Author Topic: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement  (Read 1872 times)

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NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« on: »
I have received this as a keeper:




Is this POFA compliant?
Please advise what to challenge this with in text and which of these options to choose:


Please see online "proof" images they have shared:










Many thanks
« Last Edit: October 30, 2025, 08:42:33 pm by 8vaibhav »

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Re: NPC Notice to Hirer parked on pavement
« Reply #1 on: »
The title of your thread says "Notice to Hirer", but the notice you have shown us says it is a "Notice to Registered keeper". What is your relationship to the vehicle?

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #2 on: »
Apologies, I am the keeper, fixed the title
« Last Edit: October 30, 2025, 09:04:29 pm by 8vaibhav »

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #3 on: »
I do see that the NTK fails to "state that the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver" so not complaint with Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, schedule 4, paragraph 9, clause 2(e).

Any other instances of non-compliance here? Any other defense should be added? The pictures do show barely half the tire on the pavement which itself is ambiguous. Also, observation window seems to be too low, less than 2 minutes.

Can anybody help me frame an appeal please. Also which option to choose online while appealing? Many thanks in advance. 

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #4 on: »
No initial appeal to this bottom-dwelling firm of ex-clampers is going to succeed. Also, the secondary IAS appeal will not succeed either as the IAS is owned by the same firm that owns the IPC. Where this will be won, eventually, is after they issue a county court claim, which when defended with advice from here is easily won and the odds of it ever getting as far as an actual hearing is incredibly low.

Your choice. Pay into the scam and become part of the problem or fight it with the advice you get here.

The Notice to Keeper (NtK) is not PoFA compliant with para 9(2)(a) and you would argue that there is no evidence of a contract ever being foamed with the driver. Not that you're going to waste that argument on the incestuous IPC and IAS.

Here is the initial appeal you should submit. You are ONLY appealing as the Keeper. They have no idea who the driver is unless you blab it to them inadvertently or otherwise.

There is no legal obligation on the known keeper (the recipient of the Notice to Keeper (NtK)) to reveal the identity of the unknown driver and no inference or assumptions can be made.

The NtK is not compliant with all the requirements of PoFA which means that if the unknown driver is not identified, they cannot transfer liability for the charge from the unknown driver to the known keeper.

Use the following as your appeal. No need to embellish or remove anything from it:

Quote
I am the keeper of the vehicle and I dispute your 'parking charge'. I deny any liability or contractual agreement and I will be making a complaint about your predatory conduct to your client landowner.

As your Notice to Keeper (NtK) does not fully comply with ALL the requirements of PoFA 2012, you are unable to hold the keeper of the vehicle liable for the charge. Partial or even substantial compliance is not sufficient. There will be no admission as to who was driving and no inference or assumptions can be drawn. NPC has relied on contract law allegations of breach against the driver only.

The registered keeper cannot be presumed or inferred to have been the driver, nor pursued under some twisted interpretation of the law of agency. Your NtK can only hold the driver liable. NPC have no hope should you be so stupid as to try and litigate, so you are urged to save us both a complete waste of time and cancel the PCN.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #5 on: »
No initial appeal to this bottom-dwelling firm of ex-clampers is going to succeed. Also, the secondary IAS appeal will not succeed either as the IAS is owned by the same firm that owns the IPC. Where this will be won, eventually, is after they issue a county court claim, which when defended with advice from here is easily won and the odds of it ever getting as far as an actual hearing is incredibly low.

Your choice. Pay into the scam and become part of the problem or fight it with the advice you get here.

The Notice to Keeper (NtK) is not PoFA compliant with para 9(2)(a) and you would argue that there is no evidence of a contract ever being foamed with the driver. Not that you're going to waste that argument on the incestuous IPC and IAS.

Here is the initial appeal you should submit. You are ONLY appealing as the Keeper. They have no idea who the driver is unless you blab it to them inadvertently or otherwise.

There is no legal obligation on the known keeper (the recipient of the Notice to Keeper (NtK)) to reveal the identity of the unknown driver and no inference or assumptions can be made.

