This month the Law Society Gazette reports on the rise in
professional negligence claims against personal injury law firms citing “reliance
on under-qualified staff, a lack of face-to-face contact with clients and
failure to understand medical reports” as “all factors in the trend”.
Surrey firm BakerLaw reported a
recovery of £700,000 for a client whose original solicitors had achieved an
award of £16,000.
An associate at Withy King who
said one claim was worth nine times the £10,000 settlement agreed by other
solicitors added that most claims were by victims represented by panel
solicitors located in a different part of the country.
Another professional negligence
lawyer spoke of “the proliferation of claims lawyers where there are just one
or two partners and a bank of paralegals” generating the problems.
None of this is surprising. The
flat, wide pyramid structure represents a risk in many types of business. In an
environment where an element of judgment informed by experience will always be
required, it signals failure.
Why do it?
Many of these firms are trapped
in the business model created by legal expenses insurers whose policies sell
for peanuts and only buy monkeys.
It’s not a universal problem.
There are decent panel lawyers and there are BTE insurers who cut a fair deal.
See for example http://legalchap.blogspot.co.uk/2011/08/bte-angels.html
But in my experience the good
guys are the exception and the evidence is beginning to show that so many who
have taken the insurers’ shilling and sold their souls are delivering a shoddy
service.
From the victims’ point of view,
that is.
What about insurers? Well it
looks fine for them. They are driving the price of legal services down to
increase their margins and passing the risk to professional indemnity insurers –
by and large a different market.
Another commentator has made the
valid observation that some if not all of these wicked under-settlements are driven
by liability insurers who care nothing about injured people, their representatives
or their indemnity insurers.
One hopes that (indemnity) market
will quickly decline to continue underwriting the risks generated by law firms
who facilitate the greedy aspirations of insurers with no care for the standard
of service delivered to injured victims.
Until then this problem will only
grow worse.