Yes, that is another option. However, do you really want the claim 'stayed'. Requesting a stay of proceedings (instead of immediate strike-out) can serve as a strategic move in certain situations. In your case, it would primarily be used to pause the case and force the Claimant to explain and correct procedural failings — rather than asking the court to dismiss the claim outright.
A strike-out application is cleaner and more final. If the court considers the late Reply to Defence as harmless (which can happen in small claims), a stay might just delay the inevitable. If you don’t make the stay request through a formal N244 application, the court is unlikely to act on it.
Are you eligible for assistance with court fees? If you are, then you should definitely make an N244 application for strike out. You could incorporate all of the arguments into a single N244 application, asking for:
• The claim to be struck out under CPR 3.4(2)(a) as disclosing no reasonable grounds (due to PoFA not applying and no driver pleaded), and/or
• The Claimant’s Reply to Defence to be struck out or disregarded due to late filing and failure to comply with CPR 15.8 and PD15 para 6 and/or
• A stay of proceedings pending clarification or permission from the court.
This all has to be done before the claim is allocated to track otherwise it is not likely to be considered within the time constraints of an actual hearing. Once it is allocated, you can please everything in your WS but most judges will not have the time or inclination to do more than skim read it.
This is the reasoning for making the application:
The 14-day expectation for replying to a defence comes from Practice Direction 15, paragraph 6. The requirement to include the Directions Questionnaire is found in CPR 15.8(a). The ability to file further pleadings after a Reply is restricted under CPR 15.9.
So, if ParkingEye waited 63 days to file their Reply to Defence without applying for an extension and without complying with CPR 15.8, they have breached procedural expectations and potentially the rules.