Peter Hunt
Consultant
The decision in Raad v Nominal Defendant by its agent Allianz Australia Insurance Limited [2026] NSWPIC 173 was delivered on 2 April 2026 and published on 9 April 2026.
The Claimant was involved in a pedestrian accident on 6 February 2023. Whilst crossing Canterbury Road, Bankstown, a blue sedan exited a driveway and knocked him down.
The offending vehicle was either a Ford or a Holden. The offending driver exited his vehicle and asked whether the Claimant was alright, before departing the scene. No details were exchanged before the offending driver left.
At the time of the accident, the Claimant was taking a lunch break after attending some workplace training. The other trainees assisted him following the accident. The Claimant was subsequently diagnosed with a fractured right leg and other musculoskeletal injuries.
The Nominal Defendant denied the claim for statutory benefits on the grounds that the Claimant failed to conduct due inquiry and search into the identity of the offending vehicle, as required by section 2.30 of MAIA.
The Claimant took the following steps to identify the offending vehicle:
The Claimant also sought information from his employer regarding the identities of the other trainees who assisted him following the accident. His requests, however, were denied on privacy grounds. Once proceedings were commenced in the Personal Injury Commission, the Claimant sought to obtain that information via a Direction for Production.
The Member concluded that the Claimant had conducted due inquiry and search for the following reasons:
The decision in Raad provides a useful summary of the principles which must be applied in assessing whether a claimant has conducted due inquiry and search into the identity of an offending vehicle.
Whilst the Member found that steps undertaken over 18 months post-accident were undertaken after the scent had gone cold, the Member appears to have accepted that the steps taken promptly – within the first 11 days post-accident – were sufficient to discharge the Claimant’s statutory obligation to conduct due inquiry and search. Those steps included reporting the accident to the Police the day following the accident.
If you would like to discuss this case note, please don’t hesitate to get in touch with CTP Practice Group Leader Peter Hunt today.