Is this Horizon parking charge PoFA compliant or not?

Is this Horizon parking charge PoFA compliant or not?

Author
Discussion

pauljoecoe

Original Poster:

179 posts

261 months

Monday 15th April
quotequote all
Been doing some reading on MSE parking forum but am finding it all a bit confusing. Lots of technical law stuff!

From what I can tell - I can refuse to tell them who the driver was if they do not follow the correct wording in PoFA paragraph 9.

The crux if the matter seems to be that in the PCN they state that they do not know who the driver is?

My Parking Charge Notice seems to ask me as the keeper to tell them who the driver is (if it's not me)

So - does anyone know -is this PoFA compliant or not? Is it worth just stating that I will not tell them (worded template available of MSE) or am on onto a loser with that approach?

Thanks in advance for any insights.



aproctor1

81 posts

169 months

Monday 15th April
quotequote all
My advice, go on Pepipoo, get a template and draft a response.

Then upload redacted pics of the ticket and your proposed letter/approach.

You will get really good feedback.

Zeeky

2,795 posts

213 months

Monday 15th April
quotequote all
Para 9 requires Horizon to ask the keeper for the name and address of the driver.

The point you have read is that if the notice doesn't comply with the requirements of Schedule 4 then Horizon has no claim against the RK, only the driver, and in that case there would be no obligation on the RK to identify the driver.

Para 9 of Schedule 4, POFA 2012

(e)state that the creditor does not know both the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver and invite the keeper—

(i)to pay the unpaid parking charges; or

(ii)if the keeper was not the driver of the vehicle, to notify the creditor of the name of the driver and a current address for service for the driver and to pass the notice on to the driver;

https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/9/schedu...

Edited by Zeeky on Tuesday 16th April 10:44

kestral

1,740 posts

208 months

Monday 15th April
quotequote all
pauljoecoe said:
Been doing some reading on MSE parking forum but am finding it all a bit confusing. Lots of technical law stuff!

From what I can tell - I can refuse to tell them who the driver was if they do not follow the correct wording in PoFA paragraph 9.

The crux if the matter seems to be that in the PCN they state that they do not know who the driver is?

My Parking Charge Notice seems to ask me as the keeper to tell them who the driver is (if it's not me)

So - does anyone know -is this PoFA compliant or not? Is it worth just stating that I will not tell them (worded template available of MSE) or am on onto a loser with that approach?

Thanks in advance for any insights.


If the vehicle was parked outside the condition set out then pay the fee. That's the best advice you will receive, come back and see this post in six months time when you are asking about County Court claims.

vikingaero

10,359 posts

170 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
In a nutshell, for the PPC to pursue the RK, they have to follow some conditions.

The first and main one is that the letter to the RK was sent within 14 days of the infraction (which I think includes weekends and BH's). So if you parked on 01/03 and the notice to keeper arrive on 21/03 then clearly the notice is not compliant under PoFA. If you raise this they will claim they are not pursuing you under PoFA (which is absurd) and effectively they are hoping you will fall for their legalese and monetary request.

The main defence used against PPCs is "I am the owner of vehicle AB12ABC, but I was not the driver at the time and I will not be naming the driver. Please issue a POPLA code if you disagree." This stops them dead as you have no legal obligation to name the driver. They will likely issue a POPLA code and you complete the same appeal with them. Then in most cases, the PPC will magically withdraw the appeal (which again I find absurd, because I feel it is your appeal and not theirs to withdraw).Caveat: Some POPLA assessor have got out of the wrong side of the bed and made incorrect decisions which you cannot appeal.

When the guy who drafted the PoFA Bill was interviewed and asked about the naming the driver loophole, he responded by just giving a knowing wink. biggrin

pauljoecoe

Original Poster:

179 posts

261 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
kestral said:
If the vehicle was parked outside the condition set out then pay the fee. That's the best advice you will receive, come back and see this post in six months time when you are asking about County Court claims.
Ah well - fortunately I didn't follow your advice. By the way there were extenuating circumstances that I did not post on here. Personally I think it was worth fighting as there are too many of these companies too keen to make money out of unsuspecting motorists. Even the government are looking into it. Too many motorists will just roll over and pay up.
https://www.gov.uk/government/calls-for-evidence/p...

I emailed CEO of Tesco (ken.murphy@uk.tesco.com) and one of his minions has agreed to tell Horizon to cancel the charge.


Tesco CEO said:
Dear Mr *******
Thanks for getting in touch.
I was sorry to learn that you had received a parking charge notice for parking outwith the alloted parking spaces in our carpark. I can only imagine how frustrating and disappointing this must have been for you to receive this.
There are 12 signs in total at the entrance and throughout the carpark advising the terms and conditions of use of the carpark. I am sorry that these were not clear to you when you have been visiting the store.
As a gesture of goodwill, and as a one off to say sorry for your poor experience. I will now contact Horizon Parking and ask them to cancel the parking charge notice you were issued with. As the maintenance work will be ongoing for several more weeks, I would advise you to ensure that your vehicle is parked within the boundaries of the parking space to prevent this from happening again.
Kind regards

Fiona Kitching
I don't agree with the 12 signs. I saw 2. There may be more signs telling you to look for other signs.
I am disappointed they haven't said that the store will stop people parking here with barriers or a temporary sign as I fear many others will pay up.(There was a partial block on a whole row of spaces due to some work going on. No signs to say don't use the spaces but it was impossible to park in the within the lines)


Thanks for comments and info. I have learned though this process. I did pay up £40 a few years ago as I thought it was a fair cop when I parked for 5 hours while attending a theatre nearby a Tesco. That was when I thought Supermarkets had unlimited free parking. I have learned a few things now.

