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The Attorney General recently proposed a No Fault Liability System to assist
victims of accident cases to have faster access to compensation. He then
referred to New Zealand and Australia as two countries with this system.
It is almost impossible for any lawyer to comment that the No Fault Liability
System won’t work, without being accused of merely protecting our ‘rice bowl’.
Whilst there is little doubt that many lawyers are involved
in this Personal Injury Claims involving motor vehicle, it is also virtually
certain that the No Fault Liability System will see the end of lawyers’
involvement in those cases.
Despite these foreseeable accusations against me, I will still endeavour to try
persuading the AG that the No Fault System will likely not work in Malaysia.
What is wrong with the current system?
Ironically recently the Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak led
a team of Judges who dialogued with the Bar about establishing a proposed
‘Pre-action protocol’ for Personal Injury Cases. The Learned Chief Judge’s team
was keen to speed things up for such claims. This led to Forum held by Kuala
Lumpur Bar Committee on the 10th April 2007.
At that Forum, 2 major issues were raised by lawyers who attended the Forum:-
1. long wait for the issuance of the Medical reports from Government Hospitals,
sometimes taking as long as a year;
2. equally long wait for documents from the Police.
There were also some comments about Insurance Companies not replying quick
enough and also low offers from the same.
The Forum alluded KL Bar Committee members to some of the problems which causes
delay to Personal Injury Claims, the very same delay that the AG believes can be
solved by merely changing the system to a No Fault Liability System.
Of course, needless to say, there are some instances where lawyers may have
caused delays too. Lawyers are not so thick-skinned to deny that the legal
fraternity is absolutely above the cause of delay. But what is crucial is we
have clear evidence from the very lawyers that are conducting Personal Injury
Claims on a daily basis of the some of the causes of the delay in claims. This
evidence, to a very large extent can be substantiated.
For the moment the said Pre-Action Protocol is not likely to take off, but is
being reviewed. Perhaps a specialist court make take off, handling accident
claims.
In addition to the findings at that Forum, I wish to add a personal opinion. I
am of the view that the Insurance companies are also culprits in the delay.
These companies in the disguise of trying to evade fraudulent claims more often
than not, delays the claims as long as they can. It is my view that even with
the No-Fault Liability Claim, the compensation will still NOT be paid any
quicker, so long as the Insurance Company are not coerced to do so.
It is also my contention that the purging of lawyers in Personal Injury Claims
cases would mean the victims would be at the mercy of the Insurance Company, and
this time, the victim has no representation and no one to shield, protect and
defend him/her.
At this juncture, this write up looks more like a fault finding write up. And
the fact is, IT IS! I am seeking to see where the fault and cause of the current
delay which made AG want to propose the alternative No Fault System. It is my
hope that since we can identify the causes for delay, AG only needs now to try
tackle these issues and try resolving it.
Clearly it is a problem which can be solved, so why change the current system?
Would the No-Fault Liability System work?
I venture to quote from the Australian Journal ‘The Agenda’,
Vol 9 No 2, 2002, page 135. [please see :
http://epress.anu.edu.au/agenda/009/02/9-2-A-4.pdf]
In that article, the authors Bronwyn Howell, Judy Kavanagh and Lisa Marriott
said this at pages 137 to 138:-
“No-fault systems have been proposed as a means of reforming the tort-based
system. No-fault systems remove the need to prove cause from the compensation
equation and thereby reduce the transaction costs of the process (Danzon,
1990:4). Compensation is generally paid according to a prescribed schedule if
the loss-sufferer satisfies the scheme administrators that loss has been
incurred, regardless of any fault by the alleged loss-causer. Such schemes are
typically funded out of levies on potential loss-causers or from general
taxation and are accompanied by some limitations on the loss-sufferer’s rights
to seek redress from the loss-causer through tort actions.
The principal weakness of no-fault schemes is the difficulty of ensuring that
the socially optimal amount of care is taken by potential loss-causers, as the
links between their potential to cause loss and the costs of their actions are
severed. Consequently, most no-fault schemes are accompanied by additional
administrative systems, not present in typical tort systems, to monitor the
behaviour of potential loss-causers in order to preserve their incentives for
appropriate loss-avoidance (Kessler, 1999:13). The efficiency-improvement
criterion is met if the transaction costs saved from the tort process are
greater than the additional monitoring costs incurred in the no-fault system for
the same level of compensation paid to individuals for the same number of
adverse events.
No-fault insurance schemes are common where the probability of a loss occurring
is very uncertain. These include ‘acts of God’ (a sudden and unavoidable
occurrence caused by natural forces, such as a flood or earthquake), where there
is no party obviously at fault from whom partial cost recovery can be sought.
The low probability of these events occurring, the unpredictability of the size
of the loss and the exposure to large number of claims arising from a single
event, mean that there is often a failure of private insurance companies to
indemnify such losses. Further, as no individual has the ability to ‘cause’ the
event, there is no need for incentives to prevent the loss-causing event and
monitoring costs are low.”
These authors are academicians in Australia and New Zealand and their views can
be used as a guide to what we are facing here.
As can be seen above, the purpose of introducing the No Fault Liability Systemin
New Zealand [NZ] was to control spiralling costs. It is also meant to deal with
mostly Medical Negligence cases, where the NZ government faced huge claims for
medical negligence at its National Health Services [NHS] Hospitals. With a No
Fault Liability System, the costs of maintaining the Hospitals can be fixed as
the government need not make huge provisions for medical negligence suits.
Another factor that the our AG ought to take into account is that in some states
in United States of America where this No Fault Liability System is practised,
the premium for the Insurance is extremely high. Why is this so? The Insurance
Company in this kind of scheme would have no choice but to compensate a victim
once the victim can prove his/her claim. There is little chance of defending the
claim. So the Insurance Company would logically increase the premium to hedge
their losses.
Also, the AG must realise that even with the adoption with this system ALL the
above mentioned delays [medical and police reports] still exist – which would
only mean that accident victims now have to deal with the Hospitals and Police
on their own to extract all relevant documents, for their claim. All the best to
the victims!
Conclusion
I have said in my earlier postings at the Bar Website
that I am concerned that such major change may in fact not solve the problem.
And of course as a lawyer I will concede that the change of system will mean
many of our friends all over Malaysia, will lose out in their income.
I take a position that the current system needs some intervention by authorities
to speed things up.
If the AG truly wants to quicken the claims process of the
victims, as he so assert in the press release, then I urge him to look at
solving the current system and not changing it.
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