Author Topic: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space  (Read 2519 times)

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Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #15 on: »
You only need to keep the LoC. You can dispose of all the forms that came with it. You don't give these bottom-dwelling incompetents any personal information.

Respond as follows by email to help@moorsidelegal.co.uk and CC yourself:

Quote
Dear Sirs,

Re: Letter of Claim dated 8th April 2025

I refer to your Letter of Claim, your ref: 10263288

I confirm that my address for service at this time is as follows, and I request that any outdated address be erased from your records to ensure compliance with data protection obligations:

[YOUR ADDRESS]

Please note that the alleged debt is disputed, and any court proceedings will be robustly defended.

I note that the sum claimed has been increased by an excessive and unjustifiable amount, which appears contrary to the principles established by the Government, who described such practices as “extorting money from motorists.” Please refrain from sending boilerplate responses or justifications regarding this issue.

Under the Pre-Action Protocol for Debt Claims, I require specific answers to the following questions:

1. Does the additional £70 represent what you describe as a “Debt Recovery” fee? If so, is this figure net of or inclusive of VAT? If inclusive, I trust you will explain why I, as the alleged debtor, am being asked to cover your client’s VAT liability.

2. Regarding the principal sum of the alleged Parking Charge Notice (PCN): Is this being claimed as damages for breach of contract, or will it be pleaded as consideration for a purported parking contract?

I would caution you against simply dismissing these questions with vague or boilerplate responses, as I am fully aware of the implications. By claiming that PCNs are exempt from VAT while simultaneously inflating the debt recovery element, your client – with your assistance – appears to be evading VAT obligations due to HMRC. Such mendacious conduct raises serious questions about the legality and ethics of your practices.

I strongly advise your client to cease and desist. Should this matter proceed to court, you can be assured that these issues will be brought to the court’s attention, alongside a robust defence and potentially a counterclaim for unreasonable conduct.

Yours faithfully,


[YOUR NAME]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #16 on: »
Thank you. I've sent that email.

Just to confirm, I should keep the LoC but at this stage I do not return the reply form outlining the reasons that I dispute the claim ie my car being legally parked in my own parking space. Is that correct?

Thanks

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #17 on: »
All the forms that came with the LoC can be chucked in the bin.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #18 on: »
Hi again

So I sent the email exactly as directed and I have just received the reply below. I don't know where they get the idea that I am seeking debt advice! They don't give up these parasites, do they? Please could you advise me on my next move. Your help is so appreciated.

Dear ...

Our reference: 10263288
Our client: UKCPS Ltd

We write further to your recent email.

Our answers to your questions are as follows:

The additional charge which has been levied on your Parking Charge of £70  is the amount set out in both the British Parking Association and International Parking Community Codes of Practice as the amount which may be added to a Parking Charge when a Parking Charge remains unpaid and when further recovery is required. Our Client adheres to the ATA’s Code of Practice. The £70 does not represent the cost of recovery but is a reasonable amount in relation to the Parking Charge amount, in order to encourage early payment of the Parking Charge without the need for debt recovery. It is a fair amount set by our Client’s government-approved Accredited Trade Association Code of Practice. There are however also costs incurred by our client in relation to debt recovery services.
 
By entering and parking the vehicle on our client's private land, you agreed to enter into a contract with our client and to be bound by the terms and conditions of that contract. The terms and conditions were clearly displayed at the entrance and in prominent places within the car park. Due to your failure to comply with the terms and conditions, our client has issued the PCN therefore if we are instructed to issue a claim the reason would be for Unpaid parking charges/ breach of contract.
We have noted on your account you are seeking debt advice and have placed the matter on hold for 30-days. If you fail to make payment after the 30-day period has lapsed, we may be instructed to issue a County Court Claim against you. 
 

You may wish to seek independent legal advice.



Yours sincerely



Moorside Legal

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #19 on: »
They are a firm of utter incompetent wannabe supposed legals. I suggest you respond with the following and CC in info@ukcps.net and yourself:

Quote
Dear Sirs,

Re: Your Reference 10263288 – UKCPS Ltd
Letter of Claim dated 8 April 2025

I write in response to your email reply following my initial letter regarding the above matter. I now address the contents of your reply in full and set out further concerns with the conduct of this matter.

1. Procedural Background

Your Letter of Claim dated 8 April 2025 made a vague demand in relation to an alleged parking charge, citing a total sum of £170. In response, I wrote to you confirming:

• That the debt is denied;
• That my address for service should be updated;
• That the £70 surcharge appeared to be unjustified and potentially unlawful;
• That I required clarification on whether the PCN sum was being claimed as damages or as consideration for a contract;
• That boilerplate responses would not be accepted.

In your reply, you attempted to justify the additional £70 by reference to BPA and IPC Codes of Practice, asserting it was not a cost of recovery but a “reasonable amount” intended to encourage early payment. You claimed your client was pursuing a claim for unpaid parking charges due to a breach of contract. You also confirmed that you had placed the matter on hold for 30 days on the assumption that I was seeking debt advice.

Let me now make it absolutely clear that your Letter Before Claim was non-compliant with the Pre-Action Protocol for Debt Claims (PAPDC), and that your response has failed to correct or address these breaches.

2. Pre-Action Protocol Breaches

Your Letter of Claim contained insufficient detail of the claim and failed to include copies of evidence your client relies upon. This is a breach of:

• PAPDC paragraphs 3.1(a)–(d), 5.1, 5.2
• Practice Direction – Pre-Action Conduct, paragraphs 6(a) and 6(c)

I remind you that the Protocol is binding on all parties, including your client, a serial issuer of consumer claims. Your failure to comply with these pre-action duties is unacceptable.

3. Request for Disclosure and Clarification

Until your client complies with their obligations under the PAPDC, I cannot consider my position or respond substantively to the alleged claim. I therefore require the following information and documents under paragraphs 6(a) and 6(c) of the Practice Direction:

1. An explanation of the cause of action.
2. Whether your client is pursuing me as driver or registered keeper.
3. Whether your client relies on Schedule 4 of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012.
4. Details of the alleged contravention: date, time, duration, and the calculation of the total sum claimed.
5. If the claim is for breach of contract: the date of the contract, parties, and a copy of the alleged contract.
6. Photographic evidence showing the vehicle allegedly in breach.
7. If alleging trespass: full particulars and supporting authority.
8. A copy of the contract with the landowner granting authority to litigate (as required by the Private Parking Single Code of Practice).
9. A site plan showing sign placement.
10. Photographs of signage (including font size and mounting height) at the time of the alleged contravention.
11. A breakdown of the £170: original PCN sum, interest, admin or other charges.
12. Clarification: is the £70 surcharge inclusive or exclusive of VAT? If inclusive, why am I as an alleged debtor being asked to pay your client’s VAT liability?
13. Clarification: is the principal PCN sum alleged to be damages or consideration for a parking contract?

I remind you again that failure to provide this information may lead to an application to stay proceedings, in line with authorities such as:

Webb Resolutions Ltd v Waller Needham & Green [2012] EWHC 3529 (Ch)
Daejan Investments Ltd v Park West Club Ltd [2003] EWHC 2872
Charles Church Developments Ltd v Stent Foundations Ltd & Peter Dann Ltd [2007] EWHC 855 (TCC)

4. Registered Keeper Position – VCS v Edward (2023)

I confirm that I am the registered keeper of the vehicle. I decline to name the driver. As you are fully aware, there is no legal presumption in English law that the keeper of a vehicle was its driver.

I refer you to the persuasive appellate reasoning in Vehicle Control Services Ltd v Ian Mark Edward (2023) [H0KF6C9C], in which the judge confirmed this principle.

Your client cannot pursue me as the driver without evidence, and any reliance on a presumption of driver identity is misplaced and contrary to settled authority.

5. £70 Surcharge – VAT and Consumer Protection Concerns

Your explanation of the £70 surcharge as an “incentive” to pay early is disingenuous. This sum is clearly:

• Not a core term of any contract;
• Not proportionate as a pre-estimate of loss;
• Likely to be unenforceable under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.

You have not answered my legitimate question about whether the £70 is VAT inclusive. I repeat: if the principal PCN is claimed as VAT-exempt but the £70 includes VAT, then your client’s approach raises serious concerns of potential VAT evasion, which I reserve the right to report to HMRC.

