he received an email response despite advising them to respond through mail onlyIf he contacted them via email, it is entirely reasonable for them to respond via the same medium.
Subject: PCN [ref] — Rectification, Erasure, and Service Address (Non-UK Resident)
Dear VARS,
I am the Hirer named on your Notice to Hirer for PCN [ref], vehicle [reg], event date [dd/mm/yyyy].
Address for service (non-UK resident)
I am not resident in the UK. My only address for service is:[Full Florida residential address].
I do not reside at, own, or have any financial interest in [mother’s UK address]. You must not use it for any purpose.
UK GDPR rectification & erasure
Treat this as a UK GDPR rectification request to replace your records with my Florida address only, and an erasure request in respect of the UK address (save for a minimal suppression record to prevent future use). Confirm in writing within 30 days.
Service of any claim
If you persist, any proceedings must be effected out of the jurisdiction in accordance with CPR 6.36/PD6B. I do not consent to service at any UK address, and I do not consent to service by email. Any attempt to serve at [mother’s address] will be mis-service; I will seek an immediate set-aside with costs for unreasonable conduct.
PoFA (hire)
Your NtH was not accompanied by the documents required by PoFA Sch.4 paras 13–14, so there is no keeper/hirer liability. The debt is denied.
Harassment/data misuse
Further contact to the UK address will prompt complaints to the ICO and the trade association.
For avoidance of doubt, I was a temporary visitor in the UK. Please update your records and confirm by reply.
Yours faithfully,
[Full name]
[Florida residential address]
[Email]
Attachments (for address verification):
– Redacted US driver licence or state ID (mask licence number/DOB).
– Recent US utility bill/bank statement showing the Florida address (mask account numbers/amounts).
Why no bailiff can knock on your door
1. County Court Judgment (CCJ):• A bailiff (enforcement agent) can only get involved after a creditor has obtained a CCJ against you in a county court.
• If the CCJ is under £600, the creditor cannot transfer it to the High Court for enforcement by a High Court Enforcement Officer (HCEO). Instead, enforcement would remain under the county court's jurisdiction.
2. Threshold for High Court Enforcement:• If a CCJ is over £600 (including fees and interest), the creditor can transfer it to the High Court for enforcement by an HCEO. This is a common method because HCEOs tend to be more effective at recovering money.
3. Cost-Benefit Analysis for Creditors:• For CCJs under £600, creditors may find it uneconomical to pursue enforcement through county court bailiffs, as they are generally slower and less effective than HCEOs.
• As a result, creditors may opt not to escalate enforcement for small amounts.
4. Private Parking Charges and Bailiffs:• In the context of private parking charges, no bailiff action can occur unless the parking operator has gone to court, won a case, obtained a CCJ, and you fail to pay the judgment within the stipulated time (usually 30 days).
So, no bailiff will come to your door for a debt under £600 unless the creditor deems it worth pursuing through county court enforcement. However, even if the debt is over £600, bailiff involvement only happens after a CCJ is issued, and enforcement is transferred to the High Court.
A County Court Judgment (CCJ) does not just happen—it follows a clear legal process. If someone gets a Parking Charge Notice (PCN) from a private parking company, here's what happens step by step:1. Parking Charge Notice (PCN) Issued• The parking company sends a letter (Notice to Keeper) demanding money.
• This is not a fine—it’s an invoice for an alleged breach of contract.
2. Opportunity to Appeal• The recipient can appeal to the parking company.
•If rejected, they may be able to appeal to POPLA (if BPA member) or IAS (if IPC member).
• If an appeal is lost or ignored, the parking company demands payment.
3. Debt Collection Letters• The parking company might send scary letters or pass the case to a debt collector.
• Debt collectors have no power—they just send letters and can be ignored.
• No CCJ happens at this stage.
4. Letter Before Claim (LBC)• If ignored for long enough, the parking company (or their solicitor) sends a Letter Before Claim (LBC).
• This is a warning that they may start a court case.
• The recipient has 30 days to reply before a claim is filed.
• No CCJ happens at this stage.
5. County Court Claim Issued• If ignored or unpaid, the parking company may file a claim with the County Court.
• The court sends a Claim Form with details of the claim and how to respond.
• The recipient has 14 days to respond (or 28 days if they acknowledge it).
• No CCJ happens at this stage.
6. Court Process• If the recipient defends the claim, a judge decides if they owe money.
• If the recipient ignores the claim, the parking company wins by default.
• No CCJ happens yet unless the recipient loses and ignores the court.
7. Judgment & Payment• If the court rules that money is owed, the recipient has 30 days to pay in full.
• If they pay within 30 days, no CCJ goes on their credit file.
• If they don’t pay within 30 days, the CCJ stays on their credit file for 6 years.
Conclusion
CCJs do not appear out of thin air. They only happen if:• A parking company takes the case to court.
• The person loses or ignores the case.
• The person fails to pay within 30 days.
If you engage with the process (appeal, defend, or pay on time), no CCJ happens.
Hire vehicles
13(1)This paragraph applies in the case of parking charges incurred in respect of the parking of a vehicle on relevant land if—
(a)the vehicle was at the time of parking hired to any person under a hire agreement with a vehicle-hire firm; and
(b)the keeper has been given a notice to keeper within the relevant period for the purposes of paragraph 8(4) or 9(4) (as the case may be).
(2)The creditor may not exercise the right under paragraph 4 to recover from the keeper any unpaid parking charges specified in the notice to keeper if, within the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which that notice was given, the creditor is given—
(a)a statement signed by or on behalf of the vehicle-hire firm to the effect that at the material time the vehicle was hired to a named person under a hire agreement;
(b)a copy of the hire agreement; and
(c)a copy of a statement of liability signed by the hirer under that hire agreement.
(3)The statement of liability required by sub-paragraph (2)(c) must—
(a)contain a statement by the hirer to the effect that the hirer acknowledges responsibility for any parking charges that may be incurred with respect to the vehicle while it is hired to the hirer;
(b)include an address given by the hirer (whether a residential, business or other address) as one at which documents may be given to the hirer;
(and it is immaterial whether the statement mentioned in paragraph (a) relates also to other charges or penalties of any kind).
(4)A statement required by sub-paragraph (2)(a) or (c) must be in such form (if any) as may be prescribed by the appropriate national authority by regulations made by statutory instrument.
(5)The documents mentioned in sub-paragraph (2) must be given by—
(a)handing them to the creditor;
(b)leaving them at any address which is specified in the notice to keeper as an address at which documents may be given to the creditor or to which payments may be sent; or
(c)sending them by post to such an address so that they are delivered to that address within the period mentioned in that sub-paragraph.
(6)In this paragraph and paragraph 14—
(a)“hire agreement” means an agreement which—
(i)provides for a vehicle to be let to a person (“the hirer”) for a period of any duration (whether or not the period is capable of extension by agreement between the parties); and
(ii)is not a hire-purchase agreement within the meaning of the Consumer Credit Act 1974;
(b)any reference to the currency of a hire agreement includes a reference to any period during which, with the consent of the vehicle-hire firm, the hirer continues in possession of the vehicle as hirer, after the expiry of any period specified in the agreement but otherwise on terms and conditions specified in it; and
(c)“vehicle-hire firm” means any person engaged in the hiring of vehicles in the course of a business.