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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Harris & Ors v The Society of Lloyd's [2008] EWHC 1433 (Comm) (01 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1433.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1433 (Comm), [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 119 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DAVID HARRIS & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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THE SOCIETY OF LLOYD'S |
Defendant |
____________________
Richard Jacobs QC (instructed by Freshfields) for the Defendant
Judgment
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Case No: 2008 FOLIO 182
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
HEATHER MARY ADAMS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SOCIETY OF LLOYD'S |
Defendant |
____________________
Richard Jacobs QC (instructed by Freshfields) for the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice David Steel :
Representation
i) The Claimants in 2007 Folio 1439 are represented by counsel, Mr. Stafford. As might be expected, he has presented their case, in almost all respects in pari materia with Mrs. Adams, with conspicuous thoroughness and clarity.
ii) Mr. Merrett is not legally qualified. In the Commercial Court in particular lay representation is seldom contemplated as permissible: see Section M of the Admiralty and Commercial Court Guide.
iii) Furthermore he is a witness in the case in the sense that extracts from two statements prepared by him and deployed by the Claimants in an attempt to re-open earlier proceedings in the Court of Appeal are relied upon by the Claimants (and in particular Mrs. Adams) in the present hearing.
iv) This feature is of particular significance for the following reason. Despite the acceptance by Mr. Adams on his wife's behalf that her claim stands or falls with the other Claimants, he had in fact sought to pursue a different argument to the effect that RITC (reinsurance to close) as between Lloyd's syndicates constituted a statutory novation by virtue of Section 85 of Insurance Companies Act 1982.
v) This argument is not open to Mrs. Adams. Indeed it is not pleaded. Although I will briefly touch on it in due course, for present purposes the important factor is that it is clear that the submission is a hobby horse of Mr. Merrett's. Indeed it was apparent that Mr. Merrett was anxious to use the opportunity to appear for Mrs. Adams to pursue this argument rather than make submissions in the general interest of Mrs. Adams on the points properly open.
vi) This became all the clearer when Mr. Adams came in due course to make his submissions. It became obvious that he used as his text material prepared wholly or largely by Mr. Merrett and which, in the main, focused on the discrete issue of statutory novation.
Disclosure
i) a note dated 4 October 1991 by Mr. Burling of the Defendant's legal department referred to in paragraph 1 of the opinion;
ii) a note dated 5 April 1993 by Mr. Mallinson, at that time solicitor to the Corporation of Lloyd's, referred to in paragraph 4 of the opinion;
iii) the instructions provided to Mr. Boyd for the purpose of producing the opinion.
i) The documents were not relevant and/or alternatively they were not necessary for the fair disposal of the present application.
ii) The Defendant had not deployed the opinion in the proceedings: it had been deployed by the Claimants and it was thereby that its privilege had been lost.
iii) Thus the documents sought remained privileged and that privilege had not been waived.
i) A CMC was fixed by Tomlinson J in December 2007 to take place on 8 February 2008 at which, amongst other matters, any application for disclosure was to be made;
ii) The documents presently sought were requested in correspondence in January 2008;
iii) The CMC was moved to 22 February. The application notice for disclosure of the documents was duly issued on 13 February, the notice itself identifying that the Claimant wished that the issue be dealt with at the CMC;
iv) The Defendant's evidence in response to the application was served on 19 February;
v) In the run up to the CMC hearing there was some debate as to whether there was sufficient time to deal with the application. Whilst the Defendant's position was that there would be time, the Claimants ironically took the opposite view.
vi) The transcript of the hearing before Andrew Smith J demonstrates clearly the willingness of the judge to deal with the application which was opened at some length. In the event the Claimants refused to pursue it and the judge struck the application out on technical grounds but left it open to the Claimants to make a fresh application.
Relevance
i) It is said that Mr. Burling's note would establish Lloyd's' view of the nature and effect of RITC and this in turn would illustrate when Lloyd's became aware that the representation they had made to prospective names was untrue. But there appeared to be no issue about what Lloyd's' view of the nature and effect of RITC was. It was regarded as a contract of reinsurance. Indeed it is the Claimants' case that that was Lloyd's view because the complaint is that they sought to deceive the Names by suggesting that it had some other nature and effect. It is clear from the opinion that Mr Burling expressed the view in the note that it was a form of reinsurance. Thus how it is relevant to any issue remains at best wholly obscure.
ii) It is said that Mr. Mallinson's note would indicate what information was provided to names at the Rota Interviews. But Mr. Mallinson's note only purports to refer to the relevant documents all of which are available. The note can add nothing to Mr. Boyd's comment that some of the documents were "misleading". Accordingly the note is not relevant let alone necessary.
iii) As regards the instructions, it is said that they would in turn encompass the matters identified in (a) and (b). It follows that they are equally irrelevant.
