Public Liability Cases - Assembling Evidence & Getting Results
In public liability matters, there are fundamentally 5 areas in which evidence can be collected to ensure that a comprehensive investigation and assessment of the claim has been established.
It is imperative however, that we have the permission of
our clients to seek the evidence from various institutions and
treatment providers. This is facilitated by way of a signed
authority from the client, including a medical authority,
freedom of information authority and a Health Insurance
Commission authority.
(1) Medical Evidence:
First and foremost, medical evidence will be derived to
document the physical and psychological injuries and
disabilities that have been incurred due to an accident.
Various sources will be relied upon to provide the medical
evidence, and this will include contemporaneous evidence from
suppliers such as the hospital which the client may have
attended upon. A request made to the hospital will provide an
Ambulance Report, the admission notice, the clinical notes and
oftentimes surgery reports, as well as the discharge notice.
Also, treatment providers, i.e. a general practitioner,
physiotherapists, psychologists, counsellors, etc will also be
relied upon to provide clinical notes and progress reports to
document the claimant‘s injuries.
Indeed, it may also be necessary to commission a report
from a claimant’s treatment provider to provide insight into
the nature and extent of the injuries and the consequent
impact on the claimant’s life, economic standing, and
treatment needs.
This process of collecting all the medical evidence will
culminate in the commissioning of a medico-legal report by a
specialist medico-legal doctor nominated by the firm. It is
common practice that such a report will not be requested until
there is confirmation from the treatment providers that the
claimant’s injuries have indeed stabilised. The general rule
of thumb is that stabilisation will normally occur
approximately 9-12 months after the date of the accident.
The medico-legal report is of great importance, as this
will provide an indication as to the extent of the damages
that can be claimed for the claimant’s injuries. This will be
ascertained by the percentage of bodily impairment nominated
by the medico-legal doctor. This percentage will then be
converted into a monetary figure by making reference to
specific charts and legislative provisions.
(2) Liability Evidence:
Liability evidence is pertinent to prove that the defendant
is indeed at fault for the subject accident and therefore
should be responsible for compensating the claimant for their
damages.
One of the most common sources of liability evidence is the
claimant’s statement. Witnesses of the accident can also
provide liability evidence by way of a statement.
If indeed liability may be a sticking point in a claim, it
is common practice to commission a liability report whereby an
investigator trained in that particular field of law, i.e.
slip and fall expert, will attend upon the place of the
accident and comment upon the issues of liability.
Photographs of the accident site and sketches are also
invaluable forms of liability evidence.
(3) Economic Loss:
It is not unusual for people who have been in an accident
to be unable to return to work for an indefinite period of
time, or at least to return to work on modified duties. As a
result, a claimant may suffer financial loss as result of
their injuries. This loss may be for a closed period of time,
i.e. claimants may be unable to return to work for three
months and then resume their pre-accident duties. Others may
however, be unable to return to work or be deemed fit to
return to work on modified duties or sometimes consider a
complete change of employment. Consequently, claimants may
suffer economic los in the future, also.
In order to quantify past economic loss, it is vital that
clients instruct their solicitor the periods in which they did
not work. It is also of great import that clients provide
notices of assessment, group certificates, pay slips for the
period three years before the date of the accident and the
period thereafter.
It may also be necessary to obtain an economic loss report
from a specialist economic loss expert.
(4) Gratuitous & Paid Care:
Claimants may also find that their injuries have greatly
impeded upon their lifestyle to the extent that they are
unable to attend to daily tasks as before the accident.
It is quite common for claimants to be unable to attend to
personal hygiene, dressing, cooking, cleaning, everyday
household chores, etc. Therefore, claimants will often be the
recipient of gratuitous care and assistance from family and
friends. Or, claimants may employ gardeners, maids, etc to
assist.
As the law stands, a claimant may be entitled to receive
compensation for past gratuitous care if it meets the
threshold of 6 hours of assistance per week for 6 months.
Statements from the caregivers can support such a claim, as
can invoices for paid assistance.
(5) Medication, Treatment & Travel
Expenses:
Claimants are also entitled to recover expenses that they
have incurred for medication, treatment and travel. Again,
invoices and receipts are essential to buttress these claims.
How We Help You Prepare Your Claim & Get The
Best Results
Here at Gerard Malouf & Partners we pride ourselves on
our aggressive pursuit of securing our client’s entitlements
to full and complete compensation. We have over 20 years of
specialised expertise in personal injury law, and we are
prepared to take the gambit and take on claims other firms
simply will not.
Having extensive expertise at our fingertips, we will guide
our clients through their claim every step of the way. With
client satisfaction at the core of our ethos, we have
implemented a streamlined process which takes all the stress
and anxiety out of the pursuit of legal action, and our
clients’ feedback has been most promising.
Read information about our public liability claims services.
Take The Next Step
At Gerard Malouf & Partners we offer a service of the first consultation free to ascertain details of your claim & explain our services that only require payment if the action we undertake on your behalf is successful.

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