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£2m settlement for cyclist who suffered "traumatic, life-changing brain injury" in collision

Rider was cycling to work in Somerset when he was knocked off his bike and suffered "serious damage to his skull and brain" — a law firm having now secured a seven-figure settlement...

A cyclist who suffered a "traumatic, life-changing" brain injury in a collision as he cycled to work back in 2019 has secured a £2m settlement.

Stewarts was instructed following the collision and secured regular interim payments from the defendant's insurer. The law firm now reports that the case was settled for £2m last year, ensuring the cyclist, Martin, is compensated for his injury and it "will allow him to meet his future needs".

Martin was cycling to work near Bridgwater in Somerset in July 2019 when he was involved in a collision, suffering "serious damage to his skull and brain". Having initially been taken by ambulance to a local hospital, the injured rider was then transferred by air ambulance to a major trauma hospital due to the severity of the CT scan results.

He underwent emergency surgery and sustained a traumatic brain injury which has "significantly impacted several aspects of his life". Stewarts reports the injury left him with "substantial physical and cognitive problems", including memory problems, inability to concentrate, fatigue, low mood, impaired sleep, impaired sense of smell and taste, impaired vision, tinnitus, headaches and vertigo.

> Cyclist disabled with life-changing brain injury awarded $29m damages after collision caused by inattentive truck driver "going too fast"

The impact of the injuries was stark and has "significantly altered Martin’s self-identity", in that he was unable to return to a working life that he enjoyed, and was previously busy with an active social life, cycling and other physical exercise.

Martin praised his "faultless" lawyers' work to go "above and beyond" and thanked them for getting "the best result". A joint settlement meeting last February did not see a final figure agreed, but the cyclist's lawyers noted it "allowed the parties to bridge the gap", a £2m settlement agreed in March 2024, three months before a court date was scheduled.

"When I first picked up the phone to Stewarts, I had no idea what the claim would entail," he said. "From start to finish, Stewarts have been impeccable and faultless and have gone above and beyond. They work so well together and provide a client with an impeccable team. The journey with Stewarts has been long but smooth and successful. I would highly recommend Stewarts to another person who needs legal guidance in a claim for personal injury."

Stewarts noted the settlement "compensates Martin for his injury and will allow him to meet his future needs."

His rehabilitation has involved a multi-disciplinary team of private therapists specialising in brain injury and the process has been described as "highly complex due to the impact of the traumatic injury on Martin’s cognitive and physical abilities".

Rehabilitation work has involved the expertise of a neurologist, neuro-occupational therapist, neuropsychologist, physiotherapist, neuro-physiotherapist, speech and language therapist, personal trainer and a support worker; Stewarts pleased to report Martin "has returned to some of the activities he previously enjoyed, in particular cycling".

His case manager, Emily Denny, commented: "This was a challenging case for a multitude of factors. Warren [Maxwell, personal injury partner at Stewarts] and his team were a case manager's dream to work with, providing outstanding communication and responsiveness. They provided a calm, clear, collaborative professionalism, which reassured the client and enabled me and the therapy team to do our jobs well. I would absolutely recommend Stewarts to my family, which is always a solid measure of any service."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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6 comments

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Secret_squirrel | 1 week ago
1 like

I have no problem with this article being ad-like - they seem like excellent Lawyers at securing settlements from neglidet parties including a drivers.

Keep em coming I say.  Drive bad drivers off the roads.

https://www.stewartslaw.com/news/cyclist-who-sustained-traumatic-brain-i...

Avatar
mitsky | 1 week ago
0 likes

Why no details about the collision itself?

I appreciate that privacy laws may prohibit the naming of the other party (presumably a driver, and their motor insurer who settled the claim/case) but the specifics of the collision itself would be usefull.

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Tom_77 replied to mitsky | 1 week ago
1 like

mitsky wrote:

Why no details about the collision itself?

I appreciate that privacy laws may prohibit the naming of the other party (presumably a driver, and their motor insurer who settled the claim/case) but the specifics of the collision itself would be usefull.

Couldn't find any news stories online for it. Looking on THINK Map I'm pretty sure it's this incident. Curious if the driver was prosecuted, but otherwise I'm not sure how useful the specifics of the collision are.

Avatar
HoarseMann replied to Tom_77 | 1 week ago
0 likes

Yes, that seems to be the collision that fits the description:

https://www.cyclestreets.net/collisions/reports/2019520905116/

Both travelling eastbound early in the morning. Possibly the old 'sun in the eyes' excuse was deployed? Nothing in the news as far as I can see regarding a prosecution for the driver.

Avatar
muhasib | 1 week ago
1 like

What an odd article, just an advert for the law firm: is this the same 'Martin' who then campaigned for cyclists to wear helmets?

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lukei1 | 2 weeks ago
3 likes

Nice ad

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