Hello, I have started on my POPLA appeal and was hoping for some feedback if this is sufficient, overkill or not enough. I haven't figured out how to copy the contents nicely into here, so have also attached the appeal as document.
POPLA Appeal
Appeal Reference: [xxxxxx]
Personal Details:
• Name:
• Address:
• Email:
Parking Charge Details:
• Parking Charge Notice Number: [PCN NUMBER]
• Vehicle Registration: [YOUR VEHICLE REGISTRATION]
• Location: Mill Parc, White Lodge Close, Isleworth, London TW7 6TH
• Date of Incident: 05/03/2025
• Operator: Spring Parking
Grounds for Appeal:
I am appealing this Parking Charge Notice (PCN) issued by Spring Parking on the following grounds:
1. No Notice to Keeper (NtK) Issued - Creditor Cannot Establish Keeper Liability
The creditor (Spring Parking) has not issued a Notice to Keeper and therefore has not satisfied the precedent condition at paragraph 6(1)(a) [and therefore paragraph 4(2)] of Schedule 4 to the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. As such, the assessor is obliged to uphold this appeal and direct the creditor that they do not have the "Right to claim unpaid parking charges from keeper of vehicle."
The sequence of events clearly demonstrates this:
• Notice to Driver issued on 05/03/2025
• I engaged with the creditor's internal disputes resolution procedure on 31/03/2025
• Creditor issued rejection on 03/04/2025 stating: "You have now reached the end of our internal appeals procedure"
Having expressly stated that I have reached the end of their internal appeals procedure without issuing a Notice to Keeper, they cannot now attempt to establish keeper liability, as this procedural sequence has closed.
2. The Notice to Driver (NtD) Fails to Comply with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012
The NtD affixed to my vehicle does not comply with Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA) in several critical ways:
a) No Period of Parking Stated (Breach of PoFA Schedule 4, Paragraph 7(2)(a)):
• The NtD only records an "Observed Time" of 14:01 and "Time of Issue" of 14:04.
• This 3-minute interval does not constitute a legitimate period of parking for establishing a contravention.
• This brief period falls within the minimum consideration period required by the BPA/IPC Private Parking Single Code of Practice (PPSCoP) for a driver to seek out, read, and understand any terms and conditions before deciding whether to remain or leave.
b) Failure to Identify the Creditor (Breach of PoFA Schedule 4, Paragraph 7(2)(e)):
• The NtD does not clearly state who the actual creditor is.
• It is unclear whether Spring Parking is acting as the creditor or merely as an agent for the landowner.
• Without this information, the notice fails to meet the statutory requirements of PoFA.
3. Inadequate Signage and No Valid Contract
There was insufficient signage at the entrance to the location to inform drivers they were entering private land with parking restrictions. Without clear entry signage, no valid contract could have been formed between the driver and the parking operator.
This location appeared to be a public road with no clear markings, lines, or signage indicating parking restrictions or that it was private property subject to a parking scheme.
4. Failure to Allow Reasonable Grace Period
The extremely short time between observation (14:01) and ticket issuance (14:04) - just 3 minutes - demonstrates that Spring Parking failed to allow a reasonable grace period for the driver to:
• Locate any relevant signage
• Read and understand any terms and conditions
• Make an informed decision about whether to park
This practice contradicts the principles established in the British Parking Association (BPA) and International Parking Community (IPC) Private Parking Single Code of Practice (PPSCoP), which requires operators to allow a reasonable consideration period.
5. The Ticket Was Issued on What Appeared to Be a Public Road
The vehicle was parked at a location that had all the characteristics of a public road, with no clear demarcation or signage indicating it was private land subject to parking restrictions. The driver had a reasonable belief they were parking legally on a public road.
6. Breach of Private Parking Sector Single Code of Practice (PPSCoP)
There is no entrance sign at the location to indicate that drivers are entering controlled private land subject to contractual parking terms. This is a clear breach of the PPSCoP section 3.1.1 which requires operators to display an entrance sign that informs drivers that they are entering controlled land.
This location is not a designated car park but rather appears to be a residential street with no ground markings, making it entirely unclear that any restrictions apply. The alleged contravention is "not clearly displaying a valid permit," but without proper signage indicating this requirement, no contract could possibly have been formed.
Conclusion:
Given the multiple failures to comply with PoFA requirements, the failure to issue a Notice to Keeper, the inadequate signage, the breach of the PPSCoP, and the failure to allow a reasonable grace period, I request that POPLA uphold this appeal and cancel the parking charge in its entirety.
Spring Parking has already expressly stated that I have "reached the end of [their] internal appeals procedure" without issuing a Notice to Keeper, and therefore they cannot now attempt to establish keeper liability under PoFA. This procedural failure alone is sufficient grounds for POPLA to uphold this appeal.
I confirm that the information provided in this appeal is true to the best of my knowledge.
Yours faithfully,
Name, Date
Supporting Evidence:
1. Copy of the Parking Charge Notice (front and back)
2. Copy of Spring Parking's appeal rejection email dated 3rd April 2025
3. Photographs of the parking location showing lack of clear signage
4. Google Maps screenshot of the location where the vehicle was parked
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