6. Next Steps

As supposed solicitors, you should be well aware that these protocols and practice directions bind all potential litigants, regardless of the size or type of claim. Their stated purpose is to assist parties in understanding the claim, taking stock of their positions, and potentially resolving the dispute without recourse to litigation. It is frankly embarrassing that a regulated firm of solicitors would issue such a vague, unevidenced and non-compliant Letter of Claim.

I confirm that, once I am in receipt of a Letter of Claim which fully complies with paragraph 3.1(a) of the PAPDC, I will consider my position and respond formally within 30 days as required by the Protocol.

Please confirm that your client will not issue a claim until they have fully complied with their obligations under the Pre-Action Protocol. If a claim is issued prematurely, I will seek:

• An immediate stay of proceedings under Practice Direction paragraph 15(b);
• Sanctions and costs pursuant to CPR 27.14(2)(g);
• Further disclosure in line with the above.

Should your client proceed to issue proceedings in defiance of these requests and without proper disclosure, I will assert a robust defence and may also consider a counterclaim for unreasonable behaviour.

Yours faithfully,

[Your Full Name]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #20 on: »
That's amazing thank you. I'd be totally lost and a nervous wreck without the help that you have provided.

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #21 on: »
Hi Guys

I've had two replies, one each for two different emails I have sent.

The first reply was to my 'escalation to RMG stage 2 complaints procedure'. This was the text provided in reply 11 in this thread. The reply to my stage 2 complaint is included below and they are offering to pay the parking charge on my behalf!

I'm happy with this but since you have put so much work in I wondered what you would suggest?

Thanks again

---------

Stage 2 Complaint Investigation 04152778

I want to thank you once again for taking the time to tell us about your complaint. I have
now completed my review into your complaint regarding a parking ticket and parking
control.

Outcome

I have carefully considered your complaint and the outcome of the Stage 1 investigation. I
am sorry to say that on this occasion I have not upheld your complaint. This is because I
was unable to identify a service failure through my review.
I appreciate this may not be the outcome you were expecting, and I hope the detail provided
through my review findings will enable you to further understand my decision and how I
came to this conclusion.

Findings

Your Property Manager, Jessica, has made further contact with UKCPS regarding the
parking ticket you received in 2023. They have ultimately advised that due to the age of
the charge, and the stage it has reached they are unable to take further action. I enclose
an extract of their email below:
I’ve looked into the charge, and I can see that it has been with Trace Debt Recovery since
November 2024, and it may have progressed to Moorside Solicitors.
I’m truly sorry, but due to the age of the charge and the stage it has reached, we’re unable
to take any further action at this point. The motorist will need to contact them directly for
any further inquiries.

The parking ticket has now reached a stage where neither UKCPS or RMG can intervene
to remove the ticket or prevent the action that is in progress. There are UKCPS
enforcement notices across the site advising residents of the parking enforcement on site.
In addition, although residents have parking bays allocated as per their lease, there is
parking enforcement on site aimed to prevent non-residents parking on site. The permits
must be displayed at all times.

If the ticket had been raised with RMG sooner, before the escalation to legal action, then
they would have been able to intervene. However, I am aware that this was only raised
with them recently.

Places for People and RMG do wish to bring this matter to an amicable conclusion and will
therefore be willing to pay the parking charge on this occasion, if you can provide
confirmation of the cost by return. I would note that in the future, we would be unable to
make such a offer and you must ensure that the parking permit is clearly displayed.

Next steps

This is the final stage of our complaint’s procedure. If you are not satisfied with the outcome,
or the way I have dealt with your complaint, we would welcome the opportunity to discuss
this. Alternatively, there are further options available to you;

 Contact the Housing Ombudsman.

Dispute Resolution Team
Housing Ombudsman Service
PO Box 152
Liverpool
L33 7WQ
Telephone: 0300 111 3000
E-Mail info@housing-ombudsman.org.uk
Website http://www.housing-ombudsman.org.uk
Thank you for your feedback
I want to thank you again for bringing this to our attention and telling us about your
experience. We use the feedback given to us by our customers to continually shape and
improve the services we deliver.
Yours sincerely,
Michelle Wood
Director of Home Ownership
Michelle.Wood@placesforpeople.co.uk

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #22 on: »
The second reply I got was to my response to their letter of Claim using the text in reply 15 in this thread.

I copied in info@ukcps,net and  I got a replay saying they could not accept complaints by email.

