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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Liverpool Victoria Insurance Company Ltd v Thumber [2014] EWHC 3051 (QB) (15 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3051.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3051 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LIVERPOOL VICTORIA INSURANCE COMPANY LTD | Claimant | |
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BALRAJ SINGH THUMBER | Defendant |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4036 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR AVTAR THUMBER appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"...it is important to set out the background of the very grave problems the insurance industry faces and why this claim is such a serious one. We were told that in the year 2010 insurers uncovered 133,000 fraudulent insurance claims -- that is to say 2,500 every week -- an increase of 9 per cent in the amount of such claims over the previous year. When describing fraudulent claims, the insurers are referring to two types of claim: one where there has been an accident or an incident where the claim has been exaggerated, and cases such as the present, where there has been no accident and no incident at all and are, therefore, in the real sense, bogus or contrived. Both are fraudulent, but the latter category is far, far more serious."
Pausing there; I have no doubt that the present claim is in the latter category. The President continued:
"This fraud has occurred in the area of motor insurance. It appears that in 2010 dishonest motor insurance fraud occurred on an extensive scale. There were 40,000 of them. Motor frauds were, of all the frauds, the most costly. They totalled over £466 million. The insurance industry estimates that insurance fraud costs £2 billion a year adding on average an extra £44 per year to the insurance bill for every UK policy holder.
The detection of such fraud is very difficult. The diligence of the insurers in this case is to be highly commended. We were told that until relatively recently the police have not had the resources to investigate this type of fraud. Although, as this case illustrates, this type of fraud involves relatively small sums of money in each claim, together such claims give rise to the very large figures to which we have referred. At the beginning of this year the City of London Police had been funded by the insurance industry to set up a motor insurance and insurance fraud enforcement department which has the capacity to deal with 100 cases per month. As was said by counsel for the insurers today, that is the tip of the iceberg."
"For many years, the courts have sought to underline how serious false and lying claims are to the administration of justice. False claims undermine a system whereby those who are injured as a result of the fault of their employer or a defendant can receive just compensation.
They undermine that system in a number of serious ways. They impose upon those liable for such claims the burden of analysis, the burden of searching out those claims which are justified and those claims which are unjustified. They impose a burden upon honest claimants and honest claims, when in response to those claims, understandably those who are liable are required to discern those which are deserving and those which are not.
Quite apart from that effect on those involved in such litigation is the effect upon the court. Our system of adversarial justice depends upon openness, upon transparency and above all on honesty. The system is seriously damaged by lying claims. It is in those circumstances that the courts have on numerous occasions sought to emphasise how serious it is for someone to make a false claim, either in relation to liability or in relation to claims for compensation as a result of liability.
Those who make such false claims if caught should expect to go to prison. There is no other way to underline the gravity of the conduct. There is no other way to deter those who may be tempted to make such claims, and there is no other way to improve the administration of justice.
The public and advisors must be aware that, however easy it is to make false claims, either in relation to liability or in relation to compensation, if found out the consequences for those tempted to do so will be disastrous. They are almost inevitably in the future going to lead to sentences of imprisonment, which will have the knock-on effect that the lives of those tempted to behave in that way, of both themselves and their families, are likely to be ruined.
But the prevalence of such temptation and of those who succumb to that temptation is such that nothing else but such severe condemnation is likely to suffice."