Disputing Parking Fine - Yes Its Another One of These Threads

So to add to the deluge of council accused non compliance heres an interesting one.

And the TLDR of it is council issued a fine, evidence is 3 photos taken after the fact and a statement which can easily be questioned and destroyed, council trying to dodge questions and strongarm me into paying—-

Setting up the day, i'd been at work doing a run (job not important at this point), it was a pretty hot day, pulled into a shopping center and nearby a bus terminal area theres a 15m park.

Only needed to run in for one thing so this was sufficient, after indicating I noticed a council officer chalking cars, and i've had to wait quite a bit to pull into the park due to the officer to move out of the way. i've chucked a dash cover up due to the heat and my work's policy of concealing any valubles or perceived valuables in the car (expensive comms gear mounted in the front of the vehicle, obviously can't cover up the whole car, but it's procedure and the car can really heat up in 5-10 minutes).

I've run in and come out approximately 10-12 minutes later to find a nice little package on my wipers informing me i'd exceeded 15 minutes, which by my estimates would have still placed the officer around, but there were none in sight.

Figured hey they'd jumped the gun, ill go home send them a message requesting their evidence sort this out.

I get a reply over a week later with 3 photos of my vehicle, one of the rear of the vehicle showing the 15m parking sign in clear view, one of the front of my car with the fine on it, and one that is a partial view of my tire.

I send them a request for all the evidence involved in the matter as these 3x photos, are all dated after the offense was alleged to have taken place, none in the 15 minutes prior which I would have gone, hey maybe I must have misjudged the time, paid it and moved on.

But alas, none of the photos pointed to this, instead it gave the idea that they'd jumped the gun.

They straight up play me off, acting as if I have no right to further information and that I may lodge a dispute on the fine.

I reply to them, that at current I have no grounds to make a dispute, I'm simply trying to review the situation at hand to make a decision, I also reply to them that I will also require documentation of what time the other cars there were marked.

Two pretty simple requests. The replies from here forth debate my "rights to know" these things, questioning the relevance, all the while insisting I "just pay the fine as the council is satisfied".

I also have several "This matter is considered finalized, and there will be no further correspondence" to which I kept getting replies despite this.

So the thing i've not disclosed to them at this point is I work in the security industry and on this day in question my route was in relation to this, so therefore I was on duty and count as a professional witness, i've not disclosed this to them and I am not planning to do so anytime soon, I also had a run sheet with signatures in relation to this, which as you can imagine my employer is not keen to handover for the purposes of disproving a fine, and the council would likely claim it's been fudged, so these two things are something i've not planned upon bringing up.

Further correspondence in with the compliance officer and it's pretty clear this person has limited training, i've mentioned to them how at this point an offense has only been alleged, where they are inferring that an offense HAS taken place, as well as inferring that all 3 photos are going to be accepted by a magistrate and be decided in the councils favor and that i'd have to pay court costs.

I question these statements again stating that, i've got every right to ask to see all the evidence in regard to the alleged offence, and that it seems as if the councils expiation department is trying to intimidate me into paying the fine.

I've again reiterated that I wish to review all of the councils evidence, I even make it simple, if the evidence is simply :
the 3x photos
a statement from the officer

Can you please confirm this so I can consult the correct advice.

I also request to get further information on when cars around mine were marked as this will be relevant to my case - again this simple request is deflected and parts of the powers enacted to the council as well as directing me to dispute the ticket are again prattled off to me.

Friday I am now offered to get a phone call from the head of the expiation department, I express how I dislike talking on the phone and I don't think that
A) this is appropriate given the situation as I am recording everything in text form to seek advice (plus looking at all the inconsistencies in their evidence and argument)
B) why are they afraid to state anything to me in writing to a point they want to state it in a voice conversation with no record?
C) (I didnt say this one)I just hate talking on the phone

Come friday afternoon call from an unknown number while i'm at work, I generally don't answer these, they call me 5-6 times so I figure this must be an emergency, nope, I get a guy who gives me the incorrect name numerous times and i'm about to hang up and thinking its a wrong number or a stitch up, then all of a sudden this guy goes, oh wait a second sorry wrong name is this (insert name here), after 2 minutes of me asking him to state the nature of the call before i'm giving any information, he begrudgingly identifies himself as the manager of the expiation department.

