It’s natural to be suspicious if someone seems to be offering you something valuable in return for nothing. We are all conditioned to think that if something sounds “too good to be true”, then it must in fact be too good to be true. There are times when we’re vulnerable to letting our guard down – for example, if it’s something we really want – and system tools have evolved to provide some protection. For example, many spam filters will catch emails with “free” in the subject line because use of that one word alone indicates dodgy intentions on the part of the sender. But just because a service is offered as 'provided free of charge' to you, it's not necessarily dodgy as long as the service provider is getting by some other method - such as happens with solicitors working for claimants with personal injury claims. We invite people to ask us questions via our Google Business page. You can ask a question of Moray Claims on Google Business here. You can see the questions Continue Reading
Legal Expenses Insurance Articles
Below are listed our articles covering Legal Expenses Insurance, as it relates to Personal Injury Claims.
What pricing will apply to our help with your personal injury claim in Moray?
When asked about his nationality, legendary Scottish fiddler, Johnny Cunningham, liked to tell people that he was half Scottish and half Irish. This explained, he said, why half of him wanted to drink all the time and the other half never wanted to pay for it. Everyone prefers a free option if it’s realistic… …and cost is one important aspect of personal injury compensation claims. What is it that personal injury clients want? In many cases they will say that it’s about “justice”. It’s the principle of the thing. In practice, what this boils down to is questions about how much your claim is likely to be worth and how long it is all likely to take to get justice for you. From the solicitor’s point of view, the main question tends to be: “Is there a claim?” - Will we be able to prove someone caused your injury by negligence? And, of course, another important question you’ll have is: “How much is it going to cost me to get help from this solicitor? Cost Continue Reading
Knowing whether Legal Expenses Insurance covers you for a personal injury claim
We thought it might be helpful to analyse a clause from a legal expenses insurance (LEI) policy relating to cover for making a personal injury claim. It’s just one type of clause out of many in a LEI policy but it is a foundational one relative to personal injury claims. What is LEI? LEI is one way to insure yourself against the risk that a personal injury compensation claim you make might fail in such a way that you could be responsible for the costs (legal expenses) of your opponent. Typically, that can only happen if you get to the stage where you have to raise a court action to pursue your claim – so legal expenses insurance is insuring you against the risk of losing your claim in court. While it is possible to buy LEI as a standalone policy, most LEI policies are added to home or car insurance as an optional extra. LEI policies bought ‘before the event’ (BTE) protect policyholders in case legal action has to be brought or defended in the future. This type of policy would be Continue Reading
Is Legal Expenses Insurance worth it?
Legal expenses insurance (LEI) is also known as legal protection insurance or even just legal insurance. It can pay for the cost of legal advice, if you need help, in a variety of scenarios - for example - a boundary dispute with a neighbouring property owner a building dispute with a tradesman who has done work on your house an employment dispute a personal injury compensation claim following an accident The insurance can cover you whether you are the person initiating the claim or the person against whom the claim is being made. The main benefit of LEI is that it provides you with a route to justice which may otherwise be too expensive for you to consider. It can be a stand-alone policy but is often an add-on to other insurance, such as house contents insurance. Types of LEI There’s an important distinction between ‘before the event’ (BTE) LEI and ‘after the event’ (ATE) LEI. The ‘event’ is the thing that's happened for which you need the legal advice Continue Reading
How legal expenses insurance can give you access to justice (that might otherwise be denied)
I was renewing my first aid qualification recently and some statistics really hit home. Less than 1 in 10 people in Britain survive an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. In countries where cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is taught in schools on the other hand (e.g. Norway), as many as 1 in 4 survive. It seems that providing folks with an early education in first aid fundamentals improves heart attack victims’ chances of making it through their experience alive. In the same way, a recent report by a group of international lawyers has argued that making Legal Expenses Insurance (LEI) more widely available would improve access to justice, giving some people a possible legal remedy where otherwise their chances would be as good as dead. In this article, we are going to consider 3 questions related to LEI. Firstly, what is LEI and what types of LEI exist? Secondly, who is most likely to benefit from taking out LEI? And, lastly, why you should make a general check of Continue Reading
9 Questions to ask your Legal Expenses Insurer if you want your own solicitor to handle your personal injury claim
In other articles, we have discussed how legal expenses insurance can help minimise the cost risk to you if you need to make a personal injury claim for compensation. The term “legal expenses insurance” can include both before-the-event (BTE) insurance and after-the-event (ATE) insurance. With ATE insurance, the insurance policy is taken out after the accident in order to cover the risk of having to pay the opponent’s legal costs (for example, if you raise a court action but the claim fails and you lose). BTE insurance covers against future legal costs but was in place before the event which gave rise to the claim, such as the accident which has caused the personal injury for which you need to claim compensation. BTE insurance generally limits your freedom to choose your own legal representative because claimants are directed to use firms of solicitors which are on the BTE insurer’s approved panel. Panel firms may be located a considerable distance from your home, especially Continue Reading
