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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> AXA General Insurance Ltd. v Gottlieb & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 112 (11 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/112.html Cite as: [2005] 1 All ER (Comm) 445, [2005] EWCA Civ 112, [2005] 1 CLC 62, [2005] Lloyd's Rep IR 369 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Judge Bowers
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
____________________
Axa General Insurance Limited |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Clara Gottlieb and Joseph Meyer Gottlieb |
Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Isaac Jacob (instructed by GSC Solicitors) for the Appellants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mance:
Introduction
Claim | Date/Ref. | Nature of claim | Payments made by insurers before any fraud (i.e. by late September/very early October 1999) | Payments made by insurers after fraud |
1 | 1/12/93 J6/12/40167 | dry rot damage after escape of water | Repairs: £30,059.99 (including £5,000 "incidentals") plus AA: £4,500 = £34,559.99 | Repairs: £9,406.25 plus AA: £16,074.25 = £25,480.25. (These repair and AA figures reflect a re-allocation by insurers to AA of the £5,000 paid prior to late September as "incidentals") |
2 | 1/2/1994 J6/12/45335 | damage by escape of water in first bathroom. | £14,250 | NIL |
3 | July 1994 | storm damage | £1,000 | NIL |
4 | 3/5/1994 J6/12/40157 | damage by escape of water in second bathroom | £13,150 | NIL |
The payments for claims (3) and (4) resolved those two claims completely.
Application for an extension of time to seek permission to appeal the fraud findings
"because (i) the finding of fraud against the Defendants who are very religious people of otherwise impeccable character is most serious (ii) there has been a change of solicitors and counsel (at the beginning of January 2005) who have reconsidered the findings of the learned judge and consider that an appeal accepting the judge's primary findings but challenging the inferences drawn (as to which there was no or no sufficient evidence) has a real prospect of success."
In support, Mr Shapiro, a legal executive with the Gottliebs' current solicitors Messrs GSC, recorded that his firm's instructions had been received on 22nd December 2004, that very shortly before that date Messrs. Hassans of Gibraltar had obtained a preliminary view from counsel, Mr Jacob, who now appears before us on Messrs GSC's instructions and that prior to that the solicitors on the record had been Messrs Ingram Winter Green who acted at the trial. As to the previous history he said simply:
"7. I believe that the view was taken by previous advisers of the Defendants that there was no real prospect of success in appealing the findings of fraud against the Defendants.
8. I understand that counsel presently instructed considers that there is a real prospect of success on the basis that the inferences drawn by the judge from primary fact are open to challenge.
9. The matter is obviously of the gravest concern from the point of view of the Defendants' reputations."
"[I]n cases where the arguments for granting or refusing an extension of time were otherwise evenly balanced, a court will have to evaluate the merits of the proposed appeal in order to form a judgment on what the defendants will be losing if time is not extended. …. The consequences of the new requirement for permission to appeal is that if other factors militate towards the refusal of an extension of time, the likely prospects of success will have to be weighed in the balance. In other words the consequence of the appellants' failure to comply with the rule will be more serious for them if the court thinks that it is more probable than not that their appeal will succeed if it is allowed to proceed than if its prospects of success are smaller, even though they just pass the threshold at which it can be said that they are "real" rather than fanciful."
"Mr Galvin arranged the alternative accommodation for us, and removal of furniture into store. I don't remember when it was that we moved into accommodation. I didn't see the property we were to move to beforehand. Mr Galvin told me that it was in a Jewish area or near a Jewish area. We stayed in the accommodation for about 12 weeks, that is everybody from our family, although some of them for only a short space of time. My husband did have to go to Israel to see his father during this period and was at the house only for a few weeks. It was sudden as his father was dangerously ill."
The draft statement went on to give an address for the house, which by the time of its preparation Mr Harder must have been given by Mr Galvin or Mrs Gottlieb.
"It was available for duration of first stage of works.
It was sudden as his father was dangerously ill.
Newish house."
She must have seen, but took no issue with, the statements regarding her family's actual occupation of the accommodation.
The appeals
"Where an insured is found to have made a fraudulent claim upon the insurers, the insurer is obviously not liable for the fraudulent claim. But often there will have been a lesser claim which could properly have been made and which the insured, when found out, seeks to recover. The law is that the insured who has made a fraudulent claim may not recover the claim which could have been honestly made. …. This result is not dependant upon the inclusion in the contract of a term having that effect or the type of insurance; it is the consequence of a rule of law. Just as the law will not allow an insured to commit a crime and then use it as a basis for recovering an indemnity (Beresford v. Royal Insurance Co Ltd [1937] 2 KB 197), so it will not allow an insured who has made a fraudulent claim to recover. The logic is simple. The fraudulent insured must not be allowed to think: if the fraud is successful, then I will gain; if it is unsuccessful, I will lose nothing."
"The presentation of a dishonest or fraudulent claim constitutes a breach of duty that entitles the insurer to repudiate any liability for the claim and, prospectively at least, to avoid any liability under the policy. Whether the presentation of such a claim should be regarded as a breach of a continuing duty under section 17 that entitles the insurer to avoid the policy ab initio with retrospective effect, enabling any payments made in satisfaction of previous unimpeachable claims to be recovered by the insurer is more debatable. It is not necessary in this case to decide this point."
"If payments on account have already been made with respect to that claim [i..e. the particular claim to which the fraud relates], they have been made on the assumption that an obligation to indemnify exists or would arise. Once that obligation is forfeit, any such payments cease to have any basis and, if already made, are recoverable accordingly as payments made on a false premise or for a consideration which wholly failed."
"I am deeply suspicious that [Mrs Gottlieb] was aware of the fraudulent nature of the claim [for alternative accommodation] from its very inception [i.e. in July 1999] but at that stage and in the absence of firm evidence I feel unable to make a finding on that basis".
His eventual conclusion was, as I have stated, that "she was an active and willing participant from shortly after the third cheque at the end of September 1999 (or very early October 1999)".
"…. [T]he fact that a party commits some illegality in the course of performance does not result in his being unable to enforce the contract:
"The fact that a party has in the course of performing a contract committed an unlawful or immoral act will not by itself prevent him from further enforcing that contract unless the contract was entered into with the purpose of doing that unlawful or immoral act or the contract itself (as opposed to the mode of ….. performance) is prohibited by law (Coral Leisure Group Ltd. v. Barnett [1981] ICR 503, 509)"
The commission of a fraud or use of fraudulent devices would not on normal contractual principles convert the whole policy into one prohibited by law. And, even if it did, the effect would be to preclude the party committing the fraud from further enforcing the policy, not, for example, to enable insurers to recover sums paid in respect of genuine and otherwise insured loss after the fraud, but prior to its discovery.
Lord Justice Keene:
Lord Justice Pill:
ORDER: The appellants' appeal is dismissed; the appellants' application for an extension of time dismissed; the cross-appeal by the respondents is also dismissed the appellants to pay to the respondents its costs of the appeal, the application and of the application for permission in respect of the further appeal and the further appeal itself; the respondent to pay to the appellant's their costs of the cross-appeal, such costs to be subject to a detailed assessment on the standard basis if not agreed.; the appellant's application for permission to appeal to the House of Lords against the order made on this appeal is dismissed.