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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Dunlop Haywards (DHL) & Anor v Erinaceous Insurance Services Ltd & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 354 (28 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/354.html Cite as: [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 464, [2009] EWCA Civ 354 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE FIELD
2007 folio 1059
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
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DUNLOP HAYWARDS (DHL) LIMITED (formerly known as Dunlop Heywood Lorenz Limited) ERINACEOUS COMMERCIAL PROPERTY SERVICES LIMITED (formerly known as Dunlop Haywards Limited) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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ERINACEOUS INSURANCE SERVICES LIMITED (formerly known as Hanover Park Commercial Limited) |
Appellant/ Defendant/ Part 20 Claimant |
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- and - |
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LOCKTON COMPANIES INTERNATIONAL LIMITED (formerly known as Alexander Forbes Risk Services UK Limited) |
Part 20 Defendant |
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- and - |
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MSI CORPORATE CAPITAL LIMITED AND OTHERS ("Excess Insurers") |
Intended Part 20 Defendants / |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr David Railton QC and Ms Siobán Healy (instructed by Messrs Kennedys) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : Friday 23rd January 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
The parties
The insurance
The insurance
"Erinaceous Group PLC including all subsidiary, associated, predecessor and acquired companies other than those specifically excluded from this policy."
Endorsement no 1 appeared in the excess slip with a capital to "commercial", thus "Commercial Property Management". There have been submissions about the significance or otherwise of capital letters, but for present purposes I do not consider them to be sufficiently telling. I note in passing that both slips, primary and excess, refer to the insured "Interest" as "Professional Indemnity Insurance in respect of the Insured's Professional Business Practice activities as stated below"; and that such "Professional Business Practice" is given as "Property Management, Managing Agents, Chartered Surveyors and as per proposal form and attachments dated 26th May 2005 and previous proposal forms and attachments". There is a dispute about whether "Commercial Property Management" embraces valuations. I note there is no separate reference to valuation or Valuation in the slips in their definition of Professional Business Practice.
"£10m xs £10m
from Dunlop Heywood Lorenz
as per existing cover
£73,500 MIT 50%".
Thus he adopted Mr Glanfield's quote. He also quoted for £20 million xs £10 million.
"28. With the possible exception of Mr Clemence of D.A.Constable, all the other underwriters who provided initial quotations – Mr Driscoll of Ace, Mr Denton of Württ, and Mr Palmer of Markel – also did so on the basis that the cover was to apply to DHL only. As for Mr Clemence, his recollection is that the cover was to apply only to commercial property management activities but this is out of accord with the basis of all the other quotations and it is highly likely that he would have quoted after Mr Glanfield who set out the breakdown of DHL's fee income on the reverse of the quote sheet and after Mr Ripley had noted that Mitsui's quote was "from Dunlop Heywood Lorenz as per existing cover"."
"23. The quotation obtained from Underwriters for the excess cover was for the commercial property management activities of all of the companies within Erinaceous…[M]y colleague Chris Gadd took the Quote Sheet round the market to obtain quotations for the remainder of the primary layer and for the excess layer. Although there was initially some confusion on the part of Mr Gadd as to whether the excess layer was for Dunlop Heywood Lorenz alone or all of Erinaceous, ultimately he obtained quotations for the commercial property management activities of the whole of the Erinaceous Group."
"Conditions/Endorsements: To follow the primary policy as far as applicable plus:
1) Indemnity provided by this policy will be restricted to the Insured's Commercial Property Management activities."
The last provision (which, as will appear, is the origin of the policy endorsement referred to above) has been called "the limiting condition" and I will adopt that expression. Although the matter is in dispute, it might be said that, contrary to the RRR, the limiting condition was not part of the terms that had been "negotiated" with the underwriters.
"Wording: LPO 392
Clauses: To follow the underlying policy terms and conditions as far as applicable plus:
1) It is understood and agreed that indemnity provided by this policy is limited to liability arising from the Insured's Commercial Property Management activities only."
"Please examine this document carefully and advise us immediately if any of the terms and conditions do not accurately meet your requirements or are incorrect…"
The cover note for the excess layer set out the limiting condition. They were sent to HPC under cover of a letter dated 7 June. The letter referred to the excess cover "which covers the commercial property management activities of the group only".
"42. Mr Wensley of HPC checked the cover notes against the RRR and the slips against the cover notes. The documents were all consistent with each other, Mr Wensley did not raise any query; and at a meeting on 22 June 2005, Mr Hart indicated to Mr Bickell that HPC had been through the cover notes and was satisfied with them.
43. None of the underwriters who provided the initial quotations, put down FON, or scratched the slip can recall being told that DHL had changed its name to Commercial Property Management or understood for any other reason that this was the case."
Other documentation and evidence about the insurance
"Practice of Dunlop Heywood bought by Erinaceous Group so change of bkr to Forbes. Cover continued for the DH activities only…"
The entry gives the insured as "Erinaceous Group" (which is printed) and someone in a manuscript which looks to be other than Mr Ripley's has added "(Dunlop Heywood)". The entry rings "Y" (for "Yes") for "Full Slip", thus confirming, as the dates also do, that this entry was made after Mitsui's signing of the slip.
The structure of the litigation
"The court may order a person to be added as a new party if:-
(a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings, and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue."
"…if it were a requirement that an existing party must be able to bring a claim against the party sought to be joined there would be little if any need for Rule 19.2(2), since the party seeking joinder could always issue a Part 20 claim."
