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Injury Claims

Do I Need A Personal Injury Lawyer?

Hire a personal injury lawyer after concussion

Do you need to Hire a Personal Injury Lawyer

A lawyer is not needed when making an injury compensation claim, but it is highly recommended that you have one. When you hire a lawyer it doesn’t mean you are ready to go to court it just says you want to seek legal advice from someone rational who is not emotionally involved in the claim.

Things You Should

It is not necessary to hire a lawyer when dealing with the Insurance Corporation of British Colombia (ICBC), but if you do, then you must make very informed decisions. The ICBC will appoint an experienced adjuster, who works for them, to negotiate for the settlement of your claim at a reasonable amount from ICBS’s point of view. The adjustors continuously deal with injury claim so they will be tough negotiators.

A good lawyer will do the following for you:

  • Advise you accordingly
  • Try and obtain a fair settlement for you
  • Collect evidence and proper medical information
  • Decide the extent to which you should be compensated in regards to your case

If your lawyer and the designated adjustor can’t come to a proper settlement, then it’s up to your lawyers to take the case to court so that they can obtain a full and fair compensation on your behalf. Less than 1% of the ICBC claims proceed to court.

Advice

If you are unsure on whether you should enlist for the services of a lawyer then pay a visit to one of the many experienced BC personal injury lawyers and seek legal advice and also obtain knowledge on the matter. Most of the lawyers offer initial legal consultation free of charge or obligations. After the meeting, you will be in a better position to decide whether you need to hire a lawyer.

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What Do Lawyers Cost?

The cost of a lawyer is entirely dependent on the case in which they are handling. In a personal injury insurance claim, you have the right to hire a lawyer and pay on a contingency basis. A contingency fee agreement means that the lawyer you hire will accept a predetermined fixed percentage of the recovery or the money to be paid to the client, if you recover nothing from your claim then you shouldn’t spend your lawyer anything. Regularly, contingency fees in British Colombia range from 20 to 33 percent of the total recoverable amount. Lawyers hired on contingency basis receive their payments at the time when they collect your compensation cheque from the insurance firm not before.

Most of the time when you want to enlist for the services of a lawyer you have to visit him. During the first meeting the lawyer gets to familiarize himself with a case, and then you will move on to the sensitive fee issue, make sure you understand the fee contract before signing it. In some cases the lawyer’s services can be paid using a predetermined hourly rate, when using such a mode of payment the lawyer may ask you for a retainer, a retainer is an amount of money that acts as security and will be used to meet the lawyer’s upcoming expenses, the lawyer will thereafter send you interim accounts for immediate payment. The method of payment while hiring a lawyer is entirely up to you.

While still discussing the topic of remuneration you must get to understand who will be responsible for disbursements. Disbursements are the expenses that the lawyer will incur in the prosecution of the claim example of such fees are the cost of medical records, cost of hiring experts, court registry fees, and other similar expenses. The disbursements may quickly sum up to thousands of dollars.

If you are to pay the lawyer on a contingency fee basis, then all the expenses incurred in the prosecution of the claim are covered by financed by the firm. It’s important to understand who will be responsible for this cost is they can’t be recovered from the ICBC. At times lawyers will deduct the expenses from their final fee if they can’t be collected as part of their final settlement.

Protection Of The Public

There are specific laws in place to govern the relationship between the lawyers and their clients. The rules of the law society of British Colombia states that in case a court awards a higher amount, the maximum amount a lawyer is entitled to for personal injury and wrongful death arising from the use or operation of a vehicle is 33.33%. Lawyers rarely charge this percentage except in exceptional circumstances like a highly complicated case or if several numbers of procedures need to be taken to bring the claim to an amicable solution.

Also, there is a 90 day cooling off period; the law states that within 90 days of hiring a lawyer you can appeal to the district registrar of the supreme court of British Colombia to have the agreement reviewed if the fee is found to be too high it shall be adjusted accordingly.

Personal Injury Attorney Vancouver

Tim Louis & Company
175 E Broadway, Vancouver, BC V5T 1W2
(604) 732-7678
http://bc.timlouis.com/

Your ICBC Claim: Trial Dollars Without A Trial

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This article touches on just a few of the strategies I use to get my clients trial dollars outside of a trial.

If you have been hurt in a motor vehicle accident you deserve fair compensation for your pain and suffering, your lost income and your medical expenses.

