Episode 4
1
00:00:00,020 --> 00:00:03,940
Welcome to Risk Matters, the insurance podcast brought to you by DWF and your
2
00:00:03,940 --> 00:00:07,660
global guide to the latest trends and issues in the insurance and reinsurance industry.
3
00:00:08,260 --> 00:00:12,200
Join us as we explore topical issues, emerging technologies and the innovative
4
00:00:12,200 --> 00:00:14,760
strategies that are shaping the global future of insurance.
5
00:00:16,760 --> 00:00:21,880
Welcome to the next episode of our DWF Risk Matters podcast series titled We
6
00:00:21,880 --> 00:00:25,820
Live in Interesting Times, where myself, Jennifer Kleiser, will be talking with
7
00:00:25,820 --> 00:00:29,180
Simon Herman Cooper, about two recent court judgments of note to the insurance community.
8
00:00:30,000 --> 00:00:34,120
And this is a community that's seen shifting sands of late, facing fresh challenges
9
00:00:34,120 --> 00:00:37,760
and evaluating risk in view of global warming, increased global conflict and
10
00:00:37,760 --> 00:00:39,440
political instability, with
11
00:00:39,440 --> 00:00:42,640
around half of the world's population voting in elections during 2024.
12
00:00:43,100 --> 00:00:46,980
And it's important to remember the contract wording will always be the starting
13
00:00:46,980 --> 00:00:50,060
point for what terms have been agreed between insurers and insured,
14
00:00:50,120 --> 00:00:52,100
and what risk insurers have agreed to accept.
15
00:00:52,100 --> 00:00:57,360
Yes, although insurers are operating in a dynamic environment as far as risk
16
00:00:57,360 --> 00:01:00,760
is concerned, the terms of the policy remain key.
17
00:01:01,020 --> 00:01:06,260
And it's these contractual terms which are often central when a dispute gains traction.
18
00:01:06,800 --> 00:01:10,760
And two recent court decisions have been apt reminders of this.
19
00:01:11,680 --> 00:01:14,940
So I understand Simon will be looking today at the two decisions,
20
00:01:15,180 --> 00:01:19,940
Scott Beef against DNS Storage and Technip Saudi Arabia against the Mediterranean
21
00:01:19,940 --> 00:01:22,140
and Gulf Insurance and Reinsurance Company.
22
00:01:22,540 --> 00:01:27,920
Yes, that's right. The Scott Beef case is not only a reminder of the rules of construction,
23
00:01:28,800 --> 00:01:32,720
but it's also a great example of the way in which the Insurance Act of 2015,
24
00:01:33,340 --> 00:01:37,040
has changed the approach to warranties in an insurance contract,
25
00:01:37,040 --> 00:01:41,680
as well as the sort of evidence that insurers need their underwriters to demonstrate,
26
00:01:42,220 --> 00:01:46,100
if they want to argue that they would have written the risk on a different basis
27
00:01:46,100 --> 00:01:48,840
if a fair presentation had been made.
28
00:01:50,550 --> 00:01:54,470
Judgements applying the Act have been few and far between since 2016,
29
00:01:54,910 --> 00:02:00,050
and it's important to learn the lessons we can from cases like Scott Beef.
30
00:02:01,590 --> 00:02:07,270
Our second case today, the Technic case, focuses on the importance of policy definitions.
31
00:02:08,050 --> 00:02:10,770
Lawyers do love a definition. Yeah, we do.
32
00:02:10,950 --> 00:02:15,410
And it's interesting about this case that it highlights that just because a
33
00:02:15,410 --> 00:02:20,290
wording is a market standard wording, it doesn't mean it's perfect and arguments
34
00:02:20,290 --> 00:02:23,550
about its correct interpretation can still gain traction.
35
00:02:24,910 --> 00:02:29,510
And the case also contained some interesting commentary on insurance exclusions
36
00:02:29,510 --> 00:02:34,410
and on clauses requiring consent to settlement in the reinsurance context.
37
00:02:35,310 --> 00:02:40,270
So taking the Scott Beef case first, this judgment might come as something of
38
00:02:40,270 --> 00:02:41,710
an unpleasant surprise to insurers.
39
00:02:41,710 --> 00:02:44,510
Yeah, I think so, because the court found
40
00:02:44,510 --> 00:02:48,790
that the effect of the Insurance Act was such that a condition precedent to
41
00:02:48,790 --> 00:02:53,930
liability written into the policy concerning the insured's trading conditions
42
00:02:53,930 --> 00:02:59,650
was unenforceable as a contractual condition precedent and should instead be
43
00:02:59,650 --> 00:03:01,770
treated as a pre-contractual representation,
44
00:03:02,030 --> 00:03:08,770
which could only operate, if at all, as a warranty subject to the new rules set out in the Act.
45
00:03:10,820 --> 00:03:14,960
The background to the case was that DNS Storage, who is the plaintiff,
46
00:03:16,000 --> 00:03:18,560
that's wrong actually, can I go back?
