beorhthelm
A. Virgo, Football Genius
- Jul 21, 2003
- 36,031
have you sued for the £1.20 over charged yet?
Whatever you get paid, work it out as an hourly rate and apply it to the time you spend, and have spent, dealing with this. If that "cost" outweighs the fine, pay the fine. Life's too short IMHO.
I received a PCN in December 2017 from Britannia Parking. Basically my wife had parked in a multi-storey car park to do some Christmas shopping, she paid for all day parking (or thought she had), but received a letter from Britannia saying she hadn’t paid for the duration of her parking. The tariff was £1.80 for 3 hours and £3.50 for all day, but we were given evidence that she had only paid £3.00 and had stayed for 4 hours. I appealed, stating that it was clearly not her intention to pay for 3 hours parking, if that was the case, why would she have overpaid by £1.20 and I suggested that the additional 50p must have got stuck in the payment machine without her realising. My appeal was rejected on the grounds that it was her responsibility to check that she had paid for the relevant parking. Based on previous advice (both from NSC and moneysavingexpert) I politely explained that I didn’t believe the fine was reasonable. There have been a series of law firms that have written to us over the course of the last 3 years, each time I have responded similarly. I was at one point also provided with the data from the parking machine, which interestingly showed that the person who paid after my wife paid £4 (rather than the £3.50 tariff for all day parking). Unfortunately we haven’t had any success and today have received a claim form issued by the County Court.
My wife has told me that she’s had enough of my petty games now and wants to pay up, but I am reluctant to fold now. However I don’t want to put her in a position where she ends up with a county court judgment against her. Any ideas what I should do next? I have to act fairly quickly as the county court claim form requires a response within 14 days.
A grand would be worth the time and hassle fighting, not really worth the time and effort over a £40 fine or whatever it is, well to me anyway.I need £1000, Please pay me.
Thought not.
Don't give in to bullies.
A grand would be worth the time and hassle fighting, not really worth the time and effort over a £40 fine or whatever it is, well to me anyway.
Living in London I’ve learnt the hard way check all the signs before parking and pay the correct amount, follow my simple advice and guess what no tickets. 99% of people who get tickets haven’t parked or paid correctly just like the OP’s wife.If it’s got as far as a County Court claim, the “fine” will have been enhanced to a few hundred. If it’s anything like my experiences, it’ll be difficult to follow how it got to be the figure on the claim form.
If people stopped just paying these fraudsters for a simple life, they might have to change. It’s because people pay them sums they are not entitled to that their business model works.
Living in London I’ve learnt the hard way check all the signs before parking and pay the correct amount, follow my simple advice and guess what no tickets. 99% of people who get tickets haven’t parked or paid correctly just like the OP’s wife.
We all know what these companies are like don’t give them a chance to issue a ticket is all I’m saying.
I can understand the unfairness of a single ticket where a genuine mistake has been made, but what is it about you in particular that means you deserve to park for free - loading the costs onto other people?I learned a trick to avoid paying for on street parking in London that worked for several years, by challenging Parking Tickets and learning the law regarding them, and the appeals process. After one or two misses with clumsy wording, I had the formula and successfully appealed more than a hundred tickets where I had not paid at all for parking. In fact, because of how the appeals system made decisions, it made it easier if I had not paid for parking than if I had.
It doesn’t work now?I learned a trick to avoid paying for on street parking in London that worked for several years, by challenging Parking Tickets and learning the law regarding them, and the appeals process. After one or two misses with clumsy wording, I had the formula and successfully appealed more than a hundred tickets where I had not paid at all for parking. In fact, because of how the appeals system made decisions, it made it easier if I had not paid for parking than if I had.
Again you don’t get a CCJ if the judge decides in their favour you pay the fine, that’s it. If you fail to pay in one months then a CCJ will go on record.
It’s the miss information that causes the fear factor.
Are you 100% sure? I think this is misinformation.
CCJ = County Court Judgement - a Judge [in the County Court] has heard the case and made his decision [award] in favour of the Plaintiff.
If the Plaintiff does not win the case they are not given a CCJ against their name.