Privilege
The present application
The main issues
i) The names had always assumed and the court had accepted that the impact of RITC was to extinguish any further liability on the part of the members of the closing syndicate.
ii) Lloyd's were however wrongly now asserting that RITC was simply a form of reinsurance and not a complete discharge in the sense of a novation.
iii) This was not the case. But if it was the case, then it followed that the Court had been misled in its understanding that the effect of RITC was to bring about a legal transfer of all outstanding liabilities.
"62. The names are simply seeking to re-open the appeal in order to put forward an argument that was always available to them but which no one thought, or wished, to pursue. It does not depend on new evidence. At best all that has happened is that Mr. Merrett, and through him the names, has become alive to a view of RITC which had not previously occurred to him. And it is very doubtful whether the view of RITC which Mr. Merrett says is now being put forward for the first time is of any significance in relation to Lloyd's understanding in the early 1980s of the effectiveness of the audit procedures. If it were, we are confident that the argument would have been pursued vigorously. These disputes and the way in which they arise are miles away form the proper ambit of Taylor v Lawrence."
i) because as regards the cause of action:
a) there is no real prospect of establishing a clearly identified and false representation of fact;
b) there is no real prospect of establishing conscious knowledge of the falsity; and
c) there is no real prospect of establishing reliance.
ii) because there is no real prospect of overcoming the limitation defence.
Statutory novation
i) the transfer is not one where both the transferor and the transferee are members of Lloyd's;
ii) the Committee of Lloyd's have by resolution authorised a person to act in connection with the transfer;
iii) a copy of the resolution has been given to the Secretary of State.
None of these conditions are satisfied in the present case and, accordingly, any suggestion of statutory novation is misconceived.
Mr Harris' claim
i) The brochure furnished to him by Lloyd's in 1983 contained representations as regards the process of RITC to the effect that all liabilities of a closed year of account passed to the names of the succeeding open year. Such representations were repeated and confirmed in the Verification form furnished to Mr. Harris in the run-up to his interview by the Rota Committee.
ii) As intended, Mr. Harris relied on the representation in pursuing his application for membership.
iii) Mr. Harris continued to rely upon the representations for each year of his participation, his last year being 1991, during which period he sustained substantial losses.
iv) The representations in the brochure and the verification form were untrue. As confirmed by legal advice to Lloyd's and explained in documentation distributed to the names, the names into whose years the risks were originally written remained liable despite RITC.
v) Further the representations were made by Lloyd's fraudulently either because Lloyd's had no honest belief in their truth or because Lloyd's made them recklessly, careless whether they were true or false.
vi) The first time that Mr. Harris knew or could with reasonable diligence have discovered that he had any cause of action in this regard was August 2007 when the content of various statements made by Mr Merrett together with various exhibits were closely examined. Thus, by virtue of s.32 of the Limitation Act 1980 the claim is not time barred.
The brochure
"…This brochure is intended to inform the recipient and his advisers of many general facts concerning the organisation and operation of Lloyd's and is not intended to be an offer of Membership of Lloyd's nor the solicitation of an application for Membership of Lloyd's. This brochure should be read in conjunction with other materials provided to the recipient in the process of his application for Membership of Lloyd's.
"1.1 Unlimited liability
A Member of Lloyd's is severally liable for a specific share of risk on every policy underwritten by him through the syndicate of which he is a member…..However in the event that the chain of security described at 8.1 – 8.4 is insufficient to pay all the claims made against the Member, he will be assessed to the entire amount of his personal fortune to pay any valid claims against him.
"1.3 Non-transferability of Membership
…..The position with regard to resignation from a syndicate will be as laid down in the agreement between the Member and his Underwriting Agent. The Member may join one or more syndicates at the beginning of any year. In the event of a Member's death or resignation from Lloyd's he remains liable (or in the case of his death, his estate remains liable) on all insurance policies underwritten by him, during the time of his Membership, through syndicates in which he was a member. It may be that the terms of his underwriting agreement provide for his participation in the policies underwritten by his syndicates during the whole of the year in which his resignation or death occurs. His deposit will be retained by the Committee of Lloyd's in trust until such time as the Committee is satisfied that all underwriting liabilities have been paid or provided for in a manner approved by it. The deposit will be returned no sooner than the time the Member's last year of account (for description of year of account see "Lloyd's System of Accounting" at 10) is closed by reinsurance: this will normally be at least two years after the effective date of his resignation or the end of the year of his death, as the case may be."
8. DESCRIPTION OF SECURITY
"…
8.5 Each member is obliged each year to contribute by means of a levy on premium income to a Central fund and contributions are collected from the syndicates concerned. This fund is held and administered under a Trust Deed by the Corporation and the Committee of Lloyd's and the purpose of the Fund is to meet underwriting liabilities of any Member in the event that his security and personal assets are insufficient to meet his underwriting commitments. The fund is for the protection of the holders of Lloyd's policies, not the member, who is still responsible for his liabilities to the full extent of his private wealth."
