The sign is not capable of forming a parking contract with a driver. Why:
1. Prohibitive wordingThe dominant message, in the largest font, is:
• “NO PARKING IN THIS AREA AT ANY TIME”
• That is a prohibition, not an offer of parking on specified terms. Contractual liability for a parking charge normally arises where the sign offers parking subject to conditions (e.g. “2 hours free parking – £100 charge if you overstay”). Here, the only thing being “offered” is an instruction not to park at all.
2. Inconsistent with a contractual offer• The smaller text tries to say “By parking or remaining on this land you, the driver, accept liability to pay the Parking Charge…”.
• However, that sits directly underneath a blanket “NO PARKING” prohibition. A court can reasonably find that a driver cannot both be forbidden from parking and be treated as having accepted a contractual offer to park on payment of £100. The more natural analysis is that anyone who parks is a trespasser.
3. Trespass, not contract• If parking is completely forbidden, the correct legal characterisation is trespass. Only the landowner (or someone with sufficient interest in the land) can generally sue for damages for trespass, and those damages would be limited to the landowner’s actual loss, not an arbitrary £100 tariff. A managing agent like CPMS usually has no standing to claim damages for trespass in its own name.
4. Prominence of the “charge” term• The “Parking charge of £100 payable within 28 days” line is there, but it is not clearly linked to any permitted use of the area. It reads more as a deterrent or penalty for disobedience of the “NO PARKING” command than as part of a genuine contractual bargain.
So, for defence purposes, you have a very solid line of argument that:
• the sign is forbidding,
• therefore it does not make a contractual offer to park, and
• any remedy would lie (if at all) in trespass on behalf of the landowner, not in a contractual parking charge payable to CPMS.