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Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
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I’ve received a County Court Claim from Euro Parking Services Limited, issued via the Civil National Business Centre (Northampton) on 15 August 2025. I have already complete AOS.

Claim details (from the form):

Claimant: Euro Parking Services Limited

Solicitors: Gladstones Solicitors Limited

Allegation: The driver of my vehicle allegedly breached parking terms at Stack Shack on 23/07/2024, incurring a Parking Charge Notice (PCN).

The claim is for:

£100 for the PCN

£60 contractual costs

£12.50 statutory interest (8% p.a.)

Plus court fee (£35) and legal representative’s costs (£50).

Total claimed: £257.50

Background:
I didn’t settle the PCN within 28 days.

Current issue:
I’m trying to post this on your site for feedback on my defence, but I’m having trouble uploading the first page of my claim form

I would appreciate some guidance- Whether my defence (see below) looks reasonable?

Thanks in advance for your help!

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Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #1 on: »
My defence

1. The Particulars of Claim are defective. They fail to specify the alleged contractual breach, omit the property’s address and relevant parking times, and merely refer to “Stack Shack”. This lack of clarity renders the claim embarrassing and non-compliant with CPR 16.4 and Practice Direction 16, which require a statement of all facts necessary to formulate a complete cause of action. The added costs/damages are an attempt at double recovery of capped legal fees (already listed in the claim) and are not monies genuinely owed to, or incurred by, this Claimant. The claim also exceeds the Code of Practice (CoP) £100 parking charge (“PC”) maximum. Exaggerated and incoherent claims for impermissible sums are good reason for the court to intervene. Whilst the Defendant reserves the right to amend the defence if details of the contract are provided, the Court is invited to strike out the claim using its powers under CPR 3.4.
2.     Separately from the defects in the Particulars of Claim, the allegation(s) and heads of cost are vague and liability is denied for the sum claimed, or at all. At the very least, interest should be disallowed; the delay in bringing proceedings lies with the Claimant. This also makes retrieving material documents/evidence difficult, which is highly prejudicial. The Defendant seeks fixed costs (CPR 27.14) and a finding of unreasonable conduct and further costs (CPR 46.5). The Defendant has little recollection of events, save as set out below and to admit that they were the registered keeper, so questions whether the Notice to Keeper was even POFA compliant.
3.     In further support of the Defendant’s position that the Particulars of Claim are defective, two recent persuasive appeal judgments in Civil Enforcement Limited v Chan (Ref. E7GM9W44) and Car Park Management Service Ltd v Akande (Ref. K0DP5J30) would indicate the POC fails to comply with Civil Procedure Rule 16.4(1)(e) and Practice Direction Part 16.7.5. On the 15th August 2023, in the Chan case, HHJ Murch held: 'the particulars of the claim as filed and served did not set out the conduct which amounted to the breach in reliance upon which the claimant would be able to bring a claim for breach of contract'. The same is true in this case and the Defendant trusts that the Court should strike out the extant claim, using its powers pursuant to CPR 3.4. The second recent persuasive appeal judgment also held that typical private parking case POC (like this) fail to comply with Part 16. On the 10 May 2024, in CPMS v Akande, HHJ Evans held: 'Particulars of Claim have to set out the basic facts upon which a party relies in order to prove his or her claim'.
3.1  In addition to the defective Particulars of Claim, there was a procedural failure in service. The Defendant had moved from their residence near Birmingham in late September 2024, yet the Claimant served the notice to the former address (CPR 6.9(3)). The HM Courts and Tribunals notice, issued 15th August 2025, was only received via the previous landlord. This error prejudices the Defendant and undermines the claim’s reliability.
4. It is neither admitted nor denied that a term was breached but to form a contract, there must be an offer, acceptance, and valuable consideration (absent in this case). The Consumer Rights Act 2015 (s71) mandates a 'test of fairness' duty on Courts and sets a high bar for prominence of terms and 'consumer notices'. Paying regard to Sch2 (examples 6, 10, 14 & 18), also s62 and the duties of fair, open dealing/good faith, the Defendant notes that this Claimant reportedly uses unclear (unfair) terms/notices. On the limited information given, this case looks no different. The Claimant is put to strict proof with contemporaneous photographs.

