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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Knight v Axa Assurances [2009] EWHC 1900 (QB) (24 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/1900.html Cite as: [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 667, [2009] EWHC 1900 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Mr. Tim Knight |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Axa Assurances |
Defendant |
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Philip Mead (instructed by Pierre Thomas & Partners) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st and 2nd July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Sharp:
Introduction
(i) To what extent are damages to be assessed by reference to English law and/or French law?
(ii) To what extent should the question of the award of interest on damages be determined in accordance with English law and/or French law?
(iii) To what extent should the question of recoverability of costs inter partes be determined according English law and/or French law?
The jurisdictional basis for the claim: Brussels 1
Question 1
The core reasoning in Maher
"[20] I take as the correct starting point the law as stated in Dicey, Morris & Collins para 35–043, which is based on the majority view expressed in Australian decisions. Whether a claim can be brought by an injured party directly against the wrongdoer's insurers is a contractual question, governed by the law applicable to the insurance contract (and see para 35–065). It is not in dispute in this case that such a claim can be brought under French law. Subject to that, I agree generally with the claimants' approach. If for example, the insurers were in dispute liability under the policy, that question would fall to be determined under French law as the law governing the policy. But in the present case there is no such dispute. It is not suggested that the policy (a copy of which is not before Court) limits the insurer's liability in any relevant way. [counsel for the defendant] does not argue with [counsel for the claimant]'s assertion that the defendant's agreement was to indemnify the insured against liability in respect of claims wherever brought. Liability is admitted, and indeed judgment has been entered by consent. The result is that the insurer has to meet directly the wrongdoer's liability which in this case is a tortious one. For the purposes of the assessment of damages, the insurer's liability should equally be seen as a liability arising in tort. The conclusion is entirely consistent with the Through Transport Mutual Insurance Association case.
[21] This approach receives some support from the joint report of the Law Commission and the Scottish Law Commission on Private International Law; Choice of Law in Tort and Delict (Law Com no 193; Scot Law Com no 129) (1990). It was this report which led in due course to the enactment of the 1995 Act. The Commission's initial view was that a direct action against an insurer should be characterised as a matter in contract because of the connection to the contract of insurance. But after the consultation process, it suggested that if the underlying claim against the wrongdoer would be in tort (as it is here) then "an action against the insurer may be better seen as an extension of this tortious action". Paragraph 3.51 reads as follows:
"In some jurisdictions it is possible for the injured party to bring a direct action against the wrongdoer's insurer rather than the wrongdoer himself. There are a number of ways in which the courts of other jurisdictions have characterised this issue. It has been seen as a tortuous question, governed by the applicable law in tort; as a contractual question governed by the proper law of the insurance contract; and as a procedural question governed by the lex fori. The Consultation Paper tentatively concluded that the question whether the claimant can sue the wrongdoer's insurer rather than the wrongdoer himself was a matter for the proper law of the wrongdoer's insurance contract rather than a question to be decided by the applicable law in tort or delict, although it also said that there did not appear to be an unanswerable argument in favour of any approach. In the light of the views expressed by consultants, we are not convinced that the tentative conclusion adopted in the Consultation Paper is necessarily the ideal one. The direct action is not in any real sense contractual since the claimant is not suing a party with whom he is in privity of contract. It is true that neither has a wrong been perpetrated by the insurer on the claimant. However, the action against the wrongdoer's insurer may be more akin to a claim in tort than contract, since what would normally be the claimant's primary remedy would be a tortuous action against the wrongdoer. If the claimant's action against the actual wrongdoer would be tortious, an action against the insurer may be better seen as an extension of the tortious action. Although the direct action cannot exist in the absence of the contract of insurance, neither would the direct action exist in the absence of any wrongdoing. While to apply a law other than the law of the insurance contract would expose the insurer to a liability greater than he contemplated, nevertheless, depending on where the insurer carries on his activities, his expectations might reasonably be expected to include not only the potential liability of the insured under the law of that jurisdiction to which cover extends, but also any potential direct liability. We have recommended that the matter should not be included in implementing legislation. The issue is of hardly any practical importance, there being no reported case in England or Scotland. We feel that the matter can be left to the courts to decide if called upon to do so."
The question whether the claimant can sue the wrongdoer's insurers is (as I have said) one for the law applicable to the insurance contract. But subject to that, this passage remains instructive when read as dealing with the stage (l) issues identified above."
