Irish Independent

Woman in crash ‘could not trace driver’ who was her son’s father

- Tim Healy

A WOMAN lost her case for damages over injuries suffered when a man with whom she had gone for a drink crashed her uninsured car into a lamppost.

Now Natalie Grimes faces costs of the failed High Court action against the Motor Insurers Bureau of Ireland (MIBI), during which she claimed she could not trace the driver, who is the father of her son.

Mr Justice Anthony Barr dismissed the case after finding Ms Grimes was required under the 2009 MIBI agreement to also sue the car driver, Glen Sheridan, the father of Ms Grimes’ son.

She was obliged to do so unless she had establishe­d he remains an untraceabl­e driver under the agreement.

She had not done so and thus could not sue the MIBI as a sole defendant, he ruled.

It was “simply untenable” for Ms Grimes to say Mr Sheridan was untraceabl­e between the time of the accident in March 2011 and when she saw him in the corridor outside court on the first day of her case last April, he said.

Had a garda investigat­ing the accident been asked, he would have confirmed he had addresses for Mr Sheridan and, on foot of a request routed through the Garda’s District Officer, would have provided that informatio­n in writing to Ms Grimes’ solicitor, he said.

The investigat­ing garda had said there was no criminal investigat­ion of the accident, and no prosecutio­n, as no complaint was made.

He also said the couple involved had “glazed eyes” when he approached them in hospital on the night of the accident, and they refused to talk to him.

Given his findings on untraceabi­lity, the judge said it was unnecessar­y to address other issues raised by the MIBI, including whether Ms Grimes allowed herself to be carried in the car knowing Mr Sheridan was not insured to drive it and he may have consumed excess alcohol.

The case arose from the accident in Clonee, Co Meath, on the night of March 22, 2011.

Ms Grimes of Avondale Park, Mulhuddart, Dublin, claimed she had had only a brief relationsh­ip with Mr Sheridan, resulting in the birth of their son in 1999, and there was infrequent contact between them.

She said he wanted to go to a pub in Clonee and, when she said she could not drive her car as it was not insured, he said he had open insurance to drive any car.

Ms Grimes said she took that at face value.

She said she had two pints of larger and Mr Sheridan had two pint bottles of cider and the accident happened some 15 minutes after they left the bar.

She claimed Mr Sheridan was untraceabl­e after both of them left the A&E department of a Dublin hospital after the arrival of gardaí.

She claimed they did so without her receiving treatment after Mr Sheridan told her: “We have to get out of this dump, I am banned”, meaning he was banned from driving.

She had not heard from Mr Sheridan since the accident or since she phoned his mother, asking her to tell him he would be done for criminal damage, it was claimed.

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