Like I say, RMG have offered to pay the charge but I wanted to give you guys all the info.

Thanks for your help.

---------

Thank you for your email.

Unfortunately, we cannot accept Appeals, Transfer Liability or Complaints via email.

Please complete your appeal or Transfer Liability on our website ukcps.com/submit-appeal/ or send it in writing to UKCPS Ltd, City West Business Park, Building 3, Gelderd Road, Leeds, LS12 6LN. Our appeals process can be found on the correspondence you have received from us.

Please note, we will not enter into further correspondence via email.

Kind regards,
UKCPS Ltd


Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #23 on: »
RMG's Stage 2 response is not only legally flawed but borders on institutional negligence in terms of its misunderstanding of leaseholder rights and the doctrine of privity of contract. Their position is internally contradictory, ill-informed, and arguably undermines their credibility as a managing agent.

Here is a proposed follow-up letter, suitable for submission to the Housing Ombudsman. This version can also double as your final reply to Michelle Wood and her team, should you wish to restate your position for the record.

Quote
Subject: Final Response to Stage 2 Complaint Outcome – PCN Issued by UKCPS While Exercising Leasehold Right

Dear Ms Wood,

I write in response to your letter dated [insert date], regarding Stage 2 Complaint Reference 04152778.

I note your decision not to uphold my complaint, and I respectfully reject the rationale provided in full. With regret, I find it necessary to escalate this matter to the Housing Ombudsman Service on the basis of your continued refusal to recognise fundamental principles of property and contract law, and your failure to protect leaseholder rights under your management remit.

These are the core legal failures in your response and, for your reference, I will be including a copy of this letter in my escalation to the Housing Ombudsman.

1. Failure to Recognise Primacy of Contract

I am the leaseholder of Flat [flat number] and my lease grants me the right to park in my allocated space (number [space number] subject to the payment of service charges. There is no mention of a permit system, nor any reference to the involvement of third-party enforcement agents such as UKCPS.

The legal principle of primacy of contract means that any subsequent arrangements imposed by RMG or its contractors cannot override my pre-existing lease rights. That is well-established in the following case law:

Jopson v Homeguard Services Ltd [2016] UKUT 496 (LC)
Pace v Mr N (2016), [C6GF14F0]
Link Parking v Ms P (2016) [C7GF50J7]

2. RMG’s Admission of Indiscriminate Enforcement

Jessica, your property manager, previously stated in writing:

"UKCPS issues parking charges to individuals who fail to display a permit, irrespective of their entitlement to park".

This is a clear admission that UKCPS is permitted to ignore the legal entitlements of leaseholders, which is indefensible in law and amounts to unlawful interference with leasehold property rights.

3. Section 37 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987

If you assert that my lease was varied to allow this enforcement regime, please provide:

• A copy of the written agreement between myself and the freeholder;
• Or evidence of an application to, and approval by, the First-tier Tribunal under s.37(5)(a) or (b) of the Act.

You have supplied no such evidence. Therefore, your enforcement regime is entirely without legal foundation in respect of my demised property rights.

4. On the Offer to Pay

While I appreciate the offer to pay the PCN “on this occasion”, I must clarify that the correct resolution is cancellation, not payment, of a PCN issued unlawfully. Accepting payment in this way appears to be an attempt to sweep a procedural abuse under the rug without admission of fault. Any future PCN issued in identical circumstances would again constitute unlawful interference, and I reserve all rights in that regard.

5. Misunderstanding of Authority and Agency Law

RMG’s position that it is “unable to intervene” because UKCPS has passed the matter to a debt recovery agent and bulk litigators is both factually and legally absurd. The notion that the contractual principal loses authority over its own agent simply because the agent has referred the matter on is a fundamental misunderstanding of basic contract law.

UKCPS remains RMG’s appointed contractor and acts under its authority. If RMG cannot control the actions of its own agents, then either it has failed in its duty to manage those agents properly, or it has chosen not to. The idea that a matter becomes irreversible just because it has been “passed on” is nonsense.

RMG should have escalated this matter to its legal advisors. If this matter was reviewed by legal counsel, then I am forced to conclude that their advisors are equally incompetent or unaware of the most basic principles of agency law and leasehold rights.

