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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Paul Toomey Of Syndicate 2021 v Banco Vitalicio De Espana SA De Seguros Y Reasseguros [2004] EWCA Civ 622 (18 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/622.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 622 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Andrew Smith
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
AND
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
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Paul Toomey of Syndicate 2021 |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Banco Vitalicio De Espana SA de Seguros y Reasseguros |
Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
George Leggatt QC and Simon Salzedo (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas:
The factual background
"Whereas the Reinsured, specified in the slip to which this Slip Contract is attached, has paid the premium to Us, the Underwriters who hereby agree to reinsure the Reinsured's interest as set out in the slip and its attachments and/or endorsements applicable thereto.
Type: Facultative reinsurance slip
Form: J(A)NMA 1779 slip policy.
As original
Assured: Atletico de Madrid
Reassured: Vitalicio Seguros
Retention: 2%
Period: 22nd August 1999 until the end of tournaments detailed hereafter nominally 22nd August 2000
Interest: A) This insurance to indemnify the assured for their net ascertained loss of contracted television rights arising directly as a consequence of the relegation of the assured from the 1st division of the Professional Spanish Football league.
Limit: pts 2.900.000.000
B) To indemnify the assured in respect of the contracted bonuses to be paid to the squad in the event of obtaining the following classifications in different tournaments:
1. To win the Spanish Football Limits League (1st division) pts 1,000,000,000
2. To win the Copa del Rey pts 500,000,000
Conditions: Full reinsurance clause. Claims co-op clause (as attached)
Proof of interest and sight of contracts Legal clause (as attached)
In the event of the assured being relegated to the 2nd division, there will not be any indemnity in respect of the section B)
All other terms as original policy.
Order hereon: 49%
Premium: Pts 158,000,000 in full
…
Information: …."
The reasons for rejection of the claim by Reinsurers
i) The Insurers had made a material misrepresentation in the draft slip as to the nature of the underlying insurance in that that insurance was in fact a valued policy, and not, as represented in the description of the interest, an unvalued policy indemnifying the Club for the net ascertained loss of contracted television rights arising from relegation. The Judge decided this in favour of Reinsurers; the Insurers contended that he was wrong in deciding that the representation was material.ii) The description of the underlying policy in the slip was a warranty and there had been a breach for the same reason. The Judge held that the description was a warranty and that there was a breach. The Insurers contended that he was also wrong in so holding.
iii) The reinsurance contained an express warranty (by reason of the terms of a clause commonly incorporated into reinsurance contracts known as the "full reinsurance clause") that the terms of the underlying insurance and the reinsurance were the same; there had been a breach. The Judge decided this against Reinsurers on the grounds that the full reinsurance clause did not give rise to such a warranty. The Club contended that he was correct in so deciding, but the Reinsurers cross-appealed.
(1) The avoidance on the grounds of misrepresentation
(a) The limited nature of the issue on appeal
"economic loss which may arise from the fact of [the Club] losing its status as a member of the first division of the Spanish Professional Football League, all of it, due to items linked to the assignment of T.V. and audiovisual rights entered into with [Audiovisual] for the exploitation of static and dynamic advertising rights and others, which has been assessed, by mutual consent and not subject to any review or subsequent valuation, in Pesetas 2,900,000,000
Scope of the coverage provided for in this section one is limited to the losing of such status which arises only and exclusively from sport reasons."
i) The representation made in the draft reinsurance slip was that the underlying policy issued by the Insurers to the Club was an indemnity policy with a limit of Pts 2.9bn and not a valued policy.ii) The underlying policy in fact issued by the Insurers to the Club was, as a matter of Spanish law, a valued policy under which the indemnity was agreed at Pts 2.9bn, even if this amount exceeded the loss actually suffered by the Club.
iii) This was, as the Judge found at paragraph 46 of his judgment, an error because the Insurers were fronting the risk and it had been intended that the insurance policy provided to the Club should reflect the terms quoted for the reinsurance; that
"the insurance and the reinsurance should be back-to-back in the sense that there should be no significant difference between the terms of the insurance and the reinsurance such that [the Insurers] might be exposed to liabilities that were not the subject of the reinsurance".iv) There was therefore a misrepresentation as to the nature of the underlying policy.
v) The Reinsurers had, on their evidence (which the Judge accepted), been induced to enter into the contract by the representation in the draft slip.
