For a clinical negligence / personal injury claim to have a case you have to prove 2 things:
Breach of duty (the defendant was negligence)
+ Causation (had the defendants negligence resulted in the outcome/injury of the person?) i.e., if the negligent act was not done, would the outcome have been the different or the same?
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If there is a clinical negligence case, and the hospital accepts that they did a breach of duty, but deny that there is any causation element - that even if the breach of duty was not done, and they did the correct things instead, then the outcome would still have been the same anyway, (ie they deny causation)
and also an 'expert report' - expert to write on breach & Causation for the case has said that they can confirm a breach of duty, but he feels he cannot write about causation in his professional opinion
then the hospital has done 'partial negligence' - breach of duty but not causation.
The question is, then in these scenarios where the hospital admit breach but not causation, then do the hospital usually offer to settle out of court, by give a smaller amount of smaller damages (just based on the fact that they did a breach? ) which would a be a smaller partial damages amount of money, .. compared to the amount they would have offered outside of court had the claimant had causation proved too)?
Is it likely that they would offer partial/ smaller amounts of settlements of money ?
on the basis that they admit breach of duty (which can be backed up
or can they see that causation cannot be proved, and think that even if it went to court then the claimant will lose (as they can't prove causation) so wouldn't offer any partial payment as even if it dragged to court, the claimant wouldn't get any money damages anyway,
(so in other words they wouldn't want to lose a 'partial' amount of money now)
I don't want to get into the details of the claim, due to it being a touching subject, but your your help on the 'damages' question would appreciated
Breach of duty (the defendant was negligence)
+ Causation (had the defendants negligence resulted in the outcome/injury of the person?) i.e., if the negligent act was not done, would the outcome have been the different or the same?
~~~~~~~~~~
If there is a clinical negligence case, and the hospital accepts that they did a breach of duty, but deny that there is any causation element - that even if the breach of duty was not done, and they did the correct things instead, then the outcome would still have been the same anyway, (ie they deny causation)
and also an 'expert report' - expert to write on breach & Causation for the case has said that they can confirm a breach of duty, but he feels he cannot write about causation in his professional opinion
then the hospital has done 'partial negligence' - breach of duty but not causation.
The question is, then in these scenarios where the hospital admit breach but not causation, then do the hospital usually offer to settle out of court, by give a smaller amount of smaller damages (just based on the fact that they did a breach? ) which would a be a smaller partial damages amount of money, .. compared to the amount they would have offered outside of court had the claimant had causation proved too)?
Is it likely that they would offer partial/ smaller amounts of settlements of money ?
on the basis that they admit breach of duty (which can be backed up
or can they see that causation cannot be proved, and think that even if it went to court then the claimant will lose (as they can't prove causation) so wouldn't offer any partial payment as even if it dragged to court, the claimant wouldn't get any money damages anyway,
(so in other words they wouldn't want to lose a 'partial' amount of money now)
I don't want to get into the details of the claim, due to it being a touching subject, but your your help on the 'damages' question would appreciated
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