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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lloyds Insurance Company SA, Re [2020] EWHC 1388 (Ch) (12 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1388.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1388 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMPANIES COURT (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF CERTAIN OF THE MEMBERS AT LLOYD'S FOR ANY OR ALL OF THE 1993 TO 2020 (INCLUSIVE) YEARS OF ACCOUNT, REPRESENTED BY THE SOCIETY OF LLOYD'S |
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- and - |
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IN THE MATTER OF LLOYD'S INSURANCE COMPANY SA -and- IN THE MATTER OF PART VII OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000 |
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Tom Weitzman QC for the Prudential Regulation Authority
Charlotte Eborall for the Financial Conduct Authority
Hearing date: 12th May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE TROWER
a. It involves the transfer from Lloyd's members to the Transferee of certain non-life insurance and reinsurance policies allocated to the 1993 to 2020 years of account. The Transferee is authorised as an insurer and reinsurer by the regulators in Belgium, and the Scheme will result in the transferred business being carried on from an establishment in Brussels.
b. The Council of Lloyd's has by resolutions dated 20 September 2018 and 17 September 2019 authorised Lloyd's itself to act as transferor in connection with the transfer.
c. The resolution of the Council of Lloyd's has been delivered to the PRA and the FCA.
a. The Scheme involves the whole Lloyd's market with a wide range of policyholders.
b. The transferring policies have been written over the last 26 years.
c. Lloyd's does not hold or have access to policyholder records and nor do its members. The records are held by a range of third parties, such as managing agents, Lloyd's brokers, coverholders, service companies, retail brokers and third party administrators.
d. The Lloyd's market involves many different participants. There are some 20,000 members, 420 Lloyd's syndicates, 120 managing agents, 570 Lloyd's brokers, 14,000 coverholders and many more retail brokers and third party administrators, although it is right to say that the aggregate numbers actually affected by the Scheme itself may not be quite as many as I have just listed.
e. There are a variety of ways in which business is written in the Lloyd's market, and hence different market participants will have different primary relationships with different policyholders.
f. Generally speaking, Lloyd's does not have regulatory authority over market participants who might be able to assist with the notification exercise. Its regulatory authority is limited to members and managing agents.
24. These difficulties are all highly relevant for the purposes of today's hearing because the terms of section 110(1) of FSMA provide that any person who alleges that he would be adversely affected by the carrying out of the Scheme has a right to be heard at the sanction hearing. To facilitate the exercise of that right, the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Control of Business Transfers) (Requirements on Applicants Regulations) 2001 (SI 2001/3625) (the "2001 Regulations") impose requirements on an applicant to give wide publicity to an application for the sanction of a Part VII transfer scheme. The 2001 Regulations apply to the transfer of Lloyd's business under the Lloyd's Part VII Order.
25. Widespread advertising is prescribed by the 2001 Regulations, as is an obligation to send a notice to every policyholder of both the transferor and the transferee. Notice must also be sent to outwards reinsurers whose contracts are to be transferred. The form of the notices to be advertised and sent has to be approved by the PRA, which, as I have already mentioned, has already happened in this case.
a. Regulation 3(2)(a)(iv): Where inwards reinsurance policies are included in the scheme, advertising in a business newspaper circulating in the EEA State in which each of the policyholders had an establishment at the time the policy was entered into is required.
b. Regulation 3(2)(b): this requires the sending of a notice to every policyholder of the parties (defined by regulation 1(2) as the authorised person concerned and the transferee).
c. Regulation 3(2)(c): this requires the sending of a notice to every outwards reinsurer whose contract is to be transferred.
"I approach this point by reminding myself that this is not a scheme designed to achieve a commercial advantage for Aviva: it is not a scheme that Aviva would have promoted were it not for the uncertainties caused by Brexit. It is also not a scheme under which some policyholders are being prejudiced in order to provide benefits to other policyholders: the potential prejudice to policyholders arises from an external source. Some latitude is therefore required."
a. For open market business, Lloyd's holds information about the category and location of the policyholder and the risk, and detailed premium and claims values, but not the contact details of the policyholder himself. Through a data system called xChanging and Lloyd's Direct Reporting there is a unique market reference or UMR for each policy.
b. For coverholder business, Lloyd's holds information about each binding authority, including risk classes covered, and premium and claims information, but not the policies or the policyholders covered under the binding authority. The information which Lloyd's holds also includes a UMR for each binding authority.
"The conclusion from the above is that the time and effort required to identify and contact each individual Market Participant who may hold policyholder contact data for the Match and Attach process is disproportionate, especially given the fact that, even if data is obtained, there would be a further reduction in usable volume due to the data being incomplete and not current."