5. DVLA keeper data is only supplied on the basis of prior written landowner authority. The Claimant (an agent) is put to strict proof of their standing to sue and the terms, scope and dates of the landowner agreement, including the contract, updates, schedules and a map of the site boundary set by the landowner (not an unverified Google Maps aerial view).
6. To impose a PC, as well as a breach, there must be: (i) a strong 'legitimate interest' extending beyond compensation for loss, and (ii) 'adequate notice' (prominence) of the PC and any relevant obligation(s). None of which have been demonstrated. This PC is a penalty arising as a result of a 'concealed pitfall or trap', poor signs and covert surveillance, thus it is fully distinguished from ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC67.
7. Attention is drawn to (i) paras 98, 100, 193, 198 of  Beavis (an £85 PC comfortably covered all letter chain costs and generated a profit shared with the landowner) and also to (ii) the binding judgment in ParkingEye v Somerfield Stores ChD [2011] EWHC 4023(QB) which remains unaffected by Beavis and stands as the only parking case law that deals with costs abuse. HHJ Hegarty held in paras 419-428 (High Court, later ratified by the CoA) that 'admin costs' inflating a £75 PC (already increased from £37.50) to £135 were disproportionate to the minor cost of an automated letter-chain and 'would appear to be penal'.
8. The Parking (Code of Practice) Act will curb rogue conduct by operators and their debt recovery agents (DRAs). The Government recently launched a Public Consultation considered likely to bring in a ban on DRA fees, which a 2022 Minister called ‘extorting money from motorists’. They have identified in July 2025: 'profit being made by DRAs is significantly higher than ... by parking operators' and 'the high profits may be indicative of these firms having too much control over the market, thereby indicating that there is a market failure'.
9. Pursuant to Sch4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 ('POFA') the claim exceeds the maximum sum and is unrecoverable: see Explanatory Note 221: 'The creditor may not make a claim against the keeper ... for more than the amount of the unpaid parking related charges as they stood when the notice to the driver was issued (para 4(5))'. Late fees (unknown to drivers, not specified on signs) are not 'unpaid parking related charges'. They are the invention of 'no win no fee' DRAs. Even in the (unlikely) event that the Claimant complied with the POFA and CoP, there is no keeper liability law for DRA fees.


Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #3 on: »
Trust me, what you have suggested as a defence is all correct but is going to p!ss off the judge who has to read it, especially the polemic on the upcoming Act. You do not want to anger a judge who is looking for the easy life with your defence.

Use the following for your defence, which has been drafted with the assistance of a very long serving district judge family member:

Until very recently, we never advised using the MCOL to submit a defence. However, due to recent systemic failures within the CNBC, we feel that it is safer to now submit a short defence using MCOL as it is instantly submitted and entered into the "system". Whilst it will deny the use of some formatting or inclusion of transcripts etc. these can always be included with the Witness Statement (WS) later, if it ever progresses that far.

You will need to copy and paste it into the defence text box on MCOL. It has been checked to make sure that it will fit into the 122 lines limit.

Quote
1. The Defendant denies the claim in its entirety. The Defendant asserts that there is no liability to the Claimant and that no debt is owed. The claim is without merit and does not adequately disclose any comprehensible cause of action.

2. There is a lack of precise detail in the Particulars of Claim (PoC) in respect of the factual and legal allegations made against the Defendant such that the PoC do not comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a).

3. The Defendant is unable to plead properly to the PoC because:

(a) The contract referred to is not detailed or attached to the PoC in accordance with CPR PD 16.7.3(1);

(b) The PoC do not state the exact wording of the clause (or clauses) of the terms and conditions of the contract (or contracts) which is/are relied on;

(c) The PoC do not adequately set out the reason (or reasons) why the claimant asserts the defendant has breached the contract (or contracts)

(d) The PoC do not state with sufficient particularity exactly where the breach occurred, the exact time when the breach occurred and how long it is alleged that the vehicle was parked before the parking charge was allegedly incurred;

(e) The PoC do not state precisely how the sum claimed is calculated, including the basis for any statutory interest, damages, or other charges;

(f) The PoC do not state what proportion of the claim is the parking charge and what proportion is damages;

(g) The PoC do not provide clarity on whether the Defendant is sued as the driver or the keeper of the vehicle, as the claimant cannot plead alternative causes of action without specificity.

