Claim Notification Form Assistance

1 05 2010

WELCOME TO CLAIM NOTIFICATION FORM ASSISTANCE FROM KASLERS SOLICITORS LLP

All  personal injury claims arising out of Road Traffic Accidents in England or Wales which occurred after 29th April 2010 must be notified to insurers using the formal Claim Notification Form or CNF as it is otherwise known.

The process is more fully described in this article.

However before the claim can be submitted, a large amount of detail must be submitted electronically to the insurers of the driver responsible by sending the CNF via the web portal.

The form cannot be submitted and your claim cannot be progressed unless all the relevant formation is available.  For details of the information required, please click here.

If you need help with regard to completing the Claim Notification Form, just complete our short on-line form by clicking here and we will guide you through it.

CLAIM NOTIFICATION FORM ASSISTANCE is part of our Car Accident Advice service.





The new process for Low Value Road Traffic Accident claims

30 04 2010

If you instruct us to act for you in a claim for personal injury arising out of a road traffic accident after the 29th April 2010, please be prepared for a long conversation with us because we are obliged to submit your claim to the insurers of the driver who caused the accident on-line to a secured website operated by the Ministry of Justice.The amount of detail which needs to be provided is extensive.

This only applies to claims where the value of the injury or injury related claims such as earnings loss or private medical treatment is likely to be  less than £10,000.00.

On the same day as we submit the form to the insurers, we must send a hard copy to the other driver and in printed form, the claim will generally be about eight pages long.

The form has several sections and it will be helpful if you can have the following information available when we speak.

Your Personal Details

Your full name Address and postcode

Telephone numbers & e-mail address (for our records only)

Your date of birth

Your National Insurance number

Your occupation

Whether you wre wearing a seat belt

Details about your injury

Full details about your symptoms

The name (and address) of any hospital visited following the accident (and reference number if available)

Whether you have received any treatment such as physiotherapy or if this has been recommended

Whether you have been unable to work and the dates of your absence

Whether you have been involved in any other accident in the last three years (for our records only)

Details about the vehicles involved and of the driver responsible

The make, model (where known) and registration numbers of all vehicles involved

The name and address of the other driver or the owner of the vehicle

The number of people in the vehicle in which you were travelling

If you are the vehicle owner

Whether you are comprehensively insured or Third Party Fire & Theft

Who is repairing the vehicle (if not written off)

The name, address and reference number of any company that has provided a hire/replacement vehicle

The dates of hire

If you were a passenger

The name and address of the driver

Accident Details

Description of the accident circumstances

The date, time and weather conditions

The names of any witnesses

The details of any other driver/vehicles involved

Why you think the other driver is at fault

Other Information

Whether you have any legal expenses insurance (legal protection) sold with your motor policy or house contents policy or even travel insurance

If you were injured on public transport, the name of the bus or coach company, the Route number if any and whether you have proof of ticket purchase for the journey, along with the approximate number of other people on the bus or coach.

If it appears that the other vehicle was uninsured, a description of the driver . 

If you don’t have all the information to hand, we may not be in a position to submit your claim and advance your case until you do! However the person taking the information on our behalf will be able to advise you further about this.

A quick and easy process if there is no dispute

The good news, however, is that once the claim has been submitted to the other driver’s insurers they have only 15 Business Days (three weeks) to concede liability and save themselves considerable legal cost if they accept that their insured was to blame. If they miss this deadline, the claim will leave this streamlined process and be dealt with under the much slower and more costly system which has applied up till now.

On the other hand, undisputed claims will progress very quickly from the early provision of physiotherapy or similar treatment to a brief medico-legal examination by a local GP at an appropriate time. The GP then prepares a report in a standard format and if you agree the contents, we will discuss the likely value of your claim and propose on-line a settlement figure (discussed with you in advance) to the other driver’s insurers and upload the medical report along with any documentation confirming your out-of-pocket expenses.

The insurers then have a further 15 Business Days to accept or reject the offer and enter into negotiations over further 20 Business Days to avoid the matter proceeding to a court hearing.

In less serious cases, claims will be capable of being finalised within three to six months and we will be paid a fixed fee by the insurers of the other driver which will cover your legal costs





Getting it right – a brand new process for Road Traffic Accident injury claims

4 01 2010

After being injured in a road accident, the last thing anybody needs is long drawn out legal process.  Fortunately, in the very near future, the waiting time for most of these cases is going to be dramatically shortened – if the lawmakers have finally got it right.

With effect from 30th April 2010, a completely new process for road accident injury claims becomes compulsory and where the insurer of the driver responsible for the accident admits liability immediately, the claim should normally be finalised in a matter of a few months.

