Thank you for your help so far. Here is my attempt to the appeal, please advice if it's any good. Many thanks!
Case Overview:
I, the registered keeper (“I”/“the Appellant”) of the above vehicle (VRM: _______), received a parking charge notice via post from MET Parking Services (“the Operator”), which purported to be a Notice to Keeper. I appealed to the Operator, who acknowledged and subsequently rejected my appeal. It is my position that, as the registered keeper of the vehicle, I have no liability for the parking charge, and that my appeal should therefore be upheld. My appeal is based on the following grounds:
1. No Keeper Liability – Non-Compliance with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA)
The operator does not know the identity of the driver and is therefore seeking to recover the charge from me, the registered keeper of the vehicle. In order to be able to recover any unpaid charges from me as the registered keeper, the operator must comply with the requirements outlined in Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. MET Parking Services have failed to do so.
As MET Parking Services now concede that they are not seeking to rely on the provisions of PoFA to hold me liable as the keeper, and as there is no evidence as to who was driving, I cannot be held liable for the charge. My appeal should therefore be upheld.
2. Breach of the PPSSCoP – Misrepresentation
The parking charge notice issued by MET Parking Services falsely claimed that they would be able to hold me liable as the registered keeper under the provisions of Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act, despite the fact that they were aware (or ought to have been aware) that they had not complied with the relevant conditions to do so. This was confirmed in their response to my appeal, in which they admitted that they were not seeking to hold me liable under PoFA.
This is in direct contravention of section 8.1.1 (d) of the Private Parking Sector Single Code of Practice (PPSSCoP), which states:
8.1.1 The parking operator must not serve a notice or include material on its website which in its design and/or language:
a) implies or would cause the recipient to infer statutory authority where none exists;
b) deliberately resembles a public authority civil enforcement penalty charge notice;
c) uses prohibited terminology as set out in Annex E; or
d) states the keeper is liable under the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 where they cannot be held liable.
For the reasons outlined above, it is clear that as the registered keeper, I have no liability for this charge, and I request that my appeal is upheld.
3. Unfair Parking Charge – Unavoidable Extended Stay Due to Slow Service
The alleged contravention occurred due to circumstances beyond the control of the vehicle’s occupants. The vehicle was parked while its occupants were customers at the establishment, with two separate orders placed at:
First order at 17:56
Second order at 18:40
It was a Sunday evening, and the restaurant was operating at near-full capacity, leading to delays in service. The second order alone took at least 20 minutes to be prepared for collection and consumption. Had the service been quicker, the vehicle would have left within the 90-minute stay limit.
A parking system that penalizes genuine customers who experience slow service due to factors outside their control is both unreasonable and unfair. The operator has failed to account for situations where delays are caused by the business itself, making the charge punitive rather than a genuine parking enforcement measure.
4. Unenforceable Penalty – No Genuine Pre-Estimate of Loss (GPEOL)
The parking charge of £100 (or £60 if paid early) is disproportionate to any potential loss suffered by the landowner. Under contract law, damages for breach should be a genuine pre-estimate of loss rather than a penalty designed to deter.
The car park is free for customers within a set time limit, meaning the landowner suffers no financial loss from the extended stay.
MET Parking Services has not demonstrated how this charge is a genuine estimate of any loss incurred.
The charge appears to be punitive and aimed at generating revenue rather than covering actual losses.
Under the Consumer Rights Act 2015, any contract term that imposes a disproportionate financial burden is considered unfair and unenforceable. In ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67, the court found that a charge may be justified only if it serves a legitimate interest beyond mere deterrence. However, in this case, there is no legitimate interest, as the delay was caused by restaurant service, and no financial loss was suffered by the landowner.
Conclusion
For the reasons outlined above:
The operator has failed to establish keeper liability under PoFA.
The notice misrepresented legal liability, breaching the PPSSCoP.
The extended stay was unavoidable due to slow service, making the charge unfair.
The charge is disproportionate and fails the Genuine Pre-Estimate of Loss test.
I respectfully request that my appeal is upheld and the Parking Charge Notice is cancelled.