Thread: Lidl parking
View Single Post
  #385   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y,uk.legal
Norman Wells[_5_] Norman Wells[_5_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 472
Default Lidl parking

"Rod Speed" wrote in message
...
Norman Wells wrote
Rod Speed wrote
Norman Wells wrote
Tim Streater wrote
Norman Wells wrote
Harold Davis wrote


How long a period of parking are you buying for the additional "charge",
colloquially referred to as a "fine"? Is that specified on the "contract"?


When you park, you are deemed to accept the conditions on whatever notices
are displayed prominently in the car park. By parking there, you enter into a
legally binding contract, the terms of which are those conditions. Any
charges displayed are legally enforceable. That includes any charges for
overstaying your welcome, parking in the wrong way etc etc.


That may or may not be true, IANAL. But if so, it would still require
the parking cpy to take action by taking you to court. Small Claims
Court or perhaps County Court. It's then up to them to prove that you haven't
complied with the conditions.


Hardly difficult.


Very difficult to prove that you didn’t use the shop when you used the carpark.


That depends on what exactly the displayed conditions were.


Nope.

They determine what has to be proved, and where the burden of proof lies.


Nope. The basic law on proof still applys.

They still have to prove that you didn’t comply with the conditions.


Which might include, for example, retaining your receipt from the shop, or producing
it on demand.

If they do, the burden of proof that you used the shop shifts to you.

Parking attendants all over the country do so successfully all the time.


Lidl doesn’t have any of those.


Someone must have tried to impose the parking charge.


The operation that Lidl gets to run their car park.

Doesn’t necessarily involve any attendant at all.

Even the bluff letters can be completely automated.


They're not 'bluff letters'. The parking company is fully entitled to the charges
it displays, and has a legal right to recover them from non-payers.