What a pity you didn't come here first before appealing and blowing your best and guaranteed chance to get this cancelled at the first hurdle. I am assuming that you, the Hirer (lessee) of the vehicle identified the driver.
In all Hire/leased vehicle cases, the PPC will fail to fully comply with the requirements of PoFA and so be unable to hold the
known Hirer (lessee) liable for the charge. As long as the Hirer does not identify the
unknown driver and there is no legal obligation on the Hirer to do so, then the PPC has nowhere to run with this.
The
unknown driver is always liable. The keeper (Hire/lease company) has no idea who the driver is. The PPC has no idea who the driver is. The driver is
unknown... unless the Hirer babs it, inadvertently or otherwise.
The
known keeper receives a Notice to Keeper. The
known keeper transfers liability for the PCN from themselves to the
known Hirer. The
known Hirer then receive a Notice to Hirer (NtH) in their own name. The PPC fails to follow all the strict requirements of paragraph 14(2)(b) of PoFA and so cannot hold the
known keeper liable for the sins of the
unknown driver.
Did you reveal the
unknown drivers identity and so make the driver
known? The driver is always liable.
In future, never, ever, ever, reveal the identity of the driver if you don't want to be scammed by these predators.
By paying the £60, you admitted liability and can kiss that money goodbye. If you had not identified the driver, you would not have to pay a penny to PE. Once the NtH was received, a simple "go get stuffed" protocol appeal would put an end to the matter:
This is an appeal by the Hirer - No driver details will be given. Please do NOT try the trick of asking for driver details in order to get around the fact your NtH does not fully comply with the strict requirements of PoFA 14(2)(b). As there is no Hirer liability, therefore, liability cannot flow from the driver to the Hirer and so, is an automatic win at POPLA. Please cancel the notice or issue a POPLA code at which point you will auto withdraw.
So, in this case, you have complicated matters. However, all is not lost. For now, you must ignore all final demands and any debt collector letters. You have to wait and see if PE will pursue this all the way to court. They don't always, especially if they farm it out to a third party, bottom-dwelling firm of roboclaim solicitors such as DCB Legal. If they do, you can guarantee that if you follow the advice and defend any claim robustly using a template defence, they will eventually discontinue.