"LLOYD'S SYSTEM OF ACCOUNTING
10.4 ……Once this liability has been estimated on the account at the end of its third calendar year, it must be reinsured by a valid policy of reinsurance before the account can be closed…."
"CLOSING REINSURANCE
11. When the estimated outstanding liability on a year of account is determined at the end of the third year pursuant to the provisions of the Lloyd's audit, a syndicate will usually close the account by reinsuring such liability into a later year of the syndicate. This is accomplished by the members of the old syndicate paying a reinsurance premium to the new syndicate. The new syndicate then assumes any future liability which may be incurred as a result of claims on the policies written by the old syndicate. Being an estimate of future liability, the reinsurance premium may or may not eventually be proven accurate. In certain cases it has been inadequate and the new syndicate has suffered losses in excess of the reinsurance premium received; in such cases Members in the new syndicate would suffer a loss on the reinsurance to close.
……….
"GLOSSARY OF TERMS
"Closed years
An underwriting account of a syndicate which has been debited with a reinsurance premium to close the account .. is known as a 'closed' account….
"Reinsurance to Close
The method by which the outstanding liability on the Underwriting Account of a Lloyd's Syndicate for any one year of Account is closed (usually, but not necessarily, at the end of its third year) by reinsuring such liability into the Account of a later Underwriting Year.
A reinsurance premium is charged to the Underwriting Account of the closing year and credited to that of the reinsuring year, which then adds to its liabilities a sum equal to the reinsurance premium so received and pays all claims which would otherwise be the liability of the Underwriting Year reinsured."
"LLOYD'S AUDIT
Under the Lloyd's system of accounting the accounts for the business underwritten in each year are normally kept open for three years. When the underwriting account is closed at the end of the third year, a reserve is made in respect of outstanding liabilities and this amount, designated a 'reinsurance' to close the account, is carried to the credit of a later underwriting account."
"Reinsurance to close: the method by which the outstanding liability of a year of account is closed by reinsuring such liability to a later year of account in consideration of the payment of a premium equal to the estimated value of known and unknown claims."
Rota Committee
"1. Confirm that the candidate understands that –
a) His liability is unlimited and that everything he owns is at risk to support this liability also that on his death this liability passes to his estate…
3. Confirm –
…
c) Candidate has seen at least seven closed years figures in the form recommended by the committee for the syndicates he proposes joining, together with an indication of the results of the open years…"
Verification form
"(2) I understand the following matters which have been explained to me by my underwriting agent:
a) The underwriting of insurance is a high risk business and profits are not guaranteed.
b) As an underwriting member of Lloyd's my liability is unlimited and in the event of my death my estate will inherit my unlimited liability in respect of business underwritten by me during my membership.
c) I can only resign in accordance with the rules explained to me by my underwriting agent and if I resign I shall continue to remain liable until my last underwriting year has been closed by reinsurance.
d) Upon my resignation or death my deposit … will not be released until my last year of account has been closed by reinsurance. This will be at least two years after my resignation or death unless a suitable reinsurance policy exists.
e) I will inherit liability for claims arising out of losses which may have occurred prior to my becoming an underwriting member of Lloyd's."
The alleged misrepresentation
"A Name has been regarded by the DTI as ceasing to conduct business when all his open years have been closed by RITC. Because RITC is treated as ending a Name's involvement in a syndicate for regulatory and tax purposes, it is effectively the mechanism whereby a name is released from his membership of Lloyd's": per Cresswell J at para 14.7.
Origin of allegation
"Although technically an assured could look to the members on old years that have since been reinsured in the event that the reinsurers default in paying the assured, it would be, presumably, a matter of policy for Lloyd's to state that the onus lies only on the members of the latest reinsuring syndicate to pay the assured and, if they do not, then Lloyd's itself (through its Central Fund or otherwise) would see to it that the assured is paid. It would not be necessary to legislate for this."
Against that background, Mr. Phillips is recorded as saying, in agreement with his instructions from Lloyd's legal department, that, while "legally" the old names remain on risk, "in practice there is a novation".
"8. In concluding the multiplicity of contracts which make up a reinsurance to close, the Managing Agent acts for all parties and owes duties to each. Contractually between the Names the effect of the reinsurance to close is to pass, in consideration of a premium, the risk of liabilities of the closed year. The Names of the succeeding year undertake to pay all claims outstanding against the year that is being closed and become entitled to receive all insurance recoveries etc. that would otherwise be payable to the closing year. The Names of the succeeding year are paid a premium for undertaking such risks. Strictly the old Names probably remain liable to the assured under their original contracts of insurance. In practice such liabilities are discharged directly by the new Names. In practice a broker acting for the assured makes a claim against "the Syndicate" without reference to the year of the Syndicate when the risk was written or to the Names who were then on that Syndicate. It could be argued that this practice is such an integral part of the way business is done at Lloyd's that all who insure at Lloyd's accede to it, so that the reinsurance to close is not merely a multiplicity of bilateral reinsurance contracts but a multiplicity of novations. This sophistry in no way affects the principles of taxation with which we are concerned; [emphasis added]."