Another learning point. I have a motorhome and when on trips we often park in supermarkets outside of lines as we don't fit. Something to think about in the future.




Edited by pauljoecoe on Tuesday 16th April 09:46

andburg

7,295 posts

170 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
OP glad you got this resolved. I get it if you're in a vehicle that doesn't fit into a bay it's frustrating but Tesco dont force you to park there or choose the vehicle you drive.
Looking at satellite images of the car park in question you can even see there is a motorhome parked overhanging well into a hatched area. Unless that is you, you're not alone in this issue. It's one reason that I went with a VW Transporter rather than a larger van myself, the UK just isn't setup to cope with larger vehicles being used for leisure. The funny thins is that their own delivery vans are parked up in the customer car park exceeding the marked bays! Only this weekend i stopped by a local Tesco and there was a car and caravan parked across about 6 bays causing no issue but i expect it's keeper will receive an invoice.

Tye Green

654 posts

110 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
kestral said:
If the vehicle was parked outside the condition set out then pay the fee. That's the best advice you will receive, come back and see this post in six months time when you are asking about County Court claims.
utter nonsense.

the OP sought advice about POFA and then acted in the correct way.

please explain how there could be a county court summons

James6112

4,379 posts

29 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
pauljoecoe said:
kestral said:
If the vehicle was parked outside the condition set out then pay the fee. That's the best advice you will receive, come back and see this post in six months time when you are asking about County Court claims.
Ah well - fortunately I didn't follow your advice. By the way there were extenuating circumstances that I did not post on here. Personally I think it was worth fighting as there are too many of these companies too keen to make money out of unsuspecting motorists. Even the government are looking into it. Too many motorists will just roll over and pay up.
https://www.gov.uk/government/calls-for-evidence/p...

I emailed CEO of Tesco (ken.murphy@uk.tesco.com) and one of his minions has agreed to tell Horizon to cancel the charge.


Tesco CEO said:
Dear Mr *******
Thanks for getting in touch.
I was sorry to learn that you had received a parking charge notice for parking outwith the alloted parking spaces in our carpark. I can only imagine how frustrating and disappointing this must have been for you to receive this.
There are 12 signs in total at the entrance and throughout the carpark advising the terms and conditions of use of the carpark. I am sorry that these were not clear to you when you have been visiting the store.
As a gesture of goodwill, and as a one off to say sorry for your poor experience. I will now contact Horizon Parking and ask them to cancel the parking charge notice you were issued with. As the maintenance work will be ongoing for several more weeks, I would advise you to ensure that your vehicle is parked within the boundaries of the parking space to prevent this from happening again.
Kind regards

Fiona Kitching
I don't agree with the 12 signs. I saw 2. There may be more signs telling you to look for other signs.
I am disappointed they haven't said that the store will stop people parking here with barriers or a temporary sign as I fear many others will pay up.(There was a partial block on a whole row of spaces due to some work going on. No signs to say don't use the spaces but it was impossible to park in the within the lines)


Thanks for comments and info. I have learned though this process. I did pay up £40 a few years ago as I thought it was a fair cop when I parked for 5 hours while attending a theatre nearby a Tesco. That was when I thought Supermarkets had unlimited free parking. I have learned a few things now.

Another learning point. I have a motorhome and when on trips we often park in supermarkets outside of lines as we don't fit. Something to think about in the future.




Edited by pauljoecoe on Tuesday 16th April 09:46
If you had bothered to outline the extenuating circumstances you would have got a better answer.
Give half the story, you can’t come back and whinge.
kestral was in the right, not you.

pauljoecoe

Original Poster:

179 posts

261 months

Tuesday 16th April
quotequote all
James6112 said:
If you had bothered to outline the extenuating circumstances you would have got a better answer.
Give half the story, you can’t come back and whinge.
kestral was in the right, not you.
No whinging that I can see.

I missed out half the story as I was trying to keep it simple. I put the full story on MSE but just posed one question on here ...

'Is this Horizon parking charge PoFA compliant or not?' I wasn't interested in someone's view of whether I was in the right or not.

Kestral didn't answer my question he just did some self righteous preaching.


Edited by pauljoecoe on Tuesday 16th April 22:14

dundarach

5,053 posts

229 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Sounds like you invited agitation OP, then when you got some, got all shirty and uperty about it.

You must live in an exciting world :-)

Cheerio

Simpo Two

85,480 posts

266 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Kestral was quoting the system which is technically correct, but the OP played the human nature card and won, saving himself £40. Good move as he had nothing to lose by trying.

pauljoecoe

Original Poster:

179 posts

261 months

Friday 19th April
quotequote all
dundarach said:
Sounds like you invited agitation OP, then when you got some, got all shirty and uperty about it.

You must live in an exciting world :-)

Cheerio
Clearly more exciting than yours - bothering to post that at 7.50am in the morning.

Me - I'm excited that a top level Tesco person understood my situation and cancelled my 'charge'. Now trying to find out if I can still park my motorhome in Tesco car parks as that definitely doesn't fit in the lines!!!

pavarotti1980

4,902 posts

85 months

Friday 19th April
quotequote all
dundarach said:
Sounds like you invited agitation OP, then when you got some, got all shirty and uperty about it.

You must live in an exciting world :-)

Cheerio
To be fair to the OP they asked a very specific question

Some nuggets posted some bullst of no relevance to the question as though it is fact (of which it definitely is not). Nuggets should be called out

Ian Geary

4,490 posts

193 months

Friday 19th April
quotequote all
Tye Green said:
....

please explain how there could be a county court summons
I've been on here long enough to know kestral's legal advice is best taken with a large pinch of sodium chloride.

However, parking companies can and do pursue breach of contract via the county court.

The summons is simply a reference to the paperwork a registered keeper will be issued should a case be brought.

Hth