Insurance Law Implications of Delay in Maritime Transport
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CHAPTER 2
Cargo insurance and delay: physical loss to the subject-matter insured
Introduction
2.1 The main interest covered by a cargo policy is physical loss of or damage to the cargo. This type of loss has been the subject of the earlier cases on delay through which the current exclusion of delay losses in s 55(2)(b) of the MIA and in the standard market conditions have been developed. The motives behind excluding these losses were mainly twofold: the first one rested upon an analogy to inherent vice as an excluded event and the second one related to the approach to proximate causation in the late 19th century which sought to exclude delay as the last cause in time. This chapter will analyse the origins of the delay exclusion from the scope of cargo policies and assess whether the earlier authorities can survive the changes in law as to the rule of proximate causation. It will also be speculated on how the new rules on causation can be applied to circumstances involving delay as a cause of loss.Delay and loss by deterioration
2.2 In cargo insurance, delay cover may be provided in the British market on an ad hoc basis by express provision in the policy1 by including the wording ‘deterioration from any cause’2 against a higher premium. Moreover, even afterPage 15
A general review of the pre-MIA authorities
2.3 Delay is an event which is capable of causing loss of or damage to perishable goods. Therefore most of the cases constituting the basis of the current law on delay as an excluded peril are on deterioration of perishables. Close examination of these early cases is required so as to determine in which context they assessed delay and whether they are currently still good law. One of the most influential decisions of the law on delay was Gregson v Gilbert.6 The negligence of the captain in finding the destination of the vessel caused delay on the voyage and want of provisions, which consequently resulted in the natural death of the slaves which were at the time considered as cargo. The delay in this decision was not considered as an event that had to be excluded, it was merely stated as an event resulting in the natural death of the slaves if coupled by want of provisions and the negligence of the captain. Following this decision, the Slave Trade Act 1790 (30 Geo. 3, c. 33),7 s 8, and the Slave Trade Act 1794 (34 G. 3, c. 80), s 10 had been passed prohibiting the insurance on slaves for losses caused by natural death or ill-treatment.Page 16
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‘Last cause in time’ rule
2.7 According to the approach to the proximate causation rule prior to Ley-land Shipping Co Ltd v Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ltd,26 the cause must not have been too distant to the loss in time or in space.27 The rule was applied in the leading case on deterioration and delay Pink v Fleming 28 where a cargo of fruit was insured under a marine policy against ‘damage consequent onPage 19
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Delay as a proximate cause in deterioration cases
(a) General overview of proximate causation
2.8 The problem of causation involves prioritising some causes over others or rejecting the idea that some are causes.34 The device developed to achieve the finding of a proximate cause of loss was codified by the MIA in s 55(1) which is a default rule and operates unless the policy otherwise provides.35 The delay exclusion set out in the MIA36 and in many other standard form policies is subject to the proximate causation rule, hence a close scrutiny of the rule is required so as to have a better understanding of delay exclusions and their scope. A strict reading of s 55(1) which expresses that an ‘insurer is not liable for any loss not proximately caused by a peril insured against’37 raises an important issue as to proximate causation. It may be read as suggesting that the insurers would not be liable where a proximate cause of the loss is not expressly covered. This line of interpretation could invite the conclusion that The Miss Jay Jay 38 was not correctly decided39 where the Court of Appeal held that the assured could recover where the loss was proximately caused by both a peril insured against and an uninsured peril. Against this background, it is possible to reconcile The Miss Jay Jay and s 55(1) on the ground that s 55(1) refers solely to single proximate cause situations, i.e. where the other cause is not a proximate cause of the loss. This suggestion may be supported by the fact that before Leyland,40 the proximate cause was accepted as the last cause in time, therefore a single proximate cause was mostly to be found among other causes. The approach of Courts in the pre-MIA decisions showed a determination to find a single cause and the possibility that there could have been two or more proximate causes was rarely acknowledged.41Page 21
(b) Proximate causation and delay following Leyland
2.9 The approach of Pink v Fleming 44 to proximate causation and delay has not yet been challenged by a higher court in England. Nonetheless, the 19th century cases on causation in relation to delay inevitably require careful consideration in the light of the abandonment of the last cause in time approach to proximate causation. Mainly two views exist as to the applicability of the earlier authorities on the recoverability of losses caused by delay: The first view rests upon the proposition that Taylor v Dunbar and Pink v Fleming were decided before the introduction of the new proximate causation doctrine established by Leyland and shall no longer apply in resolving disputes on causation where delay is involved as a peril.45 The second view argues that although Pink v Fleming is no longer good law given the abandonment of the earlier rule, the authority of Taylor v Dunbar is not yet challenged in English courts and that the insurers could still exclude liability on facts similar to Taylor v Dunbar.46 It is noteworthy that even though it can be submitted that Taylor v Dunbar where the last cause in time rule of causation was notPage 22
‘… it might be thought relevant that the 1906 Act, crystallising statutorily the concepts of perils of the seas and inherent vice, was enacted against the background of the Victorian authorities, and before the definitive emergence of the modern conception of proximity’.49