47
00:03:19,560 --> 00:03:24,020
The background to the case was that DNS Storage provided warehousing facilities
48
00:03:24,020 --> 00:03:26,780
for meat processing companies in Scotland.
49
00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:32,200
It contracted with its clients on the basis of industry standard terms,
50
00:03:32,420 --> 00:03:38,320
known as the UKWA terms, and subsequently the FSDF terms.
51
00:03:38,760 --> 00:03:43,140
That's a lot of acronyms. Yeah, we love our acronyms as well as our definitions, don't we?
52
00:03:43,700 --> 00:03:50,000
So, DNS purchased Warehouse Keepers Liability Insurance from Lonham, the insurance company.
53
00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:56,860
And the policy noted that the insured's trading conditions were FSDF terms and conditions.
54
00:03:57,460 --> 00:04:03,300
And the policy also contained a duty of assured clause, which is at the heart of this dispute.
55
00:04:04,220 --> 00:04:08,860
Okay, so this is where the all-important so-called condition precedent comes into play.
56
00:04:08,860 --> 00:04:12,900
So the duty of assured clause provided, I understand, that it was a condition
57
00:04:12,900 --> 00:04:17,340
precedent to the liability of insurers, that the insured would firstly make
58
00:04:17,340 --> 00:04:20,820
a full declaration of all current trading conditions at inception,
59
00:04:21,060 --> 00:04:25,740
during the currency of the policy, continuously trade under the conditions they
60
00:04:25,740 --> 00:04:28,500
had declared and had been approved by insurers in writing,
61
00:04:28,700 --> 00:04:32,960
and take all reasonable and practical steps to ensure that their trading conditions
62
00:04:32,960 --> 00:04:36,500
were incorporated in all contracts that the insured entered into,
63
00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:38,560
presumably for the duration of the policy.
64
00:04:38,860 --> 00:04:41,780
I mean, that seems fairly clear drafting to me.
65
00:04:42,140 --> 00:04:46,000
Yes, and the clause seemed to provide a bit of a get-out at the end as well,
66
00:04:46,160 --> 00:04:49,300
because it said that if a claim under the policy arose,
67
00:04:50,220 --> 00:04:54,980
and it concerned an underlying contract where the insured had failed to incorporate the conditions,
68
00:04:55,320 --> 00:04:59,880
the insured's right to indemnity would not be prejudiced if they could show
69
00:04:59,880 --> 00:05:04,460
that they'd taken all reasonable and practicable steps to incorporate the conditions
70
00:05:04,460 --> 00:05:05,920
into the relevant contract.
71
00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:10,960
The difficulty arose because there was a clause later in the wording,
72
00:05:11,060 --> 00:05:15,460
I think it was a couple of pages further on, that set out the effect of a breach
73
00:05:15,460 --> 00:05:16,860
of this condition precedent,
74
00:05:17,280 --> 00:05:21,880
and it said that if insurers could identify a breach of condition precedent,
75
00:05:22,240 --> 00:05:25,800
then they'd be entitled to avoid the claim in its entirety.
76
00:05:27,240 --> 00:05:31,460
And how did the claim that was the subject of this dispute arise? What were the facts?
77
00:05:31,780 --> 00:05:36,320
Well, DNS made a claim following allegations against it by Scott Beef,
78
00:05:36,520 --> 00:05:40,380
which was a red meat product provider, as its name might suggest.
79
00:05:40,700 --> 00:05:46,200
And Scott Beef alleged that meat had been inadequately stored in the DNS warehouses
80
00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:48,340
and had therefore become damaged.
81
00:05:48,880 --> 00:05:52,720
And whilst the claim was being investigated by the insurers,
82
00:05:53,100 --> 00:05:59,140
it transpired that DNS's contract with Scott Beef was not on the SFDF terms
83
00:05:59,140 --> 00:06:02,860
and conditions as had been required by the insurance contract.
84
00:06:04,080 --> 00:06:08,080
And on that basis, insurers rejected the claim and they said there had been
85
00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:12,060
a breach of the condition precedent set out in the duty of assured clause.
86
00:06:12,900 --> 00:06:17,440
And given the drafting of that clause was pretty clear, how did the insured
87
00:06:17,440 --> 00:06:19,460
try and argue that the claim should still be paid?
88
00:06:20,040 --> 00:06:25,560
Well, DNS's case was that the requirements of the duty of assured clause were
89
00:06:25,560 --> 00:06:32,080
not on their true construction, conditions precedent, but instead were pre-contractual representations.
90
00:06:33,380 --> 00:06:35,240
And the court agreed with that argument.