He starts off pretending to be friendly telling me that he can't understand my dispute as it has come through blank, I inform him that i've not lodged one, I went to issue a request for further information like i've been requesting in emails, and that the system seemed geared to not be able to handle this.

He laughs, and goes oh it's this one, your the guy asking lots of questions, I inquire with him as to why this is an issue, a 10 minute back and forth now goes on with this guy trying to refuse to hand over any information, and trying to effectively batter me down into either paying the fine or taking it to court, where he likes to keep adding that "and we will win", at the end of this run, he finally decides to go hardball and says in a really sarcastic tone, "maybe you'd like me to organize for you to speak to our solicitor". (I found that quite hilarious). It's become pretty evident due to this guys tone and frequent talking over me and treating me like a kid, that he's extremely sure of himself and proclaims himself several times before this to be a compliance specialist.

So after he tries to drop the solicitor remark, I figure hey what the hell, and I state to him what the purpose of this would be?
He starts to prattle off again about how most people don't know the laws so have to have it explained to them by a lawyer.

So I identify myself, I hold a certificate 4 in compliance, and part of my role at my company is as a compliance officer, he instantly sees this as a hostile move and instead of trying the lawyer line again, starts bragging of how he has worked in the department for 20 years, how up until recently all that was required of the officers was "their word". I've stated to him how these days that could easily be destroyed in court, i've deliberately not given up the flaws in the photos in case I have to take this to court. I interject that right now the situation presents as this, there are 3 photos after the fact which do not prove an offense has been committed, and a statement from a professional witness.

As I was on duty at the time, any statement I give would also be treated as a professional witness statement, with anger he concedes that while this is true, "my officer will be believed over you as they have enacted powers of government" and decides to go off in that direction, before stopping himself and going, hey… you would have had a run sheet wouldnt you, I guess you wouldn't mind sending me a copy of your run sheet, as if he believed I didn't have one. I reply to him that if there was a run sheet for the day in question, there is no one in hell any security employer would allow one to be copied and sent to an unauthorized party.

He tries to dig into this, and I point out to him, look you've tried to tell me I have no idea what i'm talking about, but even you can admit right now that we can both agree in any industry what you've just asked me to do is a violation of the privacy act 1988.

As soon as deploying that he's backed down on demanding a run sheet to prove my legitimacy of being on duty, and then decided to go back to the solicitor angle, again trying to state that they have completely satisfied that their photos and their statement are enough.

I pause and I question him on this, and ask him so if you are confident that one statement and three photos are sufficient evidence, can I get confirmation that this is ALL of the evidence for you alleging the offense.

I get a subdued "well yeah".

Pretty pissed off that i've finally gotten an answer I pull the guy up on this we're now 15 minutes into the call, and I remark that this is literally the question i've been trying to get answered right from the start, this and the markers, why was it so hard and why are you refusing so hard.

He pulls back and states how this is NOT discovery, and they had no legal requirement to provide the evidence (pretty sure this is illegal, i've numerous times in documents referred to myself engaging in discovery where i've issued them written requests for evidence to review their case to choose whether to pay or dispute it, and instead been met with hostility).

He's refuted this, and i've asked him… at what point have you answered my questions, or your staff at any point that answered the first two questions, i've now got one answer what about the second question.

He asks me what that question was, I reply "about the markers, what times were the other markers placed on the cars"

He seems dumbfounded, he asks for what relevance that is.

I tell him exactly what happened, when I pulled up a female officer was marking cars, I had to wait for her to move for me to park. He then tries to go, and you put a sunshield up meaning you were to remain there for an extended period of time, way more than 15 minutes".

I reply to him that this is an assumption, I explain to him that it's company policy and why so, he laughs and starts to claim that i am "reaching" and that he's "heard it all before", I reply to him that while putting it up which took me a whole 30 seconds that officer had finished up on the next two cars and moved on. Meaning at my point of exit from the vehicle there was no officer around the vehicles.

Yet in my small time frame going in and out, i'd some how had the officer come back, mark my car, wait 15 minutes then ping me.

He laughs at me and goes "Thats exactly what happened". I've then gone, again thats an allegation, i've asked for all your evidence, you have 3 photos after the fact and a statement, I've got a statement that contradicts it, it's going to come down to photos that can't seem to prove anything.

Further more if other cars were fined there, you'd have all the time stamps when the tickets were issued, so i'd like a register of all of those, as its a bit suss if my car got done at the SAME time as other cars there as mine had pulled in after other cars there, and brings reasonable questions as to when my car was tagged in relation to the other cars.

He completely dodges this question and states to me "In my 20 years doing this we've never lost a court case" then keeps telling me how he has more stuff to do right now and will call me back later, i'm pretty annoyed at this phone call and dealing with the guy (if I talked to the police or clients how this guy was talking to me we'd lose contracts or get into fights).

I've then asked him how the evidence situation has changed in the last 3 months, he seems puzzled and I reply to him that several of my staff on many occasions while on duty have sent his expiation department alerts and photos of matters where sapol informed them they were not the best party to handle it, I single out a case at a local shopping center where a car was clearly illegally parked. They were notified, and photos were sent in which clearly showed the car breaking the law. All of a sudden he went from claiming photos were sufficient evidence for them to issue fines to a "well i'm sure that didn't happen" I offer to send him copies of the correspondence where his department had cited that mere photos were "Insufficient evidence as photos are insufficient evidence" he's then gone "oh that won't be necessary our officers never take the word of the general public" to which I reply, yet this offense was witnessed by on duty security officers (professional witnesses) and a member of sapol, who in fact was the one who directed them that the offense was a council matter".

He's then started to trail off telling me how "fake cops think they know everything" (thanks for the uncalled for insult mate) and then told me (not asked) he will call me back to discuss the matter further.

I've told him not to call me back, please email any further correspondence, and to please email me the statement of evidence you've just given me so I can refer it to advice. He replies to me "whats wrong with a phone call? I PREFER to talk to people and let them know how things are " (came across as "I Like to intimidate and harass people"), I again refer him to email me due to being busy and wanting a record of correspondence.

Since then i've been thinking this over for course of action - I get they are trying to intimidate me into paying the fine, which is making the part of me going hey this is a ton of effort dealing with a poor situation just get it over with.

Other part of me is feeling hustled and like they've tried to play the intimidation game on me.

Has anyone had an experience similar to this or taken this to court?

Given what they've presented and given my experience with court matters and presenting evidence to police and in court (including statements)… it's smacking incredibly of insufficient evidence.

I've had a case where we've busted a dealer on site in a complete, there is footage of him dealing, he was caught with substance on him, witnessed by three different officers trying to discard it, and he resisted arrest and assaulted a cop and the entire case fell apart because his lawyer argued that in the dealing footage, you couldnt see what he was handing out to people clearly therefore lack of evidence.

Now thats criminal law, so burden of proof is beyond reasonable doubt.

I'm guessing council offenses fall into civil law which is proof to reasonable doubt.

Given the time frame, refusal to provide all evidence and relying on a statement and 3 photos which don't prove the offense, and the photo alleging the marker could be any tire on any car and again was taken after the fact (seriously a time stamped photo when it was put on, and taking a photo that showed the tire actually belonged to my car) would have altered my thought on this.

Anyone have any thoughts on it and moving forward?

Comments

  • +1

    So say the matter goes to court or tribunal or whatever. The judge/member only has to be satisfied on the balance of probabilities that you committed the offence/infringement/whatever.

    The council offers their photos as evidence, and a statement from the parking officer, plus anything else they may have which they haven't provided to you.

    You offer nothing other than a statement from yourself (a long one no doubt) stating you didn't do it but don't offer any tangible proof of this (such as CC TV with date/time stamps, etc) and basically just claim 'that could be anyone's tyre'.

    I don't think it is going to go so well.

    • -4

      council officers witness statement isn't going to stand.

      At this point council have confirmed due to that call that is all of their evidence, right now it's down to two photos that they will be able to present.

      It's interesting that the council are claiming they have no requirement to provide their evidence and then summarized it.

      I get the direction you are going at from this one, again we have our entire system for checks and balances and so far nothing they are showing so far would stand up to much scrutiny.

      • +1

        council officers witness statement isn't going to stand.

        On what basis? Just because you claim something shouldn't be admitted because ?? doesn't mean the judge is going to accept that.

        • -2

          its how a professional witness statement works, if you get them into a 1v1 in each case they generally cancel each other out.

          A police statement can trump this, but generally it then goes to secondary evidence depending on the issue.

          • +3

            @typhoonadventure:

            its how a professional witness statement works, if you get them into a 1v1 in each case they generally cancel each other out.

            I assume by 'professional witness' you mean like an expert witness? I am unsure how you think you could be a professional/expert (ie. unbiased) witness in your own matter.

            It comes down to who's testimony (written, oral, or a combination) the judge accepts as fact or gives more weight to. Seems a lot more likely it will be the council officer than the defendant.

        • -2

          On what basis?

          Because the cry baby who overstayed the carpark limit limit says so.

          hahaha the OP is going to be crying a river when the council pulls out video footage from the street cameras showing the OP stayed way above the 15mins :)

          • @JimmyF: ah yes, hows your non bias going?

            • +1

              @typhoonadventure: You use the word 'bias' a lot for someone who doesn't know the adjectival form.

  • +2

    Where is the obligatory MS Paint diagram that usually accompanies this type of post?

    • +4

      It's still buffering.

    • I think the wall of text is an encrypted message.
      Copy and paste and then zoom out.
      Left side, first half, the part that sticks out like, that's OP's car
      https://i.imgur.com/LYmjOYV.png
      LOL

  • Civil burden of proof is ‘on the balance of probabilities’

  • I'd love to hear from anyone who has taken these matters further either via further council action or taking it to court.

    • +1

      I have. I ended up pleading guilty for a $0 fine + court cost and wasted half a day. Never again.

      The guy before me (rural court) had a non-guilty case, which I watched his hearing. He lost (which most do). He would have wasted several days and that fine of $150 became $150 + court costs + $2500 prosecutor costs. They took the word of the time sheet as fact.

      • Were you going to please not guilty but changed your mind after seeing the person try before you? How much were court costs?

    • +3

      Anyone that has, gave up after reading about 10-20% of your post.

      Go back, cull out the irrelevant crap (I really didn't need to know about your sunshade, or why you put it up), and try again.

      Be concise and to the point you're arguing. Drop the waffle.

      • +1

        He doesnt have time for that, he is already starting on his next post

  • +2

    Can't wait for the Netflix series to be released on this! Prob would have been cheaper to pickup a few hours overtime and pay the fine, than type that out. Also is it worth your time to miss a day of work to sit in a court house, where you'll waste a least half a day, just to need up pleading guilty to get a $0 fine or god forbid, not guilty and waste several half days, which the risk of copping legal fees of the council / Police

    • -2

      No police involved in it?

      I get that view of it but honestly feeling like i'm being hustled, again in the times we've worked with and still work with other councils we generally have higher burdens of evidence placed upon us, i'm just finding it interesting at the effort they're putting into strongarming a fine, yet have put little effort into the evidence of the offense, it honestly feels like a hustle where they are just hoping people don't question them.

      • -2

        I get that view of it but honestly feeling like i'm being hustled

        No you overstayed….. You got fined. Grow up.

      • *prosecutor or the other parties representative.

    • +1

      Prob would have been cheaper to pickup a few hours overtime and pay the fine

      hahaha true….. But if you read enough of the posts, you'll find out the OP was doing personal errands on work time. So they already being 'paid' for not working.

      yet have put little effort into the evidence of the offense, it honestly feels like a hustle where they are just hoping people don't question them

      As a street parker for many many many years, they don't just go around and 'make' fines up. If you generally overstayed the time allowed, you do get booked.

      The OPs issue is he pissed them off by blocking traffic waiting quite a bit (OP words) for them to move while doing their job. So they came back dead on 15 mins later and to their delight the OPs car was there waiting for them.

      • -1

        So you've stated your not bias, but again displaying a bias.

        At which point in the original post was it stated that it was a personal errand?

        • +2

          At which point in the original post was it stated that it was a personal errand?

          Correct me if I'm wrong. Had you been on business or not for your trip into the store?

          So you've stated your not bias, but again displaying a bias.

          My advice above was unbias, but you continue to show signs of being a d!ck, so I'll point out all the holes in your fantasyland story time event.

  • +8

    I deal with hostile people a lot. The head-of gave you your options - pay the fine, or take them to court. The fact that he didn't entertain much beyond this isn't evidence of anything other than he likely did not want to continue going around in circles with you.

    You might not like the options, but they're your options. If a run sheet will disprove them, take them to court. If it won't, pay the fine and accept that just maybe your timing was off by 3-5 minutes.

    • +3

      so we've just discovered something interesting, the work phone had google location services on…

      It has being at the shopping center as 12 minutes before leaving…

      • Well if it clearly shows you arrived in the spot and were gone from that spot within the 15 min time zone, then challenge it. It's still a waste of time and your risk alot. Still would contact legal aid or a lawyer to see if it will be enough for the court. The prosecutor may claim someone else had that work phone and left before you, in which case you will need to prove it was you that had the phone.

        • That work phone stays in the car with comms gear.

          Will be interesting to see what they say on this one.

          • +2

            @typhoonadventure: "They" wont say anything. Your either guilty or not guilty. The council will suggest you either write to SDRO (depending on your state) and plead a case but that's generally for admitting guilt and asking for leniency or you be advised to take it to court for not guilty. In this event you will waste alot of time. You will also need more than just showing your phone. You will need to submit it into evidence and may require a statement from a professional regarding this. The work phone being in the car also proves nothing. They may make a claim like, you may have given to phone to someone else. idk, you don't seem to have the burden of proof. I would suggest going back and looking for a CCTV camera, but then your up for a huge bill to get that tape. I know in non-criminal case NSW Health charges a massive amount (over $2000) without a court order

            • @Froot Loops: If the location I was stopping for was outside of the mall with a camera pointed at the park this would have been a cakewalk lol.

              All cameras there are by the Grove village, I know they only hand over footage for sapol and insurance, but ill see what i can do.

      • Then take them to court.

        Stop wasting people's time who have neither the authority nor inclination to entertain you. Seriously, I deal with this a handful of times a month. Take them to court or just move on.

  • +5

    I got fined in similar circumstance and won. Parked in a 2hr zone, back in 90 mins to see the fine. I took them to court and won. Photos provided by the council was after the fact. The book they write info down was done after the fact. I had a good judge which saw no evidence of the parking officer noting down the time my vehicle was parked in that location and marked. Also had my trump card which was video evidence from a shop across the road but it didn't get the chance as the judge dismissed the case straight out. Surely you may get security footage this day and age.

    • Ive heard so many similar stories to this. I have sneaking feeling if I was to push this to court, a logbook not yet disclosed will be provided claiming they noted the time.

      So given the google locations data we now have… it's interesting to see how this will go down.

      • Providing false evidence is a serious crime and definitely not worth it for them to win this case. If they did fabricate logs, then they're incredibly stupid to do so.

        • Besides, OP's car got chalked. That's how they mark timing.

          Compared to Arcticsolder, he had no mark indicating that he was clocked..

  • +1

    Big brother knows everything. Well Google maps does anyway. I take it you probably have a GPS in your car too. If you're confident in your time spent in the car space then perhaps you have evidence to tip the balance of probabilities in your direction.

    As you've I indictated above it's not a criminal case. The evidence you have mentioned tips the scales in the council's favour. You're 'I was in my there about 10-12 minutes' though have nothing to confirm this doesn't seem like you have a strong case so far. As an investigator you already know that you have to take the emotion out of it and only look at the facts.

    • Correct, we're now staring at 1x statement vs 1x statement, 1x photo dismissed, 2x photos relying on the statement, which can now be challenged further by the geo data.

      They will try every attempt to have the geo data nixed, there is also a possibility as well several other items we have are gps loggers, will be interesting to see how work answer that question as I know they don't want us knowing what is and what isn't if you catch my drift.

      • Didn't your epic adventure say that you had to wait a long time to actually get into the spot? So wouldn't GPS data show that you were actually there for longer than you indicated?

        • Correct which implies I was even quicker than I thought.

  • +3

    After typing all that, do you feel better?

    • Not really it's been a pretty horrible week. Had several staff hospitalized due to heat as well as some other nasty incidents not worth getting people upset over.

      Here's hoping with the heatwave breaking things are going to be looking a lot better.

      • +2

        Sorry to hear that. Good to see you're still on board despite some fairly excessive nastiness. I enjoyed the read!

  • +6

    TLDR… But I'm a masochist and skim read it.

    Not sure what state you're in but there is so much on your end that doesn't add up.. what do you mean by "professional witness". Do you mean an expert witness? Because if you're claiming that an expert witness is necessary for an infringements case then you're totally wrong (note: I have not looked up precedent on this so YMMV and some highly influential, precedent setting test case may have occurred). Plus, if you're saying you count as an expert witness, which makes even less sense because expert witnesses are specifically experts in their field and are cross examined accordingly, you can't be an expert witness in your own case. You'd be a standard witness. Just because you supposedly count because of your qualifications for other matters does not mean you can be an expert in your own case. Which brings me to my most important point! I say this as someone who deals with regulations and highly emotional people day in and day out…

    Go to court.

    The council has told you what your options under whatever Act they've fined you with are. They do not care and it's not their job to go over all of this with you. You have been fined, they are maintaining the fine is correct. Any testing or "discovery" or arguing is irrelevant. You have two options. Pay the fine or contest the fine. Contesting is ordinarily done in court and the point of court is for all of the arguing you're doing with the council to be arbitrated by an objective judicial officer. The council can't do anything for you!

    Take it from someone who is legally trained (though this is NOT legal advice /disclaimer) - trying to enforce your view of what is correct or just, or whatever you think happens when you challenge a fine and go after a council officer by quoting the law at them will just make everyone involved frustrated. You have limited options… and so does the council. Just because you quote "discovery" at them, make a fuss etc.. does not mean they are going to be able to do anything for you. They are also bound by regulations and (without looking at them) I'd wager that their only option is also court. Just because you want them to do things for you, like declare evidence, does not mean they can. Do it properly and go to court. Get independent legal advice, talk to your boss about what evidence you can use from the car and make a case.

  • +1

    Has anyone had an experience similar to this or taken this to court?

    You've given so much unique detail, that the chances of anyone having experienced a similar situation is very unlikely.

  • +2

    Bumper Sticker:

    "High Court or bust"

  • +4

    all this for a parking fine?

    drama queen…

    • +1

      Lol. Spot on. It would have been cheaper to just pay the ticket than the time OP has wasted on the phone and on this forum. Talking about cutting off ones nose to spite ones face…

      • -1

        Ever heard of the principle of the thing? They sure sound like hustlers to me!

  • +4

    I am just wondering given so many issues or questions or concerns regarding parking inspectors and fines, why isn't there any Royal Commission into this?

    /s

  • +1

    Read the first half of the essay and gave up.

    Take it to court if you've got reasonable proof

    /Thread

  • +6

    I'm not a lawyer though I'm pretty sure if you say the following in court you'll win for sure:
    'In summing up, it’s the constitution, it’s Mabo, it’s justice, it’s law, it’s the vibe and aah no that’s it, it’s the vibe. I rest my case"

    • +1

      You know what we'd give for a photocopier that never breaks down?

  • "Further correspondence in with the compliance officer and it's pretty clear this person has limited training, i've mentioned to them how at this point an offense has only been alleged, where they are inferring that an offense HAS taken place, as well as inferring that all 3 photos are going to be accepted by a magistrate and be decided in the councils favor and that i'd have to pay court costs."

    They are implying, not inferring.

    • +1

      The whole "gotcha" rant with the council official sounds like it came out of a bad Sorkin movie. OP comes off as an armchair lawyer, magistrates love those.

  • +2

    The phone call was for intimidation. That's it. There is no way the expiation manager could get away with having what he said in writing. His demeanour was rude, condescending, aggressive - and potentially even misleading.

    Their tactic here is to be as difficult as possible and to try and hustle you into giving in. That is abundantly obvious.

    I don't think they have a leg to stand on - after all, you are innocent. I hope you fight this OP.

  • Morning guys, I just could not resist to add my 2c…

    After many similar stich-ups by the ghosts in grey, now thanks to a handy camera in my pocket, if I am unsure I will make it back on time or be very close, I take my own time stamped photographic evidence, of the car and the signpost. Thank God for the smartphone!

    But even where I thought I was very close, in over 30 yrs of driving I've learned that sometimes my time and my sanity is worth more than the $150 or whatever the fine was.

    Just to be on the other side of the argument for a minute, I know a couple of coppers and you would not believe the pressure on them to fill quotas of fines issued. Maybe that poor guy writing the parking tickets was short on quotas that month and his boss was on his back, so he took a chance on cutting some corners.

    But looking at the overall picture, I have taken many many risks of getting a fine by overstaying, and got pinged relatively very few times. You know what they say 'what you lose on the swings you gain on the roundabouts'. So I'm not too fussed when I get a fine every now and then.

    Just sayin……

  • +3

    Im late for work now because I read half of this post..

    • +1

      Should have read it at work like the rest of us…

  • +2

    Wow what a post largely filled with irrelevant stuff. Unfortunately I read it all! OP, simply take them to court if you are so confident of your facts. Nothing we can really help you with. You will have evidence to support your version and the council will have theirs. Simple really..

  • +1

    Oh chit, I shouldn't have come in!

  • +1

    https://www.ozbargain.com.au/comment/5709561/redir

    Yeah writing essays is what Op does

  • my 2 cents worth is:
    does your vehicle have a tracking system, our work cars are now all GPS tracked and we have to log onto the system at the start.
    If so, you will only need to access these records to see the time your were stopped at that location.
    You will have either been under or over time. If under, take it to court, if not, just pay up.

    I haven't looked it up, but id hope that being 'parked' starts from the time you are actually parked and stationary, not just pulling in as you are not 'parked' but still moving.

    And as its a 15 minute time zone, booking someone at 15 minutes and 1 second (example) is a bit hard core..

  • +1

    I feel like I've paid a fine after reading all that.

  • +1

    How much is the fine, how much do you make per hour, how many hours have you spent thus far in thinking about, writing about, talking about the fine? If x is less than y, pay it and move on.

  • Repeating my comment again, don't go to court arguing with council for anything under $500. It is a waste of time EVEN if you win.

    All that preparation, etc…

  • +1

    in my view, (and i did think it was an informative yet, interesting read) I don't think you will have a leg to stand on in court. Unless, you can actually provide a "blanked out" run sheet showing your time. whilst their evidence may not be sufficient.
    that is really your only argument here

  • initially, I was interested to read the post - then I got lost when attempting to finish the last sentence.

    btw, how much is the parking fine?

    You need to include this in details too :)

  • +7

    If you have GPS data from google maps / phone, a run sheet that is some sort of backup to your claim, and the photos they offered prove nothing, take them to court and you'll likely win. Call their bluff - because it's likely just that, they factor in 99% of people fined like this not challenging. The ones that do, they will probably just waive it if you're lucky.

    Also if it means that much to you, contact the shopping centre for CCTV, explain it's going to court yada yada


    To all those critiquing his essay, give him a break. He's clearly just upset and being wronged by 'authority'. He's also clearly a 'details guy' and that's how some people's brains work.

    How many of these threads do we read where there's basically no details and it's impossible to determine anything based on the lack of detail.

    Chill out folks.

  • You should have phone or car dashcam GPS showing how long you were stopped for. Send that to them and call it a day - can't see they'd be able to argue against that.

  • +3

    …the thing i've not disclosed to them at this point is I work in the security industry and on this day in question my route was in relation to this, so therefore I was on duty and count as a professional witness

    “i've not disclosed to them” - If you have something that supports your position you need to let them know and request an official review in writing (…so good luck!).
    Clearly outline in your request for review the facts and your supporting evidence. Don't include anecdotes about phone conversations you’ve had with their staff.

    “professional witness” – the term you’re looking for is “Expert Witness”. A magistrate might give you a little more credibility if you can demonstrate how your position in security relates to the events and your ability to recall them, but this would be mostly negated by the parking officers who are even more expert in the field of parking fines than you!

    Until they have responded to your request for review, all of your quasi legal assertions are a waste of time and just waffle.

    • I work in the security industry

      Explains so much about the OP……..

  • +4

    So emailed them about the geodata and got :

    "we've suspended the matter while we review this new information".

    • $5 says they will now waive it.

      Mostly just because of the stir you’ve caused by escalating it and holding them to account, and resources it will take them to fight you in court.

      • +1

        This is what I find sad about the system, if the decision is made in that direction, it's not come down to what is right, finding a fault in the system and fixing it… it's being done for the wrong reason, which means they'd happily do it again.

