SponsoredBuild your website with Vincony

Avertisment: Acesta nu este un sfat juridic. Legislația și jurisprudența se schimbă. Consultați întotdeauna un avocat calificat pentru situația dvs. specifică.

UK Law Reference
Toate cazurile
Contract Law
Supreme Court
2015

ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis

[2015] UKSC 67

Ratio Decidendi

A parking charge of £85 for overstaying a two-hour free parking limit was not an unenforceable penalty. The charge was not extravagant or unconscionable, served a legitimate interest in managing the car park, and was prominently displayed.

Fapte

Mr Beavis parked in a retail car park managed by ParkingEye. Signs stated parking was free for two hours and that a charge of £85 would be imposed for overstaying. Beavis stayed for nearly three hours and was issued a charge. He argued the charge was an unenforceable penalty clause.

Rezumatul hotărârii

The Supreme Court (4-1) held the charge was enforceable. Lords Neuberger and Sumption reformulated the penalty doctrine: a clause is penal only if it imposes a detriment out of all proportion to any legitimate interest of the innocent party. ParkingEye had a legitimate interest in efficient turnover of parking spaces. The £85 charge was not extravagant. Lord Toulson dissented.

Citate cheie

"The penalty rule in England is an interference with freedom of contract. It is a blatant interference. It is, to that extent, anomalous."

Lord Neuberger and Lord Sumption

Tratament ulterior

Good law

Reformulated the test for penalty clauses alongside Cavendish Square Holding v Makdessi. The legitimate interest test replaced the Dunlop v New Garage distinction between penalties and liquidated damages.