6. Final Position

I do not accept that RMG or Places for People are legally powerless to instruct UKCPS or its legal agents to cancel a charge issued contrary to a lease. Your failure to do so, despite clear evidence, amounts to mismanagement and breach of your obligation to administer the estate in accordance with leaseholder rights.

As this is your final response, I will now escalate this matter to the Housing Ombudsman, requesting an investigation into:

• RMG’s failure to uphold leaseholder rights;
• Your tacit approval of unlawful enforcement activity;
• The stress and inconvenience caused by your failure to intervene meaningfully once the facts were made known.

Yours faithfully,

[Your Name]
« Last Edit: June 10, 2025, 06:49:00 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: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #24 on: »
Hi guys

I've had two replies since I sent the last message. One from RMG in which they finally acknowledge and address the legal points that you have guided me through. I don't think they actually suggest a way forward though.

The second is from the Housing Ombudsmen stating that since RMG have sent a new response they are putting my complaint on hold for a few weeks.

I've copied the email below. Can you suggest an appropriate reply please; and thanks once again for the amazing support you have given me.

----------

From: customerservice@rmguk.com
Subject: Case Ref: (04335951)

Thank you for your email date the 3rd July 2025. Michelle Wood has read over your email and my response and is in approval of the below content.

To begin, I appreciate the opportunity to respond and clarify the rationale behind the parking enforcement measures in place at Merment House.

Firstly, I would like to assure you that we fully recognise and respect your leasehold right to park in your allocated space (Space 20). The parking enforcement scheme currently in operation does not, and is not intended to, override or diminish any such rights granted under your lease.

The enforcement system was introduced in response to ongoing issues with unauthorised parking across the estate. These included instances of both residents and non-residents parking in spaces not allocated to them, which caused significant disruption and inconvenience to those entitled to use those spaces.

To address this, a permit system was implemented to help our enforcement partner, UKCPS, distinguish between authorised and unauthorised vehicles. The requirement to display a permit is not a variation of your lease, nor does it seek to impose new conditions on your right to park. Rather, it is a practical measure to ensure that your rights, and those of other leaseholders, are protected from misuse by others.

We understand your concerns regarding the legal framework surrounding leasehold rights and enforcement. However, the permit system is not intended to interfere with your contractual rights, but to support them by deterring unauthorised use of private spaces. We do not dispute that you are entitled to park in your allocated space; we simply ask that you display your permit so that enforcement officers can verify your entitlement and avoid issuing a charge in error.

Regarding the Parking Charge Notice (PCN) issued to you, we acknowledge that this may have caused frustration. While we offered to cover the cost of the PCN as a gesture of goodwill, we understand your preference for cancellation and will take this into account in future reviews of enforcement procedures.

Finally, we note your intention to escalate this matter to the Housing Ombudsman. We will, of course, cooperate fully with any investigation and provide all relevant documentation and context to support our position.

We remain committed to managing the estate fairly and in accordance with leaseholder rights, and we thank you for your continued engagement on this matter.

Yours sincerely,

Jessica McGann
Property Manager

---------

From: casework@housing-ombudsman.org.uk
Subject: Case ID - 202513367 [REF/Qp/Kv/Kd/kw/]



To help us deal with your complaint as quickly as possible:
 
please do not copy us into your emails with others
please do not send us information that we have not asked you for
 
Thank you.
 
Complaint: 202513367 - Places for People Group Limited
Dear [name]

Thank you for contacting the Housing Ombudsman Service.
 
After reviewing your case, I can see you have had a final response from your landlord which requires further assessment. We aim to contact you again within 12 weeks. Please be aware we are currently experiencing high levels of demand which may lead to delays in responding as quickly as we would like to. You will be contacted as soon as possible.
 
Please tell us what telephone number you would like the advisor to contact you on. When we call you the caller ID will display as 0300 111 3000.
 
Yours sincerely
Andrea
Dispute Resolution Support Officer (DS)
 
Please note - the signature named in this correspondence is not your named contact. Your complaint can be dealt with by anyone within the department. You may see different names in our correspondence as your complaint progresses.
 
 
www.housing-ombudsman.org.uk
View our Privacy Notice
Follow us on 
For all the latest news, reports, and guidance from the Housing Ombudsman Service visit our website.