"(1) that was a material fact for an underwriter to know, if, at the time when the reinsurance was placed, there was a realistic possibility that the net ascertained loss in the event of relegation might be less than Pts 2.9bn
(2) conversely, that fact was not material for a prudent underwriter to know, if at the time when the reinsurance was placed, there was no realistic possibility that the net ascertained loss in the event of relegation might be less than Pts 2.9bn"
(b) The contract between the Club and Audiovisual
i) As initially entered into on 19 July 1996, it covered the five seasons from the 1998/9 season to the 2002/3 season.a) For the right to broadcast, the Club were to be paid annually a minimum of Pts 2bn (plus VAT); this comprised a fixed guaranteed sum of Pts 1.75bn and a share of the net profit obtained by Audiovisual from the exploitation of the rights of at least Pts 250m. The fixed sum was payable in twelve monthly instalments.b) The Club were also to be paid a further Pts 1bn if it finished the season among the top four teams in the first division.c) If, however, the Club's first team was relegated, it was to be paid only Pts 150m for all broadcasting rights of the home games in the second division, without any limit on the number of matches that might be broadcast.ii) The agreement was amended by an addendum dated 16 August 1996.
a) The period of the agreement was changed to seven seasons from 1996/97.b) The amount to be paid to the Club was increased to a minimum of Pts 3bn, a guaranteed sum of Pts 2.625bn (indexed) and the minimum payment by way of the share of the profits of Pts 375m. The guaranteed sum was to be paid in 12 monthly instalments starting in September each year.c) There was to be no bonus for finishing among the top four teams; the agreement had been re-structured so that the Club were to repay Pts 500m to Audiovisual if it did not do so."B).- For each of the seasons during the in force period of this Agreement where [the Club] fails to be classified amongst the first four of the Official Championship League, [the Club] will be obliged to return to [Audiovisual] the sum of FIVE HUNDRED MILLION PESETAS … plus the corresponding VAT charge, before the start of the following season or failing that, to authorise [Audiovisual] to deduct the same sum from the amounts due in respect of the following season."iii) These terms were amended on 30 July 1998 as recorded in a board resolution of Audiovisual; the condition triggering the obligation to repay Pts 500m became the Club's failure to qualify for European competition (either the Champions League or the UEFA cup), which the Club could do by finishing among the top seven teams in the First Division of the Spanish League or by winning the Copa del Rey.
(c) The finding made by the Judge
i) Fixed amount of Pts 2.65bn with indexation: Pts 2,764,034,851ii) 25% of Audio visual net profit Pts 375,000,000
iii) Less income for the team in 2nd Division -Pts 150,000,000
iv) Plus loss of 2nd Division team income Pts 150,000,000
v) Total: Pts 3,139,034,851
i) The Club had to bring into account the obligation to repay Pts 500m if it did not qualify for the European competition.ii) The loss resulting from the relegation of the second team from the second division was not to be brought into account.
iii) The Club might be able to reduce the loss sustained through negotiation with Audiovisual.
"Under the insurance policy Vitalicio were to pay an indemnity for "economic loss which may arise from the fact of [Atletico] losing its status as a member of the first division". If Atletico's first team had remained a member of the first division for the 2000/01 season, the Club would have been paid some pts 3.139 bn in respect of the television broadcasting rights for the team's home matches, but would have entitled to keep only pts 2.639 bn unless they qualified for European competition. Mr Boswood conceded that if Atletico's entitlement from Audiovisual had been structured as a payment of pts 2.639 bn with a bonus or additional payment of 500 mn. if the first team qualified for European competition, then the loss from relegation would not have been as much as pts 3.139 bn, but he submitted that it made a crucial difference to the measure of Atletico's "economic loss" that the arrangements were structured in the form of a gross up-front payment and a potential refund. I cannot accept this. It seems to me that the expression "economic loss" requires less blinkered and commercially more realistic view of Atletico's economic loss. The evidence does not explain why the arrangement between Atletico and Audiovisual was structured as it was, but the reality is that if Atletico's first team had not been relegated in the 1999/2000 season and had played in the first division in 2000/01 without qualifying for European Competition, the overall financial benefit to the Club would have been pts 2.639 bn, plus the use of pts 500 mn until they were obliged to reimburse it. Their economic loss from relegation was the loss of this benefit. After all the arrangement with Audiovisual was not that they should simply that they should pay a penalty of pts 500 mn if they did not qualify for European competition, but for reimbursement of part of the up-front payment, as is evidenced not only by the terminology of the agreement but by the provision for the pts 500 mn to be repaid with the corresponding VAT."
(d) The arguments and my conclusion
i) The risk insured was the relegation of the first team from the first division and the loss of television rights consequent on that; the fact that the Club might have had to return Pts 500m because it did not qualify for a European competition was irrelevant, as that was not the contingency which was insured. The obligation to refund Pts 500m arose at a different time and on different conditions; the relegation occurred at the end of the 1999/2000 season in April or May 2000; the consequences of the failure to qualify (if in fact the Club failed) was a different condition and the repayment would be at the end of 2000/1 season.ii) It was impossible to speculate about the prospects of qualifying for Europe had the Club remained in the first division; it mattered not for this purpose whether the Pts 500m was treated as a refund or a bonus. It was impossible to quantify the value of this.
i) I accept that the contingency of the Club not qualifying for the European competition was not an insured risk.ii) However, in my view, that was irrelevant, because qualification for the European competition was an integral part of the scheme for the payment by Audiovisual for the broadcasting rights. It was necessary to take account of the provision relating to the obligation to refund in the event of the failure to qualify because it was a necessary part of the calculation in contrasting the earnings from Audiovisual that would have been received in the 2000/1 season had the Club been relegated with the earnings the Club would have received after relegation.
