Why should an injured person recover damages from the person at fault?

The ‘Spending Review and Autumn Statement 2015[1] (26th November 2015) may have had some surprises for the economists and political commentators.  But it was a surprise that it had a surprise for the personal injury practitioner.  Whiplash claims below a certain value will be abolished, if the government and the ABI (Association of British Insurers) have their way.

You may think that ‘whiplash claims’ are just a way of building up a holiday fund or a nest egg for most claimants.  But even the ABI recognises that a whiplash injury is a neck injury and often the result of a road traffic accident.[2]  However according to the Autumn Statement (para 1.143) compensation must stop because:

  1. The government is determined to crack down on the fraud and claims culture in motor insurance” and to “end the cycle in which responsible motorists pay higher premiums to cover false claims by others”;
  2. Whiplash claims cost the country £2 billion a year, an average of £90 per motor insurance policy, which is out of all proportion to any genuine injury suffered”.

Of course, we have not been provided with the evidential basis for fraud in this area or of the need to crack down on it, or of this so-called “cycle” and none is presented.  And the source for the quoted cost of whiplash claims and the claimed cost to every motor insurance policy is given in the Autumn Review as the ABI’s own assertion available on its website.  To give credit to the ABI, in the reference referred to they go on to state that “we are actively working with the insurance industry and the government to … make the system more efficient for genuine claimants” although that appears to have fallen on deaf ears as that end result is not obviously behind the government’s plans to abolish claims for some genuine claimants and make more claimants bring the claims to court by themselves.

We will no doubt hear in due course how the assertion that the proposed changes will “remove over £1 billion from the cost of providing motor insurance” is calculated and we will not hold our breath for the heralded “average saving of £40 to £50 per motor insurance policy to be passed onto consumers”  i.e. motorists.

The plan proposed is two-fold.  Firstly to remove the right to any damages at all for the injury itself (damages for pain and suffering and loss of amenity) for a class of “minor soft tissue injuries”, although consequential losses (loss of earnings, medical costs) will be recoverable.

How that class will be defined we wait to see.  If it is by what would be the value of such general damages, and it is difficult to see what else it could in practice be, then we can expect interesting claims at around the level imposed where the value will be argued up and down by the respective parties.

And in the absence of a medical report how will it be known how significant the injury is, but if the consequence of the report, and following appropriate skilled advice, the value of the claim is considered to fall just below the decreed claimable value, who will pay for that report?

Further it would be strange if no damages were to be recoverable for a ‘minor’ whiplash injury but damages would be recoverable for a finger fracture or a laceration to the arm, and what about ligamentous damage to the shoulder or severe bruising to the chest?

Secondly, personal injury claims with a value up to £5,000 will be dealt with in the small claims court where legal costs are not recoverable, and therefore in practice legal representation is not available for claimants.  (The current level of damages for pain and suffering and loss of amenity is £1,000.)

The current Judicial College Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases gives a range of awards between £3,630 and £6,600 for whiplash injuries to the neck and soft tissue injuries to the shoulder where a full recovery takes place within a period of about one to two years, so it can be seen that a £5,000 limit will put claims where there have been significant consequences for an individual into a court system where they will be unrepresented and will work out how best to present their claim on their own.  In contrast an insurer defending such a claim will decide as a commercial matter whether or not it would wish to spend policy-holders’ money in seeking to defend or minimise such a claim using a professional with experience of such matters, or, perhaps more likely, make offers of settlement on which the claimant will be unable to obtain independent legal advice.

The government will consult on the details in the New Year.  For anyone who considers that if they are negligent when driving a car and cause injury, then their insurer should pay appropriate compensation to the injured party, it will be important to keep an eye out for the consultation when it appears as, on past form, there is unlikely to be much time in which to respond.

Meanwhile bear a thought for the potential consequences for the injured road user. As Andrew Ritchie QC has suggested:  “So when the elderly and the retired suffer a rear end car crash which is not their fault and thereafter suffer intense neck pain and reduced neck movement for 3-6 months, they will recover no damages, not a bean, nothing.  This change does not improve the state of the nation, it undermines safe driving and puts more profit into the pockets of the same insurance companies who paid hundreds of thousands into the Conservative Party’s election funds before the last two elections.

[Who or what is medico-legal minder?  Terms and conditions apply]

 

[1] https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/479749/52229_Blue_Book_PU1865_Web_Accessible.pdf

[2] https://www.abi.org.uk/Insurance-and-savings/Topics-and-issues/Personal-injury-claims/Whiplash-claims

Written Questions of an Expert in Civil Claims

From a lawyer’s perspective, the opportunity to ask questions of the other side’s expert is a valuable part of the litigation process.  From the expert’s perspective, the questions often come out of the blue and at best appear irritating, at worst insulting, and often unnecessary.

The CPR provide at Rule 35.6:

(1)           A party may put written questions about an expert’s report (which must be proportionate) to –

(a)           an expert instructed by another party; or

(b)           a single joint expert appointed under rule 35.7.

(2)           Written questions under paragraph (1) –

(a)            may be put only once;

(b)            must be put within 28 days of service of the expert’s report; and

(c)             must be for the purpose only of clarification of the report,

unless in any case –

                   (i)   the court gives permission; or

                    (ii)  the other party agrees.

(3)           An expert’s answers to questions put in accordance with paragraph (1) shall be treated as part of the expert’s report.

(4)           Where –

(a)             a party has put a written question to an expert instructed by another party; and

(b)             the expert does not answer that question,

the court may make one or both of the following orders in relation to the party who instructed the expert –

                     (i)   that the party may not rely on the evidence of that expert; or

                      (ii)  that the party may not recover the fees and expenses of that expert from any other party.

One certainty is that the expert will not know when his or her report is served, and therefore will not know when the 28 days within which the questions must be asked (under CPR 35.6(2)(b)) commences.  The expert knows only when the report was provided to the instructing lawyers, and service (i.e. sending the report to the other side) may have been many months later.  It is in any event likely that the questions will be pursuant to a court order, which can be made at any time – and therefore might be significantly later than the (unknown) date of service of the report – or at some other date agreed to by the lawyers instructing the expert, perhaps so that they might ask questions of the other side’s expert at the same time.

The consequence is that the questions are likely to come long after the expert has forgotten the subject matter of the report.

Who can ask the questions?

Under CPR 35.6 the questions can be asked by a lawyer of the opposing expert, not the lawyer’s own expert, or by any or all of the lawyers instructing a single joint expert.  Of course a lawyer can always ask his or her own expert questions, whether formally in writing in response to written questions or in any other manner, but these are asked under the expert’s general retainer or as part of the expert’s duty to his or her own client.  However those answers provided by the expert to his or her instructing lawyer are not automatically admissible in evidence in the case and may require the court’s permission before being used in that way.

How often can questions be asked

The default position is that questions may be asked once (CPR 35.6(2)(a)) but that doesn’t stop the court or the parties agreeing to a second round of questions, if this is deemed necessary.  The first answers provided may themselves have given rise to more questions than they answered, or they may have been inadequate, or there may have been developments in the case which require further ‘clarification’.

‘Clarification’

What is clarification?  And whose clarification are we talking about?   ‘Clarification’ at CPR 35.6(2)(c) is not defined in the Rules.  The Court of Appeal has taken the view that questions should be answered if to do so would assist the just disposal of the dispute[1].  Therefore the questions may involve the expert in expressing opinions on matters additional to those addressed in the report, if  (of course) they are within the expert’s area of expertise and if relevant to the issues to be resolved in the dispute.  The expert must not be led into answering questions on matters on which he or she does not have the requisite expertise.

When can an expert decline to respond?

As the Guidance for the Instruction of Experts in Civil Claims 2014[2] states (para 67) experts have a duty to provide answers to questions properly put.  The questions ‘must be proportionate’ – see the opening words of CPR 35.6(1).  Unfortunately, this is not a defined term and the length of questions permissible will vary according to the number and complexity of issues addressed in the report and how adequately they have been dealt with in the report or how relevant the answers will be to the disposal of the dispute.Read More »