More than £1.8m paid by council to a pothole claimant Published duration 6 October 2017

A council paid out more than £1.8m in a single compensation claim involving a pothole, it has emerged.

Somerset County Council paid out £1,836,000 to a third party for "general damages" following an accident "involving a pothole defect".

The council said it was unable to give further details for legal reasons.

Documents also reveal a rise in the total amount of compensation paid out by the authority.

It paid about £170,000 to 28 claimants in 2014 to 2015, and almost £900,000 to 33 claimants in the following year.

This financial year, however, the authority has had to pay out £2,137,167, with £1.8m of it going to just one person.

'Clothes in brambles'

Across the county, the FoI revealed the most common claim for compensation was for potholes, followed by drains and gullies and then "erosion of road".

The lowest compensation pay out was £11.99 for "damage to clothing caused by overgrown brambles that were not maintained".

A spokesman for Somerset County Council said, "data protection legislation" meant it could not give "any further details about individual claims against the local authority".

But he added, to successfully claim compensation claimants would need to prove the council had neglected or breached its "statutory duty".

"Often events occur that are unfortunate but not due to any party's negligence," he said.

"As such, there is no automatic entitlement to compensation or any guarantee that making a claim will be successful."