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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> XYZ v Travelers Insurance Company Ltd [2017] EWHC 287 (QB) (24 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/287.html Cite as: [2018] Lloyd’s Rep IR 636, [2017] EWHC 287 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a judge of the High Court
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XYZ |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY LTD |
Respondents |
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Mr Guy Philipps QC and Mr Ben Lynch (instructed by DWF Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 26th and 27th October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE THIRLWALL:
Transform's financial position
The Insurance Policy
"174 That leaves the question whether the right to prorate the insured's loss across the period of exposure applies also to defence costs.
175 The insuring clause provides, immediately after the principal coverage provisions: "The company will in addition…be responsible for all costs and expenses incurred with the consent of the company in defending any such claim for damages." The insurer is liable under this provision for costs and expenses incurred with its consent in defending any "such" claim for damages, ie a claim for damages for disease caused during any period of insurance."
Then, at paragraph 177A he said –
"…Unless there was some severable part of the defence costs that can be specifically related to a period when the insurer was not on risk, the whole of the defence costs had to be incurred to meet that part of the claim which was insured. The fact that it was also required to meet the uninsured remainder of the claim is irrelevant. The most that the insurer can say in this situation is that in funding the defence of a claim so far as it related to an insured period, it incidentally conferred a benefit on those who were potentially liable for the same claim in respect of an uninsured period: ie other insurers and IEG in its capacity as "self-insurer". In New Zealand Forest Products Ltd v New Zealand Insurance Co Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1237, the insured incurred costs in defending litigation in California against a number of parties only one of whom, a director, was insured against the relevant liability. The Privy Council held that the defence costs did not fall to be apportioned between the insured and uninsured defendants. So far as the defence costs were reasonably required to meet the defence of a party whose liability was insured, the insurer was bound to pay them. It did not matter that the expenditure also benefited other parties whose liabilities were not insured. The principle is accepted by the insurers on this appeal, who concede that they are liable to pay the defence costs in full. That concession appears to me to be correct."
The claimants' costs
The jurisdiction
i) The arrangements as between Travelers and Transform were those that pertain in many personal injury or product liability claims where the defendant is insured. The insurer was in the driving seat. Travelers selected the solicitors, they selected counsel.
ii) Given the size of the litigation and the existence of uninsured claims Mr Rouch of Transform was involved in conferences and discussions about the case and had some input into instructions to counsel.
iii) BLM was retained on behalf of both Transform and Travelers.
iv) After a time it was agreed that BLM would also advise Transform in respect of the uninsured claims.
v) The solicitor was at all times concerned to avoid conflict so that BLM would not have to come off the record at the last minute.
vi) Leading counsel was not informed about the insurance arrangements so that his advice would be neutral.
vii) The obvious differences between the interests of a party who is facing over 400 uninsured claims and those of an insurer which faces 197 claims were never confronted or grappled with. It is not easy to see how it was ever in Transform's interests to face such a large number of uninsured claims.
viii) A conflict about the terms of the policy was not identified until April 2014, it was not brought to the attention of the court at the CMC in May. The issue was raised in August with the result that the trial listed for October 2014 was postponed. This is further evidence of the failure to appreciate or act upon conflicts of interest between Transform and Travelers. It appeared to me, at the hearing in September 2014, that there had been no communication between the (then three) teams of lawyers acting for Transform/Travelers.
ix) Long before that, Transform repeatedly asked for advice from BLM about whether it should disclose to the claimants that it had no insurance before April 2007 or after March 2011. This began in 2011 and continued into 2012. The solicitor records in his statement "Transform considered that disclosure of this might deter claimants from pursuing claims against it that would if successful be for Transform's own account". This was a correct assessment of the position.
x) A number of reasons were given to Transform by solicitors and counsel for not disclosing that there was no insurance: that they would be out of line with other defendants (which did not prove to be the case), that it might encourage the claimants to ask for more details. These were important factors in the insured claims but of little, if any relevance to the uninsured cases. In reality Travelers' desire not to reveal the details of the insurance policy inevitably affected the advisers' approach to the uninsured claims. For example, the solicitor said to Mr Rouch " I would be very concerned about taking this course of action [ie disclosing the absence of insurance]. It was problematic to release this information and it would just increase the pressure on us to release the rest of it." The "rest of it" is a reference to disclosure of the terms of the insurance policy. This, or something like it, appears more than once in the papers. Inevitably, as it seems to me, the effect of having a single team of advisers who wanted to avoid conflict meant that Travelers' interests were in play even when the uninsured claims were being considered. At a later stage the solicitor was concerned that disclosure of the details of insurance would set an [unhelpful] precedent. The precedent, if that is what it was, could not be unhelpful to Transform, only Travelers.
xi) In April 2013 Mr Rouch was expressing concern that if an uninsured case was chosen as a lead case "considerable costs could fall to Transform and he needed to reserve for that." In fact, significant claimants' costs would fall on Transform whether or not uninsured cases were chosen as lead cases.
xii) In July 2013 Mr Rouch asked Travelers to allow him to disclose Transform's insurance position. He told Mr Kidman (see paragraph 86) that "Travelers was content to allow Transform to do so… although exactly what would be disclosed was open to debate and that to decide where cover would operate would potentially require further evidence on occasions." Mr Keating says "We agreed that Transform could confirm the years of cover, the basis on which the policy was written and that it covered only claims by claimants who had sustained injury". In the event it is said that the claimants' application for disclosure of the insurance position overtook the parties at this stage and a decision was made to oppose disclosure. I see the benefit to Travelers in doing that. I see none to Transform. It is quite plain that in approaching Mr Keating, Mr Rouch considered that he needed Travelers' permission to disclose any information about the insurance or lack of it. That was the reality.