OK. As this is going to be a telephone hearing, it is not strategically worthwhile to continue seeking a transfer to your local court for an in-person hearing when:
• A telephone hearing has already been listed.
• No personal attendance is required.
• You’ve preserved the objection in correspondence (which helps if costs are later sought).
Unless you have specific reasons (e.g. hearing impairment, poor phone coverage, or caring responsibilities making a phone hearing unworkable), HMCTS will very likely reject any further request to change the venue.
So you need work with what you have. So far:
• Claim has been incorrectly allocated to St Helens County Court despite your N180 requesting your local court.
• CNCB and St Helens Court have not responded to your correction requests.
• Directions Order issued on 11 May 2025 with:
• Telephone hearing scheduled for 1 August 2025
• Witness statements deadline: 4pm, 11 June 2025
•Trial fee due from Claimant by 4 July
• No witness evidence received from the Claimant as of yet.
You now need to prepare your witness statement and supporting exhibits to be filed and served no later than 4pm on 11 June 2025. Even if the Claimant fails to serve theirs, do not miss your own deadline. If they don’t comply, you can object to their evidence later.
Here is a suggested WS but you should not send anything until just before 4pm on Wednesday 11th June:
IN THE COUNTY COURT AT ST HELENS
Claim No: [Claim Number]
BETWEEN:
Norwich Traffic Control Ltd
Claimant
- and -
[Defendant's Full Name]
Defendant
WITNESS STATEMENT
1. I make this statement in support of my defence to the claim brought by Norwich Traffic Control Limited. I confirm that the facts set out here are true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
No Contract Formed
2. The claim fails from the outset due to the Claimant’s total failure to show that a parking contract was ever formed. The Notice to Driver (NtD) and Notice to Keeper (NtK) merely record a single timestamp. There is no actual “period of parking” specified, and no evidence whatsoever of how long the vehicle was present. This is a fundamental omission. A contract by conduct cannot be formed without a consideration period. There must be sufficient time for the driver to seek out, read the signage, consider the terms, and make a decision to accept or reject them. Without showing how long the vehicle remained on site, the Claimant has not established that any contract was formed.
3. The IPC Code of Practice, Version 9, which applied at the time, confirms this. Section 13 requires that a consideration period of appropriate duration be allowed before a parking contract is formed. This is consistent with basic contract law: no contract can arise by conduct unless there has been sufficient time to seek out, read and consider the terms. The Claimant has provided no evidence that this requirement was met. The Claimant has provided no evidence that the vehicle remained on site beyond this undefined but necessary consideration period. Without this, the court cannot conclude that a contract was even capable of being created, let alone breached. As such, the entire basis for the claim collapses.
No Compliance with PoFA 2012
4. This same deficiency also renders the Claimant’s notices non-compliant with Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 ("PoFA"). In order to transfer liability from the driver to the registered keeper, strict compliance with the statutory requirements is mandatory. Paragraph 7(2)(a) (in respect of a Notice to Driver) and paragraph 8(2)(a) (for a Notice to Keeper following a NtD) both require that the notice must "specify the period of parking to which the notice relates." A single timestamp, as provided by the Claimant, is not a “period” of parking and therefore fails this requirement.
5. This issue was considered in the persuasive appellate decision Scott Brennan v Premier Parking Solutions (2023) [H6DP632H]. Relevant excerpts are exhibited at Exhibit XX-01.
6. At paragraphs 27 to 30, HHJ Mitchell confirmed that PoFA requires the notice to specify a period of parking, even if it is a short one, and not merely a moment in time. He explained that:
“The period of parking does not refer to the whole period a vehicle is in situ. It could be less than that... it could be any minimum period; that is the period to which the Notice relates. That is what the Regulations are getting to... Where it went wrong... is that the second of those [times] was put in as ‘NA’. If the time had been put in, that would have cured the problem and that simply had to be repeated in the Notice to keeper.” (paras. 28–29)
7. The judgment makes it clear that where the notice fails to specify a minimum identifiable period, as is the case here, PoFA conditions are not met and keeper liability cannot arise.
No Evidence of Driver Identity
8. The Claimant has also failed to establish the identity of the driver. The registered keeper is under no legal obligation to identify the driver, and I have not done so. In the persuasive appellate case of VCS v Ian Mark Edward (2023) [HOKF6C9C], HHJ Gargan made it clear that it is not appropriate for a court to infer that the registered keeper was the driver, even on the balance of probabilities, where there is no supporting evidence. A copy of the relevant section of the judgment is exhibited at Exhibit XX-02.
9. At paragraph 35.3, the judge stated:
“It is consistent with the appropriate probability analysis whereby simply because somebody is a registered keeper, it does not mean on balance of probability they were driving on this occasion, because one simply cannot tell… These are all possibilities which show that it is not appropriate to draw an inference that, on balance of probability, the registered keeper was driving on any given occasion.”
10. As the Claimant’s notices are non-compliant with PoFA, they cannot rely on keeper liability, and in the absence of any admissible evidence identifying the driver, the claim must fail.
