header-logo header-logo

Insurance surgery: Getting serious

02 March 2016 / Duncan Rutter
Issue: 7689 / Categories: Features , Insurance surgery , Profession
printer mail-detail
001_nlj_7689_rutter

Duncan Rutter reviews The Serious Injury Guide

The Serious Injury Guide has taken over a year to finalise. It was developed in response to the pilot of the Multi Track Code (2008) which concluded in 2011. It is a voluntary guide that applies to high value claims. To date 13 insurers and 48 law firms have signed up to it. The full guide can be found here.

This is a best practice guide for complex injury claims with a full liability value of at least £250k. It does not apply to clinical negligence or asbestos-related disease claims and, emphasising the voluntary nature of the code, does not affect a solicitor’s duty to act in the best interests of his/her client.

Objectives

The guide begins with its objectives. It is intended that liability should be resolved as quickly as possible and in any event within six months of first notification, a period twice as long as that allowed by the pre-action protocol reflecting the importance of a more careful consideration of liability in

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Birketts—trainee cohort

Birketts—trainee cohort

Firm welcomes new cohort of 29 trainee solicitors for 2025

Keoghs—four appointments

Keoghs—four appointments

Four partner hires expand legal expertise in Scotland and Northern Ireland

Brabners—Ben Lamb

Brabners—Ben Lamb

Real estate team in Yorkshire welcomes new partner

NEWS
Robert Taylor of 360 Law Services warns in this week's NLJ that adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) risks entrenching disadvantage for SME law firms, unless tools are tailored to their needs
From oligarchs to cosmetic clinics, strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs) target journalists, activists and ordinary citizens with intimidating legal tactics. Writing in NLJ this week, Sadie Whittam of Lancaster University explores the weaponisation of litigation to silence critics
Delays and dysfunction continue to mount in the county court, as revealed in a scathing Justice Committee report and under discussion this week by NLJ columnist Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School. Bulk claims—especially from private parking firms—are overwhelming the system, with 8,000 cases filed weekly
Writing in NLJ this week, Thomas Rothwell and Kavish Shah of Falcon Chambers unpack the surprise inclusion of a ban on upwards-only rent reviews in the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill
Charles Pigott of Mills & Reeve charts the turbulent progress of the Employment Rights Bill through the House of Lords, in this week's NLJ
back-to-top-scroll