If what you have shown us is from an AST, then the following is established:
1. The AST grants no parking rights
Clause 4 of the tenancy states clearly that parking is not included in the tenancy. Therefore, the tenant (and by extension the Keeper, if different) does not have any leasehold-derived right to park on the premises.
2. Prior consent was informal and revocable
The parking was previously permitted via a non-contractual, informal agreement with a manager who had the vehicle added to a whitelist. This is essentially a licence by permission, and such a licence can be revoked at any time. Once withdrawn, any continued parking could be subject to enforcement, assuming signage and procedures are otherwise valid.
3. No derogation or breach of quiet enjoyment
Because parking was not included in the tenancy, and the arrangement was outside the lease, the withdrawal of the whitelist or the start of enforcement does not amount to derogation from grant or breach of quiet enjoyment. These principles apply to rights granted by the lease; here, no such right was granted.
4. Third-party authority still needs scrutiny
While the parking company may now be issuing PCNs, they still need to prove they have lawful authority to enforce parking on that land and that:
• Their signage forms a contractual offer to a driver;
• Their procedures comply with PoFA if they are pursuing the Keeper.
5. Potential mitigation and fairness argument
Although not a legal defence, it may still be appropriate to argue that:
• The vehicle was previously authorised without objection;
• The PCNs began due to a change outside the Keeper’s control;
• This demonstrates a lack of clarity, poor communication, or a failure to give fair notice
As you do not have parking rights under your AST, and you were previously allowed to park under a discretionary or informal arrangement, then the ultimate authority for enforcing parking conditions (such as requiring a permit or issuing PCNs) must stem from the freeholder’s head lease or superior title, or a management company’s delegated authority.
You should formally request a copy of the head lease from your landlord (who is a leaseholder) under Section 1 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, which provides for the disclosure of lease information upon request. You can say that you require it in order to understand the basis for the imposition of parking restrictions and penalties by third parties.
Here’s why seeing the head lease matters:
1. To identify who has the legal right to control or regulate parking• The head lease may specify whether parking spaces are demised, shared, communal, or subject to rules imposed by a management company.
• It may reveal whether the freeholder or management company retains control of the parking area and can enter into contracts with third parties (e.g. parking enforcement firms).
2. To assess whether third-party enforcement is contractually permissible• If there is no express authority for a parking company to enforce terms (or require permits), then the company may lack standing to issue PCNs or create enforceable parking contracts.
3. To determine if any right to park exists that could be enforced against interference• Even if the AST is silent on parking, if the head lease grants the apartment landlord the use of a space (or rights over communal areas including parking), those rights may cascade to the tenant, creating a potential defence based on derogation from grant or interference with easement.
4. To confirm or refute the parking company's legal standing• Operators often rely on “agency” or contracts with managing agents. Without clear delegation from the freeholder (as shown in the head lease or management agreement), that authority may be invalid or challengeable.
What you should do for now is ignore all debt recovery letters. Debt collectors are powerless to do so anything except to try and make the low-hanging fruit on the gullible tree pay out of ignorance and fear. We do not need to see or know about debt recovery letters and you can safely ignore those.
If you receive a Letter of Claim (LoC) then you should tell us about that. In the meantime you need to request a copy of your landlords head lease and then we need to know anything in it that mentions parking.
I've had a conversation with a district judge this afternoon about the sign you showed us nd whether it is capable of forming a contract, and it isn't.