Call (0115) 931 51 71 to talk to us about your situation
Barratts Legal
  • Twitter
  • Mail
  • Facebook
  • Welcome
  • Why Choose Us?
    • Who We Are
    • Our Approach
    • Our Team
    • Case Studies
    • News
    • FAQs
  • Clinical Negligence
    • Clinical Negligence Team
    • Case Studies
      • Birth injuries Case Studies
      • Brain Injury Case Studies
      • Misdiagnosis and Missed Diagnosis Case Studies
      • Surgical and Orthopaedic Errors Case Studies
      • DVT and Vascular Case Studies
    • Related News
    • Related Links
    • Birth Injuries
    • Spinal Injuries
    • Diagnosis Errors
    • Inquests
    • Funding Your Claim
  • Personal Injury
    • Personal Injury Team
    • Case studies
      • Spinal Injuries Case Studies
      • Brain Injury Case Studies
      • Road Traffic Accident Injury Case Studies
      • Workplace Injuries Case Studies
      • Industrial Disease Case Studies
      • Orthopaedic Injuries Case Studies
      • Mental Health Case Studies
    • Related News
    • Related Links
    • Head Injury
    • Subtle Brain Injury
    • Spinal Injuries
    • Inquests
    • Funding Your Claim
  • Criminal Injury Compensation
    • Criminal Injury Compensation Team
    • How we can help
    • Case studies
    • Spinal Injuries
    • Head Injury
    • Subtle Brain Injury
    • Funding
    • Inquests
  • Court of Protection
    • Court of Protection Team
    • The Work of a Deputy
    • Case Studies
    • Funding
  • Fatal Claims & Inquests
    • Inquests Team
    • The Inquest Process
    • Case Studies
      • Inquests Case Studies
      • Fatal Claims Case Studies
    • Funding
  • Contact
  • Menu Menu

Accidents in Europe After Brexit

March 12, 2019/in News, Personal Injuries Team, Personal Injury News

Mollweide Projection of the World

With all the news about deal or no deal and backstop clauses, you may be forgiven for not thinking about what will happen if you have an accident in Europe after March 2019.

At Barratts Solicitors we have a reputation for pursuing claims for clients who have been injured in road traffic accidents anywhere in the world. As an EU citizen, if you are injured in the EU, we are able, in almost all circumstances, to pursue your claim in the UK Courts. This avoids the need to identify an EU lawyer and the problems of litigating in a foreign language with unfamiliar procedures.

We have successfully helped clients in this way. It limits their stress as they have direct access to an English lawyer and a familiar country. However, if we leave the EU, there will be no such right to bring a claim in the UK. Access to justice will be seriously impaired. This is because the ability to bring a claim in this country will be removed. Injured clients will have to find and instruct a lawyer in the country where the accident happened. They may have to return to the country, where the accident occurred, for the case to be heard. This can be very traumatic.

We will continue to do all we can for individuals injured abroad, but the new regime will undoubtedly prejudice many people injured on European roads.

To find out more about the campaign to protect victims of road traffic accidents in Europe, the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers (APIL)  are campaigning on this issue. We would urge you to read their briefing policy for the Government:

https://www.apil.org.uk/files/online-files/165-742534/MotorVehiclesAmendmentAPILBriefing.pdf

 

Extending Legal Aid for Inquest Costs Rejected

February 20, 2019/in Clinical Negligence News, News, Personal Injury News

For some families, an Inquest can be an important, yet inevitably very difficult, part of the grieving process following the death of a loved one. The purpose of an Inquest is to reach a conclusion regarding the circumstances of a person’s death and throughout the process the Coroner is guided by the evidence of key witnesses.

 Nottingham Coroner's Court

At Barratts we often receive instructions to provide legal assistance at Inquests on behalf of the bereaved families, to assist them through what can sometimes be a complex process. Legal representation also ensures that families are fairly represented and on an equal-footing with other parties (such as medical practitioners or local government organisations) who will have the financial and legal backing of the Hospital Trust or Local Authority.

Obtaining answers for the bereaved family is intended to be the focal point of the Inquest, but in circumstances where the level of trust has already been broken between the family and others involved, fairness and equality is of paramount importance. The prospect of a formal Inquest can be very daunting for those involved. Families need to be confident that they are asking the right questions of the witnesses and that they can understand the answers without being overwhelmed by medical and legal jargon. It is also important for families to be sure that the Coroner has been given all the relevant evidence from everyone involved, including themselves, to make an informed decision about the cause of death.

Whilst public bodies and other organisations will have the financial support to obtain a high level of legal representation, families often do not.  The cost involved can be the deciding factor as to whether legal representation is obtained at all.