Why you should always make use of insurance, if you have it
We criticise insurance companies on this blog quite often. Of course, insurance companies are frequently critical of solicitors who help people to make personal injury claims. They are also critical of claimants themselves. As well as people with possible personal injury compensation claims, we get a lot of enquiries from people who are worried that some sort of compensation claim might be made against them. If they have insurance cover, they are not sure if they should use it. If you have insurance that will help you defend a claim against you for personal injury (or property damage), you should make use of it. Here are a couple of very recent examples. The first scenario is a road traffic accident. Of course, in theory, it is compulsory to have motor insurance to cover you against the risk of liability to a 3rd party. In this case, the person making the enquiry to us had been driving at night in a suburban area. There was street lighting. The car in front was Continue Reading
Why a personal injury claim does not guarantee you your day in court
Can you have your day in court, with a personal claim, if that's what you want? Donald Trump used the Rolling Stones’ recording of their 1969 song “You Can't Always Get What You Want" during his 2016 primary and presidential campaigns. Following the Republican National Convention in July 2016, which was widely televised, the Stones went public with their views on the use of the song composed by Keith Richards and Mick Jagger. They stated that they did not endorse Trump. They also requested that Trump should stop using their songs to support his message. Despite these requests, Trump continued his use of the song at rallies, even beyond the 2016 presidential elections. It seems that, even if you are the Rolling Stones, you can’t always get what you want. It is also the case that, if you are an injured person with a personal injury compensation claim, you can’t always get what you want – and we’re going to look at some aspects of that in this article. Most people ask if they Continue Reading
How soon can you choose your own solicitor under Before the Event insurance?
We’ve covered the topic of Before the Event insurance in other articles. Before the Event (BTE) Insurance is legal expenses insurance you can choose to take out. It means that if, for example, you are injured in an accident, the insurance covers the cost of legal advice on the prospects of claiming compensation. It’s an alternative to other funding methods such as no win-no fee and legal aid. One of the friction points of BTE Insurance is that you usually have to use the BTE insurer’s own panel solicitor for legal advice in the early stages. The justification most commonly given is that BTE insurers prefer to use their own panel solicitors for valid commercial and quality-control reasons. You can’t use, say, your own local, specialist solicitor for advice under the policy in the initial stages of advice. (You can still use them for advice, it just won’t be under the policy - which may not be a problem, in fact). The situation changes if it becomes necessary to raise a court Continue Reading
3 ways timing is important with Legal Expenses Insurance
I was sad to read that one of my all-time favourite bands, Rush, are "basically done" after 41 years of music making. At times, as a child, I would listen to their LPs incessantly and many of the lyrics have stuck with me through my life. A Farewell to Kings (1977) was the first Rush record I bought and these words are from the title song: When they turn the pages of history When these days have passed long ago Will they read of us with sadness For the seeds that we let grow? We turned our gaze From the castles in the distance Eyes cast down On the path of least resistance Cities full of hatred Fear and lies Withered hearts And cruel, tormented eyes Scheming demons Dressed in kingly guise Beating down the multitude And scoffing at the wise As Rush sang in another song (Circumstances), quoting famous words attributed to Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr from the mid-19th century: "The more that things change, the more they stay the same." 40 years on, the last 4 Continue Reading
When does Legal Expenses Insurance cover you for a Personal Injury Claim?
Cammy Keith, the all-time leading goalscorer for Keith football club, went viral on social media following his side's lead to defeat to Rothes on 03 February 2018. Keith (the player) scored both goals for Keith (the team) and so, on results pages, it appeared as though he had almost achieved a near-impossible outcome: a draw where one player was up against a full team of 11 players. A tweet that he had put in the "quite the shift" was retweeted many times. Quite the shift for Keith on his own. pic.twitter.com/nkni1CMcvy — The Harry Wraggs (@THWtwit) February 3, 2018 In that case, the bare statistics gave a misleading impression as to whether it had been a fair match. As an injured person with a possible personal injury claim for compensation, it is never a fair match at the outset. You need to take every possible measure to tip the scales back to your side, even if you don't level them up completely. The scales are weighted in favour of the insurer on the other side Continue Reading
Do you have freedom of choice of personal injury solicitor?
Humans have an overpowering need to return favours. This is one pillar of the psychology of persuasion explored in Robert Cialdini’s book, “Influence”. The rule of reciprocity is that we feel a duty to repay others in kind for whatever they have done for us. It’s powerful because it forms the basis of all societies: it allowed our ancestors to share resources securely, knowing that their favour would be returned later. If someone else does us a favour, we feel a psychological burden until we return it. We’re afraid of being labelled as a parasite, if we don’t. Many experiments have demonstrated this phenomenon. In one of these - at Cornell University in the early 1970s - Professor Dennis Regan demonstrated that people are so anxious to get rid of the burden of debt that they will perform much larger favours in return for small ones. In that study, a researcher – “Joe” – bought test subjects a 10 cent Coke as an unprompted favour and then later asked the subjects to buy Continue Reading