The NtK is not compliant with all the requirements of PoFA which means that if the unknown driver is not identified, they cannot transfer liability for the charge from the unknown driver to the known keeper.

Use the following as your appeal. No need to embellish or remove anything from it:

Quote
I am the keeper of the vehicle and I dispute your 'parking charge'. I deny any liability or contractual agreement and I will be making a complaint about your predatory conduct to your client landowner.

As your Notice to Keeper (NtK) does not fully comply with ALL the requirements of PoFA 2012, you are unable to hold the keeper of the vehicle liable for the charge. Partial or even substantial compliance is not sufficient. There will be no admission as to who was driving and no inference or assumptions can be drawn. NPC has relied on contract law allegations of breach against the driver only.

The registered keeper cannot be presumed or inferred to have been the driver, nor pursued under some twisted interpretation of the law of agency. Your NtK can only hold the driver liable. NPC have no hope should you be so stupid as to try and litigate, so you are urged to save us both a complete waste of time and cancel the PCN.

Thanks, can you also advise which option from the drop down to choose?
I am tempted to select "I was not aware that I have incurred a charge", all others seem less true than this one.

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #6 on: »
I have appealed as keeper and choosing the above option with the following text:

Quote
I am the keeper of the vehicle and I dispute your 'parking charge'. I deny any liability or contractual agreement and I will be making a complaint about your predatory conduct to your client landowner.

As your Notice to Keeper (NtK) does not fully comply with ALL the requirements of PoFA 2012, you are unable to hold the keeper of the vehicle liable for the charge.

Besides, other shortfalls, as an example, your NTK fails to "state that the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver" so it is not complaint with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, schedule 4, paragraph 9, clause 2(e).

Partial or even substantial compliance is not sufficient. There will be no admission as to who was driving and no inference or assumptions can be drawn. NPC has relied on contract law allegations of breach against the driver only.

The registered keeper cannot be presumed or inferred to have been the driver, nor pursued under some twisted interpretation of the law of agency. Your NtK can only hold the driver liable. NPC have no hope should you be so stupid as to try and litigate, so you are urged to save us both a complete waste of time and cancel the PCN.
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Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #7 on: »
I have got the following expected rejection:
Please share a draft for the IAS appeal, many thanks in advance.

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #8 on: »
We really don’t need to see their rejection. We know they will reject, irrespective of whatever you appealed with.

Now you have to submit a useless IAS appeal. You are just going through the process. That will also be rejected. This wil only conclude after they issue a county court claim. Anything before the claim is part of the scam that is the IPC, which owns the IAS.

Submit the following as your IAS appeal:

Quote
I am the registered keeper of the vehicle. I deny any liability for this parking charge and appeal in full.

The parking operator bears the burden of proof. It must establish that a contravention occurred, that a valid contract was formed between the operator and the driver, and that it has lawful authority to operate and issue Parking Charge Notices (PCNs) in its own name. I therefore require the operator to provide the following:

1. Strict proof of clear, prominent, and adequate signage that was in place on the date in question, at the exact location of the alleged contravention. This must include a detailed site plan showing the placement of each sign and legible images of the signs in situ. The operator must demonstrate that signage was visible, legible, and compliant with the IPC Code of Practice that was valid at the time of the alleged contravention, including requirements relating to font size, positioning, and the communication of key terms.

2. Strict proof of a valid, contemporaneous contract or lease flowing from the landowner that authorises the operator to manage parking, issue PCNs, and pursue legal action in its own name. I refer the operator and the IAS assessor to Section 14 of the PPSCoP (Relationship with Landowner), which clearly sets out mandatory minimum requirements that must be evidenced before any parking charge may be issued on controlled land.

In particular, Section 14.1(a)–(j) requires the operator to have in place written confirmation from the landowner which includes:

• the identity of the landowner,
• a boundary map of the land to be managed,
• applicable byelaws,
• the duration and scope of authority granted,
• detailed parking terms and conditions including any specific permissions or exemptions,
• the means of issuing PCNs,
• responsibility for obtaining planning and advertising consents,
• and the operator’s obligations and appeal procedure under the Code.

