The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

£100m insurance hope after ruling

- ROB MCLAREN AND SAM TOBIN

The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) said a crucial ruling on Covid insurance claims could deliver a £100 million boost for Scottish firms.

The Supreme Court yesterday “substantia­lly allowed” an appeal brought by the Financial Conduct Authority in a landmark £1.2 billion legal battle over businesses’ ability to claim on insurance for Covid-related disruption.

Andrew Mcrae, FSB’S Scotland policy chairman, called on insurers to pay out quickly.

He said: “This victory for small businesses could deliver more than a £100m boost for Scotland’s independen­t and local firms.

“But to save many operators that are already on the brink, we need to see providers pay out quickly.”“

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) last year brought a test case, which could affect around 370,000 businesses, over wording of business interrupti­on insurance policies, which some insurers argued did not cover the Covid-19 pandemic.

The City watchdog previously said it was bringing the legal action after “widespread concern” over “the lack of clarity and certainty” for businesses seeking to cover substantia­l losses incurred by the pandemic and subsequent national lockdown.

In September, the High Court ruled on several “lead” insurance policies issued by eight insurers largely in favour of the FCA, which welcomed the judgment as “a significan­t step in resolving the uncertaint­y being faced by policyhold­ers”.

The regulator, however, argued the judgment “paved the way for many insurance policies to pay indemnitie­s on Covid-19 business interrupti­on claims”, but also “took something away with one hand after giving more substantia­lly and in detail with the other”.

Six of the insurers – Arch, Argenta, Hiscox, MS Amlin, QBE and RSA – also appealed against aspects of the High Court’s ruling, as did the Hiscox Action Group, which represents around 400 businesses insured by Hiscox.

In November, the UK’S highest court heard “leapfrog” appeals – which have bypassed the Court of Appeal – in a case which could have implicatio­ns for hundreds of thousands of businesses affected by coronaviru­s.

Announcing the Supreme Court ruling, Lord Hamblen said: “The appeals of the Financial Conduct Authority and the Hiscox Action Group are substantia­lly allowed and the insurers’ appeals are dismissed.”

Summarisin­g the Supreme Court’s decision in relation to “prevention of access clauses” – which are triggered by “public authority interventi­on preventing access to, or use of, the business premises” – Lord Hamblen said the High Court’s interpreta­tion was “too narrow”.

The judge said: “An instructio­n given by a public authority may amount to a ‘restrictio­n imposed’ if it carries the imminent threat of legal compulsion or is in mandatory and clear terms and indicates that compliance is required without recourse to legal powers.”

In a written ruling, Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt – with whom Supreme Court president Lord Reed agreed – concluded: “Although we have accepted some of the insurers’ arguments on their appeals, in no case has that affected the outcome of the appeal. It follows that the insurers’ appeals are dismissed.”

In a separate concurring judgment, Lord Briggs – with whom Lord Hodge agreed – said: “On the insurers’ case, the cover apparently provided for business interrupti­on caused by the effects of a national pandemic type of notifiable disease was in reality illusory, just when it might have been supposed to have been most needed by policyhold­ers.”

 ?? Picture by Mhairi Edwards. ?? PLEASED: FSB Scotland policy chairman Andrew Mcrae hailed the Supreme Court ruling.
Picture by Mhairi Edwards. PLEASED: FSB Scotland policy chairman Andrew Mcrae hailed the Supreme Court ruling.

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