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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Hill v Generali Zrt [2021] EWHC 3381 (QB) (14 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/3381.html Cite as: [2021] WLR(D) 629, [2022] 1 WLR 2477, [2021] EWHC 3381 (QB), [2022] WLR 2477 |
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HIGH COURT APPEAL CENTRE BIRMINGHAM
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT TELFORD
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE RAWLINGS)
Birmingham Civil Justice Centre 33 Bull Street, Birmingham, B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GEOFF HILL |
Claimant / Appellant |
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- and – |
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GENERALI BIZTOSITÓ ZRT |
Defendant / Respondent |
____________________
Tom Collins (instructed by Hudgells Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 30 November 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PEPPERALL:
THE COUNTY COURT PROCEEDINGS
THE RECAST REGULATION
5.1 Article 4(1) provides that persons domiciled in a Member State should be sued in the courts of that state.
5.2 Article 5(1) provides that such persons can only be sued in the courts of another Member State by virtue of the rules set out in Sections 2 to 7 of Chapter II of the Regulation.
5.3 Article 7(2) (which is within Section 2) provides that a person domiciled in one Member State might also be sued in tort in the Member State in which the "harmful event" occurred.
"An insurer domiciled in a Member State may be sued:
(a) in the courts of the Member State in which he is domiciled;
(b) in another Member State, in the case of actions brought by the policyholder, the insured or a beneficiary, in the courts for the place where the claimant is domiciled; or
(c) if he is a co-insurer, in the courts of a Member State in which proceedings are brought against the leading insurer."
7.1 Article 12 provides that the insurer may also be sued in the courts for the place where the "harmful event" occurred.
7.2 Article 13(2) provides that Articles 10, 11 and 12 apply to actions brought by the injured party directly against the insurer.
7.3 Article 14(1) provides that an insurer may bring proceedings only in the courts of the Member State in which the defendant is domiciled, irrespective of whether the defendant is the policyholder, the insured or a beneficiary.
8.1 Generali can be sued in Hungary, being its place of domicile, or Germany, being the place of the accident: Arts 4(1), 7(2), 11(1)(a) and 12.
8.2 As the insured, Mr Hill can also sue Generali in England & Wales, being his place of domicile: Art. 11(1)(b).
8.3 As the insurer, and subject to being permitted to join an action already proceeding in another jurisdiction, Admiral cannot take advantage of the more favourable rules as to jurisdiction available to the policyholder, the insured and beneficiaries.
9.1 is a claim brought by the insured such that it may be pursued in England & Wales under Article 11(1)(b); or
9.2 is a claim that must be treated as brought by the insurer such that it cannot, subject to questions of joinder, be pursued in this jurisdiction.
"15 The rules of jurisdiction should be highly predictable and founded on the principle that jurisdiction is generally based on the defendant's domicile. Jurisdiction should always be available on this ground save in a few well-defined situations in which the subject-matter of the dispute or the autonomy of the parties warrants a different connecting factor …
16 In addition to the defendant's domicile, there should be alternative grounds of jurisdiction based on a close connection between the court and the action or in order to facilitate the sound administration of justice. The existence of a close connection should ensure legal certainty and avoid the possibility of the defendant being sued in a court of a Member State which he could not reasonably have foreseen …
18 In relation to insurance, consumer and employment contracts, the weaker party should be protected by rules of jurisdiction more favourable to his interests than the general rules.
21 In the interests of the harmonious administration of justice it is necessary to minimise the possibility of concurrent proceedings and to ensure that irreconcilable judgments will not be given in different Member States. There should be a clear and effective mechanism for resolving cases of lis pendens and related actions …"
11.1 The policy of providing rules that are more favourable to weaker parties is given effect to by:
a) rules allowing the policyholder, the insured or a beneficiary to sue in his or her place of domicile (Art. 11(1)(b)), while otherwise insisting on proceedings being brought in the place of domicile of the defendant or the place of the accident (Arts 4(1), 7(2), 11(1)(a), 12 and 14);
b) provisions that protect such parties when sued from unintentionally conceding jurisdiction (Art. 26(2)); and
c) provisions that protect such parties from contracting out of the more favourable rules (Arts 15 and 31).
11.2 The policy of promoting predictability is furthered by provisions that determine when the more favourable rules are to be applied according to the class of litigant rather than by a case-specific enquiry as to whether one party is in fact weaker than another. Thus, policyholders, insured parties and beneficiaries are deemed to be weaker and gain the protection of Article 11(1)(b) regardless of whether they are private individuals or wealthy corporations, while insurance companies are deemed not to be weaker parties whatever their financial position.
11.3 The policies of allowing courts with a close connection to hear a case, of facilitating the sound administration of justice, of minimising concurrent proceedings and ensuring that irreconcilable judgments are not given, are furthered by the provisions:
a) allowing joinder of additional parties (Arts 8 and 13) and counterclaims to be pursued (Art. 14(2)) in a court in which related proceedings are already pending;
b) requiring courts to stay proceedings involving the same cause of action between the same parties in favour of the court of another Member State that was first seised of the case (Art. 29); and
c) permitting courts to stay "related" proceedings (being an action so closely connected with another action that it would be expedient to hear and determine the actions together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments) in favour of the court of another Member State that was first seised of the case (Art. 30).
12.1 The courts of a Member State shall refuse recognition of a judgment if it is irreconcilable with a judgment given between the same parties in that or another Member State: Art. 45(1)(c)-(d).
12.2 Where such grounds arise, the judgment shall not be enforceable: Art. 46.
THE JUDGMENT BELOW
"… a claim made by a directly injured party, the benefit of which accrues to an indirectly injured party under the English concept of subrogation, should be assimilated with or treated in the same way as a claim made by an indirectly injured party in their own name, pursuant to an assignment."
14.1 He concluded that his judgment did not "score as well" on predictability as the contrary conclusion given that it required an enquiry into who would benefit from the claim. He observed, however, that such position would only be likely to affect insurers and that the exercise of rights of subrogation was likely to be apparent from the claim.
14.2 He considered that his judgment accorded with the policy of not extending the more favourable jurisdiction rules to parties who are not in a weaker position. There was, he concluded, no reason why an insurer exercising a right of subrogation should benefit from such rules in circumstances where the insurer would not so benefit if the cause of action were assigned.
14.3 He accepted that his judgment might result in related claims being commenced in different Member States. He added, however, that it was always open to the directly injured party to bring his claim in the state in which the defendant was domiciled.
14.4 Considering these factors in the round, he concluded that "the balance comes down in favour of promoting the purpose set out in recital 18 … because the reduction in predictability (recital 15) and risk of multiple actions for related claims (recital 21) are in each case minimised … whereas there appears to be no justification for allowing an indirectly injured insurer relying upon its rights of subrogation, to take advantage of the Jurisdiction Privilege which would not be available to it if it took an assignment of the directly injured insured's right of action. This is particularly so where the amount of control that the indirectly injured insurer has over the subrogated claim, brought in the name of its directly injured insured, is likely to be, substantially the same as the indirectly injured insurer would have, if they took an assignment of the right of action and pursued the claim, in its own name."
THIS APPEAL
"A person domiciled in a Member State may also be sued as a third party in an action on a warranty or guarantee or in any other third-party proceedings, in the court seised of the original proceedings, unless these were instituted solely with the object of removing him from the jurisdiction of the court which would be competent in his case."
"39 The hearing, in the course of the same proceedings, of both the original action and an action brought by a third party against one of the parties to the original action and closely linked to the original action, is such as to further the above-mentioned objectives in a situation in which an action has been brought by the injured party against the insurer of the person liable for the damage and another insurer, which has already paid the injured party some compensation for his injuries, seeks reimbursement of that compensation from the first-mentioned insurer.
40 If that were not permissible, there would be a risk of two courts, in the same case, arriving at different solutions, whose recognition and enforcement would therefore be uncertain."
DISCUSSION
26.1 MacGillivray on Insurance Law offers the view at para. 13-011, but without any detailed analysis or citation of authority, that the rules in Section 3 of the Regulation do not apply to subrogated claims brought on behalf of insurers.
