The Utmost Good Faith Flashcards
What does it mean when we say that insurance is a contract “uberrimae fidei”?
Insurance is a contract “uberrimae fidei” or involving the utmost good faith [Life Association of Scotland v Foster (1873) per Lord President Inglis at 359. The application of this principle to consumer insurance contracts is now restricted by virtue of s 2(4) of Consumer Insurance (Disclosure Representations Act 2012).].
What is a consumer insurance contract?
A consumer insurance contract is an insurance contract entered into between an individual who enters into the contract wholly or mainly for purposes unrelated to the individual’s trade, business or profession (i.e. the consumer insured) and a person who carries on the business of insurance and who becomes a party to the contract by way of that business (i.e. the insurer): section 1.
Marine Insurance Act 1906 s 17:
“a contract of Marine Insurance is a contract based upon the utmost good faith, and, if the utmost good faith be not observed by either party, the contract may be avoided by the other party.”
What are the three primary components of the duty of good faith?
These are primarily relevant prior to the insurance contract being concluded:
1) The duty of disclosure
2) Duty not to misrepresent
3) No fraudulent claim
What is the duty of disclosure?
⁃ This is an obligation on the insured to make full and accurate disclosure of all material facts that would influence the judgment of a prudent underwriter - Joseph Fielding Properties (Blackpool) Ltd. v Aviva Insurance Ltd. [2010]
When does the duty of disclosure exist?
The duty of disclosure only exists:
⁃ at the negotiation stage
⁃ until the contract of insurance is formed and
⁃ when the policy comes up for renewal
Is the insurer under a duty to disclose?
The insurer is also under a duty to disclose. Such a duty arises in relation to facts that are material to the nature of the risk insured or the recoverability of a claim under the policy which a prudent insured would take into account in deciding whether or not to take out cover with the insurer. In such circumstances, the duty to disclose can arise during the subsistence of the insurance contract. (This duty can exist throughout the contract rather than simply up until the conclusion of the contract).
What is the duty not to misrepresent?
There is a duty not to misrepresent material facts. In practice, representations are often elevated by insurers to the status of material contractual terms by a ‘basis of the contract’ clause in the policy but note the effect of section 6 of the 2012 Act on consumer insured contracts. The insurer must also prove inducement.
What is the requirement not to make a fraudulent claim?
Where an insured makes a fraudulent claim, the insurer is under no liability to meet that claim.
What must be disclosed?
Under the Marine Insurance Act s 18:
⁃ (1) The assured must disclose to the insurer, before the contract is concluded, every material circumstance which is known to the assured, and the assured is deemed to know every circumstance[ So this broadens the duty to things the insured ought to know.] which, in the ordinary course of business, ought to be known to him.
⁃ (2) Every circumstance is material which would influence the judgment of a prudent insurer in fixing the premium or determining whether he will take the risk.
What is judged as material in cases where the Marine Insurance Act does not directly apply?
Outwith the field of marine insurance (i.e. where the statutory provision doesn’t directly apply), there are two alternative interpretations as to what is material:
⁃ (1) whether the undisclosed fact would have had a ‘decisive influence’ on the prudent insurer; or
⁃ (2) whether the fact is one which would have had an ‘effect’ on the insurer’s mind.[ This is easier for an insurers to satisfy.]
NB materiality is judged at the time of formation of the contract, i.e. When the insurer accepts the risk.
How are criminal convictions treated?
A particularly difficult issue is the effect of the criminal history or dishonesty of the insured. Criminal convictions for offences of dishonesty are normally treated as material, even those which have been committed some time ago [Schoolman v Hall [1951] - 15 years prior still material]. Although the insured is not obliged to disclose convictions which have been “spent” in terms of s4(3)(a) of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974. In North Star Shipping Ltd v Sphere Drake Insurance Plc it was stated that the insured is required to disclose allegations of serious criminal behaviour which have not yet led to arrest or charge, although Walker LJ criticised this rule. The information is clearly of a type which would influence the judgement of a prudent insurer in assessing the risk
What was improved in Pan Atlantic Insurance Co v Pine Top Industries Co. Limited [1995]?
Interpretation (2) was approved by the HL (by a majority) in the case of Pan Atlantic Insurance Co v Pine Top Industries Co. Limited [1995]. So there is no need for an insurer to prove that a prudent insurer would have acted differently had he known of the fact in question. The insurer only requires to show that it was one factor out of several that the prudent insurer would have taken into account in making his decision to accept the risk and set the premium accordingly. This rule applies in relation to indemnity contracts in both Scotland and England, and in England applies to life assurance as well.
How does the test in Scotland in the context of life assurance differ?
It is more favourable to the insured.
Life Association v Foster 1873
In this case, prior to the insurance contract being entered into the insured had been asked if she’d had a rupture. She answered no. Shortly after she entered into the life assurance contract she died and it was discovered that she’d had a form of swelling which was strongly indicative of a potential rupture. The question was whether this swelling was a material fact that she should have disclosed to the insurer. It was held that what is material is determined in relation to what a reasonable insured would consider material - not what the prudent insurer would consider material. Mrs Foster had no medical knowledge and had otherwise answered the questions carefully; thus she couldn’t have known that this swelling was material, so the insurers had to pay out.
- So the duty in Scots law in the context of life assurance is framed by reference to what the reasonable man in the position of the insured would consider to be material, not what the prudent insurer would consider to be material [Cuthbertson].
Hooper v Royal London General Insurance Co Ltd 1993
The insured had failed to disclose prior to the insurance contract (not a life assurance contract) being entered into that he’d been convicted of vandalism. Based on this nondisclosure, the insurer refused to pay out. The court upheld the insurer’s position - in the case of indemnity insurance, materiality of the circumstance is judged from the perspective of the prudent and reasonable insurer, not the reasonable insured.
Lord Justice Clerk Ross made it clear that this “reasonable insured” test (from Foster above) only applied to life assurance. Since they relate to personal matters which are often “peculiarly within the knowledge of the assured” and “are not capable of assessment on any objective basis”. [Contrast with indemnity insurance where the answers to the questions asked can be objectively ascertained.
Cuthbertson v Friends Provident Life Office [2006].
A recent attempt to argue that the prudent insurer test should apply to cases of life assurance in Scotland as it does in England failed in the Outer House
What are the origins of the duty of disclosure?
The origin of the rule in relation to the disclosure of physical and moral hazards is Carter v Boehm 1766
[Lord Mansfield: “Insurance is a contract upon speculation. The special facts, upon which the contingent chance is to be computed, lie most commonly in the knowledge of the insured only: the underwriter trusts to his representation and proceeds upon confidence that he does not keep back any circumstance in his knowledge, to mislead the underwriter into a belief that the circumstance does not exist, and to induce him to estimate the risk as if it did not exist. The keeping back of such circumstance is a fraud, and therefore the policy is void. Although this suppression should happen through mistake, without any fraudulent intention; yet still the underwriter is deceived and the policy is void, because the risk run is really different from the risk understood and intended to be run at the time of the agreement”.].
What is inducement?
If the insurers can show that a material fact has not been disclosed, this in itself is not enough: the insurer must also prove inducement (Pan Atlantic Insurance v Pine Top Insurance [1995]). So the non disclosure of the material fact must have induced that particular insurer to enter into a contract of insurance or to enter into the contract on the terms that he did.
⁃ In addition to proving misrepresentation, the insurer also has to prove inducement.
⁃ If the insurer can prove that he was induced to enter into the insurance contract due to the misrepresentation he can avoid the contract - see Marine Insurance Act, s. 17(1) and Joel v Law Union & Crown Insurance Co. [1908][ Same authority as for the “duty of disclosure”.]. The contract is voidable (provided that restitutio in integrum is possible). There is no right of damages. All sums paid out to the insured must be repaid to the insurer and the premiums returned/refunded by the insurer to the insured. The effect of misrepresentation is more severe on the insured than the insurer.