My sister gets legal support through her trade union. She is a health worker. She had a nasty accident while visiting a residential property earlier this year. Fell through a defective/corroded manhole on the driveway. Broken arm, surgery, pins etc. Her lawyers sent a letter of claim to the homeowner and asked for insurance details. No reply. So they sent a chaser. Still no reply. So now her lawyer wants to drop the whole claim on the basis that he cannot be sure the defendant is solvent and could pay. Sister is fuming. Surely they shouldn't just drop the case because the defendant didn't reply? If that happened all the time, then defendants could easily wriggle out of reponsibility just by sitting tight and refusing to answer any letters from the claimant's lawyer, right? Is there a way to force the defendant to provide the necessary details? Any advice appreciated.
No reply from defendant so solicitor dropped case
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The lawyer is probably worried about not receiving their fee if the property owner does not have insurance
My advice to your sister is to drop this lawyer and consider making a court claim as a litigant in person.
If she doesn't know the name of the property owner she could search at the Land Registry
Fortunately there is an example of a Particulars of Claim in Negligence/Occupiers Liability at www.lawteacher.net
Did your sister obtain a photo of the defective manhole?
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Originally posted by Pezza54 View PostThe lawyer is probably worried about not receiving their fee if the property owner does not have insurance
My advice to your sister is to drop this lawyer and consider making a court claim as a litigant in person.
If she doesn't know the name of the property owner she could search at the Land Registry
Fortunately there is an example of a Particulars of Claim in Negligence/Occupiers Liability at www.lawteacher.net
Did your sister obtain a photo of the defective manhole?
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You can find the land registry details for the property to see who owns it and whether there are any outstanding mortgages or other charges. This may indicate whether the property itself may be a means of eventual payment.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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