Good Faith and Insurance Contracts
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CHAPTER 17
The loss of the insurer’s right to exercise a remedy or to rely upon a breach of warranty
Background
17.01 Where one party to an insurance contract is guilty of material non-disclosure or misrepresentation, in breach of the duty of good faith, the insurance is not automatically avoided and the other remedies now specified by the Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012 and the Insurance Act 2015 are not automatically applied. The remedies available to the insurer for the assured’s unfair presentation of the risk, if available to the insurer, depend on the insurer making an election to exercise such remedies. If the insurance contract is procured by the assured’s deliberate or reckless breach of duty or if the insurer would not have entered into the insurance contract at all on any terms, but for the assured’s breach of duty, the contract is, in effect, rendered voidable.1 The innocent party2 may elect to avoid the insurance contract ab initio or to affirm it. Other than in cases of fraud or deliberate or reckless breaches of duty, the premium should be returned or at least tendered in order to put the parties back into their pre-contractual position.3 Except in cases of misrepresentation or fraudulent claims (which are considered elsewhere) or where the contract of insurance validly provides otherwise, avoidance, the right to re-write the terms of the insurance or the right to pay a proportionately reduced claim are the principal remedies available to the insurer; damages are not currently a remedy available to the insurer, although some of the remedies are compensatory in part.4. By contrast, an assured who suffers loss by reason of the insurer’s failure to pay an insurance claim within a reasonable time, that assured can claim damages for the breach of the implied term introduced by section 13A of the Insurance Act 2015.Page 624
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The applicable doctrines
17.08 The doctrines with which this chapter is concerned are waiver by election and affirmation, on the one hand, and promissory estoppel,11 on the other. In view of the fact that section 34(3) of the Marine Insurance Act 1906 (which is replicated in section 10(3)(c) of the Insurance Act 2015) provides that a breach of warranty may be waived by the insurer and that when the Marine Insurance Act 1906 was enacted there was no doctrine of promissory estoppel, there is also a discussion of what waiver in the context of breach of warranty might entail.Page 626
Unconscionability
17.09 First, we consider whether, other than by waiver (by election or by estoppel), the insurer can lose the right to avoid or any other remedy by reason of the insurer having himself acted unconscionably. Colman J in Strive Shipping Corporation v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Association (Bermuda) Ltd; The Grecia Express considered that the court must decide, taking into account equitable considerations, whether a failure on the part of the insurer to act consistently with his duty of utmost good faith “should disentitle him to avoidance of the policy.”12 17.10 However, in Drake Insurance plc v Provident Insurance plc, Moore-Bick J said that, while he felt “some unease at the prospect of an insurer’s avoiding the contract for non-disclosure in circumstances such as the present”, he did not think that “the solution is to be found in the exercise of the court’s equitable jurisdiction”.13 He gave two reasons for this: first, that, viewed as the exercise of a right of rescission, avoidance did not involve the exercise of equitable considerations since no differentiation falls to be made between rescission in equity and rescission at common law; and, secondly, that the right of avoidance and rescission “is exercisable at the election of the injured party” and “does not require the intervention of the court but is effective immediately upon the communication by the injured party of his decision to rescind the contract”.14 17.11 In a later case, Brotherton v Aseguradora Colseguros SA15 Moore-Bick J rejected the argument a second time.16 That case went on appeal, mainly on the question of the degree to which “intelligence” needs to be disclosed,17 but also on the question of whether (as Colman J had considered in The Grecia Express) the courts can impose their views on whether it is conscionable or not for a party to rescind (or avoid). Mance LJ rejected the argument, observing that “rescission under English law is not generally subject to any requirement of good faith or conscionability”.18 He said that the mere fact that a right to rescind has an equitable origin (assuming that this is the case with the right of avoidance)19 does not mean that its exercise is only possible if that is consistent with good faith or with a court’s view of what is conscionable. Mance LJ then went on to observe that, in the light of the fact that “recent authority has in any event tended to limit the scope of any post-contractual duty of good faith to circumstances of repudiatory breach or fraudulent intent”,20 even if there were any scope in any circumstances for “qualifying, in effect, a clear principle recognised as long ago as 1811”,21 it could not be in a case like the one before him where thePage 627
“The judge was right on this point, for the reasons that he gave in Drake Insurance v Provident Insurance in paragraphs 31–32. Like him, I am unable to accept the contrary view of Colman J in The Grecia Express.