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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> William McIlroy Swindon Ltd & Anor v Quinn Insurance Ltd [2010] EWHC 2448 (TCC) (12 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/2448.html Cite as: 133 Con LR 181, [2011] BLR 136, [2010] EWHC 2448 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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1. William McIlroy Swindon Ltd and 2. Rannoch Investments Ltd |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Quinn Insurance Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Ben Elkington (instructed by Greenwoods) for the Second Claimant
Mr Nicholas Davidson QC (instructed by Weightmans) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 28 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart:
"Under the relevant European and Irish legal provisions the Company and the Insured Person are free to choose the law applicable to the Contract. We propose that Irish Law will apply. "
There is no evidence before the court that either Lenihan or its brokers ever proposed that any other system of law should apply to the Policy, and so on the face of it Irish Law applies. General Condition 16 of the Policy, the arbitration clause, provided that the arbitrator was either to be appointed jointly by the insured and the insurer in agreement or, failing agreement, by the "chairman for the time being of the Bar Council". The Bar Council of Ireland is, like the Bar Council of England and Wales, generally known as the Bar Council. It is likely therefore that, if the default position is applicable, namely that Irish Law applies to the Policy, the reference to the "Bar Council" is a reference to the Bar Council of Ireland.
The facts
The preliminary issues
(1) Whether, if properly construed, General Condition 16 does not exclude the right to pursue a claim by litigation.(2) Alternatively, if, properly construed, General Condition 16 excludes the right to pursue a claim by litigation and terminates the right to bring a claim in arbitration after nine months, whether General Condition 16 was an unusual and onerous clause and, Quinn having failed to bring it to the attention of Lenihan, whether it was incorporated into the Policy.
(3) Alternatively, if General Condition 16 was incorporated and the right to pursue a claim by litigation is excluded, whether the time for referring the matter to arbitration has expired.
(4) Alternatively, if time has expired, whether an extension of time for referring the dispute to arbitration should be granted.
Is arbitration under General Condition 16 an exclusive remedy?
Was General Condition 16 incorporated as a term of the policy?
"A firm must not in any written or oral communication to a customer seek to exclude or restrict, or rely on any exclusion or restriction of, any duty or liability . . . unless it is reasonable for it to do so."
"…if one condition in a set of printed conditions is particularly onerous or unusual, the party seeking to enforce it must show that that particular condition was fairly brought to the attention of the other party."
And, per Bingham LJ, at 445G-H:
"The defendants are not to be relieved of that liability because they did not read the condition, although doubtless they did not; but in my judgment they are to be relieved because the plaintiffs did not do what was necessary to draw this unreasonable and extortionate clause fairly to their attention."
"Has not the giver of the paper any right to suppose that the receiver is content to deal on the terms in the paper? What more can be done? Must he say, "Read that?" As I have said, he does so in effect when he put it into the other's hands. The truth is, people are content to take these things on trust. They know that there is a form which is always used - they are satisfied it is not unreasonable, because people do not usually put unreasonable terms into their contracts. If they did, then dealing would soon be stopped. Besides, unreasonable practices would be known. The very fact of not looking at the paper shews that this confidence exists. It is asked: What if there was some unreasonable condition, as for instance to forfeit £1,000 if the goods were not removed in 48 hours? Would the depositor be bound? I might content myself by asking: Would he be, if he were told "our conditions are on this ticket," and he did not read them. In my judgment, he would not be bound in either case. I think there is an implied understanding that there is no condition unreasonable to the knowledge of the party tendering the document and not insisting on its being read - no condition not relevant to the matter in hand. I am of opinion, therefore, that the plaintiffs, having notice of the printing, where in the same situation as though the porter had said, "Read that, it concerns the matter in hand;" that if the plaintiffs did not read it, they were as much bound as if they had read it and had not objected."
(My emphasis)
Bingham LJ summarised the effect of the English decisions at page 445:
"The tendency of the English authorities has, I think, been to look at the nature of the transaction in question and the character of the parties to it; to consider what notice the party alleged to be bound was given of the particular condition said to bind him; and to resolve whether in all the circumstances it is fair to hold him bound by the condition in question."
When did a dispute arise within the meaning of General Condition 16?