These requirements are not optional. They are a condition precedent to issuing a PCN and bringing any associated action. Accordingly, I put the operator to strict proof of compliance with the entirety of Section 14 of the PPSCoP. Any document that contains redactions must not obscure the above conditions. The document must also be dated and signed by identifiable persons, with evidence of their authority to act on behalf of the parties to the agreement. The operator must provide an agreement showing clear authorisation from the landowner for this specific site.

3. Strict proof that the enforcement mechanism (e.g. ANPR or manual patrol) is reliable, synchronised, maintained, and calibrated regularly. The operator must prove the vehicle was present for the full duration alleged and not simply momentarily on site, potentially within a permitted consideration or grace period as defined by the PPSCoP.

4. Strict proof that the Notice to Keeper complies with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 (PoFA), if the operator is attempting to rely on keeper liability. Any failure to comply with the mandatory wording or timelines in Schedule 4 of PoFA renders keeper liability unenforceable.

5. Strict proof that the NtK was posted in time for it to have been given within the relevant period. The PPSCoP section 8.1.2(d) Note 2 requires that the operator must retain a record of the date of posting of a notice, not simply of that notice having been generated (e.g. the date that any third-party Mail Consolidator actually put it in the postal system.)

6. The IAS claims that its assessors are “qualified solicitors or barristers”. Yet there is no way to verify this. Decisions are unsigned, anonymised, and unpublished. There is no transparency, no register of assessors, and no way for a motorist to assess the legal credibility of the individual supposedly adjudicating their appeal. If the person reading this really is legally qualified, they will know that without strict proof of landowner authority (VCS v HMRC [2013] EWCA Civ 186), no claim can succeed. They will also know that clear and prominent signage is a prerequisite for contract formation (ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67), and that keeper liability under PoFA is only available where strict statutory conditions are met.

If the assessor chooses to overlook these legal requirements and accept vague assertions or redacted documents from the operator, that will speak for itself—and lend further weight to the growing concern that this appeals service is neither independent nor genuinely legally qualified.

In short, I dispute this charge in its entirety and require full evidence of compliance with the law, industry codes of practice, and basic contractual principles.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain
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Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #9 on: »
Sharing another winner update here. Thanks guys, NPC gave up even before IAS could review the appeal.

Appeal Status
Operator Conceded
The Operator conceded this appeal due to Landowner Intervention.
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Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #10 on: »
Sharing another winner update here. Thanks guys, NPC gave up even before IAS could review the appeal.

Appeal Status
Operator Conceded
The Operator conceded this appeal due to Landowner Intervention.

Did you personally contact the land owner?

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #11 on: »
Did you personally contact the land owner?

I did NOT. I copy pasted the text shared kindly by B789 with minor edits.

Usually IAS appeal allows operator to upload further evidence and appelatant to respond and so on, till both have nothing more to add. Then they evaluate the appeal. In this instance instead of adding any "evidence", the operator apparently simply withdrew, I am not 100% sure why, maybe they have seen their success rates have dropped to 0% when B789's magic is at work, I am only guessing.
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Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #12 on: »
Okay, all good info.

But in your earlier post it is clearly stated that the appeal was conceded due to 'Landowner Intervention' - I was just interested to know the reasons for that intervention.

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #13 on: »
You are talking about the IAS here. You will never know the true reasons. As they are a bunch of lying custards (new Jeremy Clarkson 2 into 1 profanity) they will, just like their pretend solicitor trained adjudicators, lie and deflect anything that shows their corrupt practices and decision making processes.

Maybe my formal complaints about their parent company, United Trade and Industry Ltd, to the CMA is going to seriously affect them once they are exposed for the corrupt firm they really are.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: NPC Notice to Keeper parked on pavement
« Reply #14 on: »
Okay, all good info.

But in your earlier post it is clearly stated that the appeal was conceded due to 'Landowner Intervention' - I was just interested to know the reasons for that intervention.

Yes, I copy pasted from the IAS page about "Landowner Intervention". I had also heard from residents in the area that things haven't been rosy between Landowner and NPC (outside of my experience) which could be a factor or as B789 says IAS could have simply made up something, I do NOT know.