Law of Insurance Warranties, The
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CHAPTER 10
Stress testing the regimes for insurance warranties in Australia, New Zealand and the UK
Stress testing the Australian regime with the facts of historic cases from other jurisdictions
10.1 This volume has already critically examined a number of cases where s54 has been applied. As we have seen,1 the Australian regime comprises a dual track approach made up of (i) s54 of the Insurance Contracts Act, covering, for the purposes of this text, non-marine commercial insurance and (ii) the Marine Insurance Act 1909. In this chapter it will be assumed that the dual track approach has been retained and that the Marine Insurance Act has been amended in line with the recommendations of ALRC 91.2 However the likely outcome under the status quo (where the recommendations of ALRC 91 have yet to be implemented) will also be reviewed. ALRC 91 of course has no relevance in non-marine cases. 10.2 De Hahn v Hartley3 In a maritime policy a warranty required the vessel to sail with at least 50 crew members, but it actually left port with only 44. The shortfall was soon made up, but when the vessel was subsequently lost the insurer still escaped liability because of the breach of warranty. As Australia has retained a separate regime for maritime policies, it is assumed these facts would be considered under Australia’s Marine Insurance Act 1909. Let us assume that the recommendations of ALRC 91 have been implemented. Accordingly, as ALRC recommended the abolition of warranties, it is assumed that the warranty would be replaced by an express term on similar lines. As the breach was remedied prior to the loss of the vessel, under the recommendations of ALRC 91, the insured would be obliged to indemnify the assured for the loss incurred. This would reverse the original decision and would be an outcome welcomed by this author. Of course in reality, the recommendations of ALRC 91 have yet to be implemented. As a result the governing regime would be essentially the same as when the case was originally heard (i.e. the Marine Insurance Act) and this text submits that it is hard to see why the outcome, on the facts (and ignoring for these purposes the likelihood of held covered clauses being included in a modern day policy), would be any different from the original case. This flags a clear disadvantage, and in the view of this author, a critical failing, with the Australian regime as it currently stands. It is possible that the court would view the provision as a condition precedent to the attachment of risk. Were this to be the case then, whether ALRC 91 had been implemented or not, the policy would never have come on risk and the insurer would escape liability. 10.3Page 160
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the existence of a liability which, in whole or in part, would not have been borne by the insurer if the act had not been done or the omission had not been made or in the non-receipt of an additional premium to which the insurer would have been entitled by reason of the doing of the act or the making of the omission.8