Author Topic: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate  (Read 5677 times)

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Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #30 on: »
Deleted
« Last Edit: November 16, 2024, 01:06:26 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 Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #31 on: »
Sorry, I missed the contract. Here is the full submission you should make in response to the operators evidence:

Quote
Response to Operator’s Submission

It is striking how little of the operator's response actually addresses the points raised in the appeal. Instead of tackling the substantive issues, the operator has opted for the “copy-paste and hope for the best” approach, regurgitating generic statements about signage and Beavis. This is disappointing, albeit unsurprising, given the lack of substance in their claim.

1. Signage is Prohibitory, Not Contractual

The operator claims that their signage forms a contractual agreement with the driver, but this assertion falls flat upon even the most basic scrutiny. The signs on-site are entirely prohibitory, stating only:

(a) “No parking, waiting, loading or unloading on the roads at any time.”
(b) “No parking, waiting, loading or unloading on the footpaths at any time.”
(c) “No causing obstructions at any time.”

These statements are not terms and conditions—they are outright prohibitions. A prohibitory sign cannot form the basis of a contract, as it does not offer anything to the driver. For a contract by conduct to be formed, there must be an offer that the driver can choose to accept by their actions. Here, no such offer exists. Instead, the signs impose blanket bans on certain activities, making it clear that parking is not permitted under any circumstances. How can a driver breach a contract that was never on offer in the first place?

If the landowner truly wished to enforce such prohibitory restrictions, the appropriate course of action would be to pursue trespass claims under common law, which only the landowner—not the operator—has the standing to prosecute. The operator cannot stretch the limits of contract law to enforce prohibitions that fall outside its remit.

The operator’s own “evidence” further undermines their case. Their signage does not communicate any of the terms listed in their supposed landowner contract (See section 4). There is no mention of the requirement to display a permit, park within marked bays, or avoid yellow lines—restrictions they claim are central to their enforcement. Instead, the signs prohibit all parking, waiting, loading, or unloading, and offer no alternative under which parking might be allowed.

The operator has attempted to sidestep this issue by simply stating, without explanation, that “the signage forms a contract.” But how does a blanket prohibition magically transform into a contractual offer? The operator has failed to address this fundamental flaw in their argument, choosing instead to rely on vague, unsupported assertions. Are we supposed to just take their word for it? Perhaps they’re hoping POPLA will.

POPLA must recognise that prohibitory signage does not create a contract. The operator cannot rely on signs that categorically ban parking to claim that a driver agreed to pay a charge for doing so. If there is no offer, there is no contract. If there is no contract, there can be no breach. This is not a minor technicality—it is the foundation of contract law. The operator’s case fails at the first hurdle, and this appeal must therefore succeed.

2. Misplaced Reliance on ParkingEye v Beavis

It’s almost amusing how the operator clings to ParkingEye v Beavis as if it’s a magic wand to justify every parking charge ever issued. However, the Beavis case involved signage that clearly offered terms—free parking for two hours, with charges for overstaying. Here, the signage does no such thing. Instead, it prohibits parking altogether. How can a driver agree to terms when the sign explicitly forbids the very act required to accept those terms?

Of course, the operator doesn’t bother to explain this glaring inconsistency. They just drop the Beavis name and hope no one notices it doesn’t apply.

3. Ambiguity of Location

The appeal pointed out that the Notice to Keeper (NtK) fails to identify the location of the alleged contravention with sufficient clarity, as required by Paragraph 7(2)(a) of PoFA. Listing an entire industrial estate and three different roads is not specific enough to identify where the vehicle was supposedly parked.

The operator’s response? They casually brush this off, claiming the “post code” is sufficient. Really? A post code that covers multiple roads and areas is supposed to pinpoint the exact location of a parking contravention? This lack of precision violates PoFA, and the operator’s dismissal of this point is, frankly, an insult to anyone with an ounce of intelligence.

4. Landowner Authority

The operator relies on a supposed “landowner contract” to justify their authority to enforce Parking Charge Notices (PCNs) at this location. However, this document is riddled with flaws, inconsistencies, and missing information that seriously undermine its credibility.

Firstly, the document lacks clarity about who actually authorised it. It contains what appear to be two different signatures purportedly acting on behalf of the landowner or their agent, but no evidence has been provided to demonstrate that either individual has the legal authority to represent the landowner. The names of the signatories are illegible, no job titles are provided, and there is no supporting documentation (e.g., a power of attorney, agency agreement, or other authorisation). Without proof of their authority, these signatures are meaningless.