-----------

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #25 on: »
That reply from RMG is an attempted face-saving exercise, but it’s legally hollow and still doesn’t deal with the core problem — the fact that the “permit scheme” is not optional in practice and is being used to penalise leaseholders despite their lease rights.

The contradictions in their response are quite stark:

• They say the scheme is “not intended” to override your lease rights, but in your case it has already done exactly that — a PCN was issued to you while you were exercising your right to park in your own space.
• They claim it’s “not a variation” of the lease, but then assert you must comply with the scheme to avoid PCNs. That is imposing a condition on your leasehold right, regardless of whether they label it a “practical measure.”
• They’re still avoiding the core legal reality that UKCPS acts as their agent, meaning RMG always retains the power to instruct them to cancel a PCN — whether it’s at “debt recovery” stage or not.
• They are conflating “site management” with enforcement against a leaseholder — it’s one thing to deter unauthorised parking, another entirely to fine the very people whose rights they claim to be protecting.

You should respond to RMG’s latest email, but keep it short, factual, and on the record, because:

• The Ombudsman will review all correspondence — so it’s useful to clearly point out, in writing, that their latest position is still contradictory and fails to resolve the core issue.
• You don’t want to get into a drawn-out back-and-forth — just one concise reply noting their continued failure and that the matter is now with the Ombudsman.
• It prevents RMG later claiming you accepted their position or failed to dispute any part of it.

I suggest you respond to RMG with the following:

Quote
Dear Jessica,

Thank you for your response.

While I note your assurance that the permit scheme is “not intended” to override my leasehold rights, the fact remains that it has done exactly that in practice — a PCN was issued to me while I was exercising my right to park in my own space, which is unconditional under my lease.

Your position is contradictory: you state that the scheme is not a variation of my lease, yet you also require compliance with it to avoid PCNs. This is, in effect, the imposition of a new condition on my leasehold right, and is exactly the interference I have raised from the outset.

I also note that you continue to assert that the PCN cannot be cancelled because it has been passed to your contractor’s own agents. This demonstrates either a misunderstanding of the basic principal–agent relationship in contract law or a refusal to exercise your authority as principal.

As this matter is now with the Housing Ombudsman, I will not enter into further debate with you directly. This response is simply to confirm that I do not accept your position and to preserve a clear record for the Ombudsman’s review.

Yours sincerely

[Your Name]

The Housing Ombudsman has accepted your case for further assessment, but it’s in their backlog. This means:

• You’ve already cleared the procedural hurdle (final landlord response received).
• They will now review the papers and decide whether to investigate.
• If they do investigate, they’ll be looking at whether RMG’s actions amount to maladministration or service failure, particularly in how they handled the PCN in light of your lease rights.

At this point, your best move is to prepare a concise evidence pack for when the Ombudsman contacts you, so you can hit them with a clear narrative:

1. Lease clause showing your unconditional right to park in your space.
2. PCN evidence showing it was issued while you were exercising that right.
3. RMG’s statements:
• Jessica’s “irrespective of entitlement to park” email.
• Stage 1 & Stage 2 responses admitting they won’t intervene if it’s at debt recovery stage.
• Their latest “we recognise your right but still expect you to comply” contradiction.
4. Your core argument: The scheme is interfering with your rights in practice, regardless of their stated “intention.”
5. Legal references: Primacy of contract, agency law, and s.37 LTA 1987.

You can also include a timeline along these lines to include with your evidence that you will submit to the Ombudsman when they review your case. Something along these lines:

Quote
Housing Ombudsman Evidence Pack – Complaint Ref: 202513367

Complainant: [Your Name]
Landlord/Agent: Places for People Group Limited (via RMG)
Managing Agent’s Contractor: UKCPS Ltd
Complaint Subject: Improper enforcement of a private parking scheme against a leaseholder with an unconditional leasehold right to park



1. Background Summary
I am the leaseholder of Flat [***]. My lease grants me the right to park one permitted vehicle in my allocated space (Space 20) subject only to payment of service charges. There is no requirement to display a permit, no reference to signage, and no contractual relationship with any third-party parking enforcement company.

RMG manages the estate’s car park and has contracted UKCPS to operate a permit-based enforcement scheme. This scheme has resulted in the issuing of a Parking Charge Notice (PCN) to my vehicle whilst it was parked in my own space, despite displaying a valid permit.



