Another, unrelated private parking entry. It's dated later and matches up with a different matter.
OK but when was the request made to the DVLA?
Have you registered an appeal with the TPT yet?
01/09/2025 = Mon = Date of issue of Notice of Rejection
03/09/2025 = Wed = Deemed date of service of NoR and day 1 of 28 day relevant period
30/09/2025 = Tues = Day 28 of 28 relevant period and last day to pay at discount (as per NoR) or to submit an appeal to the TPT.
If not, I wouldn't hang about. Get the appeal registered and put "further evidence to follow" in the appropriate box. Make sure you ask for a telephone hearing. Not a hearing on the papers. You can always change your mind.
The DVLA log shows that the request (VQ4) was received on the 21st July 2025 and the result (VQ5) was provided the next working day, ie the 22nd July 2025 . So well outside the 28 days provided to issue and serve a PCN.
There is nothing in the DVLA record to support requests having being made on the 3rd June 2025 or at any time before the 21st July 2025. Or that the DVLA failed to respond to any such request.
The V5c registration document for the car was last updated on the 11th August 2024, so the DVLA held the registered keeper's name and address well before the 26th May 2025, the date of the alleged contravention.
The DVLA is the statutory holder and guardian of the data requested, I would suggest that the DVLA's record of enquiries is definitive. The authority might well have intended to request the registered keepers details on the 3rd June however the VQ4 was clearly not actually received by the DVLA. This further suggests a computer or electronic communication failure at the enforcement authorities end.
In any event, even assuming that a request (VQ4) was ever successfully submitted, which is not supported by the facts, to the DVLA on June 3rd 2025 there has been an unreasonable delay with follow-up by the enforcement authority when the expected response failed to arrive. The authority would know very well that a reply should be received the next working day. The authority should have followed up with the DVLA when the response (VQ5) failed to arrive. Waiting until the 27th July 2025 is plainly unreasonable and unjust.
A reasonable person would expect that the authority has routine audit programs running on it's computer systems designed to detect and capture failed transactions and procedures in place to rectify identified cases within the statutory timeframes.