For more than 30 years I’ve been representing injured clients seeking fair settlements from ICBC. I have yet to represent someone who would not willingly give up monetary compensation for their injury if they could go back in time and avoid the injury altogether. My clients do not start claims against ICBC out of greed — they just want fair compensation.

Pain is not just a four-letter word. Injuries from MVAs can negatively impact all aspects of life — work, play and social relationships, including those with family members and other loved ones. And it’s not just the limitations of the injuries themselves. Pain can rob people of pastimes, activities and even the general sense of well-being most people take for granted before an MVA.

GETTING THE TIMING RIGHT

waiting-410328_640Starting a lawsuit against the party responsible for an accident is the beginning of what can be a lengthy journey. While most lawsuits end up settling out of court, it is very difficult — usually impossible — to get trial dollar settlements without a trial date on the horizon.

This is why I don’t do what many other lawyers apparently do — try to negotiate with the ICBC adjuster over an extended period of time and, if settlement has not been reached, only start a lawsuit just before the two-year limitation period expires. In my opinion, this is a recipe for either a poor settlement or an unnecessarily delayed one.

When I start the lawsuit on behalf of my client shortly after the accident we will get a trial date roughly two years down the road. When we are ready to negotiate a settlement, ICBC is much more motivated to offer trial dollars because of the fact that I have already sent a very clear message — we are quite serious about going to trial.

If we had not started the lawsuit right away and we ended up on the cusp of the two-year limitation period, starting one then would mean that the trial date would be roughly four years after the date of the accident — something most clients are not prepared to wait for.

A big question people often ask is, should you, as an injured party, settle your claim before you are fully recovered? This can sometimes be very tempting.

Partway into the litigation process ICBC will make an offer. Sometimes it’s not a poor offer, given the length of time that’s passed since the date of the accident. However, the answer should always be a firm and clear “no”. If you have not yet fully recovered you have no certainty as to when or even if full recovery will occur.

A court, in deciding how much your injury and pain and suffering are worth, will always take into consideration the length of time it took you to recover or the fact that you simply are not going to recover, if this is the case. Settling early before you’ve had the time to recover means that you’re almost certainly selling yourself short. It may be hard to wait but it’s almost always better to do so.

I’m fond of the saying that an ICBC file is like a bottle of fine wine. The longer it sits the better it gets.

THE POWER OF LAY WITNESSES

bonding-1985863_1920So we have a trial date on the horizon. Any number of outcomes from the MVA can be your new reality, but the two most striking ones are polar opposites: You are either fully recovered or your doctor has advised you that you are not ever going to recover.

Whatever the outcome is, what steps do we need to take to increase the likelihood of getting you trial dollars without a trial?

By this point, I will have contacted all of your consulting doctors, obtaining medical legal reports from each of them. ICBC will almost certainly have obtained medical legal reports from their own doctors, too. So if we go to trial, there will be a number of experts in our corner of the ring and a number of experts in ICBC’s corner. The judge will have to decide whose experts are the most credible and reliable.

One of the ways I break the “expert deadlock” is by calling lay witnesses. These can be friends, neighbours, relatives and your significant other.

Lay witnesses can be very helpful. They see you in the real world; expert witnesses do not. Lay witnesses can give “before” and “after” evidence — what you were like before the accident and what you are like after. A few well-chosen lay experts can go a long way in helping you at trial.

More importantly, lay witnesses can help you get a good out-of-court settlement. Here’s how: I will prepare written statements summarizing what I understand the lay witnesses will say at trial if an out-of-court settlement is not reached, and then provide these statements to ICBC. This can have a very positive effect on negotiations.

COMPENSATION FOR FUTURE CARE

wheelchair-1595802_1920If your injury is permanent you will incur medical expenses after the trial, often for many years. Of course, you will not have receipts for these expenses at the trial itself. These medical expenses are sometimes referred to as Future Costs of Care.

I will typically hire an occupational therapist to prepare a Future Costs of Care report. This report assists the judge in calculating the appropriate amount of money to compensate you for all of your future care costs.

A Future Costs of Care report that’s done effectively can be very helpful to your claim. Served on ICBC well in advance of the trial, this type of report will increase the amount of money ICBC is prepared to put on the table.

If you are looking for an ICBC Claims lawyer in Vancouver to work on your behalf, give me a call at 604-732-7678 today.

MEDICAL EXPENSES: Can Renovations Be Claimed?

