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£100 charge for breaking 15 minute limit at petrol station

Khaggis
Posts: 88 Forumite

Hi guys, I'm back again, as you've all been incredibly helpful before, I was wondering if I could squeeze some more knowledge from you.
My partner received a PCN the other day for £100 for overstaying at a petrol station while collecting a parcel from there. The kicker? It has a max limit of 15 minutes. She was clocked at 29 so will be outside of the "recommended" 10 minutes "grace" period. Unfortunately you can see the sign if you look on street view, but it's not something I've ever known enforced at petrol stations before, plus its a busy road, so it would be distracting to read.
I'm going to do the standard protocol of wait 28 days, don't admit to who the driver is, argue that its inadequate signing etc, but my question is, is a 15 minute time limit reasonable? I was going to pop in and speak to the manager on her behalf, but looking at the reviews of the petrol station on Google, apparently a lot of people have got stung with this from just waiting to fill up, buying snacks in the store or using the car wash. They've spoken to the manager that said they would cancel it but never bothered in the end and they had to pay it. The consensus seems to be that the manager/owner isn't cancelling them as he receives a cut of the fine, though I don't know how true that is.
I just think 15 minutes is a completely unreasonable amount of time (and yes she was nearly double over that) but she was waiting for ages for this parcel, and I believe she filled her car as well. I'm just trying to figure out all the points I can throw in to the appeal for her to try and get her out of it.
Thanks in advance and sorry for the rant.
My partner received a PCN the other day for £100 for overstaying at a petrol station while collecting a parcel from there. The kicker? It has a max limit of 15 minutes. She was clocked at 29 so will be outside of the "recommended" 10 minutes "grace" period. Unfortunately you can see the sign if you look on street view, but it's not something I've ever known enforced at petrol stations before, plus its a busy road, so it would be distracting to read.
I'm going to do the standard protocol of wait 28 days, don't admit to who the driver is, argue that its inadequate signing etc, but my question is, is a 15 minute time limit reasonable? I was going to pop in and speak to the manager on her behalf, but looking at the reviews of the petrol station on Google, apparently a lot of people have got stung with this from just waiting to fill up, buying snacks in the store or using the car wash. They've spoken to the manager that said they would cancel it but never bothered in the end and they had to pay it. The consensus seems to be that the manager/owner isn't cancelling them as he receives a cut of the fine, though I don't know how true that is.
I just think 15 minutes is a completely unreasonable amount of time (and yes she was nearly double over that) but she was waiting for ages for this parcel, and I believe she filled her car as well. I'm just trying to figure out all the points I can throw in to the appeal for her to try and get her out of it.
Thanks in advance and sorry for the rant.
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Comments
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Khaggis said:Hi guys, I'm back again, as you've all been incredibly helpful before, I was wondering if I could squeeze some more knowledge from you.
My partner received a PCN the other day for £100 for overstaying at a petrol station while collecting a parcel from there. The kicker? It has a max limit of 15 minutes. She was clocked at 29 so will be outside of the "recommended" 10 minutes "grace" period. Unfortunately you can see the sign if you look on street view, but it's not something I've ever known enforced at petrol stations before, plus its a busy road, so it would be distracting to read.
I'm going to do the standard protocol of wait 28 days, don't admit to who the driver is, argue that its inadequate signing etc, but my question is, is a 15 minute time limit reasonable? I was going to pop in and speak to the manager on her behalf, but looking at the reviews of the petrol station on Google, apparently a lot of people have got stung with this from just waiting to fill up, buying snacks in the store or using the car wash. They've spoken to the manager that said they would cancel it but never bothered in the end and they had to pay it. The consensus seems to be that the manager/owner isn't cancelling them as he receives a cut of the fine, though I don't know how true that is.
I just think 15 minutes is a completely unreasonable amount of time (and yes she was nearly double over that) but she was waiting for ages for this parcel, and I believe she filled her car as well. I'm just trying to figure out all the points I can throw in to the appeal for her to try and get her out of it.
Thanks in advance and sorry for the rant.4 -
Castle said:Khaggis said:Hi guys, I'm back again, as you've all been incredibly helpful before, I was wondering if I could squeeze some more knowledge from you.
My partner received a PCN the other day for £100 for overstaying at a petrol station while collecting a parcel from there. The kicker? It has a max limit of 15 minutes. She was clocked at 29 so will be outside of the "recommended" 10 minutes "grace" period. Unfortunately you can see the sign if you look on street view, but it's not something I've ever known enforced at petrol stations before, plus its a busy road, so it would be distracting to read.
I'm going to do the standard protocol of wait 28 days, don't admit to who the driver is, argue that its inadequate signing etc, but my question is, is a 15 minute time limit reasonable? I was going to pop in and speak to the manager on her behalf, but looking at the reviews of the petrol station on Google, apparently a lot of people have got stung with this from just waiting to fill up, buying snacks in the store or using the car wash. They've spoken to the manager that said they would cancel it but never bothered in the end and they had to pay it. The consensus seems to be that the manager/owner isn't cancelling them as he receives a cut of the fine, though I don't know how true that is.
I just think 15 minutes is a completely unreasonable amount of time (and yes she was nearly double over that) but she was waiting for ages for this parcel, and I believe she filled her car as well. I'm just trying to figure out all the points I can throw in to the appeal for her to try and get her out of it.
Thanks in advance and sorry for the rant.
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Which parking company ?1
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Is it an MFG station ?
If yes, see the recent threads about MFG, where they dont want to penalise legitimate customers2 -
Gr1pr said:Is it an MFG station ?
If yes, see the recent threads about MFG, where they dont want to penalise legitimate customers0 -
This is the Esso in question, if you see the reviews it's a lot of people saying the manager would cancel it as they were legit customers, but then never bothered to, forcing them to pay the fine...
https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-tef-gb-rvc2&sca_esv=00d2b9dd415bfb1f&source=android-browser&sxsrf=AE3TifPDeKb4bQP30BcTD_qQXUbleq0FhA:1756204981648&q=esso+birmingham+reviews&si=AMgyJEtREmoPL4P1I5IDCfuA8gybfVI2d5Uj7QMwYCZHKDZ-E9Uvymyd6Ze9LKsnwK3HAaogncfHoAbMTjpVvSyo5iw5IaMXw0X_zbxbwAry_D3mDwq3_IyxwSaTDFj8M9rz1d9k8YW6&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiJzNWwpaiPAxWVRPEDHQPPBFcQ9qsLegQIHhAJ&biw=412&bih=845&dpr=2.63#ebo=10 -
Its not a fine and nobody is forced into paying without a court order3
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Khaggis said:Gr1pr said:Is it an MFG station ?
If yes, see the recent threads about MFG, where they dont want to penalise legitimate customersPRIVATE 'PCN'? DON'T PAY BUT DON'T IGNORE IT (except N.Ireland).
CLICK at the top or bottom of any page where it says:
Home»Motoring»Parking Tickets Fines & Parking - read the NEWBIES THREAD4 -
They probably get £10 for every successful PCN paid and saying he will get it cancelled avoids confrontation at the time.4
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