4. The Defendant submits that courts have previously struck out similar claims of their own initiative for failure to adequately comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a), particularly where the Particulars of Claim failed to specify the contractual terms relied upon or explain the alleged breach with sufficient clarity. The Defendant refers specifically to the persuasive appellate cases:

- Civil Enforcement Ltd v Chan (2023), Luton County Court, HHJ Murch, ref: E7GM9W44

- CPMS Ltd v Akande (2024), Manchester County Court, HHJ Evans, ref: K0DP5J30

In both cases, the claim was struck out due to identical failures to comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a).

5. The Defendant invites the Court to strike out this claim of its own initiative. The Defendant relies on the judicial reasoning set out in Chan and Akande, as well as other County Court cases involving identical failures to adequately comply with CPR 16.4. In those cases, the court further observed that, given the modest sum claimed, requiring further case management steps would be disproportionate and contrary to the overriding objective. Accordingly, the judge struck out the claim outright rather than permitting an amendment. The Defendant proposes that the following Order be made:

Draft Order:

Of the Court's own initiative and upon reading the particulars of claim and the defence.

AND the court being of the view that the particulars of claim do not comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a) because: (a) they do not set out the exact wording of the clause (or clauses) of the terms and conditions of the contract (or contracts) which is (or are) relied on; and (b) they do not adequately set out the reason (or reasons) why the claimant asserts that the defendant was in breach of contract.

AND the claimant could have complied with CPR 16.4(1)(a) had it served separate detailed particulars of claim, as it could have done pursuant to CPR PD 7C.5.2(2), but chose not to do so.

AND upon the claim being for a very modest sum such that the court considers it disproportionate and not in accordance with the overriding objective to allot to this case any further share of the court's resources by ordering further particulars of claim and a further defence, each followed by further referrals to the judge for case management.

ORDER:

1. The claim is struck out.
2. Permission to either party to apply to set aside, vary or stay this order by application on notice, which must be filed at this Court not more than 5 days after service of this order, failing which no such application may be made.
« Last Edit: September 11, 2025, 09:07:59 pm by b789 »
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #4 on: »
Dear b789 – Hero Member,

Thank you so much for your kind and thoughtful response — I truly value the time and advice you’re sharing.

If I may ask, would it be considered appropriate to include a suggested draft order when submitting my defence to the court?
And, if it’s not too much trouble, do you happen to know whether anyone has successfully used a similar defence to have their case struck out?

I’m very grateful for your help and guidance.

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #5 on: »
Short answer: yes, it’s appropriate to include the suggested draft order within the defence on MCOL. It won’t be treated as an application; it’s an invitation for the judge to act of their own initiative. It does no harm and can help a judge who is minded to strike out.

The PoC in any Gladstones issued claim never comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a) as they never include a concise statement of the facts on which the claimant relies. Think of CPR 16.4(1)(a) as the rule that says: if you sue someone, you must tell them, in short but clear terms, exactly what facts you rely on. Not conclusions, not labels, but the basic story: what contract, what term, what was done wrong, where and when, and how the sum is made up.

The PoC in a Gladstones issued claim don’t do that. Here’s why:

1. “Breach of parking terms” is just a conclusion. The PoC don’t say what the driver supposedly did: failed to pay, overstayed, left site, wrong bay, no permit, etc. Without the alleged act, there are no material facts to answer.
2. Contract cases must set out the contract relied upon. PD 16 paras 7.3–7.5 require the claimant to attach or set out the relevant terms if it’s written, or to state the terms if it’s oral or by conduct. The PoC don’t identify any contractual term or wording, so the defendant can’t see what term was allegedly broken.
3. The PoC don’t state who is being sued and on what basis: the driver, or the registered keeper under PoFA. If the keeper is pursued, the claimant should plead that PoFA Schedule 4 conditions are met. As drafted, the defendant cannot tell which case they have to meet.
4. Time and duration matter in parking claims. Saying only “23/07/2024” isn’t enough. There’s no start time, end time, or period of parking, so the defendant can’t check signage hours, machine logs, receipts, grace/consideration periods, or whether the vehicle was merely stopped briefly.
5. The place is vague. “Stack Shack” is a trading name, not a precise location or car park area. Many sites have multiple bays/zones with different signs. The PoC don’t say exactly where on the land the alleged breach occurred or what sign applied there.
6. The £60 “contractual costs” are just a label. The PoC don’t plead any contractual term that entitles that add-on, nor facts showing the defendant agreed to pay it. In contract, you must point to the term that creates liability for the extra sum.
7. Interest is not properly particularised. PD 16 para 4.2 says a claimant seeking s.69 interest should state the rate, the start date, the period to which it applies, the daily rate, and the amount claimed. The PoC give only a lump figure and 8% with no period or daily rate.
8. Standing is not pleaded. Private parking firms need authority from the landowner to contract and to sue. The PoC say nothing about the claimant’s authority, which is part of the factual basis of the claim.
9. The £50 “legal representative’s costs” are claimed but no basis is pleaded. On the small claims track, recoverable costs are tightly limited; if they say it’s part of the principal debt, they must plead the contractual basis. If they say it’s costs, they must accept the small-claims limits. As pled, it’s opaque.

