I have to agree with the above observation. I am sorry if it sounds a bit harsh but here are the reasons why you are flogging a dead horse:
Is this worth pursuing in county court?
Bluntly: No, not really. Here’s why:
The Keeper paid the PCN. That’s the fatal flaw. Once you pay, you’re essentially accepting liability. Courts will ask: If you knew it was wrong, why did you pay? Saying it was “under duress” won’t fly unless there was serious coercion—which there wasn’t. A threat of POPLA costs or escalation isn’t duress in legal terms.
You had a winning hand and folded. Smart Parking almost never complies with PoFA. If you’d held your ground and gone to POPLA, you’d likely have won. But by paying, you gave up your leverage. You’re now trying to claw back money you voluntarily handed over.
Civil court isn’t the place for moral victories. You can’t use county court to get a judge to declare Smart Parking’s practices unlawful or criminal. The court will only look at whether you’re owed money. And since you paid without being forced, the answer is probably no.
The Equality Act angle is weak post-payment. Yes, unloading a disabled person might give you protection. But again, you didn’t use that argument when it mattered—during the appeal. Courts won’t reward hindsight.
So what now?
Learn from it. Next time, don’t pay. Challenge the PCN, cite PoFA non-compliance, and go to POPLA if needed. Educate others. Use this as a case study in how not to handle a PCN.
Don’t waste more time or money. Filing a claim now is likely to be dismissed, and you’ll be out the court fee too.
As far as legal action goes—this one’s dead in the water.