"16. Arbitration
Any dispute between the Insured and the Company on our liability in respect of a claim or the amount to be paid shall, in default of agreement, be referred within nine calendar months of the dispute arising, to an Arbitrator, appointed jointly by the Insured and the Company in agreement, or failing agreement, appointed by the chairman for the time being of the Bar Council and the decision of such Arbitrator shall be final and binding on both parties. If the dispute has not been referred to arbitration within the aforesaid nine-month period, then the claim shall be deemed to have been abandoned and not recoverable thereafter. "
"We will indemnify you …against legal liability to pay compensation…in respect of any Event specified below:
Accidental
a. …
b. Loss of or damage to material property occurring within the Territorial Limits during the Period of Insurance in connection with the Business."
55. Thus the Policy provided cover against legal liability. This reflects the usual rule that an insurer has no liability to the insured under a policy in respect of third party risks until that insured's liability to the third party has been determined and quantified: see Post Office v Norwich Union [1967] 2 QB 363.
"The insured could only have sued for an indemnity when his liability to the third person was established and the amount of the loss ascertained." (per Lord Denning MR at 374B)
56. In this case, Lenihan's liability to CWO was established and ascertained on 11th December 2009 [B/85]. That is therefore the earliest date on which a dispute can have arisen in respect of Quinn's "liability in respect of a claim". It follows that the nine month time limit cannot have expired.
"The policy says that "the company will indemnify the insured against all sums which the insured shall become legally liable to pay as compensation in respect of loss of or damage to property". It seems to me that the insured only acquires a right to sue for the money when his liability to the insured person has been established so as to give rise to a right of indemnity. His liability to the injured person must be ascertained and determined to exist, either by judgment of the court or by an award in arbitration or by agreement. Until that is done, the right to an indemnity does not arise. I agree with the statement by Devlin J in West Wake Price & Co v Ching [1957] 1 WLR 45, at 49. "The assured cannot recover anything under the main indemnity clause or make any claim against the underwriters until they have been found liable and so sustained a loss".
Under the section it is clear to me that the insured person cannot sue the insurance company except in such circumstances as the insured himself could have sued the insurance company. The insured could only have sued for an indemnity when his liability to the third person was established and the amount of the loss ascertained. In some circumstances the insured might sue earlier for a declaration, for example, if the insured company were repudiating the policy for some reason. But where the policy is admittedly good, the insured cannot sue for an indemnity until his own liability to the third person is ascertained."
(My emphasis)
Lord Denning continued, at page 375:
"In these circumstances I think the right to sue for these moneys does not arise until the liability of the wrongdoer is established and the amount ascertained. How is this to be done? If there is an unascertained claim for damages in tort, it cannot be proved in the bankruptcy; nor in the liquidation of the company. But nevertheless the injured person can bring an action against the wrongdoer. In the case of a company, he must get the leave of the court. No doubt leave would automatically be given. The insurance company can fight that action in the name of the wrongdoer. In that way liability can be established and that the loss ascertained. Then the injured person can go against the insurance company."
"The case really resolves itself into this simple question: Could Potters on June 17, 1965, have successfully sued their insurers for the sum of £839 10s 3d which they were denying they were under any obligation to pay to the Post Office? Stated in that way, I should have thought the question admits of only one answer. Obviously Potters could not have claimed that money from their insurers. It is quite true that if Potters in the end are shown to have been legally liable for the damage resulting from the accident to the cable, their liability in law dates from the moment when the accident occurred and the damage was suffered. But whether or not there is any legal liability and, if so, the amount due from Potters to the Post Office can, in my view, only be finally ascertained either by agreement between Potters and the Post Office or by an action or arbitration between Potters and the Post Office. It is quite unheard of in practice for any assured to sue his insurers in a money claim when the actual loss against which he wishes to be indemnified has not been ascertained. I have never heard of such an action and there is nothing in law that makes such an action possible. I agree with the statement of Devlin J, in West Wake Price & Co v Ching, to which the Master of the Rolls has already referred."
