desprateseagull
New member
Or, how about when trucks go wrong.. slip to about 2mins in..NSFW language
..
Or maybe do it the Russian way..
Or, how about when trucks go wrong.. slip to about 2mins in..NSFW language
The Tree Surgeon is taking a great risk doing private work without PI PL or even some EL coverage . Are you SURE he has none of these ?
Apparantly as the tree surgeon was doing it as a cash sale
I would not make assumptions about the proximate cause. Too many questions need answering before you can assume anything. Also the son's HH insurers will only be involved if he's sensible enough to notify them. There might or might not be motor insurers as well.The proximate cause in this case would appear to be the original fell.
However who is responsible for the rotten branch ?
Liability may be with the owner of that tree who appears to be your son .
Has the car owner reported this loss to his insurer . It is non fault there is no reason not to do so.
Advise him to so . If he has, his insurer will initiate subrogation proceedings against your son's property insurer .
If the car owner hasn't reported loss , request to see repair or TL invoice. Then advise he will need to instigate court proceedings .
He won't .
He needs to notify them and allow them to investigate. If he doesn't he could end up with having to pay 3k plus another 3k or so for legal costs.I would have thought that the owner of a tree that overhangs a public way/road is responsible for the maintenance of that tree. The offending branch seems like it was an accident waiting to happen if it was that rotte, so I don't see how the tree surgeon could be directly responsible.
I don't know if home insurance would cover it?
Isn't there an old legal saying that a man who acts for himself has a fool as a client? See a lawyer...
If no one had been there to hear it, would it have made a noise?
My son got a tree surgeon who was a friend of a neighbour to fell 2 large trees from my sons garden in February .
When they were felled into his garden the crash of the trunk hitting the ground caused a rotten branch from an adjoining tree to fall to the ground and hit a car driving down a road at the side of his property .
The tree sugeon left his name and number to the driver and that was that.
8 MONTHS later the tree surgeon gets in contact with my son and says the person who owns the car wants £3000 for the damage to his car.
Apparantly as the tree surgeon was doing it as a cash sale and not for his employer he isn't covered for insurance.
Where does my son stand on this as it seems a bit fishy to me.
1/ Is it down to the tree surgeon even though he was doing it himself?
2/ is 8 months too long after the incident and should the driver had contacted his car insurance and come back sooner regarding damage?
3/ As it was from another tree and not the felled tree is it classed as a act of god ?
NO! Tell his house insurers. They will want to appoint their own Lawyers who know what they are doing IF the matter proceeds to litigation.
My son got a tree surgeon who was a friend of a neighbour to fell 2 large trees from my sons garden in February .
When they were felled into his garden the crash of the trunk hitting the ground caused a rotten branch from an adjoining tree to fall to the ground and hit a car driving down a road at the side of his property .
The tree sugeon left his name and number to the driver and that was that.
8 MONTHS later the tree surgeon gets in contact with my son and says the person who owns the car wants £3000 for the damage to his car.
Apparantly as the tree surgeon was doing it as a cash sale and not for his employer he isn't covered for insurance.
Where does my son stand on this as it seems a bit fishy to me.
1/ Is it down to the tree surgeon even though he was doing it himself?
2/ is 8 months too long after the incident and should the driver had contacted his car insurance and come back sooner regarding damage?
3/ As it was from another tree and not the felled tree is it classed as a act of god ?
NO! Tell his house insurers. They will want to appoint their own Lawyers who know what they are doing IF the matter proceeds to litigation.
It all seems very fishy. An alleged accident occurs and nobody seems to know about it for 8 months, apart from the car driver and/or owner, yet somehow seem to know the sequence of events i.e. the impact of a tree hitting the ground causing a rotten branch to fall. How the heck do we know that happened? Someone out of the blue claims damage to a car and doesn't claim from the owner of the property but against the friend of a friend who was chopping down the tree. How does the car owner know to contact the chap cutting the tree. Why the delay? Was he driving around in a damaged car for months? We don't know if the car was insured? Stinky!
It all seems very fishy. An alleged accident occurs and nobody seems to know about it for 8 months, apart from the car driver and/or owner, yet somehow seem to know the sequence of events i.e. the impact of a tree hitting the ground causing a rotten branch to fall. How the heck do we know that happened? Someone out of the blue claims damage to a car and doesn't claim from the owner of the property but against the friend of a friend who was chopping down the tree. How does the car owner know to contact the chap cutting the tree. Why the delay? Was he driving around in a damaged car for months? We don't know if the car was insured? Stinky!
Sorry I missed the bit about the driver taking the tree feller's details. I'm an idiot!. BTW Who were the other 2 fellers? Ha!Why do you say it was an alleged accident? The OP states that the tree surgeon knew about it when it happened and it may well be that the OP's son was there at the time although he might confirm this.
When I first read it quickly, I didn't appreciate that the felled tree didn't hit the other branch but that the vibration from the impact caused it to fall. As it was described as an adjoining tree, it's probably fair to assume that it was also in the garden of the OP's son. I would suggest the onus is going to fall on him (no pun intended) rather than the tree surgeon hence he should be involving his household insurers. Is it reasonably to expect the tree surgeon to do an assessment on every tree around, every shed or anything else. d