Brendan Burgess
Founder
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It’s called ambushing the plaintiff. To make an example and so that there is a punitive element to the costs order that will inevitably be made against him.It happened in December 2017. Why did they only show him the footage recently?
If they told him they had the incident on camera it may never have gotten to court at all.
The longer things get spun out, the worse it is for the plaintiff who will have embarked on a series of deceptions by the time the litigation hits court.
Nothing beats the element of surprise in litigation.
But the case wasn't heard...............They are just as guilty as the plaintiff in wasting the courts time.
When Mr Morgan’s case was called for hearing before Judge Berkeley, his legal team informed the court he was withdrawing his claim and offering to pay all of Spar Artane’s legal costs.
Sounds unfair on the shop owner to drag it out, presumably they are stuck with that insurance company paying higher premiums while this claim is outstanding for 4 years.It’s called ambushing the plaintiff. To make an example and so that there is a punitive element to the costs order that will inevitably be made against him.
The insurance company will spin a dishonest plaintiff out over a long period in the knowledge that they already have what they need to catch him out at the time of their choosing. If they let on that they know the real story too soon, the plaintiff can pull out with no real cost to himself. That, or it gives him time to make up a story.
The longer things get spun out, the worse it is for the plaintiff who will have embarked on a series of deceptions by the time the litigation hits court.
Nothing beats the element of surprise in litigation.
That’s one way of looking at it.Sounds unfair on the shop owner to drag it out, presumably they are stuck with that insurance company paying higher premiums while this claim is outstanding for 4 years.
Yes, they need to file a Defence.Do they not have to file a defence? Surely something as important as CCTV evidence (and central to their defence) would need to have been mentioned and entered into evidence?
"When Mr Morgan’s case was called for hearing before Judge Berkeley, his legal team informed the court he was withdrawing his claim and offering to pay all of Spar Artane’s legal costs."But the case wasn't heard...............
From the 'Indo'.........
No basis for this statement re an increase in premium.At the end of the day the loser is the shop owner who will have a higher premium (ied be stunned if they don't). The legal eagles won't lose at this point.
Having said that the outcome for dodgy claimants is excellent - they wreak it for everyone.
Ok so even assuming the insurer doesn't increase the premium (big assumption in my opinion), the shop owner can't switch insurer while there's an outstanding claim, so they can't do the yearly shop around for the best premium.No basis for this statement re an increase in premium.
In fairness, there may well be an increase in premium for the shop owner, but that all depends on the type of policy and the level of overall claims in a year, the state of the market etc.Ok so even assuming the insurer doesn't increase the premium (big assumption in my opinion), the shop owner can't switch insurer while there's an outstanding claim, so they can't do the yearly shop around for the best premium.
The equitable maxim “he who comes to equity must come with clean hands” applies to the plaintiff. In this case, the dishonest one.I've no time for such fraudsters, but there is something a bit off to me in spinning anyone along in Court proceedings, with the objective of increasing legal costs. Does this not breach the 'clean hands' principle about coming to Court?
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