iii) In determining what the Club would have received, it was necessary to consider the terms of the contract with Audiovisual. Under the terms of the contract it would only have been entitled to retain the sum of Pts 500m, on the assumption that it had remained in the first division for the 2000/1 season, if it had qualified for the European Competition; the retention or repayment of that sum would in every sense have had a significant bearing on the Club's earnings for the season 2000/1. Thus in calculating the earnings for the 2000/1 season, the contingency of repayment had to be brought into account.
iv) As the Judge recorded, the Insurers accepted that if the arrangements had been structured so that the sum of Pts 500m was a bonus payable only if the Club entered the European competition, then the calculation of the earnings for the 2000/1 season would have had to have been made without the Pts 500m. In my view, as what the policy covered was "economic loss", it could make no difference whether the payment of Pts 500m was structured as a refundable amount or an amount payable, as the obligation to make the payment or to make the refund would both be determined by the same event. The arrangement for the sum to have been a refundable payment purely went to cash flow and did not affect the overall position of the Club for each season.
v) The event which determined the repayment of the Pts 500m clearly related, by reason of the terms of the clause set out at paragraph 19.ii)(c), to the earnings for the relevant period, as it was referable to the period during which the Club would suffer economic loss arising from relegation. This was also the way in which the Club and Audiovisual had operated the contract, because at the end of the 1999/2000 season (after which the first team was relegated) when the Club had failed to qualify for the European competitions, it was required by Audiovisual to repay Pts 500m plus VAT in respect of the consideration for the 1999/2000 season.
vi) It follows therefore that in calculating the earnings that the Club would have received if it had remained in the first division for the 2000/1 season, the contingent obligation to refund the Pts 500m had to be brought into account.
(2) The rejection based on breach of warranty
i) They contended that the term in the slip as to the description of the interest was to be construed as a warranty. As there had been a breach of the warranty at the inception of the policy, the Reinsurers were discharged from liability from the inception of the policy.ii) In the alternative, they contended that the contract contained an express warranty that the terms of the insurance and the reinsurance were identical. They relied on the Full Reinsurance Clause; there are at least two versions of this clause, but each contains the following relevant wording:
"Being a reinsurance of and warranted same gross rate, terms and conditions as and to follow the settlements of the [reinsured] Company and that the said company retains during the currency of this Policy at least .. on the identical subject matter and risk and in identically the same proportion on each separate part thereof, but in the event of the retained line being less than as above, Underwriters' lines to be proportionately reduced."
(a) The approach to the issue as to whether a term is a warranty
" It is a question of construction, and the presence or absence of the word "warranty" or "warranted" is not conclusive. One test is whether it is a term which goes to the root of the transaction; a second, whether it is descriptive of or bears materially on the risk of loss; a third, whether damages would be an unsatisfactory or inadequate remedy. Lord Justice Bowen said in Barnard v Faber, [1893] Q.B. 340 at p. 344: "A term as regards the risk must be a condition." Otherwise the insurer is merely left to a cross-claim in a matter which goes to the risk itself, which is unbusinesslike …."
"In marine policies there is a presumption that any statement of fact bearing upon the risks underwritten is, if introduced into the written policy, to be construed as a warranty. In Sceales v Scanlan, Lefroy B. was inclined to follow these early marine cases in a case of life assurance, so that the mere affirmation of a matter of fact which forms part of the contract by actual insertion or by reference to another instrument does make it a matter of warranty. In another Irish case, Quin v National Assurance Company which concerned the description of premises in a fire policy, Jay C.B. thought that a description of premises written in the policy must ipso facto be a warranty. The general tendency in English law, however, is to consider the relevance of the disputed term to the policy as a whole in order to determine the parties' intention in regard to it. Thus in HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v New Hampshire Co, Rix LJ noted three tests which might be used in determining whether, as a matter of construction a term was to be construed as a warranty… He noted also, with approval, the views expressed in previous editions of this work that a description of the subject-matter of the insurance written into the policy and obviously material to the risk would be likely to be construed as a warranty."
(b) The arguments and my conclusion
(d) The full reinsurance clause
"Although the wording is archaic and difficult to comprehend I understand the phrase "warranted same gross rate terms and conditions" as a warranty given by the company, i.e. the insurer, that he has placed the risk on the same terms that he has disclosed to the reinsurers. This view is I think strongly supported by the fact that the policy is attached to the slip against the heading "Infn" which is clearly an abbreviation of the word "Information" and shows that at the time the slip is completed the policy terms are available to the reinsurer to show the nature of the risk that he is accepting. The warranty in the insurance is that the policy has been or will be written in those terms"
Although that passage was cited by Beldam LJ in Gan Insurance v Tai Ping [1999] Lloyd's I.R.R 472 at 479, it was accepted by Reinsurers that it was cited without approval or disapproval; the passage has not been referred to in any other decision.
Lord Justice Dyson: I agree
The Vice-Chancellor: I also agree