91
00:06:35,740 --> 00:06:40,640
Looking at the requirements of the duty of assured clause, the court felt that
92
00:06:40,640 --> 00:06:44,500
although these were badged as conditions precedent, so insurers had described
93
00:06:44,500 --> 00:06:47,060
them as condition precedent in the actual contract,
94
00:06:47,420 --> 00:06:51,840
that wasn't conclusive and the clauses Causes could be properly interpreted
95
00:06:51,840 --> 00:06:58,340
as pre-contractual representations which had intended to be incorporated into the contract.
96
00:06:59,100 --> 00:07:05,420
That was partly because they represented promises by the insured about the situation
97
00:07:05,420 --> 00:07:12,900
at inception where they declared that all trading conditions then in use satisfied various criteria.
98
00:07:13,460 --> 00:07:18,420
And then they said that they would only trade under those conditions for the duration of the policy.
99
00:07:19,740 --> 00:07:23,900
Of course, if these requirements were indeed pre-contractual representations
100
00:07:23,900 --> 00:07:26,080
rather than conditions precedent,
101
00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:31,300
then the only way for them to be enforced once the contract had been entered
102
00:07:31,300 --> 00:07:37,100
into is for them to be treated of warranties by the insured for the purposes of the contract.
103
00:07:37,740 --> 00:07:42,300
But the Insurance Act has obviously changed the way warranties are treated in insurance contracts.
104
00:07:42,300 --> 00:07:47,620
Yes, that's right, because Section 9 of the Insurance Act states that a pre-contractual
105
00:07:47,620 --> 00:07:51,660
representation can't automatically be turned into a warranty,
106
00:07:51,700 --> 00:07:54,080
and any attempt to do so in the wording,
107
00:07:54,280 --> 00:07:58,500
for example by a basis of contract clause, will be unenforceable.
108
00:08:00,020 --> 00:08:03,020
There was a bit more of a debate about the third part of the clause,
109
00:08:03,060 --> 00:08:07,380
which requires the insured to take reasonable steps to ensure that conditions
110
00:08:07,380 --> 00:08:12,760
are incorporated into the contract the insurer has entered into on an ongoing basis,
111
00:08:13,160 --> 00:08:18,360
as well as in contracts that existed at the time that the policy was entered into. you.
112
00:08:19,460 --> 00:08:23,220
But the court held that this couldn't be relied upon as a freestanding condition
113
00:08:23,220 --> 00:08:25,740
precedent to liability, as
114
00:08:25,740 --> 00:08:29,980
it didn't comply with the transparency requirements of the Insurance Act.
115
00:08:30,580 --> 00:08:35,220
Ah yes, so where you have a clause that puts the insured in a worse position
116
00:08:35,220 --> 00:08:38,740
than would have been the case under the Act, you have to make sure the clause
117
00:08:38,740 --> 00:08:41,100
is drafted in a clear and unambiguous way,
118
00:08:41,260 --> 00:08:45,700
and also draw the attention of the insured specifically to the relevant clause
119
00:08:45,700 --> 00:08:47,940
prior to the policy being entered into.
120
00:08:48,200 --> 00:08:52,760
Yes, that's right. And none of those conditions had been satisfied here.
121
00:08:53,020 --> 00:08:58,040
And they needed to be because the third part of the duty of assured clause entitled
122
00:08:58,040 --> 00:09:03,400
insurers to reject a claim unless the insured took all reasonable and practicable
123
00:09:03,400 --> 00:09:09,760
steps to ensure that their trading conditions were incorporated into the contracts they entered into.
124
00:09:10,820 --> 00:09:16,140
If the wording was allowed to stand as is, the insured would be in a worse position
125
00:09:16,140 --> 00:09:21,300
than under the Act, which provides that insurers are only off-risk whilst the
126
00:09:21,300 --> 00:09:23,920
insured is in breach of any warranty,
127
00:09:24,600 --> 00:09:29,760
or condition precedent is in breach of any warranty, and a condition precedent
128
00:09:29,760 --> 00:09:32,700
is in breach of any warranty.
129
00:09:33,220 --> 00:09:36,940
And furthermore, breach of warranty or breach of a condition precedent...
130
00:09:36,940 --> 00:09:40,860
If you can also go through it, and then go before it.
131
00:09:41,060 --> 00:09:46,660
Okay, I'll start the whole thing again. If the wording was allowed to stand as is,
132
00:09:46,880 --> 00:09:49,900
the insured would be in a worse position than under the Act,
133
00:09:50,060 --> 00:09:54,100
which provides that insurers will only be off risk for a breach of warranty
134
00:09:54,100 --> 00:09:59,680
while the insured is in breach and once the breach has been remedied, cover will be restored.
135
00:10:01,360 --> 00:10:05,160
And it's also the case under the new Act that a breach of warranty or a condition
136
00:10:05,160 --> 00:10:12,100
precedent can be disregarded altogether under Section 11 if the warranty is
137
00:10:12,100 --> 00:10:15,040
intended to reduce the risk of loss of a particular kind,
138
00:10:15,300 --> 00:10:18,700
in a particular place, or at a particular location,
139
00:10:19,020 --> 00:10:24,160
and if breach of the warranty didn't increase the likelihood of the loss which
140
00:10:24,160 --> 00:10:26,000
actually occurred occurring.
