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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 >> Greene Wood & McLean v Templeton Insurance Ltd [2008] EWHC 1593 (Comm) (10 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1593.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1593 (Comm), [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 61 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GREENE WOOD & McLEAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TEMPLETON INSURANCE LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Derek Sweeting QC(instructed by Manches LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
The claim in contract
"5. At a meeting in Douglas, Isle of Man, in late June Mr. Edwards [a partner in the Claimant] asked Mr. Brunswick [the managing director of the Defendant] if the Defendant would be interested in providing ATE insurance for the coal mining cases (the miners' claims). Mr. Brunswick said that he had read about the cases and would insure them and he instructed Mr. Maule [the underwriting manager of the Defendant] to arrange the insurance.
6. Acting on the basis of that agreement Mr. Edwards proceeded to prepare documentation to be used for the miners to enter into CFAs with the Claimant.
7. This documentation included a document headed "Mineworkers' Group Action….the GWM Guarantee to Clients". The Claimant will refer to this document for its full terms and effect. In its final form it included the following:
(1) The GWM Guarantee to clients;
(2) No win, no fee, no risk, no cost!;
(3) We, Greene Wood & McLean LLP confirm to our clients that we will handle their claims in relation to the above matter on the basis that …….
2) We have obtained a policy of After The Event Litigation Expense Insurance for our clients underwritten by Templeton Insurance Limited a regulated insurer of Douglas Isle of Man;
3) The policy will cover adverse costs, own disbursements and the insurance premium….Below I set out what the costs implications are – win or lose ……………..
b) Lose….ii) Disbursements – these are recoverable from the insurance policy …iv) Adverse costs – this is recoverable from the insurance policy.
8. The above document was submitted in draft to Mr. Maule who approved it subject to an amendment suggested by him (which was at paragraph 3(a)(iii) of the document). Having approved the documentation, Mr. Maule authorised the Claimant, on behalf of the Defendant, to enter into agreements with the miners whereby they became parties to the policy to be issued by the Defendant ("the Policy"). "
"Applying either or both of the business efficacy test and the officious bystander test, in agreeing with the Claimant that the latter would (a) be authorised to bind its clients to contracts of ATE insurance with the Defendant, and (b) give its clients the GWM Guarantee the Defendant must be taken to have agreed that it would meet valid claims under the Policy. This was an obligation owed to GWM, not merely to the individual insureds."
The claim for a contribution
i) that it is liable in respect of that damage because it is in breach of its guarantee that the miners will not have to bear costs; andii) that the Defendant is also liable in respect of that same damage because it failed or refused to indemnify the miners in respect of their costs liability.
"When any claim for contribution falls to be decided the following questions in my opinion arise:"
(1) What damage has A suffered?
(2) Is B liable to A in respect of that damage?
(3) Is C also liable to A in respect of that damage or some of it?
At the striking-out stage the questions must be recast to reflect the rule that it is arguability and not liability which then falls for decision, but their essential thrust is the same. I do not think it matters greatly whether, in phrasing these questions, one speaks (as the 1978 Act does) of "damage" or of "loss" or "harm", provided it is borne in mind that "damage" does not mean "damages" (as pointed out by Roch LJ in Birse Construction Ltd v Haiste Ltd [1996] 1WLR 675, at p 682) and that B's right to contribution by C depends on the damage, loss or harm for which B is liable to A corresponding (even if in part only) with the damage, loss or harm for which C is liable to A. This seems to me to accord with the underlying equity of the situation: it is obviously fair that C contributes to B a fair share of what both B and C owe in law to A, but obviously unfair that C should contribute to B any share of what B may owe in law to A but C does not."
"But this purposive and enlarged view of the reach of the statute does not assist on the central issue of construction before the House. The critical words are "liable in respect of the same damage." Section 1(1) refers to "damage" and not to "damages": see Birse Construction Ltd v Haiste Ltd [1996] 1 WLR 675, 682 per Roch LJ. It was common ground that the closest synonym of damage is harm. The focus is, however, on the composite expression "the same damage". As my noble and learned friend Lord Bingham of Cornhill has convincingly shown by an historical examination the notion of a common liability, and of sharing that common liability, lies at the root of the principle of contribution: see also Current Law Statutes Annotated (1978), "Background to the Act" at p 47. The legislative technique of limiting the contribution principle under the 1978 Act to the same damage was a considered policy decision. The context does not therefore justify an expansive interpretation of the words "the same damage" so as to mean substantially or materially similar damage. Such solutions could have been adopted but considerations of unfairness to parties who did not in truth cause or contribute to the same damage would have militated against them. Moreover, the adoption of such solutions would have led to uncertainty in the application of the law. That is the context of section 1(1) and the phrase "the same damage". It must be interpreted and applied on a correct evaluation and comparison of claims alleged to qualify for contribution under section 1(1). No glosses, extensive or restrictive, are warranted. The natural and ordinary meaning of "the same damage" is controlling."
Disclosure
The assignment point
The arbitration point
Conclusion