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Jamie Hill

Call: 2016
  • Jamie’s preparation is incredibly thorough. He is great at keeping in touch prior to and after hearings, and he values input from his instructing solicitor. His knowledge of the civil procedure rules is second-to-none.

    Legal 500 (2025)
  • Jamie is calm and technically astute. He has an eye for detail, is adept at making clients and instructing solicitors feel at ease, and he is an unassuming advocate who gets results.

    Legal 500 (2024)
  • Jamie’s work is detailed and prompt, he is approachable, friendly and capable of maintaining a robust position in a professional capacity. Drafts are well written and it is evident that he puts a lot of time and effort into conducting research as part of his drafting process.

    Legal 500 (2023)

Overview

Jamie Hill is a well-regarded barrister, who has been repeatedly recognised by the Legal 500 for personal injury on the Northern Circuit.  Jamie practises in all areas of personal injury and accepts instructions on behalf of both Claimants and Defendants.  He has a busy multi-track practice and regularly accepts instructions in cases where the pleaded value is between £100,000 and £1,000,000.  Jamie has significant trial experience in the County Court and has achieved a number of notable results for his clients over the years.

Awards

Personal Injury

Serious Injury

Jamie has a busy multi-track personal injury practice.  He accepts instructions in cases with a pleaded value of up to £1 million.  His multi-track practice covers the full spectrum of personal injury litigation, although the majority of his higher-value work involves cases where there is a traumatic brain injury.  Jamie is often instructed early in such matters to provide advice in conference or to assist with the compilation of expert evidence.  Clients welcome his views, not only on the legal position but also on what tactics should be deployed to secure the best possible outcome.

Recent examples include:

  • P v C & U (2025) – Jamie advised on procedure and attended a Coles v Perfect approval hearing in the High Court for a £2.3 million settlement.  P had suffered an extradural haematoma and multiple parenchymal haemorrhages.  Because the injury affected the frontal lobe, P had limited insight into his injuries, which made him unwilling to accept the care package that had been recommended.
  • H v W & M (2025) – H was fatally injured when his motorcycle was struck by a JCB.  Jamie drafted the Counter-Schedule of Loss and advised on quantum.  The matter settled shortly before trial.  The High Court subsequently approved the compromise.
  • H v S (2023) – a secondary school pupil lost part of his finger in a door that was alleged to be dangerous. Jamie settled the Defence, represented the Defendant successfully at 3 interlocutory hearings and advised in conference. The case eventually settled for around 25% of its pleaded value.

Road traffic collisions

Many of Jamie’s instructions involve serious injuries arising out of road traffic accidents.  Jamie is experienced in dealing with liability, causation, and quantum arguments.

Recent case examples:

  • S v F (2024) – Jamie successfully defended a claim brought by a pedestrian who had been struck by a car. There had been an earlier altercation and F pursued S.  S called the police.  F alighted from her vehicle and ran towards S.  S drove off, striking F and causing serious injuries to her right arm and leg.  Negligence was denied on the basis that F’s driving was reasonable given she was in genuine fear.  The Trial Judge agreed.
  • R v M (2019) – Jamie acted for the Claimant in an MIB untraced drivers matter, where a pedestrian had been struck and suffered serious injuries, including the traumatic amputation of her left ear. She also developed post-traumatic pain symptoms and had a number of serious orthopaedic injuries.
  • E v A (2019) – Jamie represented the Claimant, who suffered bilateral pulmonary embolisms following a simple rear end collision. The Claimant was left with lifelong post-thrombotic syndrome. Jamie advised in conference and settled the Schedule of Loss. The case settled before trial.

Highways Act

Jamie often works on cases which turn on the reasonableness and thoroughness of a highway authority’s system of inspection and maintenance.

Recent examples include:

  • B v S (2025) – Jamie successfully represented the highway authority at a multi-track trial involving a cyclist who alleged to have suffered a nasty wrist fracture as a result of coming off his bicycle due to a defect in the carriageway.  After Jamie’s cross-examination, the Judge rejected B’s evidence that the ‘defect’ was the cause of his fall.  The Judge went on to find that, had he been able to accept B’s evidence, he would have dismissed the claim in any event, as the ‘defect’ was not a ‘real source of danger’ given its location.
  • B v S (2024) – Jamie successfully represented the Defendant local authority in a claim arising out of an accident in which the Claimant asserted he had slipped on mud. The case featured argument on whether this had arisen as a result of a failure to maintain the highway or a failure to remove an obstruction from the highway.
  • B v L (2021) – Jamie successfully represented the Defendant local authority in a pothole pedestrian tripping claim. Following cross-examination, the Judge found the Claimant was unable to prove the date of the alleged accident or how it had occurred.
  • B v B (2018) – successfully represented the Defendant local authority, which relied on the ‘special’ s.58 defence when presented with a claim involving a sizeable and dangerous pothole.

Insurance Fraud

Jamie has developed a specialist insurance fraud practice.  He is able to expose possible dishonesty by identifying the inconsistencies and improbabilities within a case.  He is a robust trial advocate with an effective cross-examination style.

Recent examples include:

  • C v I (2025) – Jamie secured the dismissal of C’s claim pursuant to Section 57 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015.  C had suffered genuine whiplash injuries in a road traffic collision.  The Trial Judge found that he, much later, developed tinnitus.  C then dishonestly attributed this to the collision.  He lied about the onset and deliberately attempted to mislead the ENT expert.  A forensic review of contemporaneous records exposed this dishonesty at Trial.  C was ordered to pay over £12,000 in costs, after having credit for his genuine injuries.
  • BJ v JM (2021) – secured the dismissal of the Claimant’s claim pursuant to Section 57 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015.  This was a multi-track claim in which the Claimant asserted he had suffered a chronic pain syndrome as a result of a workplace incident.  He asserted to the Consultant in Pain Medicine that he was unable to work, was living a sedentary lifestyle and could not drive due to the medication he was taking.  Subsequent records demonstrated that account was untrue.  At the time the Claimant made those assertions, he was, in fact, working full time as a taxi driver.  The Judge found that the Claimant had dishonestly exaggerated his injuries and that in reality all he had suffered was a modest 3 month soft-tissue injury.  The Judge dismissed the entirety of the Claimant’s claim and ordered him to personally pay the Defendant’s costs of the entire action.
  • D and others v E (2020) – following a ‘skilful and thorough cross-examination’ obtained findings of fundamental dishonesty against all 3 Claimants. The Judge found, on balance, none of the Claimants had been injured.  Their medical records and work history were damning.  The Defendant secured an enforceable costs order.  This case also featured legal argument on the scope of Section 57 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015 and is a case still often cited on the point.

Clinical Negligence

Jamie has developed an evenly mixed clinical negligence practice, acting for both claimants and defendants. Most of his clinical negligence work involves significant causation disputes. Such matters require a careful consideration of not only the expert opinion but contemporaneous medical records.

Jamie is often instructed early in clinical negligence cases in order to advise in conference and assist with the compilation and refining of expert evidence. He is familiar and comfortable with discussing draft reports with experts in conference.

Recent case examples:

– O v S (2023) – Jamie acted for the executor of the deceased Claimant, who suffered two grade 4 pressure ulcers due to prolonged negligent care in a nursing home. The case was of particular interest due to the Defendant’s arguments in relation to the impact Covid-19 had had on its ability to access hospital care.

– B v S (2023) – Jamie acted for the Defendant in a case in which it was alleged that culpable delay had resulted in the Claimant’s wrist fracture having healed in a malunited position. Breach of duty and causation was disputed.

– P v M (2022) – Jamie acted for the Claimant in a case in which it was alleged that a radiologist had negligently reported a CT scan, which had resulted in her bowel becoming irreversibly ischaemic. Whilst the Defendant admitted breach of duty, it denied causation. The case settled shortly after the Particulars of Claim, which Jamie had drafted, were served.

Inquests & Public Inquiries

Jamie is able to represent any ‘interested person’ involved in an Inquest, be it the family of the deceased or persons involved professionally, such as local authorities, clinicians and police officers. Jamie is aware of the significantly different approach required depending upon the nature of the relationship between the deceased and the ‘interested person’.

Recent case examples:

– DS (2023) – Jamie advised in conference and attended the Inquest on behalf of a landlord, following the death of its tenant in a housefire.

Jamie’s Inquest work is complimented by his serious personal injury and clinical negligence work. He has attended Inquests in cases where he was instructed by solicitors pursuing personal injury claims arising out of the incident that caused the Deceased’s death.

Associations

Personal Injuries Bar Association

Education

LLB (Hons), Staffordshire University

BPTC, BPP University

Awards

Pump Court Tax Chambers Scholarship

Blackstone Entrance Exhibition

BPP Regional Scholarship

Davies Group Law School Prize

Prescribed Information

Jamie Hill is a practising barrister, who is regulated by the Bar Standards Board. Details of information held by the BSB about Mr Hill can be found here.

Mr Hill’s clerks will happily provide no obligation quotations for all legal services that he provides. Their contact details can be found here. It is most common for Mr Hill to undertake Court work for a fixed fee, negotiated in advance.  Paperwork and conferences are most commonly charged at an hourly rate, although fixed fees for certain matters are also available. Conditional Fee Agreements and Damages Based Agreements will be considered in cases with favourable prospects of success. Mr Hill will typically return paperwork within 10 working days, however professional commitments, complexity and the volume of documentation can affect these approximate timescales.

Mr Hill also undertakes Direct Access work. This work is undertaken on a contractual basis, as agreed between the client and Mr Hill’s clerks. This is on fixed fee basis for a specific events such as a conference, advisory work, a hearing with additional hearing days (refreshers) or the drafting of specific documents. All work agreed to be undertaken by Mr Hill with the fixed fee cost will be clearly outlined in the direct access contract signed by the client and will be payable in full prior to the commencement of the work.

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