26.2 Colinvaux and Merkin's Insurance Contract Law draws a distinction at para. D-0710/1 between cases in which an insurer takes an assignment of the claim such that the claim is one between insurers and not within Section 3, and subrogation proceedings in England in which the claim is brought in the name of the insured. Colinvaux refers to the decision of Tomlinson J, as he then was, at first instance in Youell v. La Réunion Aérienne [2008] EWHC 2493 (Comm), [2009] ILPr 23. In Youell, English and French insurers both insured the same assured. The English insurers issued proceedings in England & Wales seeking a declaration that they were not liable to contribute to a settlement reached by the French insurers in a claim brought against the assured. The French insurers challenged jurisdiction on the basis that jurisdiction was governed by the rules under Section 3 of the Regulation. Tomlinson J rejected such contention holding that Section 3 did not apply to claims by one insurer against another. Colinvaux observes, with an obvious correction to the text:
"The learned judge distinguished the present case from one involving subrogation rights. In subrogation proceedings brought in England the action is in the name of the assured rather than the [insurer]. Accordingly, the Youell ruling would not apply in a subrogation action where, for example, a property insurer having indemnified its assured was to commence direct proceedings against liability insurers in circumstances where a direct action was permissible. In these circumstances, the action is in the name of the assured under the property policy and not in the name of the insurers, so the claim remains one relating to insurance."
26.3 That said, the commentary in Colinvaux is somewhat equivocal in that the footnote to the last sentence adds:
"But see Bayern v. Blijdenstein (Case 433/01), [2004] ECR I-981, in which the European Court of Justice held that a public body exercising subrogation rights was not to be treated as a maintenance debtor for the purposes of establishing jurisdiction under Regulation 44/2001 because it was not a weaker party. This potentially means that even a subrogated insurer is unable to rely upon the special jurisdiction rules."
26.4 Bayern was not, however, an insurance case; nor was it a case of subrogation as understood in English law since the claim was brought directly in the name of the public body seeking judgment.
27.1 Upon its proper construction, the Recast Regulation does not require analysis of whether a particular party is or is not in a weaker position. In the interests of predictability and legal certainty, the question is whether the party is in a class that is deemed by law to be weaker: KABEG; Hofsoe v. LVM Landwirtschaftlicher Versicherungsverein Münster AG (Case 106/17), [2018] I.L.Pr. 12.
27.2 The policyholder, the insured and other beneficiaries are expressly deemed to be weaker while insurers, reinsurers and other insurance professionals are deemed not to be: FBTO Schadeverzekeringen NV v. Odenbreit (Case 463/06), [2008] ILPr 12; UGIC v. Group Josi Reinsurance Co. SA (Case 412/98), [2001] QB 68; GIE Réunion Européene v. Zurich España (Case 77-04), [2005] ILPr 33; Hofsoe; Aspen Underwriting Ltd v. Credit Europe Bank NV [2020] UKSC 11, at [43]; Youell.
27.3 Since Article 11(1)(b) contains a derogation from the general principle of jurisdiction of the defendant's domicile, it has to be regarded as exceptional in nature and be interpreted strictly: Hofsoe.
27.4 While an insurer pursuing an assigned claim cannot take advantage of the weaker-party rules, it might be able to apply to join an existing claim brought by the insured in the insured's place of domicile pursuant to Article 8(2): SOVAG. Such decision and the policy of "ensuring" that irreconcilable judgments are not given underline the importance to be accorded to avoiding a multiplicity of actions.
27.5 Thus, an insurer who takes an assignment of the claim for insured losses:
a) may be able to join an action brought by the insured for the uninsured losses in the place of his or her domicile; but
b) where there is no such earlier action, will only be able to sue in the place of domicile of the defendant or the place of the tort.
28.1 it may be (although I do not purport to decide the issue) that the Hungarian court would not be required by Article 29 to stay a second case brought in respect of the insured losses;
28.2 there would in such circumstances be a strong case for a discretionary stay of the Hungarian proceedings pursuant to Article 30 since the claims for the insured and uninsured losses would be so closely connected that it would plainly be expedient to hear and determine the claims together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments; and
28.3 there would in any event be a case for allowing Admiral to pursue the claim for insured losses in this jurisdiction pursuant to Article 8(2) either:
a) in Mr Hill's name; alternatively,
b) in its own name following an assignment.