![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> McManus & Ors (t/a Mcmanus Seddon Runhams (a firm)) v European Risk Insurance Company [2013] EWHC 18 (Ch) (17 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/18.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 18 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
____________________
(1) COLETTE ANN McMANUS (2) NICHOLAS JAMES LEADBEATER (3) ROGER FRANK SEDDON (t/a McMANUS SEDDON RUNHAMS (a firm)) |
Claimants |
|
-and- |
||
EUROPEAN RISK INSURANCE COMPANY |
Defendant |
____________________
Derek Holwill (instructed by Caytons Law) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 3rd, 4th and 5th December 2012
Judgment
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Ms Vivien Rose:
The insurance policy
"It is now almost invariable for liability underwriters in general, and professional negligence underwriters in particular, to issue policies that provide cover on what is known as a "claims made" basis, that is, which provide the insured with an indemnity against losses arising from claims made against him, as opposed to events occurring, during the policy period. This has an advantage for underwriters in that they are less exposed to unforeseen losses arising long after the period of cover has expired, but it poses a serious problem for any insured who becomes aware during the policy period of circumstances that may give rise to a claim in the future. When seeking insurance for the following year he would be bound to disclose the existence of any circumstances, but might well find it impossible to obtain insurance in respect of that potential loss at a commercially acceptable premium, if indeed at all. As a result the practice has grown up of including in "claims made" policies a term extending cover to losses arising from circumstances that may give rise to a claim in the future provided that they have been notified to the underwriters during the period of cover. So significant are these factors that in J. Rothschild Assurance Plc v Collyear [1999] 1 Lloyd's Rep. I. R. 6, 22 Rix J. expressed the view that a "claims made" policy could hardly work on any other basis."
"1. Scope of Cover
1.1 Civil Liability
The Insurer will indemnify each Insured against civil liability to the extent that it arises from private legal practice in connection with the Insured Firm's practice, provided that a claim in respect of such liability:
(a) is first made against an Insured during the period of insurance; or
(b) is made against an Insured during or after the period of insurance and arising from circumstances first notified to the Insurer during the period of insurance.
1.4 Prior Practice
The Insurer will indemnify each Insured against civil liability to the extent that it arises from private legal practice in connection with a prior practice, provided that a claim in respect of such liability is first made against an Insured:
(a) during the period of insurance; or
(b) during or after the period of insurance and arising from circumstances first notified to the Insurer during the period of insurance.
7.2 Notice of claims and circumstances, etc
The insured will give notice in writing to the Insurer, as soon as reasonably practicable of any;
(a) claim first made against any Insured during the period of insurance; or
(b) circumstances of which any Insured first becomes aware during the period of insurance;
(c) investigation, inquiry or disciplinary proceeding during or after the period insurance arising from circumstances first notified to the Insurer during the period of insurance.
Circumstances means an incident, occurrence, fact, matter, act or omission which may give rise to a claim in respect of civil liability.
Prior Practice means each practice to which the Insured Firm's practice is ultimately a successor practice by way of one or more mergers, acquisitions, absorptions or other transitions but does not include any such practice which has elected to be insured under run-off cover in accordance with clause 5.3(a) of the [Minimum Terms and Conditions]"
The events leading up to the notification
"Having reviewed the various files and/or papers that are available in relation to the claims notified or during the sample review, it is clear that the review has revealed to date a consistent pattern of breaches which include but are not limited to the following failures to report to lenders:-
- back to back and/or subsale transactions;
- uplifts in purchase prices;
- included incentives, discounts and deposits;
- purchase monies paid by third parties;
- completion monies paid to third parties;
- properties were being purchased with the aid of bridging loan; and/or
- conflicts of interest.
There is evidence to suggest that some of the numerous "fee earners" who had conduct of the matters were not admitted solicitors and it is arguable whether they had the sufficient expertise to deal with the transactions
In the light of the above, and having considered the various claims and having reviewed the various files and papers available, on balance it would seem reasonable to conclude that the risks to insurers in relation to MSR result from transactions conducted by [Sekhon Firth], and only arise against MSR as its successor practice."
The Notification Letter
"The circumstances arise from discoveries which I and my fellow partners have made of the conduct or manner in which files were conducted within [Sekhon Firth] and subsequent to the acquisition of [Sekhon Firth] by Runhams LLP"
"47. The Report raised concerns that:
• The Firm had failed to disclose gifted deposits and incentives on some transactions;
• The Firm had preferred the interests of purchaser clients over lenders;
• The Firm had failed to inform lenders that the firm was acting for buyers and sellers in the same transaction;
• The Firm had preferred the interests of one client over another;
• The Firm had failed to investigate discrepancies in a client's signature on one transaction;
• The Firm failed to investigate why monies were being sent to third parties in a number of remortgage transactions."
