No Win No Fee Compensation Claims Solicitors Scotland, Edinburgh Lawford Kidd
If you've been injured in an accident which wasn't your fault contact Lawford Kidd, one of Scotland's leading compensation claims ...
|
|
If you've been injured in an accident which wasn't your fault contact Lawford Kidd, one of Scotland's leading compensation claims ...
A traffic accident could be very angry, and affects many people and vehicles. It could result in injuries of varying severity. You could suffer serious injuries in a case of hit-and-run, could lead to a head in a collision with a vehicle larger property damage and loss of life. You can also suffer damage as a passenger in the vehicle and if you are driving could have been worse.
Road accidents are quite common and although we have not heard of any serious incidentTime – dings and scratches are quite sufficient to count as a car accident. Scotland in 2007, some 16,000-odd incidents. If you think this number is shocking, you might consider – it was just 22,000 10 years ago. A reduction of 28% is very commendable.
...|
Get a move on with Taylor Wimpey There's no chain to break down and you can stay in your property until your new home is ready to move into. Part-exchange is available on selected plots at developments across the east of Scotland including Burnside, Kinglassie; Balbirnie Green, |
|
McCoist waits patiently at door of the counting house Bougherra has also indicated that he might leave this summer; he has a year left on his contract but, under Fifa's “Webster Rule”, he could buy that out and leave for no transfer fee. Rangers have slogged through this season with a threadbare squad and |
|
Scottish drivers pay price for English law Insurers maintain that premiums are mounting because of escalating personal injury claims, which have been driven up by an explosion of ambulance-chasing solicitors, who operate on a 'no-win, no-fee' basis and promise everyone involved in an accident a |
INTERVIEW: Peter Wood steers Esure towards a winning flotation
He argues that as a result of no-win, no-fee lawyers we seem to have the weakest necks in the world. 'Whiplash doesn't exist in any other country. You can't prove you have got it, and you can't prove you haven't got it,' he says.
|
View from the top: Jackson is only the start
Royal Bank of Scotland Insurance stands squarely behind Lord Justice Jackson's recommendations in his Review of Civil Litigation Costs. This includes after-the-event insurance premiums not being recoverable in 'no win, no fee' cases and that — as long
|
Francis Maude makes the eye-catching claim he has shrunk the Civil Service to its smallest size since the Second World War.
While all savings are welcome, isn’t it disingenuous, and meaningless, to compare the 444,000 people in Whitehall today with 1945 – when Britain ran an Empire and was still on a war footing?
Besides, the only number that matters is the size of the entire public sector, which employs six million people in job-destroying quangos, profligate town halls and elsewhere – an increase of 345,000 since 2001.
None of these six million have to make a profit or compete for business like the wealth-creating private sector. Yet, as we revealed yesterday, civil servants are still pocketing £2million every month in unjustified bonuses and, we now learn, are being given special ‘sweetheart deals’ that allow them to pay less tax.
Preposterously, Mr Maude says he is well on the way to creating ‘a leaner’ Whitehall machine that ‘manages its finances like the best-run businesses’. In truth, he’s barely made a start.
Recent comments