Are you sure that there's NO mention of parking anywhere in your lease? Did you pay for the electronic permit? There is no requirement for a permit in your lease and if you have paid for it, you should demand your money back. If they want to issue permits for free, so that they can whitelist your vehicle, then that is OK and you are only doing so as a courtesy, not a requirement.
Your lease is the governing document. If it makes no mention of parking rights, enforcement, or delegation to third parties like P4 or any other third party company, then no such authority exists.
The definition of “Common Parts” in your lease includes access ways and forecourts, but does not confer any right to regulate or restrict parking, nor does it mention enforcement mechanisms or third-party control. P4’s involvement is ultra vires—beyond the powers granted by the lease. Their actions are not legally supported unless the lease was formally amended or a supplemental deed was executed. Can you confirm this has not occurred.
Under English property law, particularly the principle of derogation from grant, a landlord or their agent cannot take away rights that have been granted by the lease. If leaseholders have historically parked in common areas without restriction, and the lease does not prohibit it, then imposing penalties or enforcement constitutes a material interference with quiet enjoyment and use.
The case of
Saeed v Plustrade Ltd confirms that landlords cannot extinguish parking rights arbitrarily—they may regulate, but not revoke without legal basis. TheLandlord and Tenant Act 1985 requires landlords to act reasonably and transparently in managing common parts and service charges.
Introducing a third-party enforcement firm without consultation or lease authority breaches the duty to manage the property in accordance with the lease and statutory obligations. P4 is unregulated and acting vexatiously, therefore this also breaches consumer protection laws and data protection regulations if they’re issuing notices or collecting personal data without lawful basis.
So, P4 Parking is a contractor, not a party to the lease. Their authority is strictly limited to what the landlord or management company delegates—and that delegation cannot override leaseholder rights.
If the leaseholder has a right to park (whether exclusive, general, or implied through historic use), P4 must cancel any PCN issued to a vehicle that is confirmed to belong to or be authorised by a leaseholder. Enforcement against third-party vehicles (unauthorised visitors, trespassers, etc.) may be within P4’s remit, but once notified that a vehicle is linked to a leaseholder, continued enforcement becomes unlawful.
If the management company refused to get the PCNs cancelled, then I suggest you send the following to them:
Subject: Immediate Cancellation of PCNs and Cessation of Unlawful Enforcement Against Leaseholder Vehicles
Your refusal to intervene in the unlawful issuance of PCNs by P4 Parking is a dereliction of duty and a breach of both contractual and statutory obligations. Let me make this unequivocally clear:
There is no legal requirement for a leaseholder to display a permit. The lease contains no clause mandating participation in any permit scheme—physical or electronic. Any such scheme is entirely extraneous to the lease and cannot override the leaseholder’s rights.
P4 Parking’s authority may be limited to managing unauthorised vehicles. Once notified that a vehicle belongs to or is authorised by a leaseholder, any PCN must be cancelled immediately. Continued enforcement is unlawful and constitutes:
• Derogation from grant, interfering with the leaseholder’s right to quiet enjoyment.
• A breach of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, which requires you to manage the property in accordance with the lease and act reasonably.
• A violation of the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (DMCC), which prohibits misleading and aggressive commercial practices. Issuing PCNs based on signage or permit schemes that have no contractual basis is unlawful and may expose both P4 and your company to enforcement action.
The leaseholder has applied for an electronic permit as a courtesy, not as a legal obligation. They reserve the right to withdraw from this scheme at any time without penalty or interference. Any attempt to enforce penalties based on non-display or non-participation in a voluntary scheme is legally void.
You are responsible for the conduct of your agents. If you have failed to amend the lease or consult leaseholders before introducing enforcement, you will be held accountable for any resulting legal or financial consequences.
I demand:
• Immediate written confirmation that P4 Parking has been instructed to cancel all PCNs issued to leaseholder-authorised vehicles.
• A copy of any agreement purporting to authorise P4’s involvement.
• A full explanation of why leaseholder rights were ignored and why no lease amendment or consultation was undertaken.
If this matter is not resolved within 7 days, I will escalate to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) and pursue recovery of all costs incurred due to your negligence. You are expected to act with urgency, competence, and legal compliance.