Companies Took Insurers to Court for not Paying out on Covid-19 Claims - Here's What's Happening Now -- Financial News
November 19 2020 - 5:52AM
Dow Jones News
By Berengere Sim
Of Financial News
The Financial Conduct Authority's business interruption
insurance case is back in the headlines--but this time it is for a
four-day appeal in the Supreme Court.
Why are the FCA and insurers in the court?
The appeal is the latest twist in the business interruption
case, which the City's watchdog took to court to bring clarity to
small and medium-sized enterprises who suffered losses as they were
forced to shutter their doors during the first nationwide
lockdown.
On May 1, the regulator announced that it was taking the case to
court. "We have been clear that we believe in the majority of
cases, business interruption insurance wasn't purchased to, and is
unlikely to, cover the current emergency," Christopher Woolard, the
interim chief executive of the regulator, said on May 1.
"Our intended court action is designed to resolve a selected
number of key issues causing uncertainty as promptly as possible
and to provide greater clarity for all parties, both insured and
insurers."
Later, eight insurer defendants--Hiscox Ltd., QBE Insurance
Group Ltd., Zurich Insurance Group AG, MS Amlin Underwriting, RSA
Insurance Group PLC, Ecclesiastical Insurance Office PLC, Argenta
Syndicate Management and Arch Insurance--agreed to participate in
the test case after 56 were approached by the regulator for
information on their business interruption policies and how they
intended to deal with claims.
The FCA represented the interests of policyholders and is
represented by law firm Herbert Smith Freehills.
The tension surrounding business interruption insurance is in
fact not unique to the U.K.; there have been similar cases in the
US, as well as in France.
What happened next?
On Sept. 15, the High Court in London ruled in favor of "most"
of the companies who said their business interruption insurance
policies should cover lockdown and pandemic-related losses.
The judgment pointed to disease clauses in certain business
interruption insurance policies that would provide cover, but added
that each policy will have to be considered against the judgment to
work out what it means. If it hadn't been appealed, the judgment
would have been legally binding to the eight insurers.
However, on Sept. 30, the FCA applied to "leapfrog" the case to
the Supreme Court, "which we believe is the fastest way to get
legal clarity as quickly as possible for all parties," the
regulator said in a statement.
On Nov. 2, the Supreme Court granted permission to appeal, to
the regulator and the Hiscox Action Group, as well as all the
insurance firms except Zurich Insurance and Ecclesiastical
Insurance. The wordings for both Zurich and Ecclesiastical don't
provide cover for business interruption, as confirmed by the
judgment.
How have things been going in the Supreme Court?
On Nov. 16, the first day of the appeal, Reuters reported that
insurance companies told judges that thousands of small companies
impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic weren't eligible for payouts. It
was "reverse engineering" to suggest they would be.
The following day, Reuters reported the Supreme Court heard
Colin Edelman QC, the FCA's lawyer, say: "[Insurers] are saying:
'We insure perils but not ones that are going to cost us a huge
amount of money. We never contemplated that'. Well that isn't an
answer."
What is at stake?
At the centre of the case is whether 28 clauses in 21 policy
wordings by the insurers should cover disruption caused by
responses to the pandemic. If they do have to cover the losses, the
case could affect hundreds of types of policies and thousands of
policyholders, with billions of pounds of claims in the
balance.
Meanwhile, the industry has been trying to find other ways to
better prepare and collaborate on pandemic-related issues in the
future. On July 1, insurance marketplace Lloyd's of London proposed
the creation of a "Black Swan Re" reinsurance framework.
The framework would provide reinsurance for commercial
non-damage business interruption cover in future catastrophic
"Black Swan" events. It would use industry-pooled capital and be
back by the government if the pool had insufficient funds.
What happens now?
The hearing continues into its final day.
The Supreme Court has yet to set down a date on which it will
publish its ruling.
Website: www.fnlondon.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 19, 2020 05:37 ET (10:37 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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