In a September 13, 2013 Tax Court of Canada case, the taxpayer’s claim for amounts paid to install engineered hardwood flooring as a medical expense was denied by CRA. The engineered hardwood replaced fairly new carpet in the taxpayer’s five year old home on the advice that her husband, who suffers from progressively debilitating Parkinson’s disease and psoriatic arthritis, was at serious risk of a fall due to the carpet.

There was no dispute that the new flooring would enable the Appellant’s husband to be more mobile and functional within the dwelling. However, in order to claim a medical expense, the law also requires that the expense:

i. not typically be expected to increase the value of the dwelling; and

ii. not normally be incurred by persons who have normal physical development or who do not have a severe and prolonged mobility impairment.

CRA argued that the engineered hardwood flooring had to be excluded under both requirements.

Taxpayer wins

The Court was satisfied with the evidence that modestly priced engineered hardwood flooring, as opposed to solid hardwood flooring, would not typically increase the value of the property, especially when replacing fairly new, quality carpet in only a portion of the home. The Court further concluded that the taxpayer “only put in what was necessary” and that this expense would not normally have been incurred in the absence of the medical need. As such, the expense was allowed.

Large medical expenses are routinely reviewed by CRA. Contact us before incurring significant costs to determine if they may qualify as a medical expense.

A Personal Injury Lawyer’s Tips for Mediation!

personal injury law mediationMost clients who come to my Vancouver Personal Injury law practice have heard of mediation. However, in order to take full advantage of mediation, a number of key points must be understood by you, the client, before the mediation takes place.

  1. How I select the mediator – Each personal injury case is unique – the complexity, the adjuster’s personality and how you, the client, present, are all factors that I consider before coming up with my shortlist of preferred mediators. I then post my shortlist on the Trial Lawyers Association of BC ListServ to find the best match for your case.
  2. At mediation, I present as though we were at your trial – providing the Court with my opening statement – I want the adjuster to see first hand how “trial-ready” I am. If the adjuster has come to mediation without enough authority to settle the case, I terminate the mediation. Because I presented as “trial-ready”, more often than not, when the adjuster returns to his/her office, the insurance company increases the offer. Adjusters that witness firsthand just how effective I am going to be at trial get the authority they need to settle the file.
  3. I focus my attention on the adjuster – Up untill the mediation, everything the adjuster has learned about your personal injury case has been filtered through the insurance company’s lawyer. Mediation is my golden opportunity to speak directly with the adjuster. Remember it is the adjuster who carries the check book – not the insurance company’s lawyer.
  4. How I handle weaknesses in your case – Every personal injury case has weaknesses. If it didn’t, it wouldn’t be in litigation. I quickly get the weaknesses out of the way by admitting them. This shifts the discussion onto the strengths of your case. Too much time spent haggling over points that are going to be lost at the end of the day, anyway, weakens your case. Better to fight on terrain that benefits us.
  5. I don’t reveal your bottom line ever – not even to the mediator – As soon as the other side learns of your bottom line, you can guarantee that your case will settle for less than this amount. Your floor has been turned into a ceiling.
  6. Be prepared to ‘walk’ – Adjusters get great pleasure from drawing a line in the sand. If that line is below your bottom line, I terminate the mediation then and there. It is my experience that once the adjuster gets back to his/her office, a new higher offer is forthcoming.
  7. I do everything I can to get the adjuster to put their cards on the table – Sometimes the adjuster and the insurance company lawyer keep their cards too close to the chest in the presence of you, the client. Simple solution – I ask my client to ‘wait in the hall’. This can work magic. I learn more about the other side’s view of the case than I ever would have learned with you, the client, present. If your case does not settle, I am that much better prepared for trial.

So, those are the thoughts of a Vancouver Personal Injury Lawyer.

Don’t pull up the white flag!

car accident claimPersonal injury clients sometimes come to me with cases that don’t look winnable to them. There are usually one of two reasons for this. Either they know the car accident was not their fault but they don’t have any witnesses to support their version of what happened. Or, the injured client does have witnesses that can give evidence that the car accident was not their fault but their doctor does not accept the fact that the client has been injured. Here is a recent example of the first situation – and one with a great ending!

