There is a difference between making a personal injuries claim th
Not referring to anyone in particular..... But I've often wondered about all of these fabricated/exaggerated/dishonest cases that are thrown out of court.
If one was to steal a chocolate bar from a shop you might face sanction - Yet if you begin legal proceedings against a person or business etc. lying and exaggerating your claims in the hope of making a quick €50,000 & are found out you simply walk away scott free???
Is this always the case? Surely lying in court would be enough to warrant action against these people.
Also is it not the case that if the legal system did go after these people who are caught in the act of very clearly making inflated/vexatious or false claim then it would discourage others in future.
I wonder is a factor here that the legal profession makes so much hay in this arena they don't want to disrupt the status quo.....
Sometimes plaintiffs fail to discharge their obligation to reach the required standard of proof.
The required standard is the balance of probabilities i.e. at least 51% more likely than not.
In that event the correct procedure is for the judge to dismiss the action.
An application for costs will usually - but not always - follow from the defendant(s).
The judge has absolute discretion in relation to any costs order.
If a claim is grossly inflated / exaggerated and the defendant can establish this the action can be dismissed by the trial judge.
Walking away "Scot free" may well be the actual outcome in some cases.
If a defendant has an order for costs against a plaintiff it is practically pointless to pursue it if the plaintiff has no means.
That is the upside for a plaintiff of no means taking a blatantly speculative action.
The issue of "lying in court" is highly problematical.
Sometimes a plaintiff will tell the truth in accordance with they oath taken before giving evidence but they are simply wrong.
Sometimes a plaintiff will knowingly give deliberately false evidence.
The problem is to distinguish
false evidence from
erroneous evidence.
For the preceding reason it almost never happens that anyone is prosecuted for perjury in this context.
Remember that a prosecutor would have to prove perjury
beyond reasonable doubt.
Perjury is still a common law offence and there seems to be no enthusiasm to prosecute it.
I think that perjury is going to be placed on a statutory footing which might bring clarity and prosecutions.
For clarity, I am making absolutely no reference to a recent and prominent case.
There have been many utterly uninformed, unfair and unreasonable assertions on social media about that matter and I will not join that circus.