Author Topic: Parking in own car park  (Read 490 times)

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Parking in own car park
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I'll try to summarise but almost too frustrated to type coherently

Year and a half ago I got a ticket for parking in a 'yellow space' not a 'white space' in my car park - where I have lived for 6 years.

The first ticket thing only said I wasn't showing a valid permit. So I didn't take it seriously. As I have one.

When the next escalation came through and I made contact. I then found out it was for this petty reason. I appealed, trying to reason with them that it was a one time slip up, tried contacting the solicitor more than once they palmed it off to. Didn't hear back.

Thought it was over with. Then more recently had a letter wanting a mediation call where I tried to explain again the ridiculousness. Is so extreme for what it is. The company managing the car park isn't even operating there anymore. And I have pics of cars abandoned for weeks with no permit even showing. No tickets. After the call neither party has changed stance but I have got an email for the solicitors who now apparently are willing to have a dialogue

Not like I've parked in a bus lane in town or disabled bay blocking a business. If I had - I'd take it on the chin. But I was 3ft away from where it's no issue at all. Asked residents and flat company and they agree, not heard a good reason even for the different spaces.

Am I a hopeless case waiting for someone like a lawyer or judge to see this for what it is. A farce bordering on extortion. Punishment not fitting crime etc etc. Have a heart......
Or am I just a meal ticket now to the system. Is there a threshold for them to avoid court. They want probably £300 out of me now....I'd pay it in 12p installments

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Re: Parking in own car park
« Reply #1 on: »
To help us help you, please read the following thread carefully, and provide as much of the information it asks for as you are able to: READ THIS FIRST - Private Parking Charges Forum guide

As this is, by the sounds of it, a residential case, a copy of exactly what your lease says about parking will be useful, in addition to the information requested in the guide above.

Re: Parking in own car park
« Reply #2 on: »
What your lease doesn't say about parking is equally important. For example, is there anything in your lease about requiring a permit to park?
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain