Reconstructing insurance law: the Law Commissions' consultation paper
Reconstructing insurance law: the Law Commissions' consultation paper
In July 2007 the English and Scottish Law Commissions published the consultation paper Insurance Law – Non-disclosure and Breach of Warranty (hereafter LCCP) which sets out in detail the Commissions' provisional proposals for the reform of insurance contract law with particular reference to the key areas of utmost good faith, warranties and agency. This article analyses, from a critical standpoint, the LCCP's principal conclusions and recommendations. It begins by noting, as a means of demonstrating that the current reform process should be informed by modern industry practices, that the ways in which modern insurance contracts are concluded differ significantly from those when insurance law was last reviewed by the Law Commission in 1980. The article then discusses the dichotomy between consumer and business insurance given that this distinction underpins the LCCP and its approach towards reforming the pre-contractual duty of good faith. By way of backdrop to the analysis, we consider the approach taken towards reforming the law governing intermediaries acting for prospective assureds during the disclosure process. Finally, the proposed rules for warranties and similar terms are examined. It is argued that the proposal to retain continuing warranties in business insurance contracts will, if implemented, represent a missed opportunity to rid insurance contracts of terms long criticised as draconian and disproportionate in their effect
insurance contract law reform, the english and scottish law commissions, joint consultation paper, LCCP 182/SLCDP 134, reforming utmost good faith, the duty of disclosure, misrepresentation, policy terms, breach of warranty, agency
95-113
Merkin, Robert
24964178-6170-4380-afb8-984a2764e54a
Lowry, John
c63bee5c-2a5f-4c29-aec3-bc656fe33076
January 2009
Merkin, Robert
24964178-6170-4380-afb8-984a2764e54a
Lowry, John
c63bee5c-2a5f-4c29-aec3-bc656fe33076
Abstract
In July 2007 the English and Scottish Law Commissions published the consultation paper Insurance Law – Non-disclosure and Breach of Warranty (hereafter LCCP) which sets out in detail the Commissions' provisional proposals for the reform of insurance contract law with particular reference to the key areas of utmost good faith, warranties and agency. This article analyses, from a critical standpoint, the LCCP's principal conclusions and recommendations. It begins by noting, as a means of demonstrating that the current reform process should be informed by modern industry practices, that the ways in which modern insurance contracts are concluded differ significantly from those when insurance law was last reviewed by the Law Commission in 1980. The article then discusses the dichotomy between consumer and business insurance given that this distinction underpins the LCCP and its approach towards reforming the pre-contractual duty of good faith. By way of backdrop to the analysis, we consider the approach taken towards reforming the law governing intermediaries acting for prospective assureds during the disclosure process. Finally, the proposed rules for warranties and similar terms are examined. It is argued that the proposal to retain continuing warranties in business insurance contracts will, if implemented, represent a missed opportunity to rid insurance contracts of terms long criticised as draconian and disproportionate in their effect
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Published date: January 2009
Keywords:
insurance contract law reform, the english and scottish law commissions, joint consultation paper, LCCP 182/SLCDP 134, reforming utmost good faith, the duty of disclosure, misrepresentation, policy terms, breach of warranty, agency
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 73354
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/73354
ISSN: 0026-7961
PURE UUID: 066bab18-46b4-498b-8fc6-9a47d8a1fa19
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Date deposited: 08 Mar 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 22:01
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Author:
Robert Merkin
Author:
John Lowry
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