This case could be important if you are offered a hire bike after a crash

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by T.C, Jul 10, 2013.

  1. T.C

    T.C Elite Member

    Joined:
    Feb 9, 2012
    Messages:
    1,007
    Likes Received:
    959
    Although this case relates to a claim involving a hire car, the same principal will apply to motorcycle hire as well, bearing in mind that if you have a crash and sign a personal loan agreement, you become liable for any un-recovered losses, such as hire cost loans.

    This is all down to the Claims management company as well, and is perhaps another reason why you should give them a wide berth in the event that you have a crash and you are offered a hire/loan bike.

    In the case of Opoku v Tintas 2013 the Court of Appeal has given an important ruling in relation to the question of period of hire. The judgment will be significant for claimants and defendants alike and should be studied closely.

    The Court of Appeal decided that the trial judge had been entitled to find that the claimant should have repaired his car earlier than he did, rather than continuing to incur costs under a credit hire agreement to hire a replacement vehicle.

    The case arose out of a road traffic accident. The defendant had driven his van into the back of the claimant's car, which suffered too much damage to be driven but was not written off. The claimant had sometimes used the car as a minicab to supplement his income. The defendant denied liability for the accident.

    The claimant instructed a claims management company which stored his car pending repair and extended credit to him to cover the cost of a replacement car. Soon after the accident the cost of repair was estimated to be £3,400 plus VAT. The claimant claimed damages of £130,000 for the cost of hiring the replacement car over a period of almost two years, and £19,000 for the storage of his car.

    The judge at first instance found that the defendant had caused the accident; that the car's damage was caused entirely by that accident; that the claimant was impecunious and therefore could recover from the defendant the cost of his replacement vehicle at the higher rate charged by the claims management company rather than a lower spot rate; but that the claimant had failed to mitigate his loss by not having his car repaired sooner. She awarded him £63,000, finding he should have had his car repaired once the defendant's insurer had inspected it, whereas in fact he did not remove it from storage and have it repaired until the defendant's insurer had paid him £3,400 on a without prejudice basis over a year later.

    The claimant submitted that there was an inconsistency between the judge's finding in relation to the hire rates, i.e. that he was impecunious, and her finding that he had failed to mitigate his loss by not using credit and savings to repair his car earlier than he did.

    The Court of Appeal decided that there was no inconsistency in the judgment. The judge had been entitled on the evidence to reach the decision she did regarding the funding of repairs; the question of whether a loss was avoidable was one of fact.

    She did not say that it was reasonable for the claimant to repair his car right after the accident; rather that there came a time when it was reasonable for him to do so. There had been plenty of evidence of the claimant's finances before the judge. She had accepted that the claimant was not living extravagantly. She had not gone outside the wide margins that trial judges had. She had been entitled to conclude that the claimant could reasonably have been expected to find the means to pay for the repairs through credit cards and savings. The one-off cost of repair, of about £3,400, had to be balanced against the cost of credit hire accruing at the rate of £5,000 per month. It was not outside the judge's legitimate scope to find that the claimant's decision had not been reasonable.
     
    • Like Like x 3
  2. vvtr

    vvtr New Member

    Joined:
    May 27, 2013
    Messages:
    200
    Likes Received:
    98
    i have a similar situation with the asian gentleman who turned right into me with his taxi while indicating left, yet still insists i am to blame...
    he was totally uninjured, having merely clipped my bar - end and fist at approx 15mph, yet claims to have sustained serious muscular damage requiring osteopath & physio etc, not surprisingly, from a dr patel. :/

    on top of that, as the case above... he is claiming £14,500 worth of hire on a top of the range mercedes minibus, when all that needed fixing on his peugot taxi was the wing mirror, which left a nice brand on my left arm.

    it took me 1 1/2hrs to read through the legal argument from my solicitors lol.

    part of the argument, all based on valid test cases, states that he did not mitigate his losses and instead has actively sought to increase the cost of the claim with his hire claim and bogus pi.
    they state that as his taxi took only a few hours to repair, he shouldve took the day off work and claimed loss of earnings.
    and if that was not possible, he shouldve paid for the repair himself and claimed back his losses.
    (assuming he is found not to blame, which is highly unikely)

    they are demanding 3mths bank and credit card statements and wageslips preceding and after the incident....
    and also he is required to attend court - in nottingham.

    they are looking at this as a fraudulent claim on his behalf.
     
    #2 vvtr, Jul 10, 2013
    Last edited: Jul 10, 2013
    • Like Like x 2
  3. Pete H

    Pete H Active Member

    Joined:
    Feb 24, 2013
    Messages:
    1,337
    Likes Received:
    747
    Have you been sat reading the PNLD today TC?
     

Share This Page