A teenager who was paralysed in a car crash that killed her mother is to receive record compensation worth £23m.
Cheltenham Ladies College pupil Agnes Collier, now 17, was left with no use of her legs and little function in her arms after the March 2009 accident on the A436 in Gloucestershire.
Damages were awarded against the insurers of motorist Anthony Norton, who caused the accident when he pulled out of a side road, causing the car Ms Collier was travelling in to be hit by an oncoming lorry.
Composed of a £7.25m lump sum plus annual payments of £270,000, the damages are believed to be the highest ever for personal injury, topping the previous record of £12.2m.
The youngster's 48-year-old mother Karen Hood, a teacher, died in the crash and her older brother Rufus suffered a serious head injury, from which he has made a good recovery.
In November 2009, Norton, of Andoversford, Gloucestershire, pleaded guilty to causing death by driving without due care and attention and was sentenced to six months' jail suspended for a year, banned from driving for 18 months and ordered to do 300 hours unpaid community work.
Agnes's father, investment banker Dominic Collier, and stepmother Jannene, were at London's High Court for the hearing.
Agnes's counsel, William Norris QC, told Mr Justice MacDuff that she was a "truly remarkable young lady" and a very bright girl who had done astonishingly well in returning to school and taking her AS-levels.
The burden of overwhelming tiredness and the need to use a scribe had affected her exam results to some extent and she was unlikely to achieve the university place she had hoped for, but she already had one offer and was set on a career.
"Her determination is extraordinary, but she has been blessed with a family who are thoroughly supportive, and her stepmother has been a tower of strength," Mr Norris said.
Ben Browne, QC for the insurers, said it was a tragedy for the entire family, of Naunton, near Cheltenham, starting with the grievous blow of the loss of a devoted wife and mother.
He said: "On top of that, they had to contend with the injuries to Agnes, which were at the very highest level of severity.
"It is difficult to imagine how the family was going to cope with those terrible blows coming together, but it is enormously to their credit that they have coped and managed to give Agnes a quality of life which would have been really unimaginable in the early days following this tragedy."
After the hearing, the family's solicitor, Paul Paxton, of Stewarts Law, said the award would be paid out over her lifetime.
He added: "While it is a lot of money, Agnes's needs are great and she needs those for the rest of her life.
"The family want to be able to move on with their lives now this chapter has closed."
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