoid doing so again or gather the relevant evidence for any
subsequent appeal.
It must also be remembered that the ground on the PCN will be repeated on the
NtO and the owner may not have been the driver. Therefore, unless an NtO is
accompanied each and every time by adequate photos of the signage, the owner
when applying common language will not be able to deduce with certainty what
parking restriction the expression “restricted street “concerns and was
allegedly contravened. The general principles of law dictate that a person
should not have to decipher the ground stated on a PCN or guess what
restriction was allegedly contravened; it should be unequivocal. In a day and
age when the UK is host to a wealth of visitors and residents whose first
language is not English and when central and local Government both readily
advocate the use of plain English on all public forms and documents it is
nonsensical to use language on a PCN that is ambiguous or may require a person
to refer to the glossary of a far away traffic order to gain a degree of
understanding of what they allegedly did wrong.
The council may be using the standard contravention codes but it should be
remembered that these contravention codes have no statutory authority and
cannot be relied upon as a defence as made clear in the key adjudication case
between Metrick v Camden (Case no 207034396A).
I find the ground of “parked in a restricted street during prescribed hours” to
be unsupported as a parking contravention prescribed by the traffic order. The
order may prohibit waiting in certain lengths of road at certain times but the
order does not define and correlate waiting restrictions with being
"restricted street" nor does it define and correlate what is
considered "prescribed hours". It is critical to remember that the
purpose of a PCN is to encourage people to park lawfully, so it stands to
reason that a person needs to know precisely what they did wrong in order to
avoid doing so again
The ground given on the PCN is ineffective in conveying what I allegedly did wrong and as such it does not satisfy paragraph 1(e) contained within the Schedule to “The Civil Enforcement of Parking Contraventions (England) General Regulations 2007 and the penalty charge should be cancelled forthwith rather than drag this matter to adjudication.
I also submitted, as part of my appeal, the following 'Restricted Zones' list and map, with the final image showing roughly where the car was:





Comments
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You need specialist help from experts with council parking penalty ticket knowledge.As we major on private parking tickets here, Free Traffic Legal Advice (FTLA) forum will be your best bet for council penalty charges. Register there but please note that a Hotmail address may not work - try using a throwaway Gmail account instead if you do have trouble registering, and post a new thread; here's your link:Read the sticky 'Read this first before posting your case' as well as reading through some of the other threads there ahead of posting your own details, to get the hang of what information they need from you in your opening post - but as a minimum you will need to post redacted photos/scans of all correspondence you've received from the council (both sides, if appropriate), as they need to see all the small print.Please note, we are not a legal advice forum. I personally don't get involved in critiquing court case Defences/Witness Statements, so unable to help on that front. Please don't ask. .
I provide only my personal opinion, it is not a legal opinion, it is simply a personal one. I am not a lawyer.
Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; show him how to catch fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.Private Parking Firms - Killing the High Street1
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