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If you were injured as a passenger in a motor vehicle accident in NSW, you might assume fault is irrelevant. After all, you weren’t driving.

If you’ve been injured in a motor accident or at work in New South Wales, you may come across the term “Personal Injury Commission” in a letter from your insurer.

Work Christmas parties, EOFY celebrations, client functions and team-building days are meant to be a reward for everyone’s effort,  but accidents can happen.

When people talk about “pain and suffering” after an accident, the law in NSW usually calls it non-economic loss.

If you’re making a genuine personal injury claim in NSW, it can be unsettling to hear that the insurer might be checking your social media or even arranging surveillance to monitor

When you make a public liability  claim in NSW, the law doesn’t just ask “how badly were you hurt?”, but it also asks “what exactly are you claiming for?”

If you’re injured in a supermarket, at a shopping centre, in a park or on a footpath, you might assume someone must be “at fault”.

If your Compulsory Third Party (CTP) or motor accident claim in New South Wales is disput