"(a) the wording of the letter agreement; (b) the placing information sent by Mr Hart to Forbes which showed that a substantial amount of DHL's business consisted of valuations; (c) the fact that valuations were covered under the primary layer and there is no reason why an insured exposed to significant valuation claims would want to exclude cover for valuations under an excess layer; (d) the fact that valuations were realistically the only element of the risk likely to generate claims at the excess level of £10 million in excess of £10 million; (e) Mr Hart's evidence that he did not tell Mr Bickell at the meeting on 12 April 2005 to restrict the excess cover to the commercial property management activities of the whole group; (f) the fact that the initial proposal for excess cover was understood by all the quoting underwriters, save possibly for Mr Clemence, to relate to the activities of DHL" (at para 62).
"41. Is there in fact cover for the third party claims under the contract of insurance? In particular:
(a) As a matter of construction:
(i) do the words "Commercial Property Management" in fact refer to the First Claimant?
(ii) Do "Commercial Property Management activities" in fact include commercial property valuations?
(b) Are the Claimants entitled to have the Excess Policy rectified by substituting the words "Dunlop Heywood Lorenz" for "commercial Property Management" in the endorsement? As to this:
(i) Was it the common intention of Forbes and the Excess Policy underwriters that cover under the Excess Policy was to be provided for all the activities of the First Claimant?
(ii) Did this common intention continue until the conclusion of the Excess Policy?
(iii) If so, does the slip or policy document accurately represent the true agreement of the parties at the time of its execution?
(iv) Would the slip or policy document rectified as set out above accurately represent the true agreement of the parties at the time?"
The legal principles of rectification
"First, there must be a common intention in regard to the particular provisions of the agreement in question, together with some outward expression of accord. Secondly, this common intention must continue up to the time of execution of the instrument. Thirdly, there must be clear evidence that the instrument as executed does not accurately represent the true agreement of the parties at the time of its execution. Fourthly, it must be shown that the instrument, if rectified as claimed, would accurately represent the true agreement of the parties at that time…"
"But this case has, in my judgment, one unusual, and for purposes of rectification very important, feature, that the slip and the resulting policy which it is sought to rectify do not purport merely to record in writing an oral agreement previously reached or a common intention previously expressed but express the terms of a contract which was in certain material respects entirely new. It was not and was not intended to be a mere continuation of the "held covered" agreement. I have already drawn attention to certain matters which had never before Mar. 22 been the subject of joint consideration or discussion between brokers and underwriters: the value of the subject matter increased to $71,500; the deletion of cl. 17a of the Institute Yacht Clauses; the sailing area; the cruising range; the $100,000 third party cover. The evidence is that Mr. Bell considered the slip very carefully, correcting an error, supplying an omission and adding the rate, part, although a minor part, of which had not been mentioned before."
"12-002 There is a presumption that a policy which is issued by the insurer and accepted by the assured contains the complete and final contract between the parties. Consequently, the courts' equitable jurisdiction to rectify insurance policies is exercised with restraint inside certain well established limitations, or else it would tend to destroy certainty in insurance business…
35-022 If the policy that emanates from the Policy Signing Office [at Lloyd's] does not accord with the slip, the parties are entitled to rectification of the policy to record the terms agreed on the slip. If the slip itself was defective and failed to record the real agreement between the Lloyd's broker and the underwriter, it also may be rectified if clear evidence of intention is adduced…"
The judge's reasoning
"50…In my judgment, given the radical difference between the terms of the FON contract and the terms contained in the slip, it is plain that the execution of the slip was not intended merely to record the terms of the FON contract but instead it constituted a fresh contract resulting from the acceptance by the Excess Insurers of the terms set out in the slip…[O]nce the slip had been executed a new replacement contract came into being whose terms were those contained in that document. The parties' contractual intention is therefore to be ascertained from the terms of the slip and not from the state of play at the time the FONs were put down by the Excess Insurers.
51. A somewhat similar situation arose in Pindos Shipping…
53…In the instant case, I am prepared to assume that a contract of insurance in respect of all of DHL's activities resulted from FONs being put down by the underwriters. But just as Bingham J held on the facts before him that the slip expressed the terms of a new contract and was not intended to be a mere continuation of any preceding agreement or common intention, so I make the same finding on the facts before me, this finding being one that can be made on the evidence before me without the need for a trial.
54. If the Excess Insurers are joined into these proceedings, the strong likelihood is that they will participate in this part of the case and thereby incur expense and inconvenience, notwithstanding the weakness of the rectification claim against them. In my judgment, so weak is the claim they ought not to be put in that position and I accordingly decline to order that Excess Insurers be joined in as defendants in respect of the rectification claim."
"55. Should the Excess Insurers be made parties in respect of HPC's construction claims? These claims are: (i) the words "Commercial Property Management" in the limiting condition mean DHL, the parties having proceeded on the mistaken basis that DHL had changed its name to Commercial Property Management; and in the alternative (ii) the words "Commercial Property Management activities" include valuations.
56. With very considerable hesitation, I am prepared to assume that each of these claims has a real prospect of success, but, even so, I do not think it desirable or appropriate that the Excess Insurers should be made parties in respect of them when it is uncertain that the holder of the right to make these claims will indeed make them and when, if it does, the claims can be tried speedily and relatively cheaply in separate proceedings."
Discussion and decision
Conclusion
Lord Justice Wilson :
Sir Peter Gibson :