Like most injury lawyers, we were delighted when the Ministry of Justice indicated that they would look at the possibility of introducing public funding for families at Inquests where a State organisation is legally represented.  Lawyers have long been campaigning for equality of arms between bereaved families and the State at Inquests.

Disappointingly, the Ministry of Justice announced last week that it would not introduce automatic public funding in Inquests where the State is represented.  Instead funding will only be reserved for the ‘most serious cases’.

This decision has been met with an outcry of disappointment from bereaved families and those organisations which have campaigned on their behalf for further support. Those same concerns have been previously echoed in a 2017 government-commissioned report – which reviewed the experiences of families affected by the Hillsborough disaster – and highlighted a ‘pressing need’ for families to receive publicly funded legal representation.

Legal Aid is still available in certain circumstances for representation at Inquests but its availability is very limited.  Barratts Clinical Negligence partners have successfully obtained Legal Aid on behalf of two clients in recent years to provide representation at an Inquest concerning deaths occurring due to failures in medical care.  Sadly we have had many other clients who have not been granted funding; this is despite the fact that they have lost family members in the most tragic of circumstances and the public purse has funded legal representation for the organisations which the family believe are responsible for the death.

The campaign for bereaved families will continue but in the meantime the Ministry of justice have lost an opportunity to redress the imbalance between families and Government organisations. See what the Law Society Gazette has to say on our Facebook page.

Click https://www.facebook.com/pg/BarrattsSolicitors/posts/?ref=page_internal
then use the search box on the right to look for “inquests” and you’ll be able to read the post from February.

Page 2 of 212

News

  • Alison Brooks joins The Legal 500 Hall of FameNovember 7, 2025 - 6:07 pm
  • Work Begins on new premises for Footprints Conductive Education CentreNovember 4, 2024 - 5:51 pm
  • Disabled boy in a wheelchair on the beach
    Makaton At ChristmasDecember 23, 2022 - 3:15 pm
  • Legal advice
    Pulmonary Embolism – why you need to act quickly.January 7, 2022 - 10:56 am
  • Straight road with future dates
    Thirty Years And Continuing….December 15, 2021 - 11:07 pm
  • Spinal injury or pain
    Mental Health After Spinal Cord InjuryDecember 7, 2021 - 11:38 am
  • Disabled boy in a wheelchair on the beach
    NHS EARLY NOTIFICATION SCHEME FOR BIRTH INJURIESJuly 22, 2021 - 6:17 pm
  • Barratts solicitors news
    “Devastating Evidence” From Families at InquestsMay 27, 2021 - 2:38 pm
  • Disabled boy in a wheelchair on the beach
    Nottingham Maternity Services “Inadequate”December 9, 2020 - 7:51 pm
  • Girl living with spinal cord injury needs a wheelchair in a car
    Living With Spinal Cord InjuryNovember 18, 2020 - 6:33 pm
  • Nottingham Coroner's Court
    Missed Chances To Save Diabetic PatientNovember 12, 2020 - 5:08 pm
  • Signpost to help, support, advice, guidance
    Costs At Inquest RecoveredSeptember 29, 2020 - 5:26 pm
  • injury prevention week - car reversing lights awareness campaign
    APIL’s Pedestrian Safety CampaignAugust 7, 2020 - 10:03 am
  • Floating £ pound signs
    Bereavement Damages IncreasedMay 19, 2020 - 3:34 pm
  • Signpost to help, support, advice, guidance
    TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY FOLLOWING A CAR ACCIDENTMay 13, 2020 - 1:01 pm
  • Girl living with spinal cord injury needs a wheelchair in a car
    Transport For Older SEN PupilsApril 17, 2020 - 10:06 am
  • Exterior of NHS building
    The Cost of Medical NegligenceJanuary 21, 2020 - 4:39 pm
  • Straight road with future dates
    Accidents in Europe After BrexitMarch 12, 2019 - 2:03 pm
  • Legal advice
    Extending Legal Aid for Inquest Costs RejectedFebruary 20, 2019 - 9:47 am
AvMA accredited
Legal 500 leading firm
Head Injury Solicitor
 
Clinical Negligence Accreditation
AVMA Panel
APIL accredited practice

Barratts

Click the below links for details of:
Legal Notices
Terms of Business
Interest Policy
Cookie Policy
Complaints Policy

Barratt Goff & Tomlinson Limited, trading as Barratts Solicitors, are authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority
No. 524015
Copyright Barratt Goff & Tomlinson Limited 2017

Opening Hours

Mo-Th: 9:00-17:00
Fr: 9.00-16.00

Out of hours appointments are also available

mail@barratts.legal

Tel: 0115 931 5171

© Barratts Solicitors
  • Twitter
  • Mail
  • Facebook
Scroll to top