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UK Supreme Court To Rule In Fight Over Business Interruption Insurance

Fri, 15th Jan 2021 06:24

(Alliance News) - The UK's highest court will rule on a landmark GBP1.2 billion legal battle over businesses' ability to claim on insurance for coronavirus-related disruption.

The Financial Conduct Authority last year brought a test case, which could affect around 370,000 businesses, over the wording of business interruption insurance policies, which some insurers - including London-listed Hiscox Ltd and RSA Insurance Group PLC - argued did not cover the Covid-19 pandemic.

The City watchdog previously said it was bringing the legal action following "widespread concern" over "the lack of clarity and certainty" for businesses seeking to cover substantial losses incurred by the pandemic and subsequent national lockdown.

In September, the High Court ruled on several "lead" insurance policies issued by eight separate insurers largely in favour of the FCA, which welcomed the judgment as "a significant step in resolving the uncertainty being faced by policyholders".

The regulator, however, argued the judgment "paved the way for many insurance policies to pay indemnities on Covid-19 business interruption claims", but also "took something away with one hand after giving more substantially and in detail with the other".

Six of the insurers – Arch, Argenta, Hiscox, MS Amlin, QBE and RSA – also appealed against aspects of the High Court's ruling, as did the Hiscox Action Group, which represents around 400 businesses insured by Hiscox.

In November, the Supreme Court heard "leapfrog" appeals – which have bypassed the Court of Appeal – in a case which could have implications for hundreds of thousands of businesses affected by coronavirus.

At the outset of the four-day remote hearing, the Supreme Court's president Lord Reed explained: "The proceedings are test cases concerned with business interruption cover in insurance policies.

"The purpose of the proceedings is to determine what liability, if any, the policies impose on the insurers towards businesses that have been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic."

In its written case, the FCA said the High Court's findings on "prevention of access clauses" – which are "triggered by public authority intervention preventing or hindering access to" business premises – "may have the effect of reducing the commercial utility of such wordings almost to vanishing point".

Colin Edelman QC said the High Court's ruling could also mean "a business ordered to close by the government, or that closed voluntarily due to the effects of Covid-19 on business and inessential journeys, may recover nothing even after being mandated to close by legislation".

He added that the court's findings could result in "a business that closed on March 20, 2020 when given the prime minister's – non-binding – instruction to do so might be said to get nothing, whereas a business that ignored and would have continued to ignore that instruction could claim all or most of its loss when shut down".

Michael Crane QC, representing QBE, said his client was challenging the High Court's decision in relation to "so-called disease clauses", which are triggered by the occurrence of a disease within a specific distance of the insured businesses' premises.

He argued in written submissions that QBE's disease clauses provided cover "for interruption of or interference with the insured business" in relation to infectious or contagious diseases within 25 miles of the business.

Crane added: "The policy will not respond, however, to business interruption caused by a national lockdown imposed to contain or control the transmission of a notifiable disease, when there is no evidence, or even suggestion, that the business interruption was the result of any local appearance of the disease."

John Lockey QC, representing Arch, said in written submissions that insurers should be allowed to adjust insurance claims to take into account "the reduction in turnover which the policyholder would have suffered in any event, even if the insured premises had not been closed".

Ben Lynch QC, representing the Hiscox Action Group, said the case was "a matter of commercial 'life or death' for the majority of the HAG claimants, all with businesses, and many with families, to support."

The Supreme Court is due to give its ruling at 9.45am and brief reasons for its decision will be livestreamed on its website on Friday morning.

By Sam Tobin, PA

source: PA

Copyright 2021 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

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