UK solicitor gets respect from UK High Court judge for conduct in clinical negligence case

The judge said Paul Wainwright exemplified “professionalism, courtesy and sensitivity” in his handling of a dishonest claim

UK solicitor gets respect from UK High Court judge for conduct in clinical negligence case

Birmingham-based solicitor Paul Wainwright got respect from UK High Court Justice Constable for his conduct in a clinical negligence case that involved a dishonest claim, reported the Law Society Gazette.

The judge said that Wainwright exemplified “professionalism, courtesy and sensitivity… of which the legal profession should be proud”.

The clinical negligence claim was filed by Sven Raymond Bogmer against Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust in October 2017. He accused the trust of negligent medical treatment, resulting in “'significant injury to his right arm” that prevented him from performing daily activities.

However, video surveillance footage obtained in January 2020 revealed that Bogmer was able to walk his dog, wash his car and do his shopping, among other activities that required the normal use of his right hand. The High Court was told that Bogmer did not display discomfort while performing these activities as per the footage.

Bogmer argued that the activities in question weren’t significantly taxing on his right arm, and said that he had “good days and bad days” in a statement published by the Gazette.

The NHS Trust made a drop hands offer that Bogmer accepted to settle the claim in January 2021. But in September 2022, the trust moved forward with an application to bring committal proceedings, which encountered a delay of 20 months before progressing.

Wainwright, who leads the counter fraud and intelligence team at Birmingham law firm Browne Jacobson, communicated with Bogmer and his wife leading up to the committal hearing, acting “quite properly and with a great deal of sensitivity”, Constable said. Last month, Wainwright talked to Bogmer’s wife for his choice to be absent from the trial for contempt.

The judge found Bogmer in contempt of court for his dishonest claim, saying that in his judgment that “to the extent any of the representations of loss of function and deterioration were accurate (which I do not accept), Mr Bogmer in any event falsely, and dishonestly, represented that the symptoms he said he experienced and the associated impacts were caused by the…surgery, when (to the extent they existed at all) they predated the surgery and were unrelated to it”. He concluded that Bogmer had made his claims “with the deliberate intention of deceiving the experts and in due course the court”.

Constable lauded Wainwright for his professionalism “in dealing with difficult matters of this nature with a litigant in person”.

The judgment was published on Monday.

Recent articles & video

SCC confirms manslaughter convictions in case about proper jury instructions on causation

Law firm associate attrition continues to decline, NALP Foundation study shows

How systemizing law firm work allocation enhances diversity efforts and overcomes affinity bias

Dentons advises Saturn on $600 million acquisition of Saskatchewan oil assets

Ontario Court of Appeal upholds anesthesiologist’s liability in severe birth complications case

BC Supreme Court assigns liability in rear-end vehicle collision at Surrey intersection

Most Read Articles

BC Supreme Court rules for equal asset division in Port Alberni property dispute

BC Supreme Court rules vehicle owner and driver liable for 2011 Chilliwack collision

BC Supreme Court upholds solicitor-client privilege in medical negligence case

Ontario Court of Appeal upholds anesthesiologist’s liability in severe birth complications case