Secondly, the contract identifies the client as “Trade Sales”, but provides no further information to confirm who or what this entity is. There is no company registration number, no address, and no evidence that “Trade Sales” is a legitimate entity, let alone one authorised to act on behalf of the landowner. This raises significant doubts about whether the operator has any valid agreement with the actual landowner of the site.

The contract also fails to provide a clear and complete map of the premises, which is a requirement under the BPA Code of Practice. The document vaguely refers to site boundaries but does not include any specific details or supporting evidence to define where the operator’s authority applies. This is particularly problematic for a large industrial estate spanning multiple roads, as it is impossible to determine which areas are covered under the supposed agreement.

Finally, while the “Restrictions” section of the contract outlines specific terms (e.g., the requirement to display a valid permit, park within marked bays, and not park on yellow lines), there is no evidence that these restrictions are communicated on-site. In fact, as discussed in Section 1, the signage on-site contains entirely different wording that is prohibitory in nature and does not reflect the terms in the landowner contract. This discrepancy raises serious concerns about whether the operator is complying with the landowner’s instructions—or if the operator is simply enforcing arbitrary rules.

Under Section 7 of the BPA Code of Practice, operators must provide clear, written evidence of their authority from the landowner, and this evidence must withstand scrutiny. In this case, the contract fails to demonstrate:

(a) That the signatories are authorised to act on behalf of the landowner.
(b) That “Trade Sales” is a valid and authorised entity.
(c) That the landowner consented to the specific terms the operator claims to enforce.
(d) That the contract was valid at the time of the alleged parking contravention.

Without these critical elements, the contract cannot be relied upon as evidence of landowner authority. POPLA must demand robust proof that the operator has the authority they claim. If the operator cannot provide clear, unredacted evidence of a valid and current landowner agreement, this appeal must succeed.

Summary

The operator’s response fails to address the points raised in the appeal. Instead, they rely on generic statements, irrelevant case law, and a complete lack of evidence. Their inability to engage with the appeal’s key arguments is telling... they don’t have a case.

The appeal must succeed for the following reasons:

(a) The signage is prohibitory and incapable of forming a contract.
(b) The NtK fails to comply with PoFA requirements, particularly regarding location and keeper liability.
(c) The operator has not provided proof of landowner authority.
(d) The charge is punitive and lacks justification under Beavis.
(e) The operator’s response is, at best, inadequate and, at worst, an insult to the intelligence of everyone involved. POPLA should uphold the appeal.
« Last Edit: November 16, 2024, 01:10:27 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 Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #32 on: »
Re. "4. Landowner Authority" again.

They did send a map although there doesn't seem to be anything in the contract that references it.

As it is a separate from the contract, can we question...

a) is the map part of the contract?
b) is it from the landowner?
c) has it been unilaterally modified?

Also, their response states the site name is 'Uxbridge Industrial Estate' followed by 'The roads that fall within the Uxbridge Industrial Estate site are Wallingford Road, Salisbury Road and Arundel Road'.

According to their own map Arundel Road is only partially within the drawn limits of their claimed enforcement area.

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #33 on: »
This so-called contract could have been signed by anyone. Their name and particulars are not given.

Who are Trade Sales?

What are they in relation to the location?

Can't find them on the CH register.


Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #34 on: »
Here is an amended section 4 and conclusion you can use. As there is a limit of 10,000 characters for the POPLA response webform, this is close to the limit at 9,983 characters. If you edit anything, check the character count.

Quote
4. Landowner Authority

The operator relies on a supposed “landowner contract” to justify their authority to enforce Parking Charge Notices (PCNs) at this location. However, this document is riddled with flaws, inconsistencies, and missing information that seriously undermine its credibility.

Firstly, the document lacks clarity about who actually authorised it. It contains what appear to be two different signatures purportedly acting on behalf of the landowner or their agent, but no evidence has been provided to demonstrate that either individual has the legal authority to represent the landowner. The names of the signatories are illegible, no job titles are provided, and there is no supporting documentation (e.g., a power of attorney, agency agreement, or other authorisation). Without proof of their authority, these signatures are meaningless.

Secondly, the contract identifies the client as “Trade Sales”, but provides no further information to confirm who or what this entity is. There is no company registration number, no address, and no evidence that “Trade Sales” is a legitimate entity, let alone one authorised to act on behalf of the landowner. This raises significant doubts about whether the operator has any valid agreement with the actual landowner of the site.

