Hi I have had a written email response today.
Copy pasted below:
Thank you for your email received 23 April 2025, outlining the reasons why you are unhappy with the decision that has been reached by the assessor in your appeal. This was passed to me by the POPLA team as I am responsible for investigating complaints.
POPLA is a one-stage process, and we would not change a decision because either party disputes the assessor’s decision. However, we may consider an appeal if there has been a procedural error, for example – if we failed to allow a motorist to comment on a parking operator’s evidence pack. My role as a complaints handler is to determine whether a procedural error has occurred during the assessment of your appeal.
It is worth pointing out that before submitting an appeal, our website informs appellants that POPLA is a one-stage appeal service and we cannot reconsider your appeal if you disagree with our decision.
The crux of your complaint is that the assessor failed to address the legal consequences of non-receipt of the Notice to Keeper under the Protection of Freedoms Act (POFA) 2012 and there was no recognition that proof of delivery is required to establish keeper liability as issuance is not the test, delivery is, therefore the assessor has made a basic error in statutory interpretation.
You advise the assessor has misinterpreted Paragraph 9 (f) of POFA as they stated information is given of what action to take if the keeper was not the driver, however the Notice to Keeper stated liability begins 28 days after the second working day after the date of issue which is not what POFA requires.
POFA states liability arises at the end of the period of 28 days beginning the day after that on which the notice is given and therefore, the operator calculation is wrong and inconsistent with the law which the assessor ignored.
I have now reviewed the appeal and I can confirm Paragraph 9(2)(f) states that the notice to keeper must: “(f)warn the keeper that if, after the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which the notice is given”…“the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver, the creditor will (if all the applicable conditions under this Schedule are met) have the right to recover from the keeper so much of that amount as remains unpaid.”
Paragraph 9(6) then defines the given date as: “the second working day after the day on which it is posted”.
In this instance, as the notice was issued on Monday 11 October 2024, the given date is Wednesday 16 October. As POFA states that motorists must be given 28 days from the day after the notice is given, the 28 days should have begun from 17 October.
The Notice to Keeper states “You are advised that if, after a period of 28 days from the second working day after the date of this Parking Charge…”, therefore it does not meet the requirements of POFA.
It should be noted within POFA Paragraph 9 (6) it states a notice sent by post is to be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to have been delivered:
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You explain the assessor accepted Horizon Parking’s assertions without criticism which wrongly shifts the burden of proof onto the appellant as the operator failed to provide proof of delivery such as certificate of posting and or delivery record.
You state the assessor dismissed evidence by stating they were unable to comment on a call they were not privy to which is unacceptable as the operators own staff reportedly stated the Notice to Keeper was probably lost in the post which is a clear admission that delivery did not occur and was not denied or countered which the assessor dismissed rather than treating this as evidence.
You explain the assessor stated they were satisfied the operator provided a land owner agreement and on reviewing this, they were satisfied the operator has a legitimate interest in the parking event which you state Is superficial and legally, an insufficient assessment.
You advise the document was heavily redacted did not specifically confirm the site omitted boundary plans and did not have a visible execution dates or signatures which the assessor failed to address and they accepted a redacted generic document without examining whether it met PPSCoP standards for valid landowner authority.
You state the assessor provided a narrow definition of POPLAs role by stating our role is to consider if the parking charge notice has been issued correctly.
You explain that POPLAs role is to assess if the charge is enforceable which includes checking compliance with POFA, the code of practice and fairness under contract principles. You advise issuing a parking charge notice does not equate to establishing liability and the assessor statement reveals either a misunderstanding of POPLAs remit or an intentional mischaracterisation to side step the need to assess enforceability.
To clarify, POPLAs remit extends only to determining if the parking charge notice has been issued correctly based on the evidence presented at the time of the appeal. We accept evidence from both parties in good faith unless the opposite is proven.
The burden of proof begins with the operator to show it issued the parking charge notice correctly. If they do that by providing evidence that support its version of events, the burden of proof then passes to the appellant.
I acknowledge in the appeal it was stated the operator advised on a call the Notice to Keeper was possibly lost in the post, however, as no evidence of this call was provided with the appeal to POLPLA, the assessor was unable to comment further.
There is no requirement in both POFA or the Single Code of Practice that an operator must send the Notice to Keeper by recorded delivery or provide proof of postage or delivery of the notice.
Section 14.1 of the Single Code of Practice states that a parking operator must obtain written confirmation from the landowner confirming it has the relevant authority to pursue charges on a car park.
This authority must confirm the site and provide a boundary map.
Within its case file, Horizon Parking provided a copy of the contract it has with landowner. Contracts with the landowner may contain commercially sensitive information, therefore, we will accept redacted landowner documents as long as the assessor is satisfied it meets the requirements of Section 14.1 of the Single Code of Practice.
I note the operator also provided a site map within it case file showing the location of the signage and the site boundary.
In this instance, as no evidence was provided to cast doubt on this contract, the assessor was satisfied Horizon Parking has the appropriate authority to issue charges on this land.
You state you expect a formal review of the decision, clarification of POPLAs official position on POFA, confirmation of retraining or disciplinary action for the assessor and written assurance that cases involving disputed POFA compliance will be assessed by trained staff with working knowledge of the legislation and code of practice.
When considering POFA, POPLA assessors will consider whether the notice to keeper has been issued correctly and meets the strict requirements set out in Paragraph 9 (f).
Assessors will make decisions based on:
Relevant law
The Single Code of Practice
Evidence provided by both parties
Assessors have been trained on these areas and our decision-making guidelines. They have also passed an accreditation process following our training programme and receive regular internal quality audits as well as coaching and personal development.
In this instance, while I am disappointed to note the assessor has misinterpreted POFA and fully accept that the assessor is wrong to state that the notice is complaint with POFA and I would like to apologise for this error, on reviewing the case, it is clear the assessor has misinterpreted POFA rather than missed evidence provided.
In order to improve the quality of future appeal decisions, I will, of course provide the relevant feedback to the assessor. However, as all of the evidence provided has been considered, no procedural error has occurred and therefore, the outcome will not change.
You advise if your complaint is not addressed, you will escalate the matter to Ombudsman Services as POPLAs administrator and to the Charted Trading Standards Institute.
Complaints about POLA are reviewed and responded to by the complaints team. TAG Services (Formerly Ombudsman Services) have no involvement in our complaints handling procedure.
It is worth explaining that POPLA was previously audited externally by Independent Scrutiny board for Parking on Private Land Appeals (ISPA) at one stage. Unfortunately, funding stopped for ISPA and they ceased to continue which means that POPLA does not currently have an independent body reviewing our appeals or dealing with complaints about our service. As such there is no platform for you currently to complain about POPLA externally. If you wish to take the matter further, you will need to seek independent legal advice.
I am sorry that your experience of using our service has not been positive. However, POPLA’s involvement in your appeal has now ended and this response concludes our complaints process. It will not be appropriate for us to correspond further on this matter and all further correspondence will be noted on your case, but not responded to.
You are of course, free to pursue this matter further, through other means, such as the Courts. For independent legal advice, please contact Citizens Advice at:
www.citizensadvice.org.uk or call 0345 404 05 06
Yours sincerely,
Paul Garrity
POPLA Complaints
complaints@popla.co.uk
flexibleresolutionservices.co.uk