Please provide a clear, focussed image of the Penalty Notice, including both sides if there is anything else written on the back.
This is a real Penalty Notice, not one of the fake ones issued by APCOA or SABA. However, it does time out after 6 months from the date of the alleged contravention.
For now, you do nothing. Do not respond to or engage with it. Do not name the driver. Do not pay the penalty. Do not enter into correspondence.
The operator waits to see if the driver voluntarily pays. If no payment or appeal is received, they escalate the matter.
After that window (usually around 28–35 days), Northern Trains Ltd will request the Registered Keeper’s details from the DVLA using “reasonable cause” provisions — which they're entitled to do under the Railway Byelaws enforcement model.
A postal Penalty Notice will then be sent to the Keeper. This is not a Notice to Keeper under PoFA — it's an invitation to pay a penalty, not a civil demand or contractual invoice.
The Keeper will be told they can pay the penalty or name the driver. Crucially, there is no legal obligation to name the driver. This differs from speeding tickets or statutory fixed penalties.
The letter may include warnings that failure to pay may result in prosecution under Railway Byelaws. This is legally true, but, they must prosecute within 6 months of the incident. Also, many operators do not proceed to court, especially if the driver remains unidentified.
The burden of proof for a case in the magistrates court is very much higher than for a civil case where it can be decided on the balance of probability. In the magistrates court, a case must be proved beyond all reasonable doubt, the criminal standard of proof.
As long as the driver is not identified, they would have great difficulty proving who the driver was. Whilst they'll huff and bluff that they can assume that the Keeper must be the driver, that is not evidence beyond a reasonable doubt.
They will try and say that they rely on the definition of "owner" found in Section 11(3) of the Regulation of Railways Act 1889, which states:
“The owner, in relation to a vehicle, means the person by whom the vehicle is kept, and in determining, for the purposes of this Act, who was the keeper of a vehicle at any time, it shall be presumed that the keeper was the person in whose name the vehicle was then registered...”
However, this does not alter the fundamental requirement that, in a criminal prosecution, liability must still be proved beyond reasonable doubt. There are four rebuttable arguments that can be used:
1.Presumption ≠ Proof Beyond Reasonable Doubt
The quoted presumption about ownership is rebuttable and only aids the court in identifying the owner for procedural purposes. It does not displace the need to prove that the owner “used, left or placed” the vehicle in contravention of the Byelaw, as required under Byelaw 14.4.
2. Byelaw 14.4 Still Requires an Act
Even if someone is presumed to be the owner, the prosecution must still prove that the owner was the person who “used, left or placed” the vehicle in breach of the Byelaws. This is an active element, not passive ownership. Ownership alone is insufficient to establish liability without proof of that conduct.
3. Ownership ≠ Criminal Responsibility Without Conduct
There is no strict liability for merely being the owner of a car that’s parked unlawfully under these Byelaws — unlike, for example, the statutory offences involving vehicle defects or speeding where the law imposes specific keeper responsibilities.
4. Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 s.101 – Evidential Burden Still Applies
Even where presumptions exist, the burden of proof remains on the prosecution to establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt once the presumption is challenged (e.g. if the Keeper denies being the driver and no other evidence is offered).
If the Keeper does not identify the driver, and no evidence is produced linking them to the contravention, then:
• The presumption of ownership alone cannot meet the criminal standard.
• The magistrates would have to dismiss the case on lack of evidence tying the Keeper (even if assumed owner) to the act of "using or placing" the vehicle in contravention.
So, you can see why Train Operating Company (TOC) prosecutors rarely, if ever, actually take one of these cases to court.
If/when you receive a postal Penalty Notice, come back and we will advise further.