Thirdly, the contract includes no clear reference to the map the operator has provided alongside their evidence. This omission raises several key questions:

(a) Is the map part of the contract? There is no clause in the contract that incorporates or references the map, leaving it unclear whether it is an official part of the agreement or a supplementary document produced later by the operator.
(b) Is the map from the landowner? The operator has provided no evidence to confirm that the map originated from the landowner or an authorised representative. Without such evidence, the map cannot be assumed to reflect the landowner’s intentions.
(c) Has the map been unilaterally modified? Given the lack of reference or chain of custody, there is no way to verify whether the map has been altered by the operator to suit their claims of enforcement authority.

The inconsistencies in the operator’s evidence further undermine the reliability of the map. For example, their response states that the enforcement area includes "Wallingford Road, Salisbury Road, and Arundel Road," yet their own map shows that Arundel Road is only partially within the drawn boundaries. This contradiction raises doubts about whether the operator’s claimed enforcement area aligns with the landowner’s actual instructions.

The contract also outlines a series of “restrictions” (e.g., the requirement to display a valid permit, park within marked bays, and not park on yellow lines). However, as discussed in Section 1, the on-site signage does not communicate these restrictions. Instead, the signage is entirely prohibitory, stating only that parking, waiting, loading, and unloading are not allowed on roads and footpaths. This discrepancy between the contract terms and the signage raises serious concerns about whether the operator is enforcing the landowner’s instructions—or their own arbitrary rules.

Under Section 7 of the BPA Code of Practice, operators must provide clear, written evidence of their authority from the landowner, and this evidence must withstand scrutiny. In this case, the contract fails to demonstrate:

(a) That the signatories are authorised to act on behalf of the landowner.
(b) That “Trade Sales” is a valid and authorised entity.
(c) That the landowner consented to the specific terms the operator claims to enforce.
(d) That the contract was valid at the time of the alleged parking contravention.
(e) That the provided map is authentic, authorised by the landowner, and reflects the true scope of the enforcement area.

Without these critical elements, the contract cannot be relied upon as evidence of landowner authority. The lack of clarity regarding the map and its inconsistencies only add to the doubts surrounding the operator’s claims. POPLA must demand robust proof that the operator has the authority they claim. If the operator cannot provide clear, unredacted evidence of a valid and current landowner agreement, this appeal must succeed.

Summary

The operator’s response fails to address the points raised in the appeal, instead relying on generic statements, irrelevant case law, and unsupported assertions. Their inability to engage with the appeal’s key arguments shows they do not have a valid case.

The appeal must succeed because:

(a) The signage is prohibitory and incapable of forming a contract. It offers no terms for parking and does not reflect the restrictions in the supposed landowner contract. A prohibitory notice cannot form a contractual agreement.

(b) The Notice to Keeper (NtK) is PoFA non-compliant. It fails to specify the location of the alleged contravention and does not establish keeper liability.

(c) The operator has not proven landowner authority. The landowner contract is riddled with inconsistencies, including illegible signatories, the unclear status of "Trade Sales," and no evidence linking the provided map to the landowner.

(d) The charge is punitive and unjustified under Beavis. The operator has not shown the charge serves a legitimate interest.

(e) The operator’s response is inadequate. It relies on vague assertions and contradictory evidence, failing to meet the burden of proof.

POPLA should uphold the appeal and cancel the Parking Charge Notice.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #35 on: »
As there is a limit of 10,000 characters for the POPLA response webform
I submitted a POPLA appeal a few weeks back and I'm fairly sure the webform for responding to the operator's evidence had a limit of 20,000 rather than 10,000.

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #36 on: »
It’s a while since I submitted 9ne. You may be right. I have 10k in my head for some reason.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #37 on: »
They must have increased it at some point - it's the first time I've had to submit one in ages too and it definitely used to be 10k.

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #38 on: »
Appeal response submitted.

I'm sure after I pasted the response the count beside the textbox went from 10,000 down to 37 or so.

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #39 on: »
There's every chance I'm misremembering - I have slept since then  ;D

Let us know how you get on - POPLA say they aim to respond in 2-4 weeks, but a recent poster reported getting a result after around 7 weeks, so it might take a while.

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #40 on: »
That's about right. By my count, there were 9,983 characters in the response I provided.

If the box showed 10,000 before pasting in the text, then it is obviously still a 10K limit.
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: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #41 on: »
POPLA say they aim to respond in 2-4 weeks, but a recent poster reported getting a result after around 7 weeks, so it might take a while.

