An estimated £4 million in compensation is heading the way of a Wiltshire cyclist who was left with serious disabilities after being hit by a car four years ago.
Graham Gregory, from Blunsdon, near Swindon, suffered spinal injuries in the crash and is now tetraplegic and unable to care for himself.
He was told at a High Court hearing in London that he will receive ‘substantial compensation’ for the injuries which left him paralysed from the neck down.
Lawyers have estimated that he could receive a pay-out of around £4 million to provide 24-a-day hour care for the rest of his life.
Mr Gregory was cycling home from a friend’s house when he was struck by a car from behind on Tewkesbury Way, West Swindon.
After receiving initial treatment, Mr Gregory was later moved to the National Spinal Injuries Centre at Stoke Mandeville Hospital where he spent 32 days in intensive care.
He stayed there for two years before he was transferred to Salisbury Hospital’s spinal unit, where he remained until February last year.
Mr Gregory had been fit and active before the accident and had a range of jobs. Now he is confined to living in a bungalow specially adapted to his needs and is reliant on his family.
Barrister Gerard McDermott QC said of his client: “He was almost as badly injured as it is possible to imagine.”
Mr Gregory sued the driver of the car that hit him, but the defence of the case was taken over by the Motor Insurers Bureau, the industry body which is responsible for compensating victims of drivers who are either uninsured, or under-insured.
But after last minute negotiations outside court, Mr McDermott told Judge John Leighton-Williams QC that the MIB had agreed to compensate Mr Gregory on the basis of 90 per cent liability.
Judge Leighton-Williams said he was delighted, particularly for Mr Gregory’s sake to approve the settlement of the liability issue.
He said the compromise was entirely appropriate and justified and would give Mr Gregory financial security for the future.
While I always have lights on day and night and wear fluro, I have a friend that wears all black all the time and doesn't use lights ever. His...
A sad case, and one with no winners. The driver can thank her lucky stars that the cyclist wasn't more seriously injured and that the court was...
Bloody hell... How are you doing now?
And I liked endura too. Got a nice long sleeve mostly merino long sleeve a little while back, in orange.
No, the Ebay lights have been around for several years, this Lezyne light just appeared.
They shouldn't worry - the second part of the "tariff" refrain is "they can make it in US and they'll do very well".
"At the going down of the sun, it will get in our eyes and cause us to crash into things."
Been living in the area thirty years now and Brixton Cycles (and local riders wearing their famed Rastafarian colours jersey) has been an iconic...
Indeed - but again these are perhaps questions we should keep asking. Even if the immediate answer is "well we are where we are" or "how on earth...