But if the Defendant loses the case in court [or fails to appear at the court hearing] AND the Judge decides in favour of the Plaintiff, a judgement against the Defendant is recorded - aka a CCJ
However, if the Plaintiff pays in full BEFORE the case is presented in Court [i.e. on receipt of a summons to attend the Court hearing] then no judgement will have been made [by a Judge in court] and so no CCJ will be recorded - is this what you are referring to? [as it's not what you wrote]
More info here
Perhaps you are more likely referring to CCJ impact on a Credit Record?
Unless you pay off a CCJ in full within 30 days of receiving the judgment, it will be entered on your credit record at the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines. It’ll remain there for six years.
This record can seriously affect your ability to get a mortgage, a credit card or even a bank account in the future. This is another reason it’s important you don’t ignore a County Court Judgment.
But you will still have a CCJ against your name.
Are you 100% sure? I think this is misinformation.
CCJ = County Court Judgement - a Judge [in the County Court] has heard the case and made his decision [award] in favour of the Plaintiff.
If the Plaintiff does not win the case they are not given a CCJ against their name.
But if the Defendant loses the case in court [or fails to appear at the court hearing] AND the Judge decides in favour of the Plaintiff, a judgement against the Defendant is recorded - aka a CCJ
However, if the Plaintiff pays in full BEFORE the case is presented in Court [i.e. on receipt of a summons to attend the Court hearing] then no judgement will have been made [by a Judge in court] and so no CCJ will be recorded - is this what you are referring to? [as it's not what you wrote]
More info here
Perhaps you are more likely referring to CCJ impact on a Credit Record?
Unless you pay off a CCJ in full within 30 days of receiving the judgment, it will be entered on your credit record at the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines. It’ll remain there for six years.
This record can seriously affect your ability to get a mortgage, a credit card or even a bank account in the future. This is another reason it’s important you don’t ignore a County Court Judgment.
But you will still have a CCJ against your name.
I received a PCN in December 2017 from Britannia Parking. Basically my wife had parked in a multi-storey car park to do some Christmas shopping, she paid for all day parking (or thought she had), but received a letter from Britannia saying she hadn’t paid for the duration of her parking. The tariff was £1.80 for 3 hours and £3.50 for all day, but we were given evidence that she had only paid £3.00 and had stayed for 4 hours. I appealed, stating that it was clearly not her intention to pay for 3 hours parking, if that was the case, why would she have overpaid by £1.20 and I suggested that the additional 50p must have got stuck in the payment machine without her realising. My appeal was rejected on the grounds that it was her responsibility to check that she had paid for the relevant parking. Based on previous advice (both from NSC and moneysavingexpert) I politely explained that I didn’t believe the fine was reasonable. There have been a series of law firms that have written to us over the course of the last 3 years, each time I have responded similarly. I was at one point also provided with the data from the parking machine, which interestingly showed that the person who paid after my wife paid £4 (rather than the £3.50 tariff for all day parking). Unfortunately we haven’t had any success and today have received a claim form issued by the County Court.
My wife has told me that she’s had enough of my petty games now and wants to pay up, but I am reluctant to fold now. However I don’t want to put her in a position where she ends up with a county court judgment against her. Any ideas what I should do next? I have to act fairly quickly as the county court claim form requires a response within 14 days.
I can understand the unfairness of a single ticket where a genuine mistake has been made, but what is it about you in particular that means you deserve to park for free - loading the costs onto other people?
It doesn’t work now?
Are you 100% sure? I think this is misinformation.
CCJ = County Court Judgement - a Judge [in the County Court] has heard the case and made his decision [award] in favour of the Plaintiff.
If the Plaintiff does not win the case they are not given a CCJ against their name.
But if the Defendant loses the case in court [or fails to appear at the court hearing] AND the Judge decides in favour of the Plaintiff, a judgement against the Defendant is recorded - aka a CCJ
However, if the Plaintiff pays in full BEFORE the case is presented in Court [i.e. on receipt of a summons to attend the Court hearing] then no judgement will have been made [by a Judge in court] and so no CCJ will be recorded - is this what you are referring to? [as it's not what you wrote]
More info here
Perhaps you are more likely referring to CCJ impact on a Credit Record?
Unless you pay off a CCJ in full within 30 days of receiving the judgment, it will be entered on your credit record at the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines. It’ll remain there for six years.
This record can seriously affect your ability to get a mortgage, a credit card or even a bank account in the future. This is another reason it’s important you don’t ignore a County Court Judgment.
But you will still have a CCJ against your name.