Hi there
Newbie here and I have attempted to go back through older posts to see if I could find the identical issue I have.
I received 3 parking fines dating back to 2018 and ignored threats in previous letters. However, this morning I received 3 Notices of Intended Legal Action that I am somewhat more worried about ignoring.
I have attached one of these letters here. Should I contain to ignore or would I need to pay each of these fines now?
Your advice is very much appreciated!
Best
Kristian
DCBL - Notice of Intended Legal Action
DCBL - Notice of Intended Legal Action
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- Syd Snitkin
- The Watcher
- Posts: 171
- Joined: 28 Apr 2014 09:43
- Location: In your loft, waiting
Re: DCBL - Notice of Intended Legal Action
It's just an invoice that can ignored - nothing is at an enforcement stage.
Send a letter to Topher Ltd asking them to outline their losses and provide a copy of the contract between themselves and the landowner.
Type "Provide a copy of the contract between yourselves and the landholder" into Google to get a template
Another thing to try is to ask for photographic evidence of the signs that were in place at the time of the alleged contravention and their locations in the car park.
Send a letter to Topher Ltd asking them to outline their losses and provide a copy of the contract between themselves and the landowner.
Type "Provide a copy of the contract between yourselves and the landholder" into Google to get a template
Another thing to try is to ask for photographic evidence of the signs that were in place at the time of the alleged contravention and their locations in the car park.
Former General Manager of a nursing home, trained in music and classical guitar, MBA in contract law, expert legal commentator on bailiff law. enjoys PG tips. No not me, some screwball elsewhere
Re: DCBL - Notice of Intended Legal Action
It is likely that DCBL doesn't have the right to sue you on behalf of the parking company.
You can defend such a claim on the grounds the claimant does not have locus standi to bring this claim
You can defend such a claim on the grounds the claimant does not have locus standi to bring this claim