The Damages (Personal Injury) Order 2019
STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS
2019 No. 1126
DAMAGES, ENGLAND AND WALES
The Damages (Personal Injury) Order 2019
| Made---- | 11th July 2019 |
| Laid before Parliament | 15th July 2019 |
| Coming into force-- | 5th August 2019 |
The Lord Chancellor makes the following Order in exercise of the powers conferred by section A1 of the Damages Act 1996(a)[1], having reviewed and determined the rate of return in accordance with paragraph 2 of Schedule A1 to that Act:
Citation, commencement, extent and interpretation
1.—(1) This Order may be cited as the Damages (Personal Injury) Order 2019 and comes into force on 5th August 2019.
(2) This Order extends to England and Wales only.
Rate of return
2. The rate of return referred to in section A1(1) of the Damages Act 1996 shall be minus 0.25 per cent.
11th July 2019
Lord Chancellor
Ministry of Justice
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(This note is not part of the Order)
This Order prescribes minus 0.25 per cent as the rate of return which, under section A1(1) of the Damages Act 1996 (c.48), courts are required to take into account when calculating damages for future pecuniary loss in an action for personal injury.
Because this is the first review of the rate of return since the commencement of Schedule A1 to the Damages Act 1996, the procedure set out in paragraph 2 of Schedule A1 to that Act applies.
A full impact assessment of the effect that this instrument will have on the costs of business, the voluntary sector and the public sector is available from the Ministry of Justice, 102 Petty France, London, SW1H 9AJ and is published with an Explanatory Memorandum alongside the instrument on https://legislation.gov.uk.
- ↑ (a) 1996 c. 48. Section A1 and Schedule A1 were inserted by the Civil Liability Act 2018 (c. 29), s 10.
This work is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 (OGL v.3).
- You are free to:
- copy, publish, distribute and transmit the Information;
- adapt the Information;
- exploit the Information commercially and non-commercially for example, by combining it with other Information, or by including it in your own product or application.
- You must, where you do any of the above:
- acknowledge the source of the Information in your product or application by including or linking to any attribution statement specified by the Information Provider(s) and, where possible, provide a link to this licence;
- If the Information Provider does not provide a specific attribution statement, you must use the following:
- Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse