Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi all,


Last year I had a car go into the back of me. It was very minor as we weren't travelling fast. At the time I had a lot of personal injuries lawyers phoning saying I needed to claim compensation for my injuries. I wasn't injured so I didn't follow it up (and reported them to a watchdog as they were very pushy trying to out words in my mouth etc).


Now, 8 months on, I've had a solicitors phone saying j can make a 'non- injury aim'. Apparently the funds from the other insurance company are already 'released' and this is just a case of 'closing the books'. It sounds too good to be true. Has anyone any advice on this? I can't believe it's 'rightfully mine' to claim this amount without repercussions of some sort.


Does anyone have any experience of this and can advise?


Thanks!

If you have suffered no injury and made no claim on your own insurance then there would be no obvious process for this. Damage to your car would be sought for (and received by) your own insurer from the other driver or his/ her insurer; if you had made a claim - with them settling any repair bills. If you haven't followed any claims process then you are being scammed by an ambulance chaser - they may indeed be able to instigate some process - but they would take the lion's share of any proceeds and it is this sort of action which drives up insurance costs for all.


Of course, if you are out of pocket because of another drivers's fault you may wish to pursue a claim properly through your own insurer (remembering that even a no-fault accident may increase your insurance risk and your premiums - the insurer's own scam here is that - even where you have a protected no claims bonus - they will increase your risk profile because you may be leading a life/ driving to places, where you are more likely to be hit by other rivers - so your NCB discount may remain the same, but discounted off a higher base premium.)


My advice - ignore...

Thanks both.


I did make a claim for the repair of some scratches- I wasn't bothered about them but because the driver was driving dangerously and originally asked that we settle without insurers which I was prepared to do- and then ignored my calls I felt it was my only option. So car 'repaired' now.


So, ok they read out to me some 'road act from 2014' that an insurance company has to tapir damage, offer courtesy car and then allow for due compensation. But yes, does sound like a scam and I'm sure they would do better out of it than me!

Not necessarily a scam, bur classic 'claims farming'. The time limit for tort claims (negligence) is three years. Although referral fees are supposed to have been banned, there is still an active trade in details of people who have had accidents. Claims companies buy them and then contact people to see whether there is any potential loss that hasn't already been compensated - provided you're within the three years you can make a claim. Many insurers will pay out a minor claim without challenge where their driver was clearly at fault. The strong suspicion has to be that the vast majority of claims that result from this sort of process are at least a bit fishy, and some (perhaps many) will be outright dishonest.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yes they do, but that is not the core tenet of representative democracy. At that level, we are voting for a parliamentary representative, irregardless of whether parties exist or not. It's why candidates can stand as independents. 
    • Sadly I think you will never convince people like this. They think gardens have to be kept chopped back and controlled. My theory is that this comes from being (or trying to be) controlling in every aspect of their lives, so I doubt if anything you could say or show them would have any effect. But are they actually coming into your garden or leaning over into it and pulling up/damaging things? If so, maybe one of our community police people could have a word with them?
    • Dear Nature lovers - advice please. I am being harassed by a neighbour who doesn't like my standard of gardening which she calls 'messy'. (I have rewilded my garden with advice from the London Wildlife Trust and a gardening expert from The Times.) I have twice caught this neighbour and her husband pulling up my plants and damaging my trees. Plus she has photographed my house, and sent a dozen complaints to the Dulwich Estate about my plan to rewild the verge outside my property - approved by the Estate some 4 years ago in line with their stated policy of supporting biodiversity in and around Dulwich. What can I do to introduce these neighbours  to the benefits to us all of returning a portion of our gardens to nature?
    • Have you tried Southwark's leisure centres? As a regular attendee at Peckham, Camberwell, The Castle and speaking to friends, the dance routines for all ages are similar to Silver ones. In addition Natty, Bianca and Isac are brilliant instructors. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...