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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> ARB International Ltd. v Baillie [2013] EWHC 2060 (Comm) (12 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/2060.html Cite as: [2013] 2 CLC 255, [2014] Lloyd's Rep IR 10, [2013] EWHC 2060 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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ARB INTERNATIONAL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR ROBERT STEVEN BAILLIE |
Defendant |
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MR. RICHARD HARRISON (instructed by Hextalls Limited) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(1) binding authorities where the coverholders were service companies under the same ultimate ownership as Watkins ("Watkins Service Company Binders");
(2) other binding authorities ("Non-Service Company Binders");
(3) quota share reinsurance treaties;
(4) excess of loss and facultative policies, including policies written on a declaration basis.
Market Practice for an MTBC
"The chief point on which we agree is that there are no hard and fast rules regarding [MTBCs]. Despite the laudable efforts of LIIBA to introduce guidelines for the market to follow, the reality is that every case is different from every other. ...
....
We wish to point out that the absence of any hard and fast rules governing [MTBCs] means that practice has always varied not just from case to case but also from broker to broker.".
Broker entitlement to commission; and costs and expense borne by the broker
(1) Absent agreement to the contrary, the commission is earned (in the sense that this is the point at which the broker becomes entitled to commission) when the business is written under the binding authority, ceded to the quota share treaty or declared under the declaration-based policy.
(2) The arrangements for reporting will evidence when this has happened. The broker may have done nothing more since the binder, treaty or policy was first entered into.
(3) The commission remains related to the premium because the contractual obligation to pay commission engages when premium-generating business is written, ceded or declared. So to hold is not to allow "the mechanics of payment [to] alter the contractual obligation" (noting the caution in these terms in XL Speciality Insurance Company v Carvill America Inc (above) at [9]).
"Q. So the mere placement of the binding authority doesn't involve any earned commission?
A. You say that, but if you ask any insurance broker who placed a binding authority who is entitled to the commission or how much of the commission he's entitled to during the course of the next 12 months, he'll tell you that he placed the binding authority and therefore he's entitled to the lion's share of it. It doesn't actually, in practice, necessarily turn out that way, but you'll find brokers extremely persuasive about something that they have been instrumental in creating and placing."
"I think that the traditional view is that brokerage is promised and paid by the insurer for the introduction of business. The coverholder or insured is content for the broker to receive that brokerage because it constitutes remuneration for the services he has performed and is performing for the coverholder."
This is important in the present case because the broker may therefore have costs and expense to bear after the point at which he has earned his commission.
(1) The outgoing broker and the incoming broker might decide which should take responsibility for and bear the cost of further work required from a broker after the MTBC on business where the commission had already been received by the outgoing broker.
(2) The outgoing broker and the incoming broker might decide which should enjoy commission earned on business that was not until after the MTBC written under a binding authority, ceded to a quota share treaty, or written (declared) under a declaration-based policy.
(3) Consideration might be given by the outgoing broker to the possibility that it might find existing binding authorities, quota share treaties or policies written on a declaration basis are simply cancelled and replaced, or have transactions of minimal value processed under them.
(4) Consideration throughout would need to be given to the interests of policyholders.
(5) Consideration might be given by the outgoing broker to the reputational importance to it of a smooth transfer.
The duties owed by Mr Baillie
(1) As a fiduciary, he had "the obligation of ... single-minded loyalty": Sinclair Investments (UK) Ltd v Versailles Trade Finance Limited and Others [2010] EWHC 1614 (Ch); [2011] 1 BCLC 202 at [26] per Lewison J (as he then was).
(2) By statute, he was required to "exercise ... the care, skill and diligence that would be exercised by a reasonably diligent person with (a) the general knowledge, skill and experience that may reasonably be expected of a person carrying out the functions carried out by the director in relation to the company, and (b) the general knowledge, skill and experience that the director has.": section 174 Companies Act 2006.
(3) As a company director, he was under "... a continuing duty to acquire and maintain a sufficient knowledge and understanding of the company's business to enable [him] properly to discharge [his] duties as director[]": Re Barings plc and Others (No 5) [1999] 1 BCLC 433, 489 per Jonathan Parker J (as he then was); approved on appeal at [2001] BCC 273 at [36] per Morritt LJ (as he then was).
(4) As to delegation: "Whilst directors are entitled (subject to the articles of association of the company) to delegate particular functions to those below them in the management chain, and to trust their competence and integrity to a reasonable extent, the exercise of the power of delegation does not absolve a director from the duty to supervise the discharge of the delegation functions ... the extent of [that] duty, and the question whether it has been discharged, [being matters that] must depend on the facts of each particular case, including the director's role in the management of the company.": Re Barings plc and Others (No 5) (above) at 489 and at [36].
File transfer
Business transfer
"... We consider that because of the unusual nature of the book of business involved in the current case (ie the overarching involvement of the Watkins syndicate) it is difficult to apply normal conventions to the allocation of brokerage in the event of a MTBC. .".
"It is hereby understood and agreed that the involvement of [ARB] is purely that of an administrator of this facility. It is further understood that all premium and claim payments are handled between the Coverholder [ie Watkins service companies] and Underwriters [ie Watkins] without the involvement of [ARB]."
Alleged breach by Mr Baillie of his duties
". what happened in this case is typical of what generally happens when there is a [MTBC]. Upon instructions from the client/coverholder the files are passed from the existing broker to the new broker. Once the transfer has taken place the existing broker gets no further commission, which goes to the incoming broker. Equally, the incoming broker takes over handling the run-off business for the outgoing broker, thus relieving the outgoing broker of this responsibility. ... If no such deal had been agreed, it would have been quite easy for the incoming broker to place the new contracts for all new business, and simply leave the displaced broker to handle the run-off of all prior contracts, without receiving any further income."
I do not conclude that Mr Howell has identified a market practice, but I do conclude that the evidence he gives, which I accept, further shows that Mr Baillie's approach is not to be condemned.
Causation and Loss
(1) Is the loss the commission which ARB alleges was payable to it, or is it the sum which would have been recovered in negotiations with Roanoke?
(2) If the latter, would ARB have recovered more on account of its claim for commission than it received from Roanoke in June 2012 as a result of the fresh negotiations leading to settlement and, if so, how much more?
(1) The loss would have been the sum which would have been recovered in negotiations.
(2) Given the strength of Watkins' and Roanoke's position including in relation to cancellation, I am not satisfied on the balance of probabilities that ARB would have recovered more. Notwithstanding the evidence about the possibilities of a "Forbes-type deal" (a reference to an earlier MTBC which had brought a transfer of the same book of business in 2001) I do not accept that was a reliable parallel in the circumstances of 2010.
Expenses
Counterclaim
Conclusions