"The member remains legally liable for his share of the business until the account is run off to extinction. However, the difference has probably not been material until now. The RITC has in practice proved effective from a practical point of view to close the account so far as Lloyd's, the Inland Revenue and the DTI are concerned because the RITC has had a Lloyd's syndicate and a Lloyd's Central Fund as security, and the security has never failed."
Abuse of process
"The underlying public interest is … that there should be finality in litigation and that a party should not be twice vexed in the same matter. This public interest is reinforced by the current emphasis on efficiency and economy in the conduct of litigation, in the interests of the parties and the public as a whole. The bringing of a claim or the raising of a defence in later proceedings may, without more, amount to abuse if the court is satisfied (the onus being on the party alleging abuse) that the claim or defence should have been raised in the earlier proceedings if it was to be raised at all. I would not accept that it is necessary, before abuse may be found, to identify any additional element such as a collateral attack on a previous decision or some dishonesty, but where those elements are present the later proceedings will be much more obviously abusive, and there will rarely be a finding of abuse unless the later proceeding involves what the court regards as unjust harassment of a party. It is, however, wrong to hold that because a matter could have been raised in earlier proceedings it should have been, so as to render the raising of it in later proceedings necessarily abusive. That is to adopt too dogmatic an approach to what should in my opinion be a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by seeking to raise before it the issue which could have been raised before. As one cannot comprehensively list all possible forms of abuse, so one cannot formulate any hard and fast rule to determine whether, on given facts, abuse is to be found or not…. Properly applied, and whatever the legitimacy of its descent, the rule has in my view a valuable part to play in protecting the interests of justice."
"Damages for fraudulent and/or negligent misstatement and/or misrepresentation arising out of or made prior his or her admission as a name in particular statements made in the Brochure for applicants for underwriting membership for the year of joining between the years 1977 and 1995."
Despite the open ended nature of this category, the threshold fraud point was narrowed down in the event by the names to an allegation of misrepresentation in the brochures and other publications of Lloyd's with respect to asbestos claims. Nonetheless the names had had every opportunity to put forward any different formulation thought to be arguable.
"Any individuals being present or former members of Lloyd's, who wish to reserve the right to advance allegations that they were fraudulently induced to become or remain underwriting members of the Lloyd's market by reason of Lloyd's failure to disclose the nature and extent of the market's liability for asbestos-related claims, must provide written notice to Lloyd's solicitors, Freshfields, at 65 Fleet Street, London EC4Y 1HS (ref RDP/GN, fax number 832 7001) by no later than
a. 3 December 1999, in the case of an individual ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom and Europe,
b. 10 December 1999, in the case of other individuals,
confirming that they wish to become parties to the litigation. Failing timely service of such a notice, these individuals will thereafter be precluded from advancing such allegations without leave of the Commercial Court. An individual who provides written notice by the specified date will be deemed to have become a party to the proceedings on date of receipt of such notice, and will be bound by the Court's determination of the Threshold Fraud Issue ordered to be tried as a preliminary issue herein."
"500. At a case management conference on 29 October 1999 Cresswell J, who was of course in charge of the Lloyd's litigation, decided that any names who wished to reserve the right to advance a case that they had been induced to become or remain members of Lloyd's by reason of Lloyd's failure to disclose the nature and extent of the market's liability for asbestos-related claims must give notice that they intended to become parties to the litigation. He made an order to that effect. Such an order was plainly appropriate since it would be unthinkable for either names or indeed Lloyd's to be able to use valuable court resources twice (or many times) in order to have the same issues determined (emphasis added)."
"4. On 1st November 1999, Cresswell J made a further order for directions. In this order, as in others, additional Names were identified as counterclaiming Names and in each case, where the Name had no existing proceedings, a date was specified as the deemed date of commencement for Limitation Act 1980 purposes. He ordered that any Names who wished to advance allegations of fraudulent inducement to become or remain an Underwriting member of Lloyd's by reason of Lloyd's failure to disclose the nature and extent of the market's liability for asbestos related claims had to provide written notice by a specified date, failing which they would thereafter be precluded from advancing such allegations without the permission of the Court. As a result of this order (as appears from the statement sent on the Court's instructions to Names who were in dispute with Lloyd's) the Court hoped to ensure that all fraud arguments would be enshrined in the Threshold Fraud Trial and would be determined once and for all, between Lloyd's and all non-accepting Names, however such fraud claims were framed, whether by reference to misrepresentation or non-disclosure of information (emphasis added)."
The Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from Cooke J ([2003] EWCA Civ 1887) without needing to touch on these issues.
"83…the applicants have had ample opportunity in the past to make the allegations that they now seek to advance and have not previously done so. They seek permission to make them more than eight years after R&R. No proper reason has been given for the delay in pursuing these claims. If names thought that they would or might advance a claim of misfeasance in public office involving allegations of this kind (or indeed at all),it should have been mentioned at the case management conference before the trial of the Threshold Fraud Point.."
"63 … I have no doubt that … the attempt to introduce Misfeasance in Public Office into the case at this stage is an abuse of process. …as early as 1997 leading counsel for the names … indicated that the pleading of misfeasance in Public Office was under consideration. That step was not taken even when…it was made clear that the structure of the enormously expensive TFP proceedings had been set up in order to deal at one time with all of the allegations of fraud sought to be brought against Lloyd's. It is plain abuse to come back to court now, after having gone unsuccessfully through the whole of the TFP trial and appeal, with a new claim that it was decided ten years ago not to plead."
"1.5 Lloyd's suggestion that Names on historic years of account retain a residual liability to policyholders, and that it is those names in that role who face policyholders claims and who are legally dependent on a successful claim against each name participating in the RITC of that underwriting year, is a change in position which has never been notified by Lloyd's to the Names whom Lloyd's now says have this ongoing liability."
"60. This part of the names' case depends on the following propositions: (a) that when hearing the appeal the court understood that the effect of RITC was to bring about a legal transfer of outstanding liabilities from the Names on the closing year to the Names on the next open year; (b) that that was an important factor in its finding that Lloyd's thought that the audit system was capable of producing reliable information about outstanding liabilities and solvency; (c) that if Lloyd's is right in saying that RITC operates merely as a reinsurance, the court was misled; (d) if the court had realised that RITC operates merely as reinsurance, its finding about Lloyd's perception of its audit system would have been different and fraud would have been established.
61. This argument fails at the first stage. In § 373 of its judgment the court adopted the description given by Mr. Outhwaite in his statement in Stockwell v RHM Outhwaite (Underwriting Agencies) Ltd of the way in which reserves were set. In the light of that evidence there is no basis for saying that the court was under the impression that RITC operated as a novation of names' liabilities to the original policyholders. If that is right, it follows that when reaching the conclusion that Lloyd's thought that its audit procedures were capable of producing reliable information for the purposes of reserving and solvency the court was not influenced by an understanding that RITC involved a transfer of legal liabilities, whether that be the correct view or not": per Buxton LJ.
As already noted the court was of the view that the names were simply seeking to put forward an argument that was always available to them but which "no one thought, or wished, to pursue".
i) The court has been at pains to structure the Lloyd's litigation in an efficient way.
ii) The claimants were all parties to the Jaffray action.
iii) This was decided at first instance by the judge then nominated by the Commercial Court to be in charge of the Lloyd's litigation.
iv) The action was designed to deal with the fraud defence raised by the names in Lloyd's v Leighs.
v) The action was constructed so as to furnish an opportunity for any name to pursue a claim based on some form of fraudulent representation by Lloyd's which had allegedly induced him or her to become a name.
vi) The documents primarily relied upon in the present proceedings as containing the fraudulent misrepresentation were at the forefront of the Jaffray litigation.
vii) It is an abuse of process to allow the marshalled proceedings in respect of fraud to be undermined by a later action, based on the same cause of action and indeed the same documents.
Deceit
"252. At the basis of any claim in deceit is the representation in question. Its falsity, and the honesty of the representor, cannot begin to be considered until the representation in question has been identified. In the case of a written document, the representation can usually be pinpointed (unless questions of implication arise), but of course context remains everything. In the case of an oral representation, the identification may be a more difficult process, involving disputed testimony, but again context remains everything….
253. It is sometimes said that the necessary representation must be unequivocal. That is too broad a statement to be accurate. Because dishonesty is the essence of deceit it is possible to be fraudulent even by means of an ambiguous statement, but in such a case it is essential that the representor should have intended the statement to be understood in the sense in which it is understood by the claimant (and of course a sense in which it is untrue) or should have deliberately used the ambiguity for the purpose of deceiving him and succeeded in doing so….
254. It remains true, however, that in any case of fraud the dishonest representation must be clearly identified.
255. It is also standard law that to found an action in deceit the representation relied on must be one of fact. A statement of opinion will not suffice unless the deceit is in the fact that the opinion was not, or not honestly, held or in some further implicit dishonest misrepresentation of fact to be derived from the statement of opinion; and neither will a misstatement of law suffice save on the same ground that it involves implicitly a misstatement of fact, viz that the representor did not in fact entertain the opinion of law which he expressed….