        If we had one of my staff receive a complaint or even a question hanging over them about deliberately fudging stuff like this, or doing a poor job, we'd investigate it and if there was an issue, we'd fix it. (trust is everything in a position like this, if we found them deliberately fudging things, they're gone, if we found deficiencies in training we'd get them more training).

        • Welcome to life mate!

          Especially when it comes to local municipalities who are desperate for cash beyond rates, and parking infringements are a huge source of cash inflow.

  • +1

    I put this into Microsoft word.

    3000 word count almost. I've written university major assignments with less words than this. I have nothing useful to add to this. I would however like to commend those that have replied to help. They probably spent 30 minutes reading that thing.

    • +2

      Speed reading is a trained skill. Useful for work emails and thread such as this :D

  • mate you get a parking ticket for overhanging another space having delivered a patient to emergency with a police escort and flashing lights - that's just how things are now.

    reckon if I had a posh tesla it would have been ok…..

  • +1

    I successfully contested a fine I made a thread about here in court. It was a longer bow to draw than your case.

    It is useless talking to council unless you're gathering evidence of their incompetence for your case.

    Good luck OP.

  • +1

    In my council area all the unmetered street parking near the shops has parking sensors, so the time you enter and exit a spot is all logged in a computer. Makes the parking fine system much more accurate when they don't have to rely on chalk.

  • +5

    At least now we know why councils seem to be too busy to help people with real problems…

    • -1

      this 100%

    • hahahahahaha as a public servant I relate to this so much.

  • +2

    In all of that - which legal jurisdiction were you in? Parking law is state law under the criminal code. The evidence required and defences available may depend on whether this is a Strict Liability or Absolute Liability offence in your jurisdiction.

    The process in jurisdictions I'm familiar with is that you don't get the full brief of evidence until you have disputed liability and plead not-guilty at court. At that point the prosecutor produces a brief of evidence including a statement from the issuing officer and a bunch of other paperwork, this should all be made available to you before the hearing.

    • +1

      Didn't you know that using the word "discovery" forces people to provide information, no questions asked? / sarcasm

      Seriously though, that is a great answer.

  • 15min zones are a goldmine for inspectors.

    Some push the limits - they probably saw your cover and made the assumption you were there for a long time.

    In Fitzroy near my old work I was talking to someone who worked in an office and parked temporarily in a 10/15 min zone which was visible directly outside their window. They saw the inspector walk up to the car, put his hand on the bonnet - felt it was warm - and then started issuing a ticket.

    In the future you have the geo data, the simplest method would be simply emailing them "I am going to fight this in court, here is the evidence I will be presenting. I am giving you a chance to review this prior to it getting there".

    Also I tend to write in situations where I know I'm in the right that I request the inspector gets appropriate training so this doesn't reoccur in the future.

    • +1

      put his hand on the bonnet - felt it was warm - and then started issuing a ticket.

      Wouldn't that be to feel if it WASN'T warm?

      • +1

        You are correct, I missed the "n't".

        • Thats ok, typos get us all at some point. Ok well that makes more sense now.

  • FYI OP's post is 2860 words. It's basically a novel!

    • I feel a plot twist coming in the sequel.

  • No MS Paint diagram. No resolution.

  • Sorry, it's just too long that I gave up half through.

    Hope you win.

  • +1

    I know someone who used to work high up in NRMA. I guess as the motorists association they consider themselves responsible to keeping the government in check over road matters, because they've challenged plenty of fines and won.

    The one I remember was that he got booked for running a red light that was obscured by another vehicle, but he was able to prove that the traffic light had been incorrectly installed according RTA requirements, and should be relocated to a more visible position.

    He says that simply knowing the rules, and having the motivation to challenge them, is a very strong weapon against traffic fines. Because they are very often issued incorrectly in the expectation that people will just quietly pay up.

  • Is it me or the number greedy revenue raising councils sitings have shot up in the past month? Its not like their help in the community has shot up the same amount.

  • -2

    This is my first post, but i had to reply to this. Is the long post really worth it? It's such a waste of time. Not everything is fair. Pay up and move on! Live life, and don't linger to things like this.

    PS, You're the type of customer I don't want to deal with in retail if you have an issue on something.

    • +2

      but if hes the customer then youre the shop kid who overcharged him and refuses to correct it

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