My sister is a health worker. Last year, while visiting a residential property, she walked along the driveway to the front door. A manhole cover gave way. She sustained a broken arm and needed an operation, pins inserted etc.
She gets legal support through her trade union. The union's lawyers sent a letter of claim to the occupier saying that he was liable under the Occupiers' Liability Act. The occupier didn't reply, but the lawyers later discovered that he was a tenant. So the lawyers then sent a letter of claim to the landlord saying that he was liable under the Defective Premises Act. The landlord replied and said that he had never received notification of the defect from the tenant, and so he isn't liable. (Apparently, for a claim to succeed under the Defective Premises Act it must be shown that a landlord had been informed of the defect - at least that what my sister's lawyers told her).
The lawyers then sent a series of letters to the tenant asking (a) if he has insurance and (b) whether he informed the landlord of the defect. The tenant has never replied. He has just ignored every single letter.
The lawyers now want to drop the whole case. They say that it's not worth suing the tenant as he probably doesn't have insurance and there is no evidence he informed the landlord of the defect.
Seems incredibly unfair. Are the lawyers right to just give up like this? Can something be done to prove liability - whether against the tenant or landlord? There is no doubt that the manhole cover was badly corroded (a subsequent report by the water company confirmed it). My sister has paid her union dues for years and is reluctant to allow the union's lawyers to throw the towel in, especially when the tenant has simply sat on his hands and refused to engage.
Any advice appreciated.
She gets legal support through her trade union. The union's lawyers sent a letter of claim to the occupier saying that he was liable under the Occupiers' Liability Act. The occupier didn't reply, but the lawyers later discovered that he was a tenant. So the lawyers then sent a letter of claim to the landlord saying that he was liable under the Defective Premises Act. The landlord replied and said that he had never received notification of the defect from the tenant, and so he isn't liable. (Apparently, for a claim to succeed under the Defective Premises Act it must be shown that a landlord had been informed of the defect - at least that what my sister's lawyers told her).
The lawyers then sent a series of letters to the tenant asking (a) if he has insurance and (b) whether he informed the landlord of the defect. The tenant has never replied. He has just ignored every single letter.
The lawyers now want to drop the whole case. They say that it's not worth suing the tenant as he probably doesn't have insurance and there is no evidence he informed the landlord of the defect.
Seems incredibly unfair. Are the lawyers right to just give up like this? Can something be done to prove liability - whether against the tenant or landlord? There is no doubt that the manhole cover was badly corroded (a subsequent report by the water company confirmed it). My sister has paid her union dues for years and is reluctant to allow the union's lawyers to throw the towel in, especially when the tenant has simply sat on his hands and refused to engage.
Any advice appreciated.





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