256. As for the element of dishonesty, the leading cases are replete with statements of its vital importance and of warnings against watering down this ingredient into something akin to negligence, however gross. The standard direction is still that of Lord Herschell in Derry v. Peek (1889) 14 App Cas 337 at 374:
"First, in order to sustain an action in deceit, there must be proof of fraud and nothing short of that will suffice. Secondly, fraud is proved when it is shown that a false representation has been made (1) knowingly, (2) without belief in its truth, or (3) recklessly, careless whether it be true or false."
257. In effect, recklessness is a species of dishonest knowledge, for in both cases there is an absence of belief in truth. It is for that reason that there is "proof of fraud" in the cases of both knowledge and recklessness….
258. And in Armstong v. Strain [1951] 1 TLR 856 at 871 Devlin J, after a full citation of passages in earlier authorities which stress the need for dishonesty (also called actual fraud, mens rea, or moral delinquency), said this about the necessary knowledge:
"A man may be said to know a fact when once he has been told it and pigeon-holed it somewhere in his brain where it is more or less accessible in case of need. In another sense of the word a man knows a fact only when he is fully conscious of it. For an action of deceit there must be knowledge in the narrower sense; and conscious knowledge of falsity must always amount to wickedness and dishonesty. When Judges say, therefore, that wickedness and dishonesty must be present, they are not requiring a new ingredient for the tort of deceit so much as describing the sort of knowledge which is necessary.""
a. The Defendant must have made a representation which can be clearly identified.
b. It must be a representation of fact.
c. The representation must be false.
d. The representor must have intended the statement to be understood in the sense that it was so understood.
e. It must have been made dishonestly in the sense that the representor had no real belief in the truth of what he stated: this involves conscious knowledge of the falsity of the statement.
f. The statement must have been intended to be relied upon.
g. It must have in fact been relied upon.
Claimants' case
i) RITC was a form of reinsurance and understood as such throughout
ii) RITC was a form of novation and understood as such throughout
iii) RITC was formerly understood as a novation and later thought to constitute reinsurance.
i) The names "take no formal position" on the effect of RITC: it is uncertain in its nature and effect and Lloyd's dishonestly failed to correct any potential for misunderstanding that arose from the brochure.
ii) It is a form of novation: Lloyd's dishonestly failed to disclose that there was an alternative view.
iii) Lloyd's had originally thought it to be a form of novation but fraudulently failed to tell the names that they had changed their view.
iv) Lloyd's had originally thought it was a form of novation but dishonestly failed to tell the names that it had received advice from counsel that it was a form of reinsurance.
v) Lloyd's correctly appreciated that it was a form of reinsurance but dishonestly described it as a form of novation.
vi) Lloyd's fraudulently failed to amend the verification form in the light of Mr Boyd's advice but fraudulently produced a Bye-Law to different effect to that advice.
Clearly identified representation of fact
"The representations by Lloyd's
10. In the circumstances of his membership application as described above, the statements made by Lloyd's to Mr. Harris in the brochure and the Verification Form, and the lack of any qualification to those statements by the members of the Rota Committee, constituted representations to him by Lloyd's
(1) that if he became a Name he would continue to have liabilities to policyholders until the last underwriting year of account for all syndicates of which he had been a member had been closed by RITC; and
(2) that the effect of RITC was to close the outstanding liability for a year of account on a particular syndicate; and
(3) that the syndicate of the reinsuring year which had accepted the RITC would assume all future liabilities of the reinsured account; and
(4) that a Name's liability to policyholders ceased on payment of RITC because the liability had been transferred to the syndicate accepting the RITC.
The first three representations were express (from the Verification Form (1) and from the brochure (2) and (3)). The fourth was implied from the first three. Mr Harris understood these representations as statements of fact as to the effect of the law or alternatively, if he understood them only as statements of fact he also understood that they implied that they were correct in law."
False
Knowledge of falsity
Reliance
Limitation
"32 Postponement of limitation period in case of fraud, concealment or mistake
(1) Subject to [subsections (3) and (4A)] below, where in the case of any action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by this Act, either—
(a) the action is based upon the fraud of the defendant; or
(b) any fact relevant to the plaintiff's right of action has been deliberately concealed from him by the defendant; or
(c) the action is for relief from the consequences of a mistake;
the period of limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff has discovered the fraud, concealment or mistake (as the case may be) or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it.
References in this subsection to the defendant include references to the defendant's agent and to any person through whom the defendant claims and his agent.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) above, deliberate commission of a breach of duty in circumstances in which it is unlikely to be discovered for some time amounts to deliberate concealment of the facts involved in that breach of duty."