141
00:10:27,320 --> 00:10:32,240
So for the clause to be effective, the Section 17 transparency requirements
142
00:10:32,240 --> 00:10:36,040
had to be adhered to, and as the judge found, they hadn't been.
143
00:10:36,480 --> 00:10:40,760
So presumably that left insurers with only an argument for breach of the duty
144
00:10:40,760 --> 00:10:45,380
of fair presentation under Section 3, on the basis that the insured had misrepresented
145
00:10:45,380 --> 00:10:47,380
its trading practices during placement.
146
00:10:48,000 --> 00:10:58,700
Well, that's right. And as you know, if insurers want to argue that there's
147
00:10:58,700 --> 00:11:02,300
been a breach of the duty of fair presentation, they have two choices.
148
00:11:02,700 --> 00:11:06,700
They can either try and make an argument that the breach was deliberate or reckless.
149
00:11:07,180 --> 00:11:12,300
And if they do that, they'd be entitled to avoid the policy from inception and keep the premium.
150
00:11:13,680 --> 00:11:16,440
Alternatively as here they can argue that
151
00:11:16,440 --> 00:11:19,840
the breach was not deliberate or reckless and
152
00:11:19,840 --> 00:11:24,760
in those circumstances their remedy will depend on what the actual underwriter
153
00:11:24,760 --> 00:11:29,720
would have done if he or she had received a fair presentation of the risk at
154
00:11:29,720 --> 00:11:34,600
placement so for example if the actual underwriter says that he or she would
155
00:11:34,600 --> 00:11:38,740
not have written the risk and can establish that on the balance of probabilities,
156
00:11:39,260 --> 00:11:41,860
then the contract will be treated as void.
157
00:11:42,640 --> 00:11:46,080
Alternatively, if the underwriter's evidence is that they would have written
158
00:11:46,080 --> 00:11:50,820
the risk on different terms, then those terms will be incorporated into the
159
00:11:50,820 --> 00:11:51,960
contract from inception.
160
00:11:53,880 --> 00:11:57,800
But in order to prove what the underwriter would have done under different circumstances,
161
00:11:58,320 --> 00:12:04,580
insurers will, if possible, need evidence from that underwriter because it's a subjective test.
162
00:12:05,020 --> 00:12:09,360
And if that underwriter isn't available, as unfortunately for insurers was the
163
00:12:09,360 --> 00:12:14,040
case here, then they'll need evidence such as applicable underwriting guidelines,
164
00:12:14,580 --> 00:12:19,380
evidence of corporate practice from more senior underwriters of the class in
165
00:12:19,380 --> 00:12:24,420
question, or evidence from someone with previous experience of the account.
166
00:12:25,360 --> 00:12:30,320
In this case, as I say, the original underwriter wasn't available to give evidence
167
00:12:30,320 --> 00:12:35,800
and so insurers relied on evidence from the underwriter who'd been responsible
168
00:12:35,800 --> 00:12:38,160
for writing the risk in previous years.
169
00:12:39,160 --> 00:12:44,460
That underwriter claimed that insurers had always based their underwriting decisions
170
00:12:44,460 --> 00:12:49,860
for this risk on the assumption that the standard terms would apply to the contract
171
00:12:49,860 --> 00:12:51,980
between the insured and its customers.
172
00:12:53,340 --> 00:12:57,560
And her case was that if insurers had been told that the insured was not always
173
00:12:57,560 --> 00:13:02,160
applying those standard terms, insurers would have declined the risk completely.
174
00:13:03,780 --> 00:13:07,800
It seems like quite a lot rests on that evidence that you put forward as to
175
00:13:07,800 --> 00:13:09,620
what the underwriter's decision would have been.
176
00:13:10,080 --> 00:13:13,680
How did the court receive the evidence in this matter? Well, you're right,
177
00:13:13,800 --> 00:13:18,120
and this is a big change from the position under the old Marine Insurance Act,
178
00:13:18,220 --> 00:13:23,100
because now the underwriter has to prove on the balance of probabilities what
179
00:13:23,100 --> 00:13:26,320
would have happened if a fair presentation had been made.
180
00:13:26,320 --> 00:13:31,920
And in this case, the underwriter accepted under cross-examination that important
181
00:13:31,920 --> 00:13:34,220
provisions of the standard terms,
182
00:13:34,440 --> 00:13:38,880
and particularly the provisions relating to limits of liability in the original
183
00:13:38,880 --> 00:13:41,320
contract between the insured and its customers,
184
00:13:41,600 --> 00:13:44,880
could have been incorporated into the insurance itself.