Quote from: POPLA
     Dear <tango33>,

 We are writing to update you about your appeal.

 Your appeal is now ready to be assessed and is currently in a queue
waiting to be allocated. We expect to make a decision on your appeal 6-8
weeks from the point that the appeal was first submitted. The next
communication that you will receive from us will be the decision on your
appeal.

 Kind regards

 POPLA Team

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #42 on: »
They've clearly re-evaluated their overly ambitious targets!

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #43 on: »
Decision
Quote
Unsuccessful

Assessor summary of your case
Quote
The appellant has raised the following points from their grounds of appeal. • The prohibitions do not suggest an offer to allow parking, instead they explicitly state what actions are not permitted which does not form an offer than can be accepted by conduct. • The charge is presented as a penalty. • Wording implies that the £100 charge is a consequence of breaching the prohibitions but does not indicate that the driver is entering into a contract by parking. • The signage as worded are incapable of forming a valid contract. • Under PoFA, Paragraph 7(2)(a) requires that the relevant land where the vehicle was parked is described with enough detail to ensure the keeper is aware of the specific location. The exact location is not listed on the PCN. • They put the operator to strict proof that the operator has the authority to issue parking charges on this land. After reviewing the operator’s evidence, the appellant expands on their grounds of appeal. The appellant has provided 1. Photo of the signage. The above evidence has been considered in making my determination.

Assessor supporting rational for decision
Quote
The appellant is appealing as the registered keeper. I have received the PCN, and I am satisfied this meets the requirements of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. I am satisfied as stated by the operator that the site name is 'Uxbridge Industrial Estate'. The roads that fall within the Uxbridge Industrial Estate site are Wallingford Road, Salisbury Road and Arundel Road. Which make up ‘Uxbridge Industrial Estate’. As such, I am considering the registered keeper’s liability for the PCN. When assessing an appeal POPLA considers if the operator has issued the parking charge notice correctly and if the driver has complied with the terms and conditions for the use of the car park. The appellant says the prohibitions do not suggest an offer to allow parking, instead they explicitly state what actions are not permitted which does not form an offer than can be accepted by conduct. When parking on private land it is the operators responsibility to display the terms and conditions on the signage. It is then the motorists responsibility to comply with them. In this case the site does no allow motorists to park. As such it is clear that by parking on site a parking charge notice will be issued. As the driver choose to park in a no parking area, they have accepted the consequences of breaching the terms and as such a parking charge notice was issued in response to this. The appellant says the charge is presented as a penalty. The say the wording implies that the £100 charge is a consequence of breaching the prohibitions but does not indicate that the driver is entering into a contract by parking. The appellant has told us in their response that they consider the charge is a contractual penalty and therefore it is unenforceable. The appeal reasons raised have led me to consider the relevant case law of ParkingEye v Beavis. The Supreme Court considered private parking charges in a high-profile case, ParkingEye v Beavis. The Court recognised that parking charges have all the characteristics of a contractual penalty, but nevertheless were enforceable because there were legitimate interests in the charging of overstaying motorists. It concluded that a charge in the region of £85 was proportionate, and it attached importance to the fact that the charge was prominently displayed in large lettering on the signage itself. While the specific facts of the case concerned a free-stay car park where the motorist had overstayed, I consider the principles that lie behind the decision remain the same. Taking these principles into account, I am not going to consider whether the loss is a genuine pre-estimate of loss or whether it reflects a correct loss to the landowner. Rather, I am going to consider the charge amount in the appellant’s case, as well as the legibility of the signage. After reviewing the signage provided by the operator, I am satisfied that the signage is legible, and the charge amount is in the region of £85 and therefore allowable. The Court’s full judgement in the case is available online should the appellant want to read it. The appellant explains that the operators evidence to show they have the authority to operate on this land is not sufficient. The British Parking Association Code of Practice sets the standards by which its members must abide by. Section 7.1 of the code confirms that if an operator does not own the land on which it is carrying out parking management, it must have the written authorisation of the landowner or their appointed agent. This must confirm the operator has the authority to carry out all the aspects of car park management for the site that it is responsible for. In particular, it must say that the landowner or agent requires the operator to keep to the Code of Practice, the details of the land and that it has the authority to pursue outstanding parking charges. In response to this ground of appeal, the operator has provided a copy of the contract, and on reviewing this, I am satisfied that the operator has sufficient authority to pursue charges on the land. Having review both the appellants grounds of appeal and the comments raised, I conclude that the terms and conditions of the car park have not been met and the operator has issued the PCN correctly, as such the appeal is refused.

