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 >> Sharon's Bakery (Europe) Ltd v Axa Insurance UK Plc & Anor [2011] EWHC 210 (Comm) (09 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/210.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 210 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
SHARON'S BAKERY (EUROPE) LTD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) AXA INSURANCE UK PLC (2) AVIVA INSURANCE LTD |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Graham Eklund QC and Mr Carl Troman (instructed by Greenwoods) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th and 13th December 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BLAIR:
The trial
The facts
Bakequip (UK) Ltd
The disputed fax dated 1 February 2008
The information given to Lombard
Finalisation of the transactions with Lombard and the defendants
The fire and its aftermath
"What I have been told by my client company is that the first invoice [dated 15 November 2007 made out to Wholesale] was incorrectly addressed and was only brought to their attention when the VAT quarter was due.
The correct invoice [dated 5 February 2008 made out to Europe] was then reissued and VAT was recovered once only."
He goes on to refer to a letter to him from Morris & Co of 27 October 2008, which says that Mr Levy is contacting the police, and says that his own client has also been to the police to lodge a complaint against Mr Levy. He ends by saying that, "I would respectfully ask that you conduct your own investigation into this matter and should the £100,000 interim payment under the business interruption claim be received here into our client account I hereby give my written confirmation that said funds will be either held in the client account or immediately returned to your principal."
Q. … When you wrote this letter to Mr Maskell on the basis of the instructions from your clients, your understanding was that those documents were invoices?
A. My understanding was that they were -- that it was an invoice.
Q. Yes. No doubt due to the explanation that you had been given for the two of them, one being reissued because the other was a mistake, that would have reinforced your view that for VAT purposes, they were being treated as invoices?
A. Yes.
Q. Well, it's not just, I think, your rationalisation of the position, or your belief; I think, as you told us, you got an explanation as to why there were two invoices, it related to the VAT mistake?
A. Yes.
Non-disclosure: moral hazard
The law
"It is not simply the peril or possibility of loss of damage occurring within the scope of the policy. It embraces other matters which would, if known be likely to influence a prudent underwriter's decision. It includes what is known as 'moral hazard' which may merely increase the likelihood of it being made to appear (falsely) that loss or damage has occurred falling within the scope of the policy…."
"… in Gate v Sun Alliance Insurance Ltd [1995] LRLR 385 (High Court of New Zealand) 407, Fisher J held that incidents of prior dishonesty by a proposer were capable of being material (in particular as going to the risk of a false claim) whether or not they had been detected or had led to conviction. It was a question of fact and degree and so of expert evidence whether any particular act of dishonesty was one which a prudent underwriter would take into account when assessing the risk."
The defendants' case
The claimant's case
Fraudulent means or devices
The law
"A fraudulent claim exists where the insured claims, knowing that he has suffered no loss, or only a lesser loss than that which he claims (or is reckless as to whether this is the case). A fraudulent device is used if the insured believes that he has suffered the loss claimed but seeks to improve or embellish the facts surrounding the claim by some lie. There may however be intermediate factual situations, where the lies become so significant that they may be viewed as changing the nature of the claim being advanced."
"The view could, in this situation, be taken that, where fraudulent devices or means have been used to promote a claim, that by itself is sufficient to justify the application of the sanction of forfeiture. The insured's own perception of the value of the lie would suffice. Probably, however, some limited objective element is also required. The requirement, where a claim includes a non-existent or exaggerated element of loss, that that element must be not immaterial, "unsubstantial" or insignificant in itself offers a parallel. In the context of use of a fraudulent device or means, one can contemplate the possibility of an obviously irrelevant lie—one which, whatever the insured may have thought, could not sensibly have had any significant impact on any insurer or judge. Tentatively, I would suggest that the courts should only apply the fraudulent claim rule to the use of fraudulent devices or means which would, if believed, have tended, objectively but prior to any final determination at trial of the parties' rights, to yield a not insignificant improvement in the insured's prospects—whether they be prospects of obtaining a settlement, or a better settlement, or of winning at trial. Courts are used enough to considering prospects, e g when assessing damages for failure by a solicitor to issue a claim form within a limitation period."
The defendants' case
The claimant's case
(1) The reference in Mr Harris's long letter of 22 September 2008 to "a purchase invoice" was obviously a mistake. It had never been suggested (whether to Lombard or otherwise) that the claimant had acquired anything from "Bakequip".(2) Moreover, Mr Harris had a copy on file of the invoice as between Wholesale and the claimant, but had overlooked its relevance. He had not at any stage been told in terms that the claimant had acquired the goods from "Bakequip" rather than Wholesale.
(3) The claimant had no reason to misrepresent the position with regard to the acquisition of the equipment, on the pretended basis that it had been acquired from "Bakequip". There was a perfectly valid set of documentation, showing how the claimant had acquired the goods from Wholesale, and how Lombard had provided finance on the security of the goods. It is wholly implausible to suggest, the claimant says, that the claimant would have committed a fraud because it was more convenient.
(4) It would be a peculiarly incompetent "fraud" to pretend to Lombard that "Bakequip" had sold the goods to Wholesale, while telling a completely different and inaccurate story to insurers, to the effect that "Bakequip" had sold the goods to the claimant. Indeed, the sheer implausibility of any such conduct is made manifest by the fact that the claimant supplied Cunningham Lindsey with the documents as between itself and Lombard, which were on their face inconsistent with any suggestion that the claimant had acquired the self-same goods from "Bakequip" (instead of Wholesale). The claimant had already told Cunningham Lindsey, in Harris Balcombe's letter dated 7 August 2008, that it had acquired the equipment from Wholesale.
(5) In relation to Mr Harris's letter of 28 October 2008, it should be noted that the context was that Mr Harris was drawing insurers' attention to the allegations made by Mr Levy, and providing Cunningham Lindsey with copies of the documents which Mr Levy had himself sent to Mr Harris. It cannot possibly be said the provision of these documents to insurers was any kind of "fraudulent device". (I interpose to mention that the defendants do not say this.) Moreover, the claimant submits, it is unlikely in the highest degree that, in advertently drawing to insurers' attention an allegation of fraud made by Mr Levy, and inviting insurers to conduct their own investigations, the claimant would then itself intentionally seek to mislead Cunningham Lindsey. It is, to put it mildly, unusual for someone committing a fraud to offer up to the putative victim of that fraud the means of discovery of the fraud in question.
(6) Moreover, the essential focus of what Mr Harris was seeking to convey was to reassure Cunningham Lindsey that any suggestion of a VAT fraud was not well-founded. In substance, this was true, and the point was that Mr Takom had originally entered the Bakequip document as the invoice in the claimant's accounting records, only for this to be corrected by Mr Caplin at the end of the relevant VAT quarter (period ending 31 May 2008). The correct invoice was the invoice from Wholesale to the claimant, and this was indeed the invoice on which VAT was recovered by the claimant, and only once.
Discussion and conclusions
Quantum
Conclusion