Failure to Comply with CPR 16.4
11. The Particulars of Claim are vague, inadequately pleaded, and fail to comply with CPR 16.4 and Practice Direction 16, paragraph 7.5. The Claimant does not identify the precise terms of the alleged contract, nor the clause(s) said to have been breached. There is no statement of when or for how long the alleged parking occurred, nor any identification of the signage or the specific terms displayed. The pleading fails to set out the facts necessary to establish either breach or the basis of any contractual entitlement to the sum claimed.
12. The Claimant has also failed to specify whether I am being pursued as the driver or the keeper. The pleading is impermissibly ambiguous, failing to disclose which legal basis is relied upon or to plead alternative causes of action with the required particularity. This is contrary to the basic principles of civil pleading and has caused significant prejudice to the Defendant.
13. The Defendant submitted a proposed draft order with the Defence, inviting the Court to strike out the claim or, in the alternative, to order further and better particulars. The Court failed to address that request and instead allocated the matter to a final hearing without requiring the Claimant to remedy the procedural defects. The Defendant respectfully submits that this oversight has resulted in procedural unfairness, and now invites the Court to exercise its case management powers to strike out the claim in its entirety pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) and CPR 16.4 for failure to disclose reasonable grounds for bringing the claim.
14. In a similar claim heard before another County Court, a District Judge struck out the case on the court’s own initiative due to the Claimant’s failure to comply with CPR 16.4. I submitted a copy of that draft order with my defence. The judge held that requiring further case management steps in such a poorly pleaded claim would be disproportionate, given the modest value of the claim. The same reasoning applies here.
No Evidence of a Valid Contract with the Landowner
15. The Claimant has failed to provide any evidence of a valid and binding contract with the landowner conferring authority to manage the land, issue parking charges, and pursue legal action in its own name. This is a serious omission that undermines the foundation of the claim.
16. The mere presence of signage is not sufficient to establish that the Claimant has the necessary legal rights to form parking contracts or enforce them. As confirmed by the Court of Appeal in Vehicle Control Services Ltd v HMRC [2013] EWCA Civ 186 at [22], a party must demonstrate that it has a sufficient interest in the land or specific authorisation from the landowner to offer contracts to park and to enforce any resulting charges. Without this, the operator cannot be a contracting party, and any alleged contract would be void for want of locus standi.
17. In this case, the Claimant has not produced any document showing:
(i) the identity of the landowner;
(ii) the dates and duration of any agreement;
(iii) the geographic extent of the authority granted;
(iv) whether the Claimant was authorised to form contracts and/or bring legal proceedings in its own name;
(v) the terms under which any consideration flows between the landowner and the Claimant.
18. The existence of such a contract is not a mere formality. It is a mandatory requirement to establish standing. As stated by District Judge McLean in Excel Parking Services v Wilkinson (Stockport County Court, 2017, unreported but widely cited), “a person who puts up a sign cannot automatically claim that they are authorised to do so by the landowner... the burden of proof is on the Claimant to show that they had the necessary rights.”
19. Accordingly, without this foundational evidence, the Claimant cannot demonstrate a cause of action and the claim ought to be struck out.
Failure to Comply with the PAP
20. I responded to the Claimant’s Letter of Claim raising detailed objections and requesting key evidence. The Claimant failed to meaningfully engage with my response. Specifically, they did not provide timestamped photographs of the signage in situ at the material time, nor did they address my argument that the £60 “debt recovery” charge was not transparently included in the original terms.
21. I also challenged the Claimant’s reliance on ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67, as the facts of that case are clearly distinguishable. In Beavis, the signage was prominent, clear, and unambiguous, and the Supreme Court held that the charge was justified by a legitimate commercial interest. By contrast, in this case, the Claimant has presented no evidence of comparable signage, no evidence of a legitimate interest justifying the charge, and no basis for the application of the Beavis ruling.
22. Had the Claimant dealt with the concerns raised pre-action, this matter could likely have been resolved or discontinued without burdening the court. The Claimant’s failure to do so has resulted in unnecessary litigation and wasted time, for which I submit that a costs order is justified.
Conclusion
23. In conclusion, the Claimant has failed to demonstrate that any contract was formed, that a valid parking charge was incurred, or that the statutory requirements of Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 have been met. They have not provided evidence of the alleged period of parking, nor established keeper liability under PoFA. No admissible evidence has been produced to identify the driver, and the Particulars of Claim remain vague, non-compliant with CPR 16.4, and lacking in legal clarity.
24. The Claimant has pursued this claim despite repeated pre-action warnings of these fundamental defects and has failed to address them both before and after proceedings were issued. Their conduct has been unreasonable throughout.
25. I respectfully request that the claim be dismissed, and that the Court consider making a costs order pursuant to CPR 27.14(2)(g) due to the Claimant’s unreasonable behaviour.
Statement of truth
I believe that the facts stated in this witness statement are true. I understand that proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against anyone who makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth.
Signed:
Date:
You will need to include the two transcripts referred to. In the WS you need to replace the XX in "XX-01" with your initials. You then need to create a cover sheet for those items of evidence with the court headers as they are in your WS and just put "Supporting Evidence" and mark each one with the corresponding reference as in the WS.
Here are links to the two transcripts:
Brennan v PPSVCS v EdwardWhen you send it, you must email it as a PDF attachment in an email with the claim number in the email subject field. You email it to
civil.sthelens.countycourt@justice.gov.uk and also CC BW Legal and also yourself in the same email.