The parties' principal submissions
The claimant's three "fall back" submissions
Discussion
"I agree with the judge [Millett J] when he said: "In order to ascertain the applicable law under English conflict of laws, it is not sufficient to characterise the nature of the claim: it is necessary to identify the question at issue." (Millet J's emphasis.) Any claim, whether it be a claim that can be characterised as restitutionary or otherwise, may involve a number of issues which may have to be decided according to different issues of law. Thus it is necessary for the court to look at each issue and to decide the appropriate law to apply to the resolution of that dispute."
See also Auld LJ at 407B; and Staughton LJ at 391H and 399C.
"…if this claim had been brought against the tortfeasor or his estate, there is therefore no doubt that damages would have been assessed by reference to English law…"
Question 2
The core reasoning in Maher
"[29] As regards the claimants' submissions, there is powerful support for the proposition that the Court's power to award interest under s35A of the 1981 Act is procedural and thus applicable as part of the law of the forum. It was so held by Hobhouse J in Midland International Trade Services Ltd v Al Sudairy (1990) Financial Times, 2 May, and by Moore-Bick J in Kuwait Oil Tanker Co SAK v Al Bader (17 December 1998, unreported), p 155. On the other hand, these authorities are not supported by the editors of Dicey, Morris & Collins (paras 33-393 and 33-396), who say that-
"Despite the uncertainty of the outcome reached by the common law, the current position depends upon the proper interpretation of Pt III of the Private International Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1995, and in particular on whether the right to claim interest by way of damages is to be regarded as an issue in tort, for the purposes of that Act, which is governed by the choice of law rules for issues in tort which are contained in that Act. It is submitted that the right to claim interest by way of damages in a claim in tort is properly characterised as an issue of tort and is not, in any sense, a procedural question for the law of the forum. Accordingly, whether there is such a right depends on the law which is found to apply to the tort."
[30] The editors' view is-
"essentially based on the premise that a claim for interest is in substance a claim for damages in the sense that it is awarded as compensation to the Plaintiff for being kept out of money justly due to him, and that the question of whether or not such a claim or award is available to a claimant is (like the availability of heads of damage strictly so called) governed by the law applicable to the contract or tort sued upon.' (See Kuwait Oil Tanker Co SAK v Al Bader [2000] 2 All ER (Comm) 271 at 343 (para 206) per Nourse LJ giving the judgment of the Court.)"…
[32] Depending on rates, which will vary according to the currency of the claim, interest can of course be an important component, and these difficult questions will need to be resolved at a higher level at some point. But I have to answer the preliminary issue in this case, and (in the absence of clear appellate authority) propose to do so on the basis of the law as set out in Dicey, Morris & Collins. With the caveat that the factual position has only been touched on so far, my view is as follows. The claim for interest on damages should be characterised as an issue in tort (see para 33–396 that I have quoted above). Any question as to whether there is a right to claim interest by way of damages (such as the Defendant has obliquely raised in its skeleton argument), depends therefore on French law as the applicable law under s11 of the 1995 Act. I should add however that the result appears to be the same if s35A of the 1981 Act is applied simply on the basis that it is a procedural provision and so applicable as part of the lex fori. This is because under s35A(2), interest in personal injuries cases may be excluded where there are 'special reasons' for doing so. A similar approach was adopted by Moore-Bick J when exercising his s35A discretion in the Kuwait Oil Tanker Co case (17 December 1998, unreported) in dealing with the contention that since interest was (allegedly) irrecoverable under the law of Kuwait the same result should follow under s35A also (see p 155ff). I respectfully think that it is the right approach.
[33] Assuming that interest is recoverable, the rate is to be determined under English law as the lex fori; see in this respect the views expressed in Dicey, Morris & Collins paras 33–397. But this does not necessarily mean that the rate will be the domestic English rate. The principles governing the Court's discretion under s35A are sufficiently flexible to enable the Court to arrive at an appropriate rate, whether English or French (see para 33–398)."
The parties' submissions
Discussion
"French procedural rules are mostly codified in the "Code of Civil Procedure" and "Code of Penal Procedure". The above rules on interest appear in the Civil Code and in the Insurance Code (not in the Code of Civil Procedure) and are treated as rules of substantive law."
Conclusion