Good Faith and Insurance Contracts
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CHAPTER 9
Modification of the duty of disclosure at placing
Modification of the duty generally
9.01 The duty to disclose material facts, whether it arises as a matter of law or contract, exists or is made whole by virtue of the contract which is entered into, and so the scope of the material facts to be revealed naturally may be defined or modified by the contract itself. For example, the policy may provide that the duty is discharged in specified instances1 or the policy may state that specific facts must have been disclosed.2 The parties may agree in their contract that the assured’s duty of disclosure may be enlarged,3 restricted4 or waived,5 or that the remedies for a non-disclosure or misrepresentation are varied from those available at common law or under a statute (such as by means of an innocent non-disclosure clause).6 Even in such cases of modification, the practice of the relevant market may assistPage 278
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Warranties and basis clauses
The nature and effect of basis clauses at common law
9.06 The contract of insurance may define the extent of disclosure required of the assured. In this way, the insurer may dispense with disclosure of objectively material facts. Alternatively, the insurer and the assured may agree in their contract that certain facts are true, whether or not they are material and whether or not the truth of such facts as declared by the assured induced the making of the contract. This latter device is achieved by the inclusion of a warranty in the policy that certain facts as declared by the assured are true. Often, the declaration is made in the proposal form on which the policy is based, in which case the policy and the proposal form have to be read together to make sense of the whole.17 If such a warranty exists, the truth of the facts warranted are treated as part of or as the basis of the contract and if such facts are demonstrated to be false, the contract is treated as discharged from both parties’ perspective. Breaches of warranty will discharge an insurer from liability, automatically without further action by the insurer,18 as from the time of the breach.19 In the case of facts that are warranted to be true at the time of the contract, the effect of the falsity of such facts is to discharge the insurer from the time of the contract so that it could be said that the risk never attached. Often such warranties are accompanied by clauses that automatically render the contract void in the event that there has been a false representation.20 9.07 This warranty must be introduced into the contract by clear and unambiguous language;21 any ambiguity will be resolved in favour of the assured.22 If the representationPage 280
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Alleviation from basis clauses and the effect of legislation aside from the Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012 and the Insurance Act 2015
9.22 As with all insurance warranties, the assured’s failure to comply with the warranty introduced by the basis clause may be excused where the warranty ceases to be applicable to the contract because of a change in circumstances, where the lack of compliance has been waived by the insurer77 or where the contract itself qualifies the warranty or the remedy for its breach.78 Furthermore, if a fact is warranted as true and that fact has been erroneously or mistakenly recorded in the contract, the court may be able to rectify the statement, provided the doctrine of mistake allows the rectification in the circumstances of the case, and so thwart a breach of warranty79 or if the mistake is so obvious that the insurer must be regarded as being put on enquiry.80 However, if the assured becomes aware of the mistake prior to the contract being made, he should inform the insurer of the error or he will have to suffer the consequence of his omission.81 9.23 Where a misrepresentation has been made and that representation has been incorporated as part of the contract of insurance by the basis clause, it has always suited the insurer to rely only on the basis clause. It may, however, be occasionally advantageous to the insurer to rely on the simple breach of the duty of the utmost good faith. Is such a choice available to the insurer or must the insurer limit his sights to the breach of warranty? Traditionally, under the ordinary law of misrepresentation, where a representation had been incorporated into the contract, the innocent party had to sue for breach of contract, not misrepresentation, unless there had been fraud.82 However, section 1(a) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967 provides that the remedy of rescission, subject to the court’s discretion, is available for any misrepresentation, even if the representation has become a term of the contract.83 This is strongly suggestive of the availability of an option to the insurer to relyPage 289
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The Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012 and the Insurance Act 2015
9.27 Basis clause operates by warranting the truth of a pre-contractual representation made by the assured, such representations often – but not always – being made in a proposal form. The warranty is such that if the pre-contractual representation is untrue, it would at common law discharge the insurer from liability under the insurance contract. This would be so, depending on the terms of the relevant warranty, whether or not the representation was material or induced the insurer to enter into the insurance contract. 9.28 Such provisions – basis clauses – are now prohibited by section 6 of the Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012 and by section 9 of the Insurance Act 2015. Both statutory provisions operate by stating that a representation made by an assured in connection with a proposed insurance contract, or a proposed variation to an insurance contract, “is not capable of being converted into a warranty by means of any provision of the … insurance contract (or of the terms of the variation), or of any other contract (and whether by declaring the representation to form the basis of the contract or otherwise)”. By section 10 of the 2012 Act and section 16(1) of the 2015 Act, it is not permissible to contract out of this prohibition. 9.29 Accordingly, basis clauses are no longer permitted. However, it is worth reflecting on what a basis clause is for the purpose of this prohibition and the extent of the prohibition. Although the statutory language is potentially broad in its effect, paragraphs 83–84 of the Explanatory Notes accompanying the Insurance Act 2015 state:“Under the current law, an insurer may add a declaration to a non-consumer insurance proposal form or policy stating that the insured warrants the accuracy of all the answers given, or that such answers form the ‘basis of the contract’. This has the legal effect of converting representations into warranties. The insurer is discharged from liability for claims if the insured made any misrepresentation, even if it was immaterial and did not induce the insurer to enter into the contract. This section [section 9 of the 2015 Act] abolishes basis of the contract clauses in non-consumer insurance. Basis of the contract clauses in consumer insurance were abolished by section 6 of CIDRA. It remains possible for insurers to include specific warranties within their policies.”