"In my judgment this reasoning is misconceived. The question is not whether the plaintiffs should have discovered the fraud sooner; but whether they could with reasonable diligence have done so. The burden of proof is on them. They must establish that they could not have discovered the fraud without exceptional measures which they could not reasonably have been expected to take. In this context the length of the applicable period of limitation is irrelevant. In the course of argument May LJ observed that reasonable diligence must be measured against some standard, but that the six-year limitation period did not provide the relevant standard. He suggested that the test was how a person carrying on a business of the relevant kind would act if he had adequate but not unlimited staff and resources and were motivated by a reasonable but not excessive sense of urgency. I respectfully agree": per Millett LJ at p.418.
"reinsurance to close" means an agreement under which underwriting members ('the reinsured members') who are members of the syndicate for a year of account ('the closed year') agree with underwriting members who comprise that or another syndicate for a later year of account ('the reinsuring members') that the reinsuring members will indemnify the reinsured members against all known and unknown liabilities of the reinsured members arising out of insurance business underwritten through that syndicate and allocated to the closed year, in consideration of:-
(i) a premium; and
(ii) the assignment of the reinsuring members of all the rights of the reinsured member arising out of or in connection with that insurance business (including without limitation the right to receive all future premiums, recoveries and other monies receivable in connection with that insurance business).
"The creation of the 'ring fence' is intended to shield the providers of capital from the impact of old year liabilities. At the same time Names who underwrote the old years must be given the greatest possible security against their outstanding liabilities. In the past the reinsurance to close had proved effective to bring an end to the involvement of Names on closed years. Legally the Names on closed years remained in theory liable for the liabilities attaching to those years: in practice the fact that reinsurance to close was effected with the security of the same or another Lloyd's syndicate as reinsurer meant that closure was for all practical purposes final. An essential feature of the 'ring fence' is that the reinsurance in years 1985 and prior by NewCo will be liabilities of NewCo alone and cannot be allowed to engage the liability of syndicates in future years. Proper capitalisation of NewCo on the basis of appropriate and equitable reserving standards for all the accounts to be reinsured is therefore an indispensable part of the two-phase restructuring approach in order to achieve the same practical finality for the 1985 and prior years of account as was previously achieved by reinsurances to close into Lloyd's syndicates. "
"One major caveat is necessary in respect of all the options outlined in the later paragraphs of this section. It is important to recognise that it is not legally possible to transfer liability under an insurance policy from the original underwriter (in this case, individual Names) without the consent of the policy's beneficiary. Hence, when this report describes means to close years or release Names, these options are, in fact or in practice, the reinsurance of liability, not its permanent and irrevocable transfer. Should the reinsurer fail, for any reason, to meet its obligations under a policy, liability legally reverts to the Name."
"Therefore when the accounts for a given year are closed it is necessary to make provision for the outstanding liabilities and credits. This is done by assessing a fair figure to represent the assessed outstanding net liability. The mechanism by which these liabilities are transferred is called a "reinsurance to close" and the sum being paid as a consideration for such transfer is called the "premium to close". The transfer that takes place covers the whole of the underwriting account including the benefit of the reinsurances and reinsurance treaties held by the year to be closed. It is a requirement of Lloyd's that the reinsurance to close should be into another Lloyd's syndicate and that the management of the account should remain with a member of Lloyd's. The purpose is to retain both the solvency requirements and the discipline of the Lloyd's market": per Hobhouse LJ.
"reinsurance not novation: the scheme involves the new vehicle reinsuring liabilities under the policies written by the individual. The liabilities under these policies remain those of the individual and if the new vehicle is unable to honour the reinsurance the liability will revert to the individual member."
"It is considered that in the event of a default by a name that cannot pay, a policyholder is likely to experience significant difficulties in taking direct action. (This is also true in the event of the failure of Equitas.) Before the policyholder can initiate action against a Name, he would have to establish that the claim had not already been resolved by the run-off agent and that the Name had defaulted. This should not occur for many years. In the event of seeking to take action against the Names, policyholders first have to locate the Names. The Names in question are those on the original policies, the whereabouts of around a third of whom are unknown to Lloyd's. Of the remainder the majority on old policies are deceased and their estates are wound up. Policyholders seeking to take action will have to locate the original Names or the Executors of original estates and persuade them to make a claim on reinsurance -to-close policies. Even very substantial claims in fact represent very small sums per Name. By the time these sums have been reinsured by 500 people or more, generally speaking the sum is only a couple of dollars per person. By the third year the sum is pence per person. The costs for pursuing these claims are hundreds of pounds per person per year; costs of collection are likely to outweigh potential returns."