Overall, the PoC read like “you broke some rule, pay £257.50” without telling the defendant what rule, how it was broken, or why the figures are due. CPR 16.4(1)(a) requires a concise statement of the facts relied on. These particulars give conclusions and totals, not facts, so the defendant cannot plead a proper response. That is why they breach CPR 16.4(1)(a).

MCOL limits do not excuse inadequate Particulars

MCOL’s character limit is real, but the rules provide a simple workaround. If the online box was too small, the claimant should have selected “particulars to follow” and then served full Particulars of Claim within 14 days of service of the claim form (CPR 7.4(1)(b); PD 7C paras 5.2 and 6.1). That route exists so claimants can comply with CPR 16.4(1)(a) and PD 16.

Full Particulars served separately should set out the contract relied on and the exact term said to be broken, who is sued and on what basis (driver or keeper under PoFA and how its conditions are met), the where/when/how long of the alleged parking event, and a clear breakdown of the sums claimed with the contractual or statutory basis for any add-ons and for interest (PD 16 paras 7.3–7.5; PD 16 para 4.2 on interest).

If MCOL still felt unsuitable, the claimant could have issued on paper using form N1. Nothing in the rules forced them to rely on an under-particularised MCOL narrative.

Prior letters, PCNs or emails are irrelevant to pleading compliance. The Particulars must stand on their own and enable a defendant, assumed to know nothing about the matter on receipt, to understand the case and plead a defence. The court cannot treat earlier correspondence as if it were part of the PoC.

In short, the claimant’s failure is one of choice, not constraint. The rules gave straightforward options to plead properly. MCOL is not an excuse.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #6 on: »
Thank you so much — I truly appreciate your help and support. I’ll keep you updated on how things progress.

I’m due to change my address and move house next month on 08/10/25. Could you kindly advise on the best way to inform both the court and the claimant about my new address?

Many thanks again for your guidance!

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #7 on: »
Tell the court currently holding the file (CNBC/Money Claim Online before transfer; your local hearing centre after transfer).

Also Gladstones. Under CPR 6.7, once solicitors are instructed, service is on them.

Send a short written “Notice of Change of Address for Service” (you can use Form N434 or a simple letter with the same information). The rules require parties to maintain an address for service and to notify changes; a notice should be filed at court and served on every other party.

Include:

• Claim number and parties
• Your full name
• Old address for service
• New address for service
• Effective date (e.g., “effective 8 October 2025”)
• Optional: “I also consent to service by email at: [email]” (this helps you receive documents promptly; consent is needed for valid email service).

File and send by email to the court (if that court accepts it) or post; keep proof of posting.
As for the claimant, serve by post to their service address on the claim (and email a courtesy copy). If you want email-only service to count, ensure they have expressly agreed to accept service by email.

Do it now, stating the effective date of 08/10/2025. If the case later transfers to your local county court, re-send the same notice to that court so their file is up to date.

Updating your details on the MCOL user profile is helpful for contact, but the rules still require a filed and served notice of the new address for service.

You can use this as a letter or complete Form N434

Quote
Subject: Notice of Change of Address for Service

Court: [CNBC/Hearing Centre]
Claim no.: [XXXXXXX]
Parties: [Claimant] v [Defendant]

I, [full name], the Defendant, give notice under CPR Part 6 and PD 42 that my address for service has changed.

