Early on in this thread I said:
"Don't hold up too much hope with POPLA. The most likely outcome of this is going to be a claim issued through DCB Legal which, once defended with the advice from here will be discontinued early next year."
Please tell us the name of the POPLA assessor that has come to this obviously erroneous decision. It is not a secret and I am compiling a list of those that obviously require further training on contract law.
Here are the very obvious reasons the assessor is wrong and has failed to do their job properly:
POPLA Decision Review – Flawed Assessment of PoFA, Landowner Authority, and Signage IssuesPOPLA’s reasoning in this decision is deeply flawed, particularly in its assessment of the operator’s failure to comply with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA) and landowner authority.
Key Issues with the Decision:1. Failure to Properly Assess Keeper Liability Under PoFA
- The POPLA assessor claims that the Notice to Keeper (NtK) complies with PoFA without addressing the explicit issue raised:
failure to invite the keeper to pay the unpaid parking charges, as required by paragraph 9(2)(e)(i).- The decision
ignores the legal requirement for full compliance with PoFA and incorrectly assumes that partial compliance is sufficient. This is a fundamental misinterpretation of the law.
2. Incorrect Acceptance of Landowner Authority Evidence
- The operator only provided an
appendix from 2017, without showing evidence of subsequent amendments authorising new signage and terms between 2020 and 2024.
- The assessor incorrectly concludes that the operator has landowner authority
without addressing the fact that the contract does not cover the current terms and conditions.3. Disregard of Signage Issues
- The response
does not properly address the evidence that signage changed between 2020 and 2024.- POPLA
fails to acknowledge that signage must be in place at the time of the alleged contravention and match the contract terms.- The "Red Hand Rule" argument was dismissed with
no legal reasoning.4. Misapplication of ParkingEye v Beavis
- The decision
misuses ParkingEye v Beavis to justify a penalty charge,
without assessing the distinguishing factors of this case.- Unlike
Beavis, where parking was free for a limited time, this case involves restrictions on permitted vehicles at certain times. The
Beavis ruling does
not justify an arbitrary or excessive charge unrelated to a breach of landowner authority.
5. Flawed Dismissal of Grace Period Argument
- The decision claims that a grace period
does not apply because the vehicle was “unauthorised.” However:
-
This reasoning is circular—the grace period exists precisely
to allow drivers to assess signage and either comply or leave.
- The
Private Parking Single Code of Practice (PPSCoP) states that
grace periods apply universally, regardless of contravention.So, more conclusive proof that POPLA is not fit for purpose.
Whilst waiting for the eventual court claim, which will be easily defended and eventually struck out to discontinued, you can send a formal complaint to the POPLA lead assessor and point out the utter incompetence of the assessor and ask them how they intend to make sure that this kind of poor decision making doesn't happen again.
Happy to put something together over the next few days if you agree,