""True finality" in the sense of limiting or "capping" liabilities to policyholders cannot be achieved for Names. The "finality" offered by R & R is not "true" or "absolute" finality, but is similar to that offered by the traditional RITC in that it depends on the continuing ability of the reinsurer (in this case, Equitas) to meet its obligations under the reinsurance contract. R & R will, however, enable Names to leave Lloyd's. Lloyd's are trying to make the price of that "finality" more affordable by redistributing to some extent the impact of losses across the society as a whole and assembling a substantial fund from various sources to reduce the overall cost to Names. "
"41. In legal terms the essence of what is proposed is the same as the traditional RITC contract which for many years has been the mechanism through which Names have been able to leave Lloyd's when they wish. The traditional RITC contract has been treated by all concerned, Names, Lloyd's and the DTI, as providing finality even though, in reality, that depends upon the reinsuring syndicate continuing to comply with its obligations under the RITC contract, in particular to pay claims: the Name is allowed to resign from Lloyd's, is no longer required to maintain reserves to back his underwriting liabilities (even though, in law, he still has them) and conducts his affairs on the basis that he is not only solvent but no longer has any of the contingent liabilities incurred while carrying on insurance business. He may, for example, be able to give his assets away and, if he dies, his executors may be able to wind up his estate without those liabilities being taken into account. The same result is intended to be achieved by the proposed reinsurance into Equitas."
"The combination of the settlement offer and the reinsurance into Equitas is designed to provide Names with affordable 'finality': that is, a final reckoning in respect of 1992 and prior business. Although it is not within the power of Lloyd's to grant Names an absolute release from their liabilities to policyholders, Names who wish to resign from the Society will be able to do so (provided they do not have outstanding Lloyd's liabilities). Full acceptance of the settlement offer would also end widespread litigation brought by the Names and allow the Lloyd's market trade forward with increased confidence."
"A member may resign from the Society at any time by giving written notice of resignation. Under paragraph 40 of the Membership Byelaw (No. 17 of 1993), notice of resignation ordinarily takes effect (that is, the member ceases to be a member) at the end of the year following the year in which the member's remaining open years of account have been closed by reinsurance to close with another Lloyd's syndicate or Equitas. The DTI has accepted that the reinsurance into Equitas can be treated as a reinsurance to close and that, having paid their finality bills, Names with no other outstanding Lloyd's liabilities may resign."
"It cannot even be said that the names have by means of the scheme somehow ceased to be severally liable to their assureds. On the contrary, they remain severally liable on every risk written on their behalf, a liability which could theoretically be enforced if Equitas were ever to go into liquidation before concluding the run-off……The reinsurance of the run-off by Equitas has simply been on market-wide, uniform terms which have involved the names transferring their assets and paying premium to a reinsurance company in exchange for (i) cover and (ii) claims handling."
"1. On what basis does Lloyd's believe that any liability is vested in the original names on policies written before 1992 and now reinsured by Equitas? Does it accept that all liability to original policyholders has been transferred by the RITC chain to the names on the open years that were eventually closed into Equitas? If not, in what circumstances could the original subscribing names have a continuing liability with and without the NIC deal?"
"1. as you are aware the names (or the former Names) originally subscribing policies subsequently reinsured by Equitas Reinsurance Limited remain liable on those policies … but are reinsured in respect of those liabilities by their reinsurers to close. This was made clear in the Settlement Offer Document and other materials published to names in 1996…. "
Breach of fiduciary duty
"Further, in the context of its relationship with Mr. Harris as a prospective Name and subsequently as an existing Name, Lloyd's owed to Mr. Harris a fiduciary duty in circumstances where it undertook to explain to him during the membership application process and at the Rota Committee interview the nature and implications of the unlimited liability that he would have as an underwriting Name. The duty was to disclose the principal features of unlimited liability, and one of those features was that unlimited liability was of unlimited duration. If Lloyd's was aware or became aware from professional advice, whether from its Legal Department if from Leading Counsel, that Names remained liable or might remain liable to a policyholder indefinitely, then Lloyd's had a duty to inform Mr Harris of that advice. It failed to do so at any time and accordingly was in breach of that duty. For the avoidance of doubt, Mr Harris will contend that the exclusion from immunity conferred on Lloyd's under the Lloyd's Act 1982 does not extend to breach of fiduciary duty."
"Mr. Harris's claim is for dishonest breach of fiduciary duty and, because fraud is involved, is covered by s.32(1)(a) of the Limitation Act 1980 and the construction of that subsection in Barnstaple Boat Co v Jones. Alternatively, if fraud is not made out, the claim is for breach of fiduciary duty in circumstances where Lloyd's deliberately concealed from Mr Harris and the Claimants facts relevant to their right of action. If so, then s. 32(1)(b) applies, and in that event too, the claim is not time-barred."
"14….the Society shall not be liable for damages whether for negligence or other tort, breach of duty or otherwise…"
In my judgment, giving this section its natural meaning, the more so having regard to the "sweeping-up" provision, a claim for breach of fiduciary duty comes within the words "breach of duty or otherwise": see Ashmore v Lloyd's [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 622 at p.634.
Conclusion