Old address for service: [full old address]
New address for service: [full new address]
Effective date: 8 October 2025

Please update the court record.

I also consent to service by email at: [email address].

Signed: [name]

Dated: [date]

Served on: the Claimant/Gladstones Solicitors at their address for service.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #8 on: »
Many thanks again for your help. I will email and post the documents to both.
Could you please let me know how I can confirm that the court accepts email? I can only find this email address (ccbc@justice.gov.uk), searching on the internet.

« Last Edit: September 15, 2025, 11:57:45 am by Waqas »

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #9 on: »
This is the email address you need to use: caseprogression.cnbc@justice.gov.uk

Put the claim number in the email subject (e.g., “[Claim number] – Defendant – Change of address”) and the first line of the body.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #10 on: »
Thank you so much again.

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #11 on: »
Court received ny defence and defence was sent to the claimant.

Then received email from the solicitor

"Dear ..............

 

We act for the Claimant and have notified the Court of the Claimant’s intention to proceed with the Claim. 

 

Please find enclosed a copy of the Claimant’s completed Directions Questionnaire, which has also been filed with the Court. 

 

You will note the Claimant has elected to mediate in an attempt to settle this matter amicably, without the need for further Court intervention. Should you agree to mediation, please inform the Court who will contact both parties to arrange a mediation appointment.

 

Yours sincerely


Skye 

Legal Assistant 


Glad... Solicitors Limited  " They have also sent a filled N180 form attached. Could you please advise what shall I do next??

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #12 on: »
Please show us a copy of the N180 DQ form. DO NOT redact the name or position of the person who has signed that DQ form.

This is very important as there is a very recent High Court appeal decision which is binding that can be used against them as the person who has signed that form is quite possibly not authorised to do so.

That letter is a standard boilerplate response. You are waiting for your own N180 Directions Questionnaire (DQ) to arrive. Just follow these instructions:

Having received your own N180 (make sure it is not simply a copy of the claimants N180), do not use the paper form. Ignore all the other forms that came with it. you can discard those. Download your own here and fill it in on your computer. You sign it by simply typing your full name in the signature box.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/673341e779e9143625613543/N180_1124.pdf

Here are the answers to some of the less obvious questions:

• The name of the court is "Civil National Business Centre".

• To be completed by "Your full name" and you are the "Defendant".

• C1: "YES"

• D1: "NO". Reason: "I wish to question the Claimant about their evidence at a hearing in person and to expose omissions and any misleading or incorrect evidence or assertions.
Given the Claimant is a firm who complete cut & paste parking case paperwork for a living, having this case heard solely on papers would appear to put the Claimant at an unfair advantage, especially as they would no doubt prefer the Defendant not to have the opportunity to expose the issues in the Claimants template submissions or speak as the only true witness to events in question
.."

• F1: Whichever is your nearest county court. Use this to find it: https://www.find-court-tribunal.service.gov.uk/search-option

• F3: "1".

• Sign the form by simply typing your full name for the signature.

When you have completed the form, attach it to a single email addressed to both dq.cnbc@justice.gov.uk and info@dcblegal.co.uk and CC in yourself. Make sure that the claim number is in the subject field of the email.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #13 on: »
Thanks once again. Please find attached the claimant’s N180 form and the defendant’s N180 form. Could you kindly let me know if any changes are required?

I am due to change my address on 09/10/25 and have already notified the court (as you advised previously). Should I still put my current address on the N180, or use my future address effective from 09/10/25?

Claimant N-180 link https://imgur.com/a/DBeDZhL
Defendent N-180 link https://imgur.com/a/l07cCl0

Re: Private parking fine (Gladstones)- HM Tribunals letter
« Reply #14 on: »
Use your current address for service (the one that is operative today) on the N180.

You have already filed a Notice of Change making the new address effective from 8 October 2025. Until that date, the “old” address remains the formal address for service. Putting a future-dated address on the N180 would conflict with your filed notice.

In your covering email/letter when filing your N180, add one line:

Quote
Please note: my address for service changes on 8 October 2025 to [new address], as previously notified under CPR Part 6/PD 42.

On another note, I see that Gladstones have signed their own N180 as a corporate entity and not a named individual. This must be objected to. The person who has completed their N180DQ is conducting litigation and must be a named individual who is authorised to do so. A paralegal or anyone else conducting litigation, even under the supervision of a solicitor is not authorised and is likely in breach of the Legal Services Act 2007, which is a criminal offence.

