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John Rowland February 4th 08 11:13 AM

Parking ticket appeal
 

I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney and they
say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made a decision. If
they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day limit is up, do I
then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision letter give me another 14
days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.




Tony Dragon February 4th 08 11:20 AM

Parking ticket appeal
 


John Rowland wrote:
I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney
and they say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made
a decision. If they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day
limit is up, do I then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision
letter give me another 14 days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.


Round my way the clock stops if you appeal.


--
Tony the Dragon



Richard J.[_2_] February 4th 08 12:20 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
Tony Dragon wrote:
John Rowland wrote:
I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney
and they say they have received my letter, but they have not yet
made a decision. If they delay giving me the result until after
the 14 day limit is up, do I then have to pay 120 quid, or will
the decision letter give me another 14 days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.


Round my way the clock stops if you appeal.


Same here. Hounslow stops the clock and restarts it from zero (i.e. you
get a full 14 days to pay the reduced rate) if they reject your
challenge. Hackney accept early challenges (there's a form on their
website), but their site doesn't say how they handle the 14-day clock.
As the early challenge process is not part of the formal appeal process
defined by law, in theory it's up to each council to decide how to
administer it, but I would expect London Councils (formerly ALG) to
standardise the process for all boroughs.

I suggest you phone Hackney on 020 8356 8877?

--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)


Abo February 4th 08 01:22 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
John Rowland wrote:
I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney and they
say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made a decision. If
they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day limit is up, do I
then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision letter give me another 14
days to pay only 60 quid?


When I appealed a parking ticket in Doncaster the 14 days was frozen
from the time they received the appeal letter until the time they made
their decision. But I dunno if that kind of common sense applies in London.

--
Abo

[email protected] February 4th 08 01:57 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 12:13:20 -0000, "John Rowland"
wrote:


I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney and they
say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made a decision. If
they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day limit is up, do I
then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision letter give me another 14
days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.


While it accepted practise to suspend deadlines while an informal
written appeal is considered, it isn't unversally applied (at least, I
cant find anything compelling a LA to do so). Theoretically, then, you
can find that your penalty has increased purely as a result of
questioning whether it should apply. If your appeal is rejected AND
they say that the full penalty applies, I've 'heard' (ahem) that its
not a bad idea to send a cheque for the smaller amount explaining why
you feel it appropriate and stating that in cashing it the authority
acknowledge full and final settlement. 'Apparently' (ahem) their greed
for any amount is sufficient for them to take what they can get :o)

Graculus February 4th 08 06:14 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
wrote in message
...
On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 12:13:20 -0000, "John Rowland"
wrote:


I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney and
they
say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made a decision.
If
they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day limit is up, do I
then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision letter give me another 14
days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.


While it accepted practise to suspend deadlines while an informal
written appeal is considered, it isn't unversally applied (at least, I
cant find anything compelling a LA to do so). Theoretically, then, you
can find that your penalty has increased purely as a result of
questioning whether it should apply. If your appeal is rejected AND
they say that the full penalty applies, I've 'heard' (ahem) that its
not a bad idea to send a cheque for the smaller amount explaining why
you feel it appropriate and stating that in cashing it the authority
acknowledge full and final settlement. 'Apparently' (ahem) their greed
for any amount is sufficient for them to take what they can get :o)


Often aided by the fact that any cheque sent to them is normally
automatically paid in regardless of what correspondence is attached. Cash
cheque first, sortout the details later.

BTW, what happens when cheques disappear, and you have to quote a card
number, in which case you have little say over how much they take?


[email protected] February 4th 08 10:45 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 19:14:21 -0000, "Graculus"
wrote:

wrote in message
.. .
On Mon, 4 Feb 2008 12:13:20 -0000, "John Rowland"
wrote:


I have written a letter contesting a PCN .

The 14 day limit to pay 60 quid is nearly up... I phoned LB Hackney and
they
say they have received my letter, but they have not yet made a decision.
If
they delay giving me the result until after the 14 day limit is up, do I
then have to pay 120 quid, or will the decision letter give me another 14
days to pay only 60 quid?

TIA.


While it accepted practise to suspend deadlines while an informal
written appeal is considered, it isn't unversally applied (at least, I
cant find anything compelling a LA to do so). Theoretically, then, you
can find that your penalty has increased purely as a result of
questioning whether it should apply. If your appeal is rejected AND
they say that the full penalty applies, I've 'heard' (ahem) that its
not a bad idea to send a cheque for the smaller amount explaining why
you feel it appropriate and stating that in cashing it the authority
acknowledge full and final settlement. 'Apparently' (ahem) their greed
for any amount is sufficient for them to take what they can get :o)


Often aided by the fact that any cheque sent to them is normally
automatically paid in regardless of what correspondence is attached. Cash
cheque first, sortout the details later.

