Hi all,
B789 has been kind enough to help me in my response to Elite Parking for a NtK I recieved last year when I failed to register for my 1 hour free parking on an app.
Here is the previous thread for context:
https://www.ftla.uk/private-parking-tickets/elite-parking-pcn-free-1-hr-failure-to-register-eddington-avenue-cambridge-popla/msg100850/#msg100850I have now recieved my Letter of Claim (LoC) from DCB Legal, included here:
Image DCB Letter of claim (redacted) hosted on ImgBB
I have also drafted my response based on B789's intitial advice. As this is my first Letter of Claim, I would be grateful if anyone could make any suggestions for what I should/shouldn't say in it. I have until next week to send a formal response.
Response to Letter of ClaimI dispute the debt and deny liability to your client.
Please treat this as a substantive response under the Pre-Action Protocol for Debt Claims. I am also seeking debt advice. This matter must therefore be placed on hold for not less than 30 days from your receipt of this response and, if you provide the documents requested below, for not less than 30 days from your provision of those documents.
If, as appears, your Letter of Claim was not accompanied by the required Information Sheet, Reply Form and Financial Statement, then it is also non-compliant with paragraph 3.1 of the Pre-Action Protocol for Debt Claims.
My position is as follows.
1. No contract was properly brought to the driver’s attention at the material locationThe vehicle was parked in the street-side row opposite the Hyatt/Turing building, not in the hotel-side row shown in much of your client’s evidence.
At the relevant location, the prominent tariff board stated “Up to 1 hour – Free”. There was no clear Elite entrance sign on the actual approach to those bays, and no prominent sign at or near the relevant bays stating that this free hour was conditional upon prior registration via JustPark or any other method.
If your client contends that registration was a mandatory condition even for the free hour, that term was not transparently or prominently communicated at the material location. The signage, as actually encountered, communicated a free first hour, not a clearly conveyed “free first hour only if registered” term. A written consumer notice must be transparent, and where wording can bear more than one meaning, the meaning most favourable to the consumer prevails.
2. Your client’s signage evidence is inaccurate and non-representativeYour client previously relied on a hand-drawn site map and signage photographs that do not accurately represent the actual route taken or the actual row in which the vehicle was parked.
The route from the Huntingdon Road entrance to the relevant bays does not contain the entrance/private land signage in the positions alleged. The “red” entrance sign relied upon by your client is not present at the entrance actually used to access the relevant bays and appears to be located hundreds of metres away elsewhere on the estate. Your client’s signage photographs were taken in the hotel-side row, which is physically separated from the street-side row by a grass median and tree line. Those photographs do not prove that the alleged registration term was visible from, or on the approach to, the bay used.
The IPC Code says operators should display entrance signs where there is a defined entrance, and must adequately display any signs intended to form the basis of contract. Your client is therefore put to strict proof that the specific contractual term relied upon was actually present, visible and legible on the route taken and at the relevant parking location on the material date.
3. Your client has not properly proved any contravention or any accepted contract at the relevant locationYour client’s case appears to rely on a single patrol image and non-representative signage material, rather than evidence showing that the alleged term was brought to the driver’s attention before or at the point of parking in the street-side row.
Further, the notice and evidence do not identify any true period of parking, only a single time. That is not proper proof that the vehicle was parked for longer than the minimum time required for a driver to enter, find a space, read signs and decide whether to stay. The IPC Code requires a sufficient consideration period so that a motorist may make an informed decision whether to enter or remain. On your client’s own evidence, there is no proper proof that any contractual term was fairly communicated, accepted and then breached.
4. Your client’s legal basis has been inconsistently statedFor completeness, your client’s Notice to Keeper was said to rely on Schedule 4 paragraph 8 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, even though no windscreen notice was served and the notice was issued by post. Paragraph 8 applies where a Notice to Driver has first been given; paragraph 9 governs postal notices where no Notice to Driver was given. That materially undermines the coherence and reliability of your client’s case.
5. The sum claimed is not properly particularisedYour letter claims £170, said to include the parking charge and debt recovery costs. Please identify precisely:
- the original parking charge
- each additional sum added
- the legal basis for each additional sum
- where each such sum was expressly and prominently communicated on the signage said to form the contract
The Debt Claims Protocol requires sufficient information about the debt and any other charges.
Documents and information requiredPlease now provide the following so that the issues can be properly understood and narrowed:
1. A copy of the original PCN / Notice to Keeper and all photographs relied upon.
2. A copy of the patrol officer’s notes, handheld device record, and the precise observation times relied upon.
3. A full unredacted copy of the contract, or chain of authority, with the landowner authorising Elite Parking Management Ltd to operate and litigate at this site.
4. A contemporaneous site plan for the material date showing the exact location of every sign relied upon, and identifying which sign is said to have applied to the street-side row opposite the Hyatt/Turing building.
5. Contemporaneous photographs of all signage on the actual route taken and at the actual parking location, not the hotel-side row.
6. Confirmation of the exact contractual term alleged to have been breached, with the wording relied upon.
7. Evidence that the alleged registration requirement for the free first hour was clearly displayed at or before the point of parking in the relevant row.
8. A full breakdown of the amount claimed, including the basis of any added sum beyond the original PCN.
9. Confirmation whether your client’s case is pleaded as breach of contract, contractual charge, or some other cause of action.
I have contemporaneous photographic and video evidence relevant to the disputed signage, route of approach and parking location, which will be relied upon if proceedings are issued and/or if it becomes necessary to do so.
Until the above documents are provided, your client has not supplied enough information to comply properly with the Protocol or to enable the issues to be narrowed. If proceedings are issued prematurely, that non-compliance will be drawn to the court’s attention.