"Because of the grave concern of my partners and me resulting from the discoveries we have made, I have spoken in private to each of these three. I have asked them about the culture and working practices of the firm and in particular the partner who was responsible for the majority of the conveyancing and its supervision when files were being handled by junior fee earners. Each of those three have separately confirmed that to the best of their recollection the practices exemplified in the files giving rise to claims and the wider files reviewed by the Corre Partnership and those practices referred to in the Judgment of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal dated 12 October 2011 were indeed endemic in the firm"
"The conclusion my partners and I have drawn is that these practices were indeed extremely common, if not universal, on files in conveyancing transactions carried out by the predecessor practices of this firm ..."
and further that:
"The conclusion my partners and I come to, which is the inevitable conclusion one must come it is that every file conducted by Sekhon & Firth and Runhams LLP (in the period subsequent to the merger of those two practices), and in respect of which this firm is deemed by the Successor Practice Rules to be the successor practice contains or is more likely than not to contain examples of malpractice negligence and breach of contract and so each and every file of the predecessor firms Sekhon & Firth, Sekhon & Firth LLP and Runhams LLP should properly be notified to you as individually containing shortcomings on which claimants will rely for the purposes of bringing claims against this firm as successor practice."
"It is impossible in the time that I have had available to carry out a full review of all the files we have inherited from Sekhon & Firth. I am prepared of course to work with underwriters to fully establish the extent of the problem which I have notified by this letter. Please let me have underwriter's instructions and guidance as to how they consider best to approach this issue. Likewise if I can give any further information at this stage or clarification please let me have underwriters' questions."
The rejection of the Notification
"The list of matters contained in the List and the Spreadsheet do not amount to valid Circumstances as you have not [identified] the specific incident, occurrence, fact, matter, act or omission which would give rise to a Claim on each individual file. Simply stating that Sekhon & Firth worked on the files in the List and Spreadsheet does not constitute a valid notification, and as such, the notifications are firmly rejected in their entirety and without question.
"The files highlighted in the Corry (sic) report are specific and the problems on each have been highlighted. However, Insurers expressly reserve their rights in relation to those matters."
Events following the Notification Letter and its rejection.
"My partners and I are concerned that the Firm will not be able to continue practice for long under the terms imposed by ARP. ... If the Firm is forced to cease trading and run-off cover has to be sought from ARP, the cost of this and other debts which would then crystallise would be likely to result in personal and partnership Insolvency proceedings for myself and my Partners and would result in all 31 of our other employees losing their livelihoods at a time when unemployment is extremely high, particularly in the Bradford area where we practice".
Notifications under 'claims made' policies
Is this an appropriate case for the grant of declaratory relief?
(1) MSR had, by the Notification Letter, validly notified European Risk 'of the following circumstances of which it has become aware further to a review of conveyancing files' conducted by Sekhon Firth. It then listed nine particular kinds of misconduct such as failure to report back-to-back transactions and failure to report to the lender the fact that a property was being bought with a bridging loan;
(2) the notification related to the period between the commencement of the Sekhon Firth partnership in 2002 and the date it ceased to exist in 2010;
(3) the circumstances 'shall extend to include' all conveyancing files over which former fee earners or members of Sekhon Firth had conduct between 1 October 2010 and 17 June 2011 (when Runhams merged with McManus Seddon), save for certain categories of files expressly excluded from the scope of the notification;
(4) any claim made after 1 October 2012 against MSR as successor practice to Sekhon Firth or Runhams 'shall, to the extent that it arises out of the circumstances set out in paragraphs 1-3 above, be deemed to have been first made within the policy period 1 October 2011 to 30 September 2012';
(5) the Rejection Email was invalid 'to the extent set out' in the list of circumstances notified.
All that said, however, I remain anxious about the fact that we are being asked to decide an issue which is likely to affect a large number of people who will have had no say in our decision. It is plain that the company is going to make a substantial number of people redundant. Many of those - perhaps a majority -will not have many years of service. If such people are made redundant, they may well seek redress from an ET on the basis that their dismissals were unfair. It is furthermore likely in these circumstances that the company will seek to rely on our decision before the ET, and that claimants will, accordingly, be directly affected by our decision.
In these circumstances, I have reached the clear conclusion, speaking for myself, that I should approach the questions posed to us on a narrow basis; and, again speaking for myself, I would like to make it clear that nothing in this judgment should be read as inhibiting any potential claimants before the ET from raising the issue that the redundancy process was unfair, or that they have been unfairly dismissed. Although any order or declaration we make -subject to any further appeal - will determine the meaning of the Directive and the lawfulness or otherwise of the collective agreement between the company and the union, I am clear that redundant employees should be entitled to raise both arguments before ETs."
"We do not, I think, need to embark upon the very interesting but ultimately unproductive argument about whether or not it is necessary for this court to make formal declarations as to the current state of the law. ... the company is plainly seeking declaratory relief. If we simply dismiss the appeal, however, my view is that everybody knows where they stand; the redundancy exercises can proceed, and the ET can adjudicate on any claims made subsequently to it."
Justice as between the parties
Conclusions
(1) The Rejection Email sent by European Risk was wrong insofar as it purported to limit the insurer's future liability to claims arising from the 32 transactions examined in the Corre Report.
(2) The Rejection Email was also wrong insofar as it appeared to require each particular transaction to be identified and notified to European Risk as a separate circumstance before European Risk could be liable for a claim arising out of that transaction.
(3) To the extent that the Notification Letter validly notified European Risk of circumstances of which MSR was aware relating to problems in the handling of transactions by Sekhon Firth or Runhams, European Risk will be liable to pay out under the policy on any successful claim against MSR if that claim is a claim to which the validly notified circumstances give rise.
(4) The precise scope of the circumstances validly notified in the Notification Letter is an issue to be determined as and when it arises in the context of an actual claim.