As a punter, you've no knowledge of the internal processes of your
local council. If they pay cheques in automatically, thats entirely
their lookout. You gave a cheque with conditions attached to cashing
it, if they didn't read the conditions thats up to them. Otherwise you
could say that none of the conditions of use for your credit card
apply to you because you didn't bother to read them!

BTW, what happens when cheques disappear, and you have to quote a card
number, in which case you have little say over how much they take?


I *think* its Cahoot (not sure since I dont have a Cahoot card) but
theres definitely at least one card provider who give you a unique
card number per transaction, with the funding available to that card
number limited to the amount of the transaction that you wish to pay.

Michael Hoffman February 4th 08 11:10 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 
wrote:

While it accepted practise to suspend deadlines while an informal
written appeal is considered, it isn't unversally applied (at least, I
cant find anything compelling a LA to do so). Theoretically, then, you
can find that your penalty has increased purely as a result of
questioning whether it should apply. If your appeal is rejected AND
they say that the full penalty applies, I've 'heard' (ahem) that its
not a bad idea to send a cheque for the smaller amount explaining why
you feel it appropriate and stating that in cashing it the authority
acknowledge full and final settlement. 'Apparently' (ahem) their greed
for any amount is sufficient for them to take what they can get :o)

Often aided by the fact that any cheque sent to them is normally
automatically paid in regardless of what correspondence is attached. Cash
cheque first, sortout the details later.

As a punter, you've no knowledge of the internal processes of your
local council. If they pay cheques in automatically, thats entirely
their lookout. You gave a cheque with conditions attached to cashing
it, if they didn't read the conditions thats up to them.


Courts have repeatedly rejected this argument. See, for example:

Ackroyd v Smithies (1885) 54 LT 130
Day v McLea (1889) 22 QBD 610, CA
Nathan v Ogdens Ltd (1905) 94 LT 126, CA
Neuchatel Asphalte Co Ltd v Barnett [1957] 1 All ER 362, CA
--
Michael Hoffman

John B February 5th 08 09:48 AM

Parking ticket appeal
 
On 5 Feb, 00:10, Michael Hoffman wrote:
As a punter, you've no knowledge of the internal processes of your
local council. If they pay cheques in automatically, thats entirely
their lookout. You gave a cheque with conditions attached to cashing
it, if they didn't read the conditions thats up to them.


Courts have repeatedly rejected this argument. See, for example:

Ackroyd v Smithies (1885) 54 LT 130
Day v McLea (1889) 22 QBD 610, CA
Nathan v Ogdens Ltd (1905) 94 LT 126, CA
Neuchatel Asphalte Co Ltd v Barnett [1957] 1 All ER 362, CA


But the precedents cited are about including misleading 'small-print'
disclaimers that are different from the intention of the transaction,
not blanket bans on attaching conditions to cheques.

If you were to send the council a letter saying "I've enclosed a
cheque for GBP60 because I only owe you GBP60, even though you claim I
owe you GBP120. If you cash the cheque for GBP60, I will take that as
an indication that you accept my claim", and write the same on the
cheque, I can't see how Neuchatel v Barnett would apply (in that case,
the cheque had conditions printed on the back that were *different*
from the covering letter).

(IANAL and there may be /other/ cases that establish you can't do the
above...)

--
John Band
john at johnband dot org
www.johnband.org

Peter Smyth February 5th 08 04:59 PM

Parking ticket appeal
 

"John B" wrote in message
...
On 5 Feb, 00:10, Michael Hoffman wrote:
As a punter, you've no knowledge of the internal processes of your
local council. If they pay cheques in automatically, thats entirely
their lookout. You gave a cheque with conditions attached to cashing
it, if they didn't read the conditions thats up to them.


Courts have repeatedly rejected this argument. See, for example:

Ackroyd v Smithies (1885) 54 LT 130
Day v McLea (1889) 22 QBD 610, CA
Nathan v Ogdens Ltd (1905) 94 LT 126, CA
Neuchatel Asphalte Co Ltd v Barnett [1957] 1 All ER 362, CA


But the precedents cited are about including misleading 'small-print'
disclaimers that are different from the intention of the transaction,
not blanket bans on attaching conditions to cheques.

If you were to send the council a letter saying "I've enclosed a
cheque for GBP60 because I only owe you GBP60, even though you claim I
owe you GBP120. If you cash the cheque for GBP60, I will take that as
an indication that you accept my claim", and write the same on the
cheque, I can't see how Neuchatel v Barnett would apply (in that case,
the cheque had conditions printed on the back that were *different*
from the covering letter).

(IANAL and there may be /other/ cases that establish you can't do the
above...)


IR v Fry is relevant here. Simply banking the cheque does not necessarily
imply acceptance of the offer.
http://www.andersonsolicitors.com/Downloads/IRvFry.pdf

Peter Smyth



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