2. Timeline of Events

14 March 2023 – Alleged contravention date. My vehicle was parked in my own allocated space and displayed a permit on the dashboard. UKCPS issued a PCN claiming “no permit displayed”.

Mid-2023 – 2024 – No contact from RMG. PCN passed by UKCPS to Trace Debt Recovery and later to Moorside Legal.

Early 2025 – I contacted RMG (Property Manager: Jessica) requesting intervention and cancellation of the PCN.

• Jessica confirmed UKCPS issues PCNs “irrespective of entitlement to park” if they deem a permit not displayed.
• Jessica stated that because the PCN was at “debt recovery” stage, RMG could not assist.

Stage 1 Complaint – RMG Response – RMG refused to uphold my complaint, repeated UKCPS’s position, and advised me to deal directly with Moorside Legal.

Stage 2 Complaint – RMG Response (Michelle Wood) – Again refused to uphold the complaint, claiming neither RMG nor UKCPS could cancel the PCN at its current stage. Offered to pay the PCN as a “goodwill gesture” but insisted permits must be displayed.

July 2025 – RMG Further Response (Jessica McGann) – Acknowledged my right to park but insisted the permit scheme does not override lease rights, describing it as a “practical measure” to prevent misuse of spaces. Continued to require compliance to avoid PCNs.

July 2025 – Complaint escalated to Housing Ombudsman.



3. Legal Position

a. Primacy of Contract
My lease is the primary and overriding contractual document governing my rights to park. The imposition of a permit scheme that penalises leaseholders for not displaying a permit is a new condition, not present in my lease. This cannot be lawfully imposed without a formal lease variation in accordance with s.37(5) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987.

b. Interference with Leasehold Rights
By issuing a PCN to my vehicle in my own space, the scheme has interfered with my legal right to park, despite RMG’s stated “intention” not to do so. Intention is irrelevant when the effect is to impose a penalty for exercising an existing right.

c. Principal–Agent Relationship
UKCPS acts as RMG’s appointed contractor. RMG, as principal, retains the authority to instruct its agent to cancel enforcement action, regardless of whether the agent has referred the matter to a debt recovery company or solicitor. RMG’s claim that it is “unable to intervene” is factually and legally incorrect.

d. Case Law
Relevant persuasive county court authorities include:

Jopson v Homeguard Services Ltd [2016] UKUT 496 (LC)
Pace v Mr N (2016, C6GF14F0)
Link Parking v Ms P (2016, C7GF50J7)
All confirm that a leaseholder’s pre-existing rights cannot be overridden by later-imposed parking schemes.



4. Key Contradictions in RMG’s Position

1. Acknowledgement vs. Action – RMG claims to “fully recognise” my right to park yet refuses to take steps to cancel a PCN issued in direct breach of that right.

2. No Lease Variation – RMG insists the scheme is not a lease variation, yet in practice imposes compliance as a condition to avoid penalties.

3. Inaccurate Legal Reasoning – RMG’s claim that they “cannot intervene” because the matter is with a debt recovery agent or solicitor ignores basic principles of contract law and agency.

4. Offer to Pay vs. Cancellation – Offering to pay the PCN as a “gesture of goodwill” is an implicit admission that the PCN is unjustified, yet they have refused the correct remedy: cancellation.



5. Remedy Sought
I request the Housing Ombudsman find that RMG’s actions and inaction amount to maladministration and/or service failure by:

• Allowing a parking enforcement scheme to operate in a way that penalises leaseholders for exercising their legal rights.
• Failing to instruct their contractor to cancel an unjustified PCN despite having the authority to do so.
• Providing contradictory and legally incorrect responses during the complaints process.

I request the Ombudsman recommend:

1. Immediate written confirmation that my space is excluded from UKCPS enforcement.
2. Formal instruction to UKCPS/Moorside Legal to cancel the PCN.
3. A written apology for the stress and inconvenience caused.
4. Review of estate parking enforcement to prevent recurrence.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #26 on: »
Amazing, thank you.

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #27 on: »
So the ombudsman has gotten back to me. They are reviewing whether my complaint is within their remit to investigate.

They are asking me for a copy of the original formal complaint, which I have. However, they are also asking me for a copy of my leasehold to confirm there is a leaseholder/freeholder relationship between me and RMG places for people.