(My emphasis)
"The right to indemnity under a liability insurance only arises in law as and when the insured's third party liability has been ascertained and quantified by judgment, award or agreement: Post Office v. Norwich Union [1967] 2 QB 363; Bradley v. Eagle Star [1989] AC 957. However, the court has jurisdiction to grant declarations as to the extent to which valid and applicable cover exists under such a policy in proceedings brought by the insured against the insurer before the insured's third party liability has been finally determined: Brice v. Wackerbarth [1974] 2 Ll.R. 274; Du Pont v. Agnew [1987] 2 Ll.R. 585, 595; and cf Thorman v. New Hampshire [1988] 1 Ll.R. 7. Whether it will do so is ultimately a matter of practicality and convenience: see the judgments in Brice v. Wackerbarth. But it is notable that in all these cases the third party had at least defined its claim by the issue of proceedings. Here, that was not so, and none of these cases comes close to the present."
Would the Claimants be entitled to an extension of time under the Arbitration Act 1996 and, if not, does paragraph 2.5.3 of ICOB apply?
"The court shall make an order only if satisfied-
(a) That the circumstances are such as were outside the reasonable contemplation of the parties when they agreed the provision in question, and that it would be just to extend the time, or
(b) That the conduct of one party makes it unjust to hold the other party to the strict terms of the provision in question."
"The courts approached the concept of undue hardship by reference to such factors as the size and strength of the claim, the extent of the claimant's fault, the pendency of negotiations between the parties, whether the respondent had been obstructed, the extent to which the respondent would suffer prejudice in addition to the loss of its time-bar defence if time were extended and generally whether the hardship was not only excessive but undeserved and unmerited."
Colman J went on to note that, following the recommendations of the Departmental Advisory Committee, the idea that the court had some general supervisory jurisdiction over arbitrations has been abandoned. Thus the court's jurisdiction under section 12 of the 1996 Act was confined to the two cases covered by section 12(3)(a) and (b) of the Act which, as Colman J stated, are conceptually quite different from the "undue hardship" approach under the 1950 Act. Colman J went on to say this, at [1999] 1 All ER (Comm) 961-962:
"Accordingly, the approach to the construction of section 12 has, in my judgment, to start from the assumption that when the parties agreed the time bar, they must be taken to have contemplated that if there were any omission to comply with its provisions in not unusual circumstances arising in the ordinary course of business, the claimant would be time-barred unless the conduct of the other party made it unjust that it should. In this connection, it would appear quite impossible to characterise a negligent omission to comply with the time bar, however little delay were involved, as, without more, outside their mutual contemplation. Narrowly overlooking a time bar due to an administrative oversight is far from being so uncommon as to be treated as beyond the parties' reasonable contemplation. The process of identifying and evaluating in the balance the disparity between the prejudice to the claimant on the one hand and the degree of fault on his part on the other will not normally be a relevant exercise in determining whether there were circumstances beyond the reasonable contemplation of the parties. The circumstances in question must in each case include those which caused or at least significantly contributed to the claimant's failure to comply with the time bar."
"not to allow the court to interfere with a contractual bargain unless the circumstances are such that if they had been drawn to the attention of the parties when they agreed the provision, the parties would at the very least have contemplated that the time bar might not apply - it then being for the court finally to rule as to whether justice required an extension of time to be given. . . . In this very case it enables circumstances such as a failure to read the provisions which might not be reasonably contemplated, to be circumstances which do not trigger consideration of an entitlement to an extension of time."
(a) A party exercising rights under the 1930 Act might very well only become entitled to exercise those rights more than nine months after a dispute arose, not least because it is necessary first to establish the liability of the insured to the third party.
(b) If Quinn is right as to the date when a dispute arose (ie July 2008 or even February 2009), it would have been impossible for CWO to comply with the arbitration provision because they had no rights to exercise against Quinn until December 2009 by which time the time limit had expired.
(c) Thus Quinn's stance renders worthless the rights granted to CWO by Parliament under the 1930 Act.
(d) That cannot have been the common intention of the parties.
(e) If these circumstances had been within the contemplation of the parties, they would necessarily have provided for a longer time limit or specified that it should not apply in respect of claims brought under the 1930 Act.
"When an insurer is informed that a customer wishes to claim under his policy it must give the customer reasonable guidance to help him make a claim under his policy."
"A firm must not in any written or oral communication to a customer seek to exclude or restrict, or rely on any exclusion or restriction of, any duty or liability . . . unless it is reasonable for it to do so."
Quinn's application for summary judgment