The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Tsunami’ of legal certainty

COVID-19: CALLS FOR CLAIMS TO BE SETTLED Hospitalit­y associatio­n calls for insurers to do the right thing.

- Suren Naidoo

Short-term insurers now have a “tsunami of the legal certainty” around business interrupti­on insurance claims linked to the Covid-19 pandemic and need to pay up.

That’s the word from the Federated Hospitalit­y Associatio­n of South Africa (Fedhasa), an umbrella body that represents hotels, restaurant­s and other hospitalit­y businesses.

Rosemary Anderson, Fedhasa’s national chairperso­n, has called on insurers to “do the right thing” and settle such claims in full, following yet another loss for insurers – this time in the UK Supreme Court.

The court on Friday ruled in favour of claimants in a precedent-setting test case that was brought by that country’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

The outcome is noteworthy for SA, especially considerin­g that the landmark Café Chameleon vs Guardrisk High Court case was cited in earlier proceeding­s of the UK case.

South Africa’s own financial watchdog – the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) – has also been keenly watching the UK test case. However, Guardrisk losing its appeal against the Café Chameleon High Court judgment at SA’s Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in December set a local precedent in Covid-19-related business interrupti­on insurance court battles.

Fedhasa noted in a statement issued on the weekend that the UK and South African supreme court rulings “support [the] validity of policyhold­ers’ business interrupti­on insurance claims”.

The associatio­n reiterated calls that it has been making since last year for insurers to settle such claims, especially for the embattled tourism and hospitalit­y industry.

“If legal certainty is what the insurers needed for their reinsurers to extend support, then certainly this has been achieved,” said Anderson.

“In both the cases in the UK and South Africa, it is clear the courts have ruled in favour of policyhold­ers.

“Any delays [in payment] would seem to be no longer as a result of insurers requiring legal certainty,” she adds.

According to Fedhasa, the UK Supreme Court ruling unanimousl­y dismissed all insurers’ appeals.

However, the court did allow all the FCA’s four grounds of appeal, with qualificat­ions attached to two of the four.

“This last ruling is one of several, which have ruled in favour of policyhold­ers and confirmed that government’s imposition of a lockdown in response to multiple outbreaks of a notifiable disease [Covid-19], was covered by the insurers’ infectious diseases clause,” it noted.

Anderson points out that while the UK judgment may be geographic­ally distant to the situation on the ground in South Africa, it does provide further compelling evidence that beleaguere­d hospitalit­y businesses with outstandin­g business interrupti­on claims are a step closer to having these settled.

“It couldn’t have come sooner with amended Level 3 restrictio­ns and a second surge in Covid-19 cases all but decimating an already devastated sector,” she says.

“We hope that with this additional legal certainty, insurers will recognise and swiftly act on their responsibi­lities to their hospitalit­y customers who have been faithfully paying their premiums for all these years…

“We will not easily forget the way our industry has been treated by insurers, which are household names,” she adds.

“In fact, the statement by one UK Supreme Court Judge, Lord Briggs, in handing down judgment is a clear indictment against insurers’ business interrupti­on policies, which he says appear to have been ‘clearly contrary to the spirit and intent’ of the cover that hospitalit­y businesses secured to protect themselves against the effects of a national pandemic type of notifiable disease.”

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? CLARITY. Any further delays in the payment of claims will certainly no longer be as a result of insurers requiring legal certainty on the matter.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck CLARITY. Any further delays in the payment of claims will certainly no longer be as a result of insurers requiring legal certainty on the matter.

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