Woman seeks personal injury compensation after trip

September 11th, 2009

Woman seeks personal injury compensation after trip

A woman from Salisbury is to make a compensation claim after tripping on an uneven pavement and breaking a bone in her foot.

Janet Street, 62, told the Salisbury Journal the incident happened because of a drop of one inch in the level of the pavement in Albany Road.

She claimed that the pavement in the area is in a "very bad way".

"My foot is in plaster and I will not be able to work for the next four to six weeks," Mrs Street added.

The sheltered housing worker is now planning to make a compensation claim and has taken photographs of the pavement where the incident occurred to use as evidence.

A recent series of Freedom of Information requests by the Liberal Democrats revealed the extent of the problem of poorly-maintained pavements in England.

The requests revealed that local authorities paid out £82 million to settle compensation claims related to injuries caused by uneven pavements between 2004 and 2009.ADNFCR-1694-ID-19357511-ADNFCR

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Pensioner in footpath fall seeks compensation

May 8th, 2009

Pensioner in footpath fall seeks compensation

A woman who has been left in fear of leaving the house after a fall on an uneven pavement is seeking compensation from her local council.

Daphne Slater, 73, was being pushed in a wheelchair to the doctors’ surgery by her son Stephen when he and the chair tripped over a sharp rise in the footpath, the Eastwood Advertiser reports.

Ms Slater fell from the chair and suffered cuts and bruises to her face, hands and feet, the Eastwood Advertiser reports.

She is claiming compensation from Nottinghamshire county council, alleging that it had not kept the path in a satisfactory state of repair and that it resurfaced it shortly after her accident.

The council has denied liability and declined to comment on the case while it goes through the appropriate legal channels.

Local council highways departments are usually responsible for maintaining and monitoring the condition of pavements, roads and highways.

They will be considered liable for any injury sustained in a pavement tripping accident if they have failed to have an adequate inspection regime or if they have not repaired any section of pavement that was known to be defective.
ADNFCR-1694-ID-19159780-ADNFCR

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