The Scotsman

Scots courts face foreign sickness claims

● Travel chiefs fear surge in cases ● UK travellers make £50m claims

- By SCOTT MACNAB

Scotland’s courts could become home to a multi-million pound travel sickness compensati­on culture as new laws open the floodgates to widespread claims from across the UK, MSPS have been warned.

It could lead to price rises for holidaymak­ers and even bans from some resorts after similar changes to the law south of the Border saw Spanish hotleliers hit with annual bills of up £50 million.

But just as the UK government moves to close loopholes in the law, the Associatio­n of British Travel Agents (Abta) is warning that proposed changes to civil law in Scotlandwo­uldopen awhole new frontier for claims firms to “aggressive­ly market” for cases.

“Should these regulatory reforms proceed in a way that opens up the Scottish Courts system to such claims, as the loophole is closed in England and Wales, we would be seriously concerned that these cases would simply migrate to Scotland,” Abta states in a submission to MSPS at Holyrood.

The changes in Scotland are being proposed in the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceeding­s) Scotland Bill which Holyrood’s justice committee is currently scutinisin­g.

The legislatio­n is actually aimed at cracking down on compensati­on culture by capping claims – except for claims originatin­g overseas.

The travel industry in England and Wales says it has been targeted by “spurious and exaggerate­d” claims from holidaymak­ers claiming to be suffering from gastric illness which they picked up on package trips.

It followed an overhaul of civil law in England and Wales which changed the “liability obligation­s” of Package Travel Regulation­s (PTR). It meant “all inclusive” holidays are increasing­ly blamed by courts when sickness occurs.

The result has been a 500 per cent increase in claims with Spanish hoteliers warning these could hit £50m a year.

“This has resulted in some hotelier associatio­ns and their members making clear that UK consumers are likely to face price increases, to have the availabili­ty of all inclusive holidays restricted, and potentiall­y to be banned from certain

GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN resorts, should the problem not be addressed,” Abta states.

Claims management companies (CMCS) already target customers in Scotland to make claims in England and Wales, as consumer protection is reserved.

“In the summer of 2016, a major UK CMC was seen touting for business in resort in Tenerife, Spain, using a mocked up ambulance to encourage consumers to lodge claims,” saod Abta

The changes coming in the Civil Litigation Bill will allow the claims firms to target Scotland’s courts, Abta now warns, through the 1992 Package Travel Regulation­s, which are Uk-wide, when loopholes are closed south of the Border.

A Scottish Government spokesman said the recent Taylor review found Scots are deterred from pursuing legal action.

He said the Civil Litigation Bill “will improve the ability of individual­s with a genuine claim to vindicate their rights.”

“Bill will improve the ability of individual­s with a claim to vindicate their rights”

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