header-logo header-logo

31 October 2013
Issue: 7582 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-detail

Small claim limit likely to stay put

Patrick Allen believes small claims threshold will not be revisited

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) is unlikely to revisit its decision not to raise the small claims threshold from £1,000 to £5,000 for personal injury cases, according to a prominent personal injury lawyer.

Announcing plans to tackle whiplash fraud last week, Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said there were “good reasons” to raise the threshold but that the increase was being deferred until the wider impact of reforms was known so that the MoJ could ensure access to justice for genuine claimants. 

Patrick Allen, senior partner at Hodge, Jones & Allen, who has been campaigning on this issue since the 1990s, says: “There must be a limit to how many times we need to engage in this debate. Lord Justice Jackson looked at the issue carefully and decided that the special limit for personal injury should remain.”

Stephen Gowland, President of CILEx, says raising the limit would exclude many genuine claimants.

 

Issue: 7582 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

42BR Barristers—4 Brick Court

42BR Barristers—4 Brick Court

42BR Barristers to be joined by leading family law set, 4 Brick Court, this summer

Winckworth Sherwood—Rubianka Winspear

Winckworth Sherwood—Rubianka Winspear

Real estate and construction energy offering boosted by partner hire

Gateley Legal—Daniel Walsh

Gateley Legal—Daniel Walsh

Firm bolsters real estate team with partner hire in Birmingham

NEWS
A wave of housing and procedural reforms is set to test the limits of tribunal capacity. In his latest Civil Way column for NLJ this week, Stephen Gold charts sweeping change as the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 begins biting
Plans to reduce jury trials risk missing the real problem in the criminal justice system. Writing in NLJ this week, David Wolchover of Ridgeway Chambers argues the crown court backlog is fuelled not by juries but weak cases slipping through a flawed ‘50%’ prosecution test
Emerging technologies may soon transform how courts determine truth in deeply personal disputes. In this week's NLJ, Madhavi Kabra of 1 Hare Court and Harry Lambert of Outer Temple Chambers explore how neurotechnology could reshape family law
A controversial protest case has reignited debate over the limits of free expression. In NLJ this week, Nicholas Dobson examines a Quran-burning incident testing public order law
The courts have drawn a firm line under attempts to extend arbitration appeals. Writing in NLJ this week, Masood Ahmed of the University of Leicester highlights that if the High Court refuses permission under s 68 of the Arbitration Act 1996, that is the end
back-to-top-scroll