(Lack of paragraphs as per POPLA web page)

Re: Private Parking Solutions - PCN received - Uxbridge industrial estate
« Reply #44 on: »
Never, mind. The decision is not binding on you. Which assessor came to this terrible decision?

The POPLA assessors decision here is fundamentally flawed, showing a misunderstanding of contract law, PoFA requirements, and the distinction between contractual agreements and prohibitory signage. While it’s frustrating, their rejection does not mean the charge is legally enforceable, and it is not binding in court. Here’s an analysis of where they went wrong and what your next steps could be.

Key Issues with POPLA’s Decision:

1. Misunderstanding of Contract Formation (Signage is Prohibitory)

• The assessor states, “It is clear that by parking on site a parking charge notice will be issued. As the driver chose to park in a no-parking area, they have accepted the consequences of breaching the terms.”
• This logic is legally incorrect. A contract requires an offer, acceptance, and consideration. Prohibitory signs do not create an offer but instead forbid parking altogether.
• By POPLA’s reasoning, trespassers would be entering into contracts with landowners just by stepping onto private property—this is not how contract law works.
• A true contract must offer something in return, which this signage does not.

2. Incorrect Application of ParkingEye v Beavis

• The POPLA assessor relies on Beavis to justify the charge but fails to distinguish a key point:

• In Beavis, ParkingEye's sign offered two hours of free parking, after which a charge applied—this was a contractual agreement.
• Here, the sign prohibits parking entirely, meaning no contract is formed, and the charge is effectively a penalty, which is unenforceable in private law.

Beavis explicitly does not apply to prohibitory signage cases. POPLA’s reliance on it is legally incorrect.

3. Failure to Properly Assess Keeper Liability (PoFA Non-Compliance)

• You raised a clear PoFA compliance issue under Paragraph 7(2)(a) regarding the lack of precise location details in the NtK.
• The decision states, “I am satisfied that the site name is 'Uxbridge Industrial Estate'. The roads that fall within the Uxbridge Industrial Estate site are Wallingford Road, Salisbury Road and Arundel Road.

• Listing multiple roads covering a large estate is not specific enough under PoFA.
• A keeper receiving such an NtK cannot be sure where the vehicle was parked, which invalidates keeper liability.
• POPLA dismissed this argument without justification.

4. Uncritical Acceptance of the Operator’s “Landowner Authority” Evidence

• POPLA states, “In response to this ground of appeal, the operator has provided a copy of the contract, and on reviewing this, I am satisfied that the operator has sufficient authority to pursue charges on the land.

• They fail to address your specific points about the contract's deficiencies (illegible signatories, unclear entity “Trade Sales,” and unverified map).
• No mention of whether the contract explicitly grants the operator the right to pursue charges in their own name.
• No assessment of whether the landowner actually authorised these charges or if they were issued arbitrarily.

It only goes to show how poorly educated in contract law and PoFA that some of these assessors are. I will draft a formal complaint to POPLA so that it is recorded how poorly trained their assessors and therefore making POPLA not fit for purpose. It won't change the decision, but it will force them to respond and explain these failures and how they intend to correct them in future.

For now, you simply ignore all the reminders and Debt Recovery Agent (DRA) letters. You can safely ignore all debt collectors because they are powerless to actually do anything because they are not a party to the contract allegedly breached by the driver. Never, ever, communicate with a useless DRA. Their sole job is to get the low-hanging fruit on the gullible tree to pay up out of ignorance and fear. Ignore them.

Send the following as a formal complaint to to the lead adjudicator at POPLA; enquiries@popla.org.uk and CC in yourself, and show us the response when it arrives.

Quote
Subject: Formal Complaint – POPLA Assessor’s Fundamental Misapplication of Contract Law in Case: [POPLA Reference Number]

Dear Lead Adjudicator,

I am writing to formally complain about the handling of my recent appeal. The decision reached by the assessor demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding of contract law, and it is clear that POPLA is failing in its duty to ensure that its assessors are adequately trained in the legal principles governing private parking enforcement.

It is well known that POPLA will not overturn a decision made by one of its assessors, no matter how legally flawed. However, if POPLA wishes to maintain even the pretence of being an independent arbiter, it must ensure that its assessors possess at least a basic level of contract law knowledge. This case highlights a glaring failure in that regard.

