Simon Allen

  • Andrew Edis QC
    Feature

    PI: calculating disadvantage

    20 October 2014

    Assessment of loss for the future earning capacity of those suffering residual disability through injury has always been unsatisfactory.

  • Coal pit
    Feature

    Pre-action disclosure

    15 September 2014

    The test to be applied in an application for pre-action disclosure.

  • RCJabove
    Feature

    Civil procedure: relief from sanctions

    14 April 2014

    An overview and guidance for solicitors currently dealing with the changes post-Mitchell.

  • HMP Swansea: accident caused through prisoner negligence
    Feature

    Vicarious liability – the two-stage test

    10 March 2014

    When is an employer responsible for the actions of its employees?

  • Simon Allen
    Feature

    Reasonable foreseeability

    4 November 2013

    The opportunity for a claimant injured at work to rely on a statutory breach was reduced on 1 October by the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act (ERRA) 2013.

  • Feature

    Mesothelioma Bill

    29 July 2013

    ‘One has also to bear in mind that, typically, the worst symptoms of pain, suffering and loss of amenity occur in the last weeks and days of the disease’s progress and that the death… is a horrible one.’(Senior Master Whitaker: Smith v Bolton Copper Limited: Unreported 10 July 2007 QBD)

  • Law Report

    Reasonable foreseeability

    15 July 2013

    Hide v Steeplechase Co (Cheltenham) Limited and Others (2013) EWCA Civ 545 (Longmore, McFarlane and Davis LJJ)

  • News

    Contributory negligence: employee or lawful visitor?

    29 April 2013

    In Sharp v Top Flight Scaffolding Ltd, the claimant was so badly injured in the accident that at trial he was a protected party represented by his brother as litigation friend.

  • News

    Nervous shock and secondary victims

    15 April 2013

    A secondary victim is someone who, when witnessing an accident, suffers injury consequential upon the injury, or fear of injury, to a primary victim. Because of the potential for multiple claims for damages arising out of a single accident, the courts have been anxious to restrict the numbers of claimants ...

  • News

    What is a disease?

    Archive

    A primary flaw in the Jackson reforms’ vision of the personal injury landscape is a profound inability to comprehend that the value of a claim in damages is but one of the variables which has to be assessed when applying the proportionality principle. In the UK, fault has to be ...

  • News

    Increase in damages by 10%

    2012-09-06T00:00:00

    In Simmons v Castle [2012] EWCA Civ 1039, the Court of Appeal has added to the general splashing about which precedes the enactment of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012. In an effort to provide ‘proper, prospective warning’, it has jumped in ahead of the implementation ...

  • News

    Case management - a more robust approach

    2012-05-31T00:00:00

    Guntrip v Cheney Coaches Ltd, [2012] EWCA Civ 392, Ward, Elias and Lewison LJJ; Fred Perry Holdings Ltd v Brands Plaza Trading Ltd & Another [2012] EWCA Civ 224, Jackson and Lewison LJJ.

  • News

    Valuation of general damages in mesothelioma claims

    2012-03-15T00:00:00

    Unless one has been in a life-threatening situation, it is impossible to grasp the concept of imminent mortality. When young, human beings are blinded from seeing the horizon of their lives by the light of expectation.

  • News

    Violent employees and vicarious liability

    2012-02-16T00:00:00

    In recent times a disproportionate number of cases concerning vicarious liability have reached the higher courts. Sadly, a number of these have involved abuse of children by members of the clergy. Violence is a common feature, though financial wrongdoing was the offence in Dubai Aluminium Company Ltd v Salaam [2003] ...

  • News

    Dishonesty, statements of truth, and Jackson

    2011-10-06T00:00:00

    It is a strange world. The perception was, and remains, that legal costs in fast-track road traffic claims are disproportionate to damages. The solution was to ask a senior judge, Lord Justice Jackson, with minimal practical experience of personal injury litigation, to review and report.

  • News

    Personal injury caused by a hazardous floor

    2011-07-28T00:00:00

    Hufton v Somerset County Council [2011] EWCA Civ 789. The claimant was a pupil at the defendant’s school. She suffered an injury to her knee when slipping on water on the wooden floor of the assembly hall when re-entering the building during the morning break.

  • News

    Video evidence; and assessing an unsafe system of work

    2011-05-26T00:00:00

    Disclosure of video evidence – Douglas v O’Neill.

  • News

    Disclosure of expert medical evidence

    2011-04-07T00:00:00

    If a claimant instructs expert A, but then does not wish to rely upon the content of his report, can he instruct expert B without having to disclose expert A’s report?

  • News

    Uren v Corporate Leisure (UK) Ltd and Ministry of Defence

    2011-03-03T00:00:00

    Mr Uren was a member of the RAF who suffered a spinal injury when taking part in a ‘health and fun day’, during which he dived head first into an inflatable pool containing water with a depth of 18 inches while competing to collect pieces of plastic fruit.

  • News

    Scouting – social value and balancing risk

    2011-01-20T00:00:00

    The Scout Association v Barnes [2010] EWCA Civ 1476 (Lord Justice Ward, Lady Justice Smith and Lord Justice Jackson)

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