ARTICLE
15 October 2018

Supreme Court Rules On Scope "Malice" In War Risks Insurance Policy

CL
Cooley LLP

Contributor

Cooley LLP logo
Clients partner with Cooley on transformative deals, complex IP and regulatory matters, and high-stakes litigation, where innovation meets the law. Cooley has nearly 1,400 lawyers across 18 offices in the United States, Asia and Europe, and a total workforce of more than 3,000.
Supreme Court Rules On Scope "Malice In War Risks Insurance Policy
UK Insurance
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

In Navigators Insurance v Atlasnavios Navegacao [2018] UKSC 26, the Supreme Court was asked to consider whether the smuggling of cocaine on a vessel, unknown to the owners or crew, constituted a 'person acting maliciously' in a war risks insurance policy. The clause in question was the standard form Institute War and Strikes Clauses 1/10/83, and so this decision will have a wide-ranging application to commercial shipping insurance.

The clause in question provided that loss caused by "any person acting maliciously" is an insured peril (clause 1.5), but coverage is excluded in the case of "arrest, restraint, detainment, confiscation or expropriation under quarantine regulations or by reason of infringement of any customs or trading regulations" (clause 4.1.5). The Supreme Court upheld the earlier Court of Appeal decision, albeit on different grounds. The Court of Appeal had previously decided that the drug-smuggling was clearly within the ambit of malicious behaviour, but that the exclusion in clause 4.1.5 applied as customs regulations had been breached.

The Supreme Court held that the smugglers' conduct did not amount to a malicious act, as the smugglers "were not intending that any act of theirs should cause the vessel's detention or cause it any loss or damage at all." As such, the conduct did not fall within the cover provided by clause 1.5. In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court agreed that there must be some level of spite or ill-will either in relation to the insured property or, at least, to other persons or property, leading to consequential loss of or damage to the insured vessel. The Supreme Court emphasised that the smugglers had been hoping the vessel would leave Venezuela without the cocaine being detected, and therefore there was no malice directed towards the ship owners, the vessel or its cargo.

Although obiter, the Supreme Court also went on to consider the position had clause 1.5 applied and agreed with the Court of Appeal that where a loss is proximately caused by an insured peril and an excluded peril, coverage will be excluded.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

See More Popular Content From

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More