I advise you to email the following to the CNBC at dq.cnbc@justice.gov.uk and CC in Gladstones at enquiries@gladstonessolicitors.co.uk and yourself:

Quote
Subject: Claim [number] – [Claimant] v [Defendant] – Defendant’s N180 + Objection to Claimant’s N180

Please find attached: (1) Defendant’s N180 (signed) and (2) Objection to Claimant’s N180 (signed PDF).

Address for service: [current address]. Please note: my address for service changes on 8 October 2025 to [new address], as previously notified under CPR Part 6/PD 42.

Copied to the Claimant’s solicitors.

Attach the following as a pdf file together with your pdf copy of your completed N180DQ:

Quote
County Court Business Centre (CNBC)
Claim no.: [XXXXXXX]
Parties: [Claimant] v [Defendant]

OBJECTION TO CLAIMANT’S N180 DIRECTIONS QUESTIONNAIRE (DEFECTIVE SIGNATURE & AUTHORISATION)

I object to the Claimant’s purported filing of Form N180, which is “signed” only as “Gladstones Solicitors Ltd” with no identified individual signatory.

Signature defect (PD 5A)

Form N180 requires a valid signature by the party or an identified legal representative. Practice Direction 5A requires documents to be signed where indicated by the person responsible; where that person acts as a member/employee of a firm, the firm’s name may be added, but a firm name alone is not a signature. The absence of an identified individual undermines accountability and is procedurally defective.

Conduct of litigation (Legal Services Act 2007)

Signing and filing an N180 is a step in the “conduct of litigation” within s.12 and Schedule 2 paragraph 4 of the Legal Services Act 2007. Only the party, an authorised person, or an exempt person under Schedule 3 may carry out reserved legal activities.

Mazur authority

The High Court in Mazur & Anor v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB) (16 September 2025) confirmed that employees who are not themselves authorised (and not within a Schedule 3 exemption) cannot conduct litigation, even if supervised. The individual who signs must personally be authorised (or exempt).

Potential statutory non-compliance

If the person who completed/signed the N180 is not authorised or exempt, carrying on a reserved legal activity may contravene s.14 of the Legal Services Act 2007.

Directions sought

A) That the Claimant be directed within 7 days to re-file and serve a properly signed N180 which:

(i) identifies the individual signatory by name and status/position; and
(ii) confirms that the signatory is authorised (or states the relied-upon Schedule 3 exemption) to conduct litigation.

B) That until compliance, the current N180 be treated as defective and disregarded for case-management purposes, with any further sanction at the Court’s discretion in the event of non-compliance.

Service

These documents are served on the Claimant’s solicitors by copy of this email.

Signed: [Defendant’s full name]

[Date]

For your reference, here are therein things you need to know about completing your own N180DQ:

Having received your own N180 (make sure it is not simply a copy of the claimants N180), do not use the paper form. Ignore all the other forms that came with it. you can discard those. Download your own here and fill it in on your computer. You sign it by simply typing your full name in the signature box.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/673341e779e9143625613543/N180_1124.pdf

Here are the answers to some of the less obvious questions:

• The name of the court is "Civil National Business Centre".

• To be completed by "Your full name" and you are the "Defendant".

• C1: "YES"

• D1: "NO". Reason: "I wish to question the Claimant about their evidence at a hearing in person and to expose omissions and any misleading or incorrect evidence or assertions.
Given the Claimant is a firm who complete cut & paste parking case paperwork for a living, having this case heard solely on papers would appear to put the Claimant at an unfair advantage, especially as they would no doubt prefer the Defendant not to have the opportunity to expose the issues in the Claimants template submissions or speak as the only true witness to events in question
.."

• F1: Whichever is your nearest county court. Use this to find it: https://www.find-court-tribunal.service.gov.uk/search-option

• F3: "1".

• Sign the form by simply typing your full name for the signature.

When you have completed the form, attach it to a single email addressed to both dq.cnbc@justice.gov.uk and info@dcblegal.co.uk and CC in yourself. Make sure that the claim number is in the subject field of the email.
« Last Edit: September 23, 2025, 06:06:33 pm by b789 »
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain