BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Assicurazioni Generali SpA v CGU International Insurance Plc & Ors [2003] EWHC 1073 (Comm) (02 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/1073.html Cite as: [2003] Lloyd's Rep IR 725, [2003] EWHC 1073 (Comm), [2003] 2 All ER (Comm) 425 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Assicurazioni Generali SpA |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
CGU International Insurance PLC and others |
Defendant |
____________________
Miss Sioban Healy (instructed by Hill Taylor Dickinson) for the Defendants
Hearing date : 28 March 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Gavin Kealey QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
"if at any time during the period of cover the [cables] or any part thereof .. shall suffer any unforeseen and sudden physical loss or damage from any cause, other than those specifically excluded, in a manner necessitating repair or replacement .."
Among the Special Exclusions to the Material Damage protection were:
"(c) loss or damage due to faulty design, defective material or casting, bad workmanship other than faults in erection;
(d) wear and tear, corrosion, oxidation, incrustation."
Under Special Condition 2, it was provided that:
"Exclusion (c) to Section 1 of this Policy is abrogated in its entirety and it is expressly agreed that in respect of claims for loss or damage to the works where the cause is defective workmanship, material or design, the cover provided by the Policy shall include the cost of repair or replacement of insured items including rectification of such defective workmanship, material or design provided always that the property insured has been lost or damaged as a consequence of such defect. There shall however be no indemnity in respect of:
a) the additional cost of introducing improvements or corrections in the rectification of the workmanship, material or design responsible for such loss or damage;
b) the deductible stated in the Schedule in respect of every such claim."
Under Special Condition 3, there was a limited exception to Special Exclusion (d) in the following terms:
"Exclusion (d) of Section 1 is limited to the part of the items to be installed immediately affected and not to any consequences of such wear and tear, corrosion, oxidation or incrustation."
The Maintenance Guarantee was contained in Special Condition 7 and this provided as follows:
"It is agreed that the cover granted under the General Conditions, General Exclusions, Special Conditions and Special Exclusions of this policy is extended to include Maintenance Guarantee for the period specified in the Schedule, to cover solely loss of or damage to the insured items, as per Section 1, resulting from faults in erection, faulty design, defective materials or casting and/or defective workmanship. .. The period of Maintenance Guarantee shall commence from the date of taking over indicated in the Taking Over or Provisional Acceptance Certificate and shall continue for a period of 24 months thereafter in respect of all insured items."
The off-shore deductible in respect of Section 1 works was 10% of any claim amount, while the deductible in respect of maintenance was 20% of any claim amount.
"The liability of the Reinsurer [Generali] shall follow that of the Company [CIC] in every case, and shall be subject in all respects to all the general and special stipulations, clauses, waivers and modifications of the Company's Policies, and any endorsements thereto."
"TYPE: Construction Reinsurance.
…..
REASSURED: Assicurazioni Generali SpA
ORIG. ASSURED: Hydro Quebec, PCI, as principal and/or Societa Cavi Pirelli SpA and Pirelli Submarine Cables as Contractors and/or their sub-contractors and/or supplier as their respective interests may appear.
….
PERIOD: From date to be advised until 1st September 1997 as original. Extensions as original if required.
LOCATION: Canada or held covered as original.
INTEREST: Contract work for supply and installation of 3 28 KV EPR armoured power cables each 4.8 Km in length between the north bank of the St. Lawrence River and the Ile aux Coudres and 2,880 m on land cable cut into 15 sections.
SUM INSURED: Estimated Contract Value CAD 7,008,082.
CONDITIONS: As original: anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding, this reinsurance is declared and agreed to be subject to the same terms, clauses and conditions, special or otherwise, as the original policy or policies and is to pay as may be paid thereon and to follow without question the settlements of the Reassured except ex-gratia and/or without prejudice settlements.
Including deviation and/or change of voyage and/or extension of the original policy, as original.
…..
HERETO: 80%
PREMIUM: 2.5875% of FCV"
(a) the number of losses: whether there had been one loss or two losses arising from two incidents; in particular whether the second incident on 9th November 1998 constituted a new event or accident which would have to be adjusted as a separate loss arising from a construction risk rather than under the Maintenance Guarantee;
(b) whether the loss or losses were unforeseen and sudden;
(c) whether the loss or losses were excluded by the exclusion of wear and tear in Special Exclusion (d) in Section 1 of the policy;
(d) whether the loss or losses resulted from a fault in erection, faulty design, defective materials or casting or defective workmanship within the meaning of the Maintenance Guarantee in Special Condition 7;
(e) if the second incident fell to be adjusted separately under the Maintenance Guarantee, whether the loss of or damage to the cable arising from that second incident resulted from a fault in erection, faulty design, defective materials or casting or defective workmanship;
(f) if the second incident did not fall to be adjusted separately under the Maintenance Guarantee, whether there had been an effective agreement to extend the works cover provided by the original policy to the undertaking of the repairs;
(g) whether Pirelli had any liability by the terms of its contract with Hydro-Quebec for the costs of repairing the cable as opposed to maintaining it; and
(h) quantum.
THE ISSUES and THE TEST FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
17. The principal issues which arise on the present application are as follows:
a. the proper construction of the follow the settlements provision in the Conditions set out in the contract of reinsurance between Generali and the Defendants: in particular which, if any, out of the three alternative constructions proposed by Generali and that proposed by the Defendants is correct?
b. whether the settlement was ex gratia;
c. if the Defendants are bound by the basis upon which Generali recognised Pirelli's claim, what that basis was;
d. whether the loss claimed by Pirelli fell outside the terms of the contract of insurance by reason of any of the matters pleaded in paragraph 16 of the Defence or proposed to be pleaded by amendment to that paragraph in the Defence: namely for example, because it was not unforeseen and was not sudden; because it was excluded by Special Exclusions 1c) and/or 1d) on the basis that it resulted from faulty design or bad workmanship not constituting faults in erection, or from wear and tear; because it did not constitute a fortuity covered by the policy; because it did not result from faults in erection or any of the other matters covered by the Maintenance Guarantee; because Pirelli had no liability to Quebec Hydro in respect of the loss;
e. whether the loss fell outside the terms of the reinsurance by reason of precisely the same matters as are pleaded or are proposed to be pleaded in paragraph 16 of the Defence, as set out in sub-paragraph d above;
f. whether Generali failed to take all proper and businesslike steps in settling the claim because it was arguably not recoverable under the contract of insurance by reason of any of the matters pleaded or proposed to be pleaded in paragraph 16 of the Defence, as set out in sub-paragraph d above;
g. whether Generali settled the claim directly with Pirelli under the original policy of insurance to which it was not a party and, if it did, whether for that reason the settlement does not fall within the follow settlements language of Declaration number 1 and/or is ex gratia;
h. whether endorsement number 5 to the contract of reinsurance between Generali and the Defendants applies and, if it does, whether the Defendants are entitled to limit any liability that they might have to Generali to their respective proportions of Can$1 million; and
i. whether the principle of average should apply, and whether there was any separate insurance available to Hydro Quebec that would have responded to Pirelli's claims.
19. CPR Part 24.2 provides as follows:
"The Court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if
(a) it considers that
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
i. Part 24 confers on the court an exceptional power since the ordinary principle, which is established to meet the ends of justice, is that disputes are to be resolved at trial on the evidence and after completion of disclosure.
ii. Part 24 is to be applied in the interests of all concerned to dispose of cases or issues that are not fit for trial at all.
iii. The test whether a case or issue is fit for determination on an application for summary judgment is whether there is a real prospect of the claim or defence, as the case may be, succeeding in circumstances where "real" is to be equated with "realistic" and contrasted with "fanciful".
iv. A Part 24 application is not to be used for the conduct of a mini-trial on the documents chosen to be deployed by the parties without disclosure or oral evidence. Where the case or issue is complex or its determination is time-consuming, the court must be astute not to allow an application for summary judgment to turn into a mini-trial and should consider with care whether or not the application should be permitted to proceed. However, where there is a realistic prospect of benefit to the parties, the court may permit the application to proceed but it will be necessary for it to keep in mind the nature of the exercise that is permissible under Part 24.
CONSTRUCTION
"As original: anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding, this reinsurance is declared and agreed to be subject to the same terms, clauses and conditions, special or otherwise, as the original policy or policies and is to pay as may be paid thereon and to follow without question the settlements of the Reassured except ex-gratia and/or without prejudice settlements.
Including deviation and/or change of voyage and/or extension of the original policy, as original."
"There are only two rules, both obvious. First, that the reinsurer cannot be held liable unless the loss falls within the cover of the policy reinsured and within the cover created by the reinsurance. Second, that the parties are free to agree on ways of proving whether these requirements are satisfied."
"It is well settled that (subject to any provision to the contrary in the reinsurance policy) the reassured, in order to recover from their underwriters, must prove the loss in the same manner as the original insured must have proved it against them, and the reinsurers can raise all defences which were open to the reassured against the original assured."
"The intention must, in my judgment, have been to bind [re]insurers to follow settlements even where the effect was that they could not dispute that there was in fact liability on the insurers under their policy with the assured.
In my judgment, the effect of a clause binding reinsurers to follow settlements of the insurers, is that the reinsurers agree to indemnify insurers in the event that they settle a claim by their assured, i.e. when they dispose, or bind themselves to dispose, of a claim, whether by reason of admission or compromise, provided that the claim so recognised by them falls within the risks covered by the policy of reinsurance as a matter of law, and provided also that in settling the claim the insurers have acted honestly and have taken all proper and businesslike steps in making the settlement. This construction seems to me to be consistent with the approach of Mr. Justice Branson in Excess Insurance Co. v Mathews. In particular, I do not read the clause as inhibiting reinsurers from contesting that the claim settled by insurers does not, as a matter of law, fall within the risks covered by the reinsurance policy; but in agreement with Mr. Justice Bigham, I do consider that the clause presupposes that reinsurers are entitled to rely not merely on the honesty, but also on the professionalism of insurers, and so is susceptible of an implication that the insurers must have acted both honestly an in a proper and businesslike manner... Furthermore, in my judgment, if insurers have so settled a claim, acting honestly and in a proper and businesslike manner, then the fact that reinsurers may thereafter be able to prove that the claim of the assured was fraudulent does not of itself entitle reinsurers not to follow the settlement of the insurers. In my judgment, they must follow the settlement, as they have contracted to do;"
"The disputed payments were in respect of non-insured claims, which by definition were not within the scope of the reinsurance contract. They did not become insured, and therefore reinsured, claims merely because the syndicate agreed to treat them as if they were."
"The principle stated in Scor's case is unexceptional, but its application gives rise to difficulty where the terms of the reinsurance contract are the same as those of the underlying insurance contract, and the reinsurer has agreed to follow the settlements of the original insurer/reinsured. This difficulty was recognised by the Court of Appeal in Hong Kong in Insurance Co. of the State of Pennsylvania v Grand Union Insurance Co. [1990] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 208. In the leading judgment, Hunter J.A. said this:
Two points, I think, have to be noticed about these two provisos. The first, I have no doubt, was very carefully worded and deliberately limited to the policy of reinsurance. Mr. Collins argues that where, as is usual, the policy of reinsurance refers to the terms of the original insurance, the reinsurer can look through to those terms and complain, as was sought to be done here, of breaches of condition in the underlying policy. I reject that. If Lord Justice Goff meant that, he would in Mr. Justice Mortimer's words "be nullifying the conclusion that he had already reached". I am satisfied that he meant no such thing. He was well aware that many settlements include compromises on liability and quantum and that to permit reinsurers to go back to an alleged strict construction of the policy would destroy the value of the clause. If there is any question as to the sufficiency or propriety of the settlement it arises under the second proviso."
….
In my judgment, the reinsurer is always entitled to raise issues as to the scope of the reinsurance contract, and where the risks are co-extensive with those of the underlying insurance he is not precluded from raising such issues, even where there is a "follow the settlement" term of the reinsurance contract. Ultimately, this is the only sure protection which the reinsurer has against being called upon to indemnify the reinsured against payments which were not legally due from him to the original insured, however reasonable and businesslike the payments may have been. But this is subject to one proviso which I have already assumed in the Syndicate's favour, and which is supported by the judgment of Hunter J.A. in the Grand Union case, quoted above. The reinsurer may well be bound to follow the insurer's settlement of a claim which arguably as a matter of law, is within the scope of the original insurance, regardless of whether the court might hold, if the issue was fully argued before it, that as a matter of law the claim would have failed.
My difficulty, to which I referred earlier, is that the present is not such a case. .. The arbitrator distinguished between two kinds of payments made by the Syndicate under the Wellington Agreement: those which are in respect of claims for which the insured producer would have been liable in any event, and others for which no such liability would have existed without the agreement, the claims being asserted against non-insured producers only. The disputed payments were in respect of non-insured claims, which by definition were not within the scope of the reinsurance contract."
EX GRATIA