1. Prohibitive Signage Does Not Create a Contract

One of my central appeal arguments was that the signage did not form a contractual offer. The signage explicitly prohibited parking, meaning that there was no offer to accept, and thus no contract could be formed. This is an elementary principle of contract law.

The assessor's response was as follows:

In this case the site does not allow motorists to park. As such it is clear that by parking on site a parking charge notice will be issued.

This statement completely contradicts itself. If parking was not allowed, then no contractual agreement could exist between the motorist and the parking operator. There must be an offer, acceptance, and consideration for a contract to exist—none of which were present. Instead of properly addressing this point, the assessor parroted the parking operator’s position without engaging in any legal analysis whatsoever.

It is shocking that POPLA has assessors making decisions who are evidently unaware of the basic legal requirement for a contract to exist.

2. Gross Misapplication of ParkingEye v Beavis

The assessor attempted to justify the charge by citing ParkingEye v Beavis (2015) UKSC 67. This reliance on Beavis is not only misguided but suggests that the assessor does not understand the specific circumstances under which that case was decided.

• In Beavis, the Supreme Court ruled that a charge was enforceable because the landowner had granted permission to park, and the charge was necessary to ensure turnover of spaces.
• In my case, there was no permission to park at all—only a prohibition.

By applying Beavis to a case where no contract could exist, the assessor has exposed their complete lack of legal competence.

3. Failing to Recognise That the Charge Can Only Be for Trespass

Since no contract was formed, the only possible legal claim would be for trespass. However, a trespass claim can only be brought by the landowner, not a parking operator. The operator therefore had no legal standing to issue a charge.

The assessor’s failure to even consider this basic legal distinction demonstrates that they are not fit to be making decisions on contract law matters.

4. Incorrectly Justifying the Charge by its Amount

The assessor argued that because the charge was “in the region of £85–100,” it must be enforceable. This is an absurd conclusion.

• The amount of the charge is irrelevant if there is no legal basis for issuing it in the first place.
• If no contract exists, any charge issued must be an unenforceable penalty, regardless of its amount.

By focusing solely on the figure and ignoring the fundamental absence of a contract, the assessor has once again demonstrated a complete lack of legal reasoning ability.

5. POPLA’s Responsibility to Employ Competent Assessors

It is abundantly clear that POPLA’s assessor was not qualified to make a decision in this case. Their reasoning was not just flawed—it betrayed a complete ignorance of contract law and legal standing.

POPLA routinely claims to be an “independent” body, yet it is impossible to take that claim seriously when its assessors lack even the most basic grasp of the legal framework governing private parking enforcement. If POPLA wishes to salvage any credibility, it must immediately ensure that its assessors:

• Receive proper training in contract law.
• Are instructed not to blindly apply Beavis to cases where no contractual offer exists.
• Are required to demonstrate at least a basic understanding of the legal distinction between a contract and a prohibitive notice before making decisions.

6. The Consequences of Incompetent Decision-Making

While POPLA decisions are not binding on the appellant, they can have serious ramifications for motorists who do not fully understand this. Many people wrongly believe that a rejected POPLA appeal means they are legally obliged to pay the charge. This often results in:

• Unnecessary harassment by debt recovery agencies.
• A heightened risk of court claims, despite the legal flaws in the operator’s case.
• Consumers being coerced into paying charges that have no legal basis, simply because POPLA’s flawed decisions embolden parking operators to pursue enforcement.

By allowing poorly trained assessors to make these consequential yet legally flawed decisions, POPLA is failing in its duty to provide a fair and competent appeals process. If this is not addressed, it will further damage POPLA’s already fragile reputation as a truly independent adjudicator.

Requested Actions

Given the seriousness of this matter, I request the following:

1. A formal review of my case by a senior adjudicator who understands the distinction between prohibitive signage and contractual agreements.
2. Confirmation that additional training will be provided to assessors to address these glaring legal knowledge gaps.
3. A clear response from POPLA management explaining how it will ensure that future cases are not decided based on such fundamental legal errors.

If POPLA continues to allow obviously unqualified assessors to make legally flawed decisions that embolden private parking companies and mislead motorists, I will escalate this matter to the relevant regulatory bodies and consumer rights organisations as well as my MP.

I expect a substantive response addressing each of these concerns. A generic reply will not be accepted.

Yours sincerely,

[Your Name]
[Your Contact Information]
[Reference Number of Appeal]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain