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Scroll down to sight what your rights are for parking out of doors your home
- Katy Pagan, Digital Fabulous Editor
A WOMAN has been left bowled over after her neighbour left a fake “court action” note on her car for parking on the street.
The bowled over Glasgow resident simplest came upon the shameful message when she headed out for the day.
Handwritten on a lined piece of card, the note read: “PRIVATE. Residents parking simplest.
“Civil proeedings notices apply.
“To avoid court action, please put off and park in other places.”
It was simply signed off as “residents association”.
Nonetheless the woman was baffled by the note as she is, indeed, a resident – and pointed available are no parking restrictions on the street.
Taking to Facebook, she asked: “Anyone had this put on their car before?
“I actually am a resident and are residing at the halt of [the] road and this was placed on my car where I had parked late last evening.”
And locals immediately jumped to her defence, insisting she had done nothing wrong.
One said: “Apt someone who had to park a bit additional down the street, threatening court lawsuits!!! What a pathetic cramped individual.”
A second person wrote: “Does such an association exist or is it suitable someone attempting to intimidate from parking of their favourite state?
I’m fuming after nosy neighbours left note on my car asking my ‘plans for parking’, regardless of having a four-car driveway
“The lack of any proper contact details makes me suspect the latter. I could be wrong, wouldn’t be the first time.”
A third chimed in: “They didn’t even attempt to make it look official.”
“Not worth the card the note is wrote on”, joked a fourth.
A fifth fumed: “I bet this ‘Residents Association’ is one KAREN neighbour who nobody likes.”
Meanwhile, a sixth added: “How do people have time to do that? Just bin it. If you were parked illegally you wouldn’t get a warning, you’d just be ticketed and fined.”
In the UK you don’t have an automatic accurate to park immediately out of doors your home or to forestall others from doing so.
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The most arresting exceptions are if parking in a street is unlawful, or a space is reserved by the local council for a particular resident. For example, a blue badge holder may well have a designated parking space.
It is far also illegal to park on the pavement, double yellow lines or along a dropped kerb.