So, you have received a Notice to Keeper from Viking Solutions for “unauthorised parking” at Finkle Street Car Park, timed at about eleven minutes between the ANPR entry and exit images. You are the registered keeper. The driver did not actually park: they pulled into the wrong car park, remained in the vehicle with the engine running while on the phone to other band members, realised this was the wrong car park for the Georgian Theatre, and then left and parked around the corner in the correct car park. The venue is willing to confirm that you moved the vehicle from the Finkle Street site to the proper car park for the gig.
Viking are relying on the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA) to pursue you as Keeper. Under PoFA, the operator must identify a “period of parking” during which the vehicle was parked on relevant land. ANPR camera images and timestamps do not, by themselves, prove a period of parking; they only record two moments in time when the vehicle passed the cameras. They do not show what happened in between, they do not prove that the vehicle was stationary for that whole interval, and they do not distinguish between parking and merely stopping, waiting, queuing, or turning around.
In your case the description is of a short stop with the engine running, with no-one leaving the vehicle and no acceptance of any parking terms. On that basis, Viking’s evidence does not prove an actual period of parking and does not establish that any parking contract was formed.
However, the notice is broadly drafted to follow PoFA and was issued within the statutory timescales, so this is not a straightforward “PoFA fail, Keeper not liable” situation. The main lines of argument are that there was no
period of parking as PoFA requires and that no contract to park was formed because the vehicle only briefly stopped while the occupants confirmed directions before leaving. In parallel, you should make use of the fact that the Georgian Theatre is willing to assist by asking them to press the landowner or site management to cancel the charge as a matter of discretion and customer relations.
The Keeper should now submit a concise appeal to Viking without revealing who was driving. The appeal should challenge their evidence, point out that the ANPR timestamps do not prove a period of parking, and make it clear that the vehicle was not parked and that no contract was accepted. Suitable wording would be:
I am the registered keeper of vehicle [STE911S] and I dispute your Parking Charge Notice [113521144].
Your notice alleges “unauthorised parking” at Finkle Street Car Park for a period of 11 minutes. The vehicle was not parked. It briefly stopped while the occupants confirmed directions by phone and, on realising this was the wrong car park for the intended venue, the driver immediately left and parked elsewhere. Nobody left the vehicle and the engine remained running throughout.
Your ANPR photographs simply show the vehicle present at two instants in time approximately 11 minutes apart. They do not demonstrate that the vehicle was parked at all, still less that it was parked for a continuous “period of parking” as required by Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. ANPR timestamps evidencing entry and exit do not, by themselves, prove any relevant period of parking or any acceptance of contractual terms.
Any alleged contravention is therefore denied.
In addition, I require you to provide:
1. A copy of the full signage terms in force at the time, and a site plan showing their locations; and
2. Evidence of your authority from the landowner to issue and enforce parking charges at this site.
In the circumstances I require you to cancel this notice. If you refuse, please treat this as a formal complaint and provide me with all the evidence you intend to rely on in any court claim.
You should keep that appeal strictly in the name of the keeper and avoid anything that identifies the driver. Separately, you should ask the Georgian Theatre to contact the landowner or management company to request that the charge be cancelled, explaining that you accidentally entered the wrong car park, did not park, and then moved to the correct car park for their event. It is often much easier for a venue or landowner to secure cancellation than for a motorist to succeed through the operator’s internal process or, later, through the IAS.
If Viking reject the appeal, they will offer the IAS for a supposed secondary appeal. That service is nothing but a kangaroo court that invariably sides with operators, so you should not rely on it to resolve matters, but you may still use it to put your position on record. The important points to preserve for any future dispute are that there is no proven period of parking, no evidence of an accepted parking contract, and contemporaneous support from the venue confirming that you left promptly and parked in the correct car park around the corner.