Mrs. R’s car accident claim

My client, Mrs. R, was involved in a car accident in 2007. She had come to a stop at a red light and was rear-ended by another driver who had been talking on his cell phone and not paying attention. The other driver, the Defendant, refused to take responsibility for the accident and claimed Mrs. R. had suddenly changed lanes into his lane without signaling and then suddenly stopped giving him no opportunity to avoid rear-ending her. The Defendant managed to round up a witness who supported his version of the events. Mrs. R. had a passenger in her vehicle. Unfortunately the passenger spoke very poor English. When the ICBC adjuster interviewed her – without an interpreter, it was very easy for the adjuster to put words in the passenger’s mouth in an effort to strengthen the Defendant’s version of what happened. The passenger ended up signing a written statement repeating the Defendant’s version of the accident.

Things went from bad to worse for poor Mrs. R. Before hiring me, she hired a lawyer who just ‘sat on the file’ as the years went by. [Remember, the accident was in 2007.] She eventually fired that lawyer and hired me.

I believed my client. I set to work getting all our ‘ducks in a row’. I immediately obtained a trial date for Mrs. R. Then I ordered a medical-legal report from her doctor. Next, I spoke with her employer and obtained all the evidence I needed to prove the loss of income Mrs. R. had suffered due to the accident.

I knew Mrs. R.’s evidence at trial was going to be extremely important because of the Defendant’s witness and the passenger’s signed statement. My team at the office began preparing her on a daily basis. That’s because we never raise the white flag.

Just one week before the trial, I learned that the ICBC lawyer had lost track of the witness the Defendant had rounded up. This was our first big break but … the playing field was still not level: there was still the problem of the passenger’s signed statement.

Four days before the trial, the passenger learned for the first time that her employer would not give her time off to give evidence at trial. The ICBC lawyer could only put her signed statement into evidence if she was at trial. The simple solution for ICBC would have been to subpoena the passenger. The subpoena would have overridden the employer’s refusal to give her time off. But, the ICBC lawyer had left it too late. With only four days to go there wasn’t enough time left for the ICBC lawyer to go to Court to get the subpoena and have it served on the passenger in time for the trial.

ICBC realizes their case is much weaker

Without any witnesses, ICBC knew they suddenly had a much weaker case on their hands and faced the very real prospect of a complete defeat. With two days to go before the trial, ICBC put a very nice offer on the table which Mrs. R. was delighted to accept. For icing on the cake, I insisted that ICBC structure the settlement in a way that meant Mrs. R. did not need to pay back any of the employment insurance benefits she had received for eight months after car accident.

A good story – and a real one. If you know you are in the right, get ready to do battle!

If you need help with your car accident claim, don’t hesitate to call Tim Louis & Company at 604-732-7678.

 

Don’t let insurance companies force you into accepting cheap settlements

Empty court room after delayed trialIn my experience representing injured clients over the last three decades, it’s not uncommon for insurance companies to count on injured Plaintiffs being forced into accepting cheap settlements because they are unable to afford the long wait for their trial date.

When I first began practicing law in 1984, it was not uncommon for Plaintiffs and their personal injury lawyer to get all the way to the Courthouse on the day of their trial only to be informed by the Registry that they were being ‘bumped’ – there was no judge available and that their trial date had to be re-booked. With the trial-booking backlog at that time, this meant that the Plaintiff typically waited another eighteen months before getting their day in Court. This played into the hands of the insurance companies.

Getting your trial bumped happens less now

Today it’s much less common to get ‘bumped’. This problem has been improved by the Government of British Columbia appointing more judges. Since insurance companies can no longer expect that the Plaintiff’s case might be ‘bumped’, they have come up with many other ways of getting the trial date adjourned on the eve of trial. So, Plaintiffs are still being forced into to accept cheap settlements by insurance companies that don’t play fair. However, there is a remedy that can be applied in many circumstances – injured Plaintiffs can level the playing field by asking the Court to order the insurance company to pay an advance.

This is exactly what happened in the recent case of Wood Atkinson v. Murphy. The Plaintiff was involved in a motor vehicle accident in August 2006 and suffered a wrist injury. On behalf of the Defendant, the lawyer appointed by ICBC admitted liability for the accident. When the trial had to be adjourned, the Court ordered the insurance company, ICBC, to pay the injured Plaintiff an advance of $50,000.00.

Our law firm can help you with your insurance claim

If you are an injured Plaintiff, the insurance company representing the Defendant has admitted liability for your injuries, and your trial date has been adjourned, ask the Court for an advance and don’t accept a cheap settlement. Call us at Tim Louis & Company Law for more information at (604) 732-7678.

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