Here’s how it works

Stage one

First, the injured person’s lawyer will have to email a very detailed Claim Notification Form to the insurers via a central website operated by the Ministry of Justice.  

Once they have received the form, the insurers have only fifteen business days to state whether or not they accept liability.  If they do AND comply with certain other time limits, the claim will be dealt with under the new procedure.  The insurers will benefit because the legal costs they have to pay will be much reduced and the injured person will benefit from a far simpler and faster process.

Stage Two

If the injured person owns the car driven in the accident, then his or her lawyer will probably arrange for either the repairs, or an inspection and valuation if the vehicle is a write-off.  As far as injuries are concerned, the lawyer will arrange to have the person assessed for treatment and an examination by an independent medical practitioner who will prepare a medical report in the format required by the new process.  This will cover the extent of the injuries and their likely ongoing effects on such things as the ability to work and go about normal daily activities.

This medico-legal report, together with further details of the claim, must be emailed to the other driver’s insurers within fifteen business days of it being approved by the injured person.

  

The Final Settlement Pack

When the claim is ready to be settled, the lawyer must discuss and agree with the client the amount of compensation to be sought.  Clearly, this must be a realistic figure based on the lawyer’s expertise in personal injury work.  The compensation claim, together with a list of the injured person’s out of pocket expenses, will then be submitted electronically through the central website to the other driver’s insurers in the form of a Settlement Pack

The insurers then have a further fifteen business days either to agree the amount sought or make a counter offer.  After that, a further twenty business days are allowed to enable negotiations to continue.

 

The Interim Settlement Pack

If the medical report indicates that further medical evidence may be needed at a later date before the claim should be settled,  the injured person’s lawyer should ask for a payment on account of the claim of £1000.00, which cannot be refused.  (They can seek more than this where valid reasons are provided).  The claims process is then put on hold until they can produce the final medical evidence at which point the Final Settlement process is followed.

What happens if the claim leaves the process?

If the insurers do not accept liability; do not comply with the time limits described above; deny that the symptoms referred to in the medical report were caused by the accident; or if they allege fraud, the claim leaves the new process and the matter is then handled by the current more lengthy and expensive process.

Generally, it will not be in the interest of insurers to allow the claim to leave the new process as the legal costs they will have to pay, if the claim succeeds, will be far greater.

 

What happens if the value of the claim cannot be agreed?

 Stage 3

If no agreement about the value of the claim has been reached after the period allowed for negotiations has expired, it remains in the process, but the insurers must pay the value of their last offer and Court proceedings are then issued.   These can take the form of an oral hearing, or (if both sides agree) by means of detailed written statements sent to the court so that the District Judge can value the claim.

Whilst the District Judge at the Court will be aware that settlement offers have been made by both sides, the amount of the final offers will be kept in a sealed envelope until after the amount to be awarded has been decided.

Getting it right here is very important because if the District Judge awards more than the insurer’s highest offer, the insurer must pay both sides’  legal fees of the Stage 3 process, plus the court fees.  However, if the amount awarded is less than that offered by the insurers in Stage 2, the injured person will be liable for the costs of both sides of the Stage 3 process.  Plainly, it is essential that the injured person’s lawyer has ensured that they have adequate legal expenses insurance (legal protection) to cover them in case this happens and that the legal expenses insurers have agreed with the lawyer’s recommendation that the claim proceeds into Stage 3.

 

Getting the right advice

A single word of warning.  Generally the new process will be far better for accident victims than the current one as both sides are both obliged and incentivised to proceed very quickly.  However there is the risk that, because the legal fees will be so much lower, shortcuts may be taken by legal representatives.  Their clients may even advised to accept offers well below the true value because lawyers will receive no additional payment for the extra work put in, or the additional time necessary to pursue claims through to their proper conclusions.

Chris Lodge has specialised as a Road Traffic Accident Solicitor for over 25 years and sits as a representative for the Motor Accident Solicitors Society on a Ministry of Justice working party testing and piloting the electronic notification form described above.





Get ready for the New Process for Low Value Injury claims

15 11 2009

Due in the Spring of 2010 is a new process for dealing with lower value injuries arising out of road traffic accidents wher the insurers of the driver that caused the injury can concede liability from the outset.

Starting with a notification via an on-line platform, the process requires insurers to decide on liability within 15 “Business Days” of receiving the electronic Claim Notification form.

The process is then streamlined to a fast resolution in cases where the injured person recovers quickly.

Watch this site for more information soon.

If you are not yet a client of Kaslers RTA department but would like initial free advice on any matter relating to a road traffic accident in the UK, whether relating to an injury or vehicle damage, click here for our New Enquiry Form








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