With all due respect, you're conflating two entirely separate legal regimes—PoFA Schedule 4 and the Railway Byelaws 2005—and in doing so, you're misapplying the statutory relief provisions.
The quoted PoFA mechanism for transferring liability from the keeper to the hirer only applies to parking charges on relevant land, as defined in Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. Railway land is explicitly excluded from the definition of “relevant land” under paragraph 3 of Schedule 4. That exclusion renders the entire PoFA framework—including the 28-day transfer mechanism—inapplicable.
This is not a Notice to Keeper issued under PoFA. It is a (fake) Penalty Notice issued under Railway Byelaw 14(4)(i), which purports to impose liability on the "owner", not the Keeper or Hirer. APCOA is not invoking PoFA, nor can they. They are relying on a statutory byelaw that does not provide any lawful mechanism for transferring liability via hire documentation. The relief provisions you cite simply do not apply.
Moreover, APCOA is a private contractor. They have no prosecutorial authority under Byelaw 24(1) unless formally delegated by the Train Operating Company, and they cannot enforce a penalty without initiating criminal proceedings in the Magistrates’ Court within six months. In practice, they do not prosecute—they issue civil demands dressed up as statutory penalties, which are legally dubious and unenforceable without court action.
So no, this is not a matter of “simple documents” relieving the registered keeper of liability. The legal framework you're quoting is irrelevant to this scenario. The correct approach is to challenge the validity of the Penalty Notice itself, not to pretend PoFA applies where it plainly does not.
Let’s not simplify by misapplying law. Precision matters.
When the lease company provides the Hirer with a Letter of Authority (LoA), the legal and procedural landscape shifts. The LoA does not invoke PoFA—because, as explained, PoFA Schedule 4 is entirely inapplicable to railway land. Instead, the LoA serves a practical and strategic function: it authorises the hirer to correspond with APCOA and challenge the Penalty Notice directly, on behalf of the registered keeper (the lease company).
Since APCOA is purporting to impose liability under Railway Byelaw 14(4)(i), which targets the owner of the vehicle, and since the lease company is likely the legal owner, the LoA allows the hirer to act in the owner's stead. This avoids unnecessary back-and-forth between APCOA and the lease company and ensures the challenge is made by the person best placed to dispute the facts and context of the alleged breach.
Importantly, because APCOA is not invoking PoFA and cannot rely on its liability transfer provisions, there is no statutory mechanism requiring the lease company to submit hire documentation to avoid liability. That entire framework is irrelevant. The lease company is not obliged to engage in the PoFA 28-day transfer process because the land is not “relevant land” and the notice is not a Notice to Keeper under PoFA.
Further, APCOA cannot be the “creditor” if this is a genuine Penalty Notice under the Railway Byelaws. A statutory penalty is payable to the prosecuting authority—typically the Train Operating Company—not a private contractor. APCOA also cannot issue a “Notice to Keeper”, because the Railway Byelaws do not recognise the concept of a “keeper”; they refer only to the “owner”. And crucially, nobody except the owner knows who the owner is. The DVLA provides registered keeper data, not proof of ownership. Unless the lease company confirms ownership or delegates authority, APCOA has no lawful basis to pursue anyone.
Instead, the Hirer—armed with the LoA—should challenge the Penalty Notice on its merits, including:
• The lack of prosecutorial authority by APCOA
• The absence of a lawful penalty mechanism without a Magistrates’ Court summons
• The misleading presentation of a civil demand as a statutory penalty
• The fact that no liability can be enforced without formal prosecution under Byelaw 24(1)
In short, the LoA enables the Hirer to take control of the dispute and expose the legal deficiencies in APCOA’s position. It is not about transferring liability—it is about asserting a challenge from a position of delegated authority, in a context where PoFA has no relevance and APCOA’s enforcement model is legally flawed.