The point is that in using a car park you can be found to be entering into a contract. My personal view is that if you get a ticket for overstaying an hour or so when you are shopping I think you would be safe to ignore an invoice for a hundred quid. As far as I'm concerned that is tantamount to extortion but either way it's an unfair contract and I'm pretty sure a judge would find it so. Well, actually I don't think it would ever get near a judge because the car park scammers aren't stupid and they know going to court for a small breach would be too risky. But if you are parking in Aldi and trotting off down the road to your office for 5 hours or more and then chucking the invoices in a drawer then all I'm saying is you are running a risk. The parking people will pursue claims to test the water and eventually they'll know what they can get away with. There's no point arguing you're safe because a contract can't be made by using a car park because it can. The problem is that Joe misunderstands the meaning of 'consideration'. He thinks it means that you have to 'consider' the contract for it to be legal. That's not what it means. I tried to explain it some time ago in a similar thread but he couldn't get it.
As a side note; some people previously said they weren't comfortable just ignoring letters and demands. Let's face it a lot of those people pay up just because they can't face the hassle and it's really those people the parking scammers rely on. My advice in that case is to send them a cheque for a reasonable amount for the parking and an amount for the letter they send. Say, ten or fifteen quid or so. If they cash it you're clear. If they don't and you do end up in court the judge is much more likely to be sympathetic. But I agree it's unlikely unless you really take the pi55.
As a side note; some people previously said they weren't comfortable just ignoring letters and demands. Let's face it a lot of those people pay up just because they can't face the hassle and it's really those people the parking scammers rely on. My advice in that case is to send them a cheque for a reasonable amount for the parking and an amount for the letter they send. Say, ten or fifteen quid or so. If they cash it you're clear. If they don't and you do end up in court the judge is much more likely to be sympathetic. But I agree it's unlikely unless you really take the pi55.