185
00:13:45,900 --> 00:13:49,300
But nonetheless, she still maintained that the risk would not have been written
186
00:13:49,300 --> 00:13:54,540
without the representation by the insured that standard terms were being applied.
187
00:13:54,540 --> 00:13:59,960
But the judge couldn't accept that, and the reasons for that were first of all
188
00:13:59,960 --> 00:14:07,180
that the FSDF terms were not in fact industry standard, as had been argued by the insurers,
189
00:14:07,500 --> 00:14:12,320
and furthermore, and perhaps even more damningly, insurers didn't even know
190
00:14:12,320 --> 00:14:16,680
what was in the FSDF terms when they wrote the risk in the first place.
191
00:14:16,680 --> 00:14:21,180
And finally, as the underwriter conceded in cross-examination,
192
00:14:21,460 --> 00:14:26,340
the judge found that important provisions of the FSDF terms could have been
193
00:14:26,340 --> 00:14:32,240
incorporated into the insurance had insurers actually considered them to be
194
00:14:32,240 --> 00:14:34,000
important and they hadn't done that.
195
00:14:34,000 --> 00:14:39,280
And all of that undermined the case that underwriters' decision to participate
196
00:14:39,280 --> 00:14:44,860
in the risk was determined by the insurer's representation that they would always
197
00:14:44,860 --> 00:14:47,560
incorporate these terms into their underlying contract.
198
00:14:48,420 --> 00:14:53,880
And on that basis, then, the judge found that insurers had failed to show that
199
00:14:53,880 --> 00:14:57,720
they wouldn't have written the contract at all had a fair presentation been
200
00:14:57,720 --> 00:15:03,060
made, and they therefore weren't entitled to avoid the risk and had to pay the underlying loss.
201
00:15:04,880 --> 00:15:08,420
So I think this shows the real importance of the evidence of the underwriter
202
00:15:08,420 --> 00:15:12,320
and the importance of having anything that will back that up as well as the
203
00:15:12,320 --> 00:15:15,760
individual's testimony, such as underwriting records, things like that.
204
00:15:16,400 --> 00:15:21,120
Yeah, I agree. And it's an important reminder of the significance of maintaining
205
00:15:21,120 --> 00:15:27,320
clear underwriting records and internal underwriting guidelines so that insurers
206
00:15:27,320 --> 00:15:31,860
are in a strong position to prove what it is that they would have done had a
207
00:15:31,860 --> 00:15:33,340
fair presentation been May.
208
00:15:33,600 --> 00:15:37,960
Often, they may be required to give that evidence some years down the line.
209
00:15:38,040 --> 00:15:43,340
If it's not supported by documentation, obviously, that can be difficult. Okay.
210
00:15:44,400 --> 00:15:48,060
Let's move on then to our second case we're discussing in this podcast,
211
00:15:48,400 --> 00:15:54,520
the Technip Saudi Arabia against the Mediterranean and Gulf insurance and reinsurance company MATA.
212
00:15:54,940 --> 00:15:58,560
Just looking at the facts of this one, Technip, which was the insured,
213
00:15:58,660 --> 00:16:03,500
contracted to carry out work on offshore assets, which were owned by a joint venture company.
214
00:16:03,880 --> 00:16:07,860
And I understand that as part of the transaction, Technit entered into a standard
215
00:16:07,860 --> 00:16:12,460
form all risks insurance policy covering offshore construction in the form of
216
00:16:12,460 --> 00:16:17,020
an amended Wellcar 2001 offshore construction project policy.
217
00:16:17,200 --> 00:16:19,240
So kind of a standard term policy.
218
00:16:19,660 --> 00:16:24,400
And the JV company and the other contractors were also insured under this same policy.
219
00:16:25,220 --> 00:16:28,680
Now, in terms of the facts that led to the loss, So whilst the offshore works
220
00:16:28,680 --> 00:16:33,120
were underway, a vessel that Technip had charted collided with an unmanned offshore
221
00:16:33,120 --> 00:16:35,620
wellhead that was owned by the JV company.
222
00:16:36,320 --> 00:16:40,560
Technip claimed on the policy, but I understand insurers rejected liability.
223
00:16:40,980 --> 00:16:46,280
And on that basis, they advised Technip to act as a prudent uninsured in their
224
00:16:46,280 --> 00:16:49,100
discussions with the JV company about the loss.
225
00:16:49,260 --> 00:16:54,040
And Technip, you know, accordingly went on to do just that and negotiate a settlement
226
00:16:54,040 --> 00:16:56,220
of 25 million US dollars.
227
00:16:57,660 --> 00:17:01,680
Once that settlement had been agreed, the insured once again approached insurers
228
00:17:01,680 --> 00:17:05,560
for indemnity under the policy and cover was once more rejected,
229
00:17:05,700 --> 00:17:08,780
this time on the basis that the loss was excluded.
230
00:17:09,480 --> 00:17:13,360
But they also raised the argument that Technip had failed to obtain insurer's
231
00:17:13,360 --> 00:17:18,140
consent to the settlement, which I understand was a requirement of the policy.
232
00:17:18,800 --> 00:17:22,140
So let's have a look at the exclusion point in the first instance.
233
00:17:23,240 --> 00:17:27,020
Yeah, so and this is where our all important definitions become relevant.
234
00:17:27,660 --> 00:17:33,600
Because the relevant exclusion carved out any claim for damages to any property
235
00:17:33,600 --> 00:17:41,120
which the principal assured, with an A, owned that was not otherwise provided for in the policy.
236
00:17:41,980 --> 00:17:45,400
But the policy didn't define a principal assured,
237
00:17:45,720 --> 00:17:51,580
what it did was define principal insured, and the principal insured,
238
00:17:51,660 --> 00:17:56,960
with an I, was defined in a way that included both Technic and the JV company,
239
00:17:57,160 --> 00:17:59,600
which of course had owned the damaged wellhead.
240
00:18:00,060 --> 00:18:05,600
Okay, so slightly different terminology, principal insured versus principal
241
00:18:05,600 --> 00:18:09,580
assured, where only principal insured is defined.
242
00:18:10,160 --> 00:18:18,340
That's right. And the policy furthermore distinguished between principal insureds and other insureds,
243
00:18:18,340 --> 00:18:23,180
which was also a defined term in the policy and referred to another category
244
00:18:23,180 --> 00:18:25,920
of insureds who were covered by the policy,
245
00:18:26,000 --> 00:18:31,420
presumably to a lesser extent or for lesser covers or lesser amounts.
246
00:18:31,940 --> 00:18:37,560
So the insurers argued that the principal assured in the exclusion should have
247
00:18:37,560 --> 00:18:41,680
the same meaning as the defined term principal insureds.
248
00:18:41,680 --> 00:18:46,100
And that meant, of course, that the exclusion would bite because the property
249
00:18:46,100 --> 00:18:51,100
which had been damaged was the property owned by one of the principal ashwards
250
00:18:51,100 --> 00:18:52,940
– in other words, the JV company.
251
00:18:54,870 --> 00:18:59,630
Technic's position, on the other hand, was that the term principal assured in
252
00:18:59,630 --> 00:19:04,790
the exclusion should be read as applying only to the principal insured making
253
00:19:04,790 --> 00:19:06,590
the claim, in other words, Technic.
254
00:19:06,830 --> 00:19:14,050
And where the property forming the subject of the claim was not the property
255
00:19:14,050 --> 00:19:16,810
of Technic, the exclusion didn't bite.
256
00:19:17,490 --> 00:19:23,610
So all of this turns on whether you use an A or an I, which is the sort of point
257
00:19:23,610 --> 00:19:27,130
that lawyers love and everyone else thinks is probably rather silly.
258
00:19:27,250 --> 00:19:32,110
But nonetheless, £25 million or US dollars turned on this one issue. you.
259
00:19:33,470 --> 00:19:38,150
Teknik also tried to make the argument that because the policy was a composite policy,
260
00:19:38,470 --> 00:19:42,830
in other words, it covered a number of different insureds, under which insured
261
00:19:42,830 --> 00:19:49,170
party should be treated as a separate distinct insured, when considering the exclusion,
262
00:19:49,630 --> 00:19:55,110
the court should consider the term as if there was only one insured.
263
00:19:56,310 --> 00:19:59,810
Okay, but am I right that Teknik lost at first instance.
264
00:19:59,970 --> 00:20:04,510
Yeah, despite all those arguments, Technic did indeed lose at first instance
265
00:20:04,510 --> 00:20:10,110
and the court found for insurers holding that the exclusion applied and the
266
00:20:10,110 --> 00:20:12,550
court then went, or the case then went to appeal,
267
00:20:12,830 --> 00:20:16,910
but unfortunately for Technic, they lost again in the court of appeal.
268
00:20:17,910 --> 00:20:22,930
And it's at the court of appeal where the issues surrounding the principles
269
00:20:22,930 --> 00:20:27,790
of construction were really addressed in detail because the court of appeal.
270
00:20:29,630 --> 00:20:35,390
If you start from the beginning okay yeah
271
00:20:35,390 --> 00:20:38,250
so the court found for insurers they found
272
00:20:38,250 --> 00:20:41,410
that the exclusion applied but the case then
273
00:20:41,410 --> 00:20:44,410
went to appeal at the court of appeal but nonetheless
274
00:20:44,410 --> 00:20:50,110
the court of appeal also found in favor of insurers and technic lost once again
275
00:20:50,110 --> 00:20:55,710
and it was at the court appeal level that the issue of construction interpretation
276
00:20:55,710 --> 00:21:01,410
of the policy was set out in terms of basic principles and basic rules.
277
00:21:01,990 --> 00:21:06,750
And what the Court of Appeal reminded everybody of is that the words of the
278
00:21:06,750 --> 00:21:12,470
contract have to be given their natural and ordinary meaning as far as possible.
279
00:21:12,650 --> 00:21:18,110
And that's the natural and ordinary meaning that would be understood by an objective
280
00:21:18,110 --> 00:21:21,710
person in the position of the parties to the contract.
281
00:21:21,890 --> 00:21:26,490
It's not something that would be understood by a lawyer's undertaking a microscopic
282
00:21:26,490 --> 00:21:30,370
examination of the wording, looking at the I's and A's and so on.
283
00:21:30,470 --> 00:21:36,250
What we're looking for is the natural and ordinary meaning of the words on an objective basis.
284
00:21:38,150 --> 00:21:43,010
The court acknowledged that the drafted clause was a market standard wording,
285
00:21:43,210 --> 00:21:46,710
but nonetheless they said that it's not a model of clear drafting,
286
00:21:46,810 --> 00:21:51,070
and so the first lesson for us here, I think, is that just because the wording
287
00:21:51,070 --> 00:21:55,370
is a market standard doesn't necessarily mean it's going to be clear.
288
00:21:56,090 --> 00:22:01,270
But nonetheless, the Court of Appeal found that insurers' interpretation of the exclusion,
289
00:22:01,630 --> 00:22:06,990
which involved reading principal insureds instead of principal assureds,
290
00:22:06,990 --> 00:22:12,970
did much less violence, as they put it, to the wording than the approach suggested by Technic.
291
00:22:13,850 --> 00:22:17,750
Technic's approach involved adding extra words to the clause,
292
00:22:17,910 --> 00:22:21,410
which was always, I think, probably going to be an uphill battle.
293
00:22:21,730 --> 00:22:27,550
Because what they said was that the court should effectively agree to amend
294
00:22:27,550 --> 00:22:33,310
the exclusion to refer not to any claim for damages to any property which the
295
00:22:33,310 --> 00:22:34,990
principal assured owned,
296
00:22:35,490 --> 00:22:44,710
but instead to any claim for damage to any property which the principal assured making the claim owned.
297
00:22:44,810 --> 00:22:49,550
So you see they wanted to add in some extra words and the court said that that
298
00:22:49,550 --> 00:22:55,890
did more violence, as they put it, to the wording than the interpretation suggested by the insurers.
299
00:22:57,170 --> 00:23:01,450
And it was also a factor, looking more broadly at the policy wording,
300
00:23:01,670 --> 00:23:06,530
that Technic's interpretation wouldn't work in the event of a claim by one of
301
00:23:06,530 --> 00:23:11,770
the other insureds who didn't, of course, actually own any property covered by the policy.
302
00:23:12,070 --> 00:23:15,650
Okay, so in that scenario, there wouldn't be any property which the principal
303
00:23:15,650 --> 00:23:21,570
assured making the claim owned because another insured would be making the claim. Yeah, exactly.
304
00:23:22,450 --> 00:23:25,870
So did the fact that this was, you mentioned earlier, it's a composite policy,
305
00:23:26,090 --> 00:23:28,890
it covers a number of named insureds, as we discussed earlier,
306
00:23:29,050 --> 00:23:32,270
but each should be treated distinctly. Did that argument hold any sway?
307
00:23:32,510 --> 00:23:36,450
No, it didn't. I mean, that was an argument that the technique tried to make,
308
00:23:36,450 --> 00:23:40,290
as you know, but the approach to the exclusion would be the same,
309
00:23:40,350 --> 00:23:42,710
whether this was a composite policy or not.
310
00:23:43,990 --> 00:23:48,270
And what about the consent to settlement point? Yeah, the relevant clause in
311
00:23:48,270 --> 00:23:53,070
the policy provided that insurers would only be liable to indemnify the insured
312
00:23:53,070 --> 00:23:58,430
in respect of damage where the insurers had consented to the underlying settlement.
313
00:23:58,530 --> 00:24:03,810
And in this case, they hadn't consented to the underlying settlement between Technic and the JV.
314
00:24:04,090 --> 00:24:07,570
But insurers had rejected the claim, if I remember correctly,
315
00:24:07,830 --> 00:24:12,490
and then told Technic to behave as a prudent uninsured. Can they really rely
316
00:24:12,490 --> 00:24:16,250
on a consent to settle clause in those circumstances? Well, the answer to that is no.
317
00:24:16,990 --> 00:24:21,750
The court found that insurers had either waived their right to rely on the consent
318
00:24:21,750 --> 00:24:28,010
to settle clause or stopped from doing so because of their denial of coverage earlier.
319
00:24:28,170 --> 00:24:31,250
So insurers couldn't effectively have their cake and eat it.
320
00:24:31,770 --> 00:24:35,890
And do these findings about the consent to settle clause still apply where the
321
00:24:35,890 --> 00:24:38,790
case had already been resolved on the basis of the exclusion?
322
00:24:38,810 --> 00:24:40,270
There was no cover anyway. way?
323
00:24:40,470 --> 00:24:44,750
Well, strictly speaking, the judge's comments on the point are non-binding on
324
00:24:44,750 --> 00:24:49,610
other judges, but they're still certainly persuasive and they'll be taken into
325
00:24:49,610 --> 00:24:52,490
account by courts facing similar issues in the future.
326
00:24:52,710 --> 00:24:58,590
And quite frankly, in my view anyway, it's so blindingly obvious that that is
327
00:24:58,590 --> 00:25:02,190
the right interpretation that I wouldn't want to be in the position of trying
328
00:25:02,190 --> 00:25:03,450
to argue something different.
329
00:25:04,570 --> 00:25:09,790
So just in terms of kind of takeaways from those two cases and some Some of
330
00:25:09,790 --> 00:25:13,210
these, I think, are reminders of things we already know, but just have been
331
00:25:13,210 --> 00:25:14,410
hammered home by the court again.
332
00:25:15,030 --> 00:25:19,930
So make sure a clause has the effect that you want it to based on the drafting.
333
00:25:20,090 --> 00:25:25,090
So labelling a condition precedent doesn't by itself make the clause a condition precedent.
334
00:25:25,230 --> 00:25:28,550
You know, it's the substance rather than the label, that old story.
335
00:25:28,990 --> 00:25:33,090
And I think this is also a salutary reminder about the transparency requirements
336
00:25:33,090 --> 00:25:37,230
under the Act. If you want the clause to do something more than the act itself
337
00:25:37,230 --> 00:25:41,370
allows, just make sure you're ticking those section 16 and 17 boxes.
338
00:25:42,170 --> 00:25:46,130
As I understand it, we talked about this earlier, keep clear underwriting records.
339
00:25:46,230 --> 00:25:49,770
It's one of those things that probably seems like another job at the time.
340
00:25:49,790 --> 00:25:53,350
But if you do find yourself, as you said, potentially years later,
341
00:25:53,450 --> 00:25:57,050
wanting to make out a breach of fair presentation argument, you're going to
342
00:25:57,050 --> 00:25:58,850
need to have that evidence to back it up.
343
00:25:59,740 --> 00:26:03,800
And finally, if you do, as many policies do, have a consent to settle clause,
344
00:26:04,020 --> 00:26:07,700
give careful thought as to how any rejection of coverage,
345
00:26:07,960 --> 00:26:12,180
kind of email or letter is worded, if actually the coverage position is still
346
00:26:12,180 --> 00:26:16,520
a bit uncertain, so that you can preserve your entitlement to rely on that consent
347
00:26:16,520 --> 00:26:18,120
to settlement clause down the line.
348
00:26:18,600 --> 00:26:23,420
Yeah, I agree with all of that. And I think more generally, these cases illustrate
349
00:26:23,420 --> 00:26:28,600
that wordings are dynamic or should be considered a dynamic because the nature
350
00:26:28,600 --> 00:26:30,700
of risk is always changing,
351
00:26:30,980 --> 00:26:34,180
because the legal and commercial background is evolving.
352
00:26:34,400 --> 00:26:38,280
So we've seen, for example, in our first case, the Scott Beef case,
353
00:26:38,460 --> 00:26:45,620
a failure by insurers to respond properly, arguably to the effects of the Insurance Act.
354
00:26:45,820 --> 00:26:49,880
And one needs to bear in mind, therefore, that the legal background to your
355
00:26:49,880 --> 00:26:51,200
wordings is always ways evolving.
356
00:26:51,880 --> 00:26:57,300
And it's important on that basis to review existing wordings regularly to ensure
357
00:26:57,300 --> 00:27:00,080
they remain up to date and fit for purpose.
358
00:27:00,360 --> 00:27:05,540
And that is the position whether they're market standard clauses or other bespoke
359
00:27:05,540 --> 00:27:10,500
products, because it's interesting here that in our second case, the Technic case,
360
00:27:10,740 --> 00:27:15,040
the court was concerned with a market standard wording, but nonetheless found
361
00:27:15,040 --> 00:27:22,820
it to be poorly drafted and in many ways not really fit for purpose in the circumstances of this loss.
362
00:27:23,460 --> 00:27:28,780
So new wordings and clauses should be prepared on the basis of existing circumstances
363
00:27:28,780 --> 00:27:31,340
and not just on what's gone before.
364
00:27:32,360 --> 00:27:37,320
Interesting times indeed. So thanks to anyone who's listening and please do
365
00:27:37,320 --> 00:27:40,820
join us for the next episode in our Risk Matters podcast series.
366
00:27:42,180 --> 00:27:45,900
Thank you for listening to Risk Matters, the DWF insurance podcast.
367
00:27:46,260 --> 00:27:49,480
We hope you join us again soon for future podcasts in our series.