header-logo header-logo

03 March 2017
Categories: Legal News , Insurance / reinsurance , Personal injury
printer mail-detail

MIB in "wheel-spin" on untraced drivers

The Motor Insurers Bureau (MIB) has been forced to remove a key provision in the Untraced Drivers Agreement 2017, following a campaign led by a solicitor and motor insurance law specialist. The revision was announced within a day of the agreement coming into effect on 1 March 2017. 

The MIB published the replacement scheme on 2 March. It substitutes the earlier scheme dated 10 January 2017 with retrospective effect. Clause 10 of the earlier version prohibited victims from using a solicitor to help them fill out or submit the claim form or to take any active role at the crucial initial stages of the claim on penalty of the entire claim being rejected outright. Solicitor and campaigner, Nicholas Bevan, complained that this was unlawful and with the backing of the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers the MIB has now omitted the offending provision but added a requirement that only the claimant can sign the form.

Bevan welcomed the MIB’s action in removing the prohibition on solicitors. However, he warned that "the new agreement is highly unsatisfactory because it fails to provide an equivalent standard of compensatory guarantee required under European law.

"The new agreement still contains a number of unlawful provisions such as the three-year deferral of interest accruing and the lack of any suitable requirement for independent legal representation of minors and mentally handicapped victims. These are likely to be challenged in the future. They've hit reverse but gone into a wheel-spin.” Read more: http://bit.ly/2mAy7lL

 

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Clarke Willmott—Megan Bradbury

Clarke Willmott—Megan Bradbury

Corporate team welcomes paralegal in Southampton

Howard Kennedy—Paul Moran

Howard Kennedy—Paul Moran

London firm strengthens real estate team with partner appointment

Cripps—Radius Law

Cripps—Radius Law

Commercial and technology practice boosted by team hire

NEWS
Pathfinder courts—renamed ‘Child focused courts’—are to be rolled out nationally, following a successful pilot where backlogs halved and cases were resolved up to seven and a half months faster
The Court of Appeal has unanimously dismissed a £385,000 costs order against a father, in a case that centred on what is required to meet the threshold of ‘reprehensible or unreasonable’ behaviour
Centuries-old burial laws would be overhauled, under Law Commission proposals to address the burgeoning problem of shortage of cemetery space
The government has committed an extra £32m to women’s charities and services tackling addiction, trauma, abuse and homelessness
The Financial Ombudsman is poised for major reform to return it to a simple, impartial dispute resolution service
back-to-top-scroll