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LIVERPOOL City Council is considering a high court appeal to a ruling which could mean hundreds of parking tickets are invalid.
On August 2, a judge ruled that tickets issued by wardens across the country, including Liverpool, did not carry the correct information and should be annulled.
Liverpool city councillor Steve Radford then said parking fines given out to motorists could be invalid after the landmark court case in London.
Cllr Radford urged drivers given tickets by Liverpool traffic wardens since August 2 to appeal, although Liverpool has not changed the wording of tickets to comply with the court ruling.
Last night, Liverpool City Council chief executive Colin Hilton told Cllr Radford that the decision may now be challenged in the Court of Appeal.
Campaigners believe drivers who received penalty notices after the court's verdict should not have to pay them.
Last week, Liverpool council changed the type of ticket it uses to comply with the judge's ruling.
Neil Herron, who campaigns against parking regimes, said: "The judge said that every ticket requires a date of notice as well as a date and time of contravention. In Liverpool, the date of notice appeared separately on a tear-off slip.
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