Hi Wizards, what do you think about below draft POPLA appeal?
POPLA Verification Code: 6062555711
Vehicle Registration: KN71EYD
PCN Reference: 128753/610483
Issued by: Parkingeye
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I. Introduction
I am the registered keeper of the vehicle. I deny any liability for the parking charge and appeal in full.
The vehicle in question was engaged in Amazon parcel deliveries at Forest housing association. The stop was temporary and solely for the purpose of unloading parcels to residents. This was not “parking.” The charge is invalid and must be cancelled.
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II. Grounds of Appeal
1. Delivery/Unloading is Not Parking
The courts have consistently recognised that delivery or loading/unloading activities do not constitute “parking.”
• In Jopson v Homeguard Services Ltd [2016] B9GF0A9E (Oxford County Court, HHJ Harris QC), it was held:
“The concept of parking… is that of leaving a car for some duration of time beyond that needed for getting in or out of it, loading or unloading it… Merely to stop a vehicle cannot be to park it; otherwise traffic jams would consist of lines of parked cars. Delivery vans, whether for post, newspapers, groceries, or anything else, would not be accommodated on an interpretation which included vehicles stopping for a few moments for these purposes.”
This case is directly on point. The judge expressly included delivery vans in his ruling.
• In Bulmer v Jopson (2017, unreported but noted in parking law commentary), this reasoning was reinforced, and the industry has accepted Jopson as binding persuasive authority.
Therefore, a delivery van engaged in active unloading cannot lawfully be treated as “parked.”
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2. Breach of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA)
The Notice to Keeper fails to comply with Schedule 4 of PoFA:
• It does not specify the period of parking (9(2)(a)). The operator has instead cited “time in car park,” which may include driving, stopping briefly, or unloading — none of which amount to “parking.”
• Without full PoFA compliance, no keeper liability can arise.
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3. No Evidence of Contract or Landowner Authority
The operator is put to strict proof of:
• A clear, unambiguous contract with the landowner permitting it to issue charges against delivery drivers;
• Evidence that the signage is adequate, visible, and allows for the lawful performance of delivery functions without penalty.
Section 14 of the BPA Code of Practice requires clear landowner contracts. Without this, the operator has no standing.
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4. Unreasonable and Unconscionable Charge
The ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67 decision does not apply here. In Beavis, the charge was upheld because of a legitimate commercial interest (ensuring space turnover in a retail car park).
By contrast:
• This is a residential/housing association site;
• There is no commercial need to penalise short-term delivery vans;
• The charge is therefore a penalty, unenforceable at common law.
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5. Industry Codes of Practice and Public Policy
The BPA Code of Practice requires operators to act fairly and reasonably. Penalising a van driver for delivering parcels — an essential and time-bound activity — is neither fair nor reasonable.
Moreover, Government policy (PoFA 2012, DLUHC Private Parking Code of Practice 2022, albeit temporarily withdrawn pending consultation) emphasises that parking controls must not penalise unavoidable activities like loading and unloading.
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III. Conclusion
The driver was engaged in a legitimate, time-limited delivery. This is not “parking” in law. The charge is unsupported by contract, unenforceable under PoFA, contrary to binding persuasive case law (Jopson v Homeguard), and unreasonable under consumer protection principles.
Accordingly, this appeal must be upheld and the charge cancelled.
[Your Name]
Registered Keeper