RMG are not mentioned in my lease. They were not even contracted when I received my lease. How should I play this do you think?

Thanks as always for any help you can offer. Email is included below.

----------


Complaint: 202513367 - Places for People Group Limited
Landlord complaint reference: 04108974
 
I am writing to you in relation to the above case and complaint you have raised with your landlord.
 
I am the Dispute resolution Advisor recently assigned to your case at Dispute Support.
 
I am currently reviewing your case file and the information provided. I really do appreciate your patience while I look into your case.
 
The complaint
 
In summary, I understand the complaint is about the landlord’s handling of reports of a parking ticket being issued in 2023 and the subsequent escalation and involvement of a debt recovery company.
 
More Information required
 
I am currently reviewing whether your complaint is within our remit to consider under our Scheme rules. Please can you provide the following information:
 
.  A copy of the initial formal complaint submitted to Places for People
 
. A copy of the leasehold agreement which confirms there is a leasehold/freehold relationship between you and Places for People
 
Once received, I will review and advise further.
 
Please note that the Housing Ombudsman will only be in position to investigate complaints in relation to the actions of the landlord who is a member of our Scheme. We are not able to investigate the actions or complaints you have against UKCPS itself. We are aware you would have a procedure available to you to dispute the parking charge notice with the parking management company, or with the debt recovery company it has been referred to. I would recommend you seek independent legal advice on the matter so you are fully informed on your options.


Yours sincerely
 
Saber Uddin
Dispute Resolution Adviser

Re: UKCPS sent penalty charge for parking in my own space
« Reply #28 on: »
Send the lease, but add a clear cover note explaining that Places for People (PfP) is acting as the landlord’s agent and has already adopted the complaint under its Housing Ombudsman-linked procedure. The Ombudsman’s remit can cover a landlord via its appointed managing agent; your complaint is about PfP/RMG’s handling, not about UKCPS directly.

What to attach
1. Your original formal complaint to RMG/PfP.
2. Your lease (showing the parties and your parking right).
3. Evidence tying PfP/RMG to the estate management and to this complaint:
• RMG’s published complaints procedure stating “RMG customers on developments RMG manages for Places for People will have their complaints dealt with under Places for People’s complaints process which the Housing Ombudsman oversees.”
• Stage 1 and Stage 2 responses (including Michelle Wood’s letter on behalf of Places for People).
• The latest “clarification” email from Jessica.
• Any service-charge/estate-charge demands or communications showing PfP/RMG acting for the landlord/freeholder in relation to the car park/common parts.

How to “play it” since RMG isn’t named in the lease
Make it explicit that:
• The lease is between you and [freeholder/landlord named in lease].
• Places for People Group Limited (through its agent RMG) has been appointed after grant of lease to manage the estate/common parts including the car park and has handled your complaint as “the landlord” under the PfP complaints process.
• Your complaint is therefore about the landlord’s handling (via its agent), not about UKCPS per se.

Send the following response to Saber Uddin:

Quote
Subject: Case 202513367 – Further documents and clarification of landlord/agent role

Dear Mr Uddin,

Thank you for your email. Please find attached:
1. My initial formal complaint submitted to Places for People/RMG.
2. A copy of my lease.
3. Evidence demonstrating Places for People’s role and adoption of this complaint under its Housing Ombudsman-linked procedure:
– RMG’s complaints procedure confirming that complaints on developments managed for Places for People are handled under Places for People’s complaints process overseen by the Housing Ombudsman.
– Stage 1 and Stage 2 responses, including the final response signed by Michelle Wood (Director of Home Ownership, Places for People).
– The subsequent email from the Property Manager (RMG) confirming management of the estate car park and the position taken on the PCN.

For clarity, my lease is between me and [name of freeholder/landlord shown in the lease]. Places for People (through its agent RMG) was appointed subsequently to manage the estate/common parts including the car park. Places for People has adopted and determined my complaint under its own complaints process that is overseen by the Housing Ombudsman, and issued the landlord’s final response.

My complaint is therefore about the landlord’s (Places for People’s) handling of my reports and its management of its appointed contractor and agents in relation to my leasehold right to park, rather than a complaint about UKCPS directly.

Please let me know if you require any further documents.

Yours sincerely,

[Your name]
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience” - Mark Twain