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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Zurich Insurance PLC v Niramax Group Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 590 (23 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/590.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 590 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
MRS JUSTICE COCKERILL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
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ZURICH INSURANCE PLC |
Defendant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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NIRAMAX GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant/Respondent |
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Ben Elkington QC and Ben Smiley (instructed by Edwin Coe LLP) for the Claimant/Respondent
Hearing date: 15 April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
Narrative
(1) a requirement for the installation of the fire suppression equipment on the fixed shredders at the Hartlepool premises;
(2) a requirement for an inspection of the electrical appliances at the Hartlepool premises and provision of an Institute of Electrical Engineers Certificate as to their condition;
(3) a requirement that at the Washington site an automatic fire detection system be installed in areas where waste was stored;
(4) a requirement that CCTV cameras should be installed at the Washington site outside and inside areas of the process/storage building.
I shall refer to these as 'the Outstanding Requirements'.
The case advanced by the parties at trial
The Judgment
"211. What has troubled me is whether, against this background, the premium he imposed would have been higher. I have concluded that it would have been; that is a conclusion which appears to find support in the independent evidence. Mr Penny reviewed this risk after the event. He went on record at the time and confirmed in evidence that the underwriting of this risk over the years had been substandard. Part of this was (based on clear evidence) that the premium calculated for the 2014 renewal did not apply the rate for waste risks correctly; instead of categorising the trade as waste, with an automatic premium of 6%, it was categorised as contractor's portable plant, with a premium of 2.25%, to which a loading of 40% was applied. Further the excess of £500 was very low for a risk of this type.
212. As I have indicated I reach the conclusion on the balance of probabilities that Mr Penny would have offered terms for renewal, impelled to that conclusion by a sense of fair play to a long standing assured and given the less than striking nature of the extra information. However, there were limits to Mr Penny's charity. I conclude that Mr Penny would only have underwritten the risk if it was priced at or about the correct price for the risk. (It seems likely that he might have given a little leeway to ease the transition into proper pricing). This approach dovetails exactly with both the fair approach evidenced by Mr Hutchinson and Mr Penny, and Mr Penny's evidence as to how in fact he approached the process of weeding out less desirable waste risks. One can also see something of the same in the history of the buildings cover; the move to Millennium was against a background of changed underwriting criteria by Aviva and forbidding pricing by Catlin. As such it is a conclusion which derives from independent evidence, and the test of logical self-consistency.
213. As I have said above, this was not quite the case advanced for Zurich; its core case was simple – that Mr Penny would not have written the risk. However, on considering the evidence adduced this more subtle approach seems clearly indicated as the answer.
214. I have included this consideration for completeness, because it forms part of the background to the next question. As I have indicated, the case was essentially put on the basis of "write or not write?", though a reference to terms was made in passing both in opening and in closing. To this binary question, the answer is "write". Doubtless the reason why the case was not really advanced on the basis of "write or not write/write on different terms" is because it is (in my view correctly) accepted by Zurich that the only change which Mr Penny would have made to the terms is not one which was related to the non-disclosed fact, but one which related to Zurich's earlier errors. It would seem to follow that the non-disclosure would not have been causative of the different terms."
The Issues
(1) Mr Penny would have refused to write the renewal at all, and the Judge was wrong to reach the contrary conclusion in paragraphs 210 and 212 of the judgment.
(2) Alternatively, the Judge was wrong to hold that inducement had not been established, having found that an additional premium would have been charged to correct a prior undercharging of premium, as a result of which the terms of the insurance would not have been the same. There were two limbs to this argument:
(a) inducement was established as a matter of law on the Judge's findings, because the premium would have been higher had the disclosure been made; that was sufficient to meet the causation test for inducement irrespective of the amount of the increase or the thought process by which the additional premium would have been calculated;
(b) alternatively, the Judge was wrong to conclude on the evidence that Mr Penny would only have charged an increased premium in an amount which corrected the mistake; there was no evidential basis for such a conclusion; the Judge ought to have found that Mr Penny would have charged a higher premium by reason, at least in part, of the undisclosed circumstances, in the light of the expert evidence on their materiality.
Limb 1
"if the misrepresentation or non-disclosure of a material fact did not in fact induce the making of the contract (in the sense in which that expression is used in the general law of misrepresentation) the underwriter is not entitled to rely on it as a ground for avoiding the contract."
The rationale is that there must be some effect which the undisclosed or misrepresented facts have on the mind of the underwriter, as is clear from the passage at pp. 541H-542B.
"In all the circumstances I would summarise the relevant principles of inducement in this context in this way. (i) In order to be entitled to avoid a contract of insurance or reinsurance, an insurer or reinsurer must prove on the balance of probabilities that he was induced to enter into the contract by a material non-disclosure or by a material misrepresentation. (ii) There is no presumption of law that an insurer or reinsurer is induced to enter in the contract by a material non-disclosure or misrepresentation. (iii) The facts may, however, be such that it is to be inferred that the particular insurer or reinsurer was so induced even in the absence from evidence from him. (iv) In order to prove inducement the insurer or reinsurer must show that the non-disclosure or misrepresentation was an effective cause of his entering into the contract on the terms on which he did. He must therefore show at least that, but for the relevant non-disclosure or misrepresentation, he would not have entered into the contract on those terms. On the other hand, he does not have to show that it was the sole effective cause of his doing so."
"The existing rules, coupled with a presumption of inducement are already stern enough, and to enable an underwriter to escape liability when he has suffered no harm would be positively unjust, and contrary to the spirit of mutual good faith recognised by section 17 [of the Marine Insurance Act 1906], the more so since non-disclosure will in a substantial proportion of cases be the result of an innocent mistake."
Limb 2
The New Ground
Conclusion on the appeal
Respondent's Notice point
Conclusion
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing:
Lord Justice David Richards: