Insurance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Insurance

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Insurance is the process by which risk is spread, usually among a large group of ... The insured must suffer a pecuniary or economic loss, but they do not need to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Insurance


1
Insurance
2
Terminology
  • Insurer
  • Insurer
  • Proposal
  • Policy of Insurance

3
What is insurance?
  • Insurance is the process by which risk is spread,
    usually among a large group of people.
  • It is a contract by which one party (the insured)
    agrees to pay an amount of money (the premium) to
    another (the insurer) who agrees to pay money to
    or on behalf of the insured on the happening of
    an event, which may be certain or contingent.

4
Types of Insurance
  • Fire Perils
  • Life
  • Marine
  • Superannuation
  • Workers Compensation
  • Accident - property
  • Personal Accident
  • Disability
  • Liability
  • Motor Vehicle
  • CTP
  • Comprehensive
  • Third Party Property

5
Business insurance
  • Mandatory insurance includes
  • workers compensation
  • motor vehicle third party insurance

6
Business insurance
  • Optional business insurance includes
  • business interruption
  • business protection
  • cash in transit
  • computer failure / lightning strike
  • directors and officers liability
  • employers liability
  • fleet insurance
  • income protection

7
Business insurance
  • key person insurance
  • litigation risk
  • loss from burglary
  • loss of profits
  • motor vehicle insurance
  • personal injury
  • plate glass, glass, windows and showcases
  • public risk
  • succession
  • water leakage

8
Under and Non-insurance
  • One in six businesses have no insurance

42 No Bus Int.
12 No P.L.
9
Sources of insurance law
  • Under common law, the relationship between the
    insurer and the insured is regulated by the law
    of contract.
  • Any ambiguity in the language of the contract is
    interpreted contra proferentem, against the
    insurance company.

10
Sources of insurance law
  • Commonwealth insurance statutes include
  • the General Insurance Reform Act 2001
  • the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (ICA)
  • the Insurance (Agents and Brokers) Act 1984
  • the Insurance Act (1973)
  • the Life Insurance Act 1995
  • the Marine Insurance Act 1909

11
(No Transcript)
12
Insurance Contracts Act
  • Does not apply to
  • Health Insurance
  • Marine Insurance
  • Reinsurance
  • Workers compensation
  • Compulsory Third Party insurance
  • State or Territory Insurance organisations
  • Limited application to
  • Life insurance
  • Disability insurance

13
Types of insurance
  • Contingency insurance is a contract between the
    insured and the insurer where the insurer agrees
    that, when an event happens, it will pay an
    agreed sum of money, e.g. life insurance.
  • Indemnity insurance is where the insurer agrees
    to pay against the actual loss that the insured
    suffered, and there is no certainty that the
    event triggering payment will ever occur, e.g.
    theft insurance, fire insurance.

14
Average
  • If an insured item is insured for less than 80
    of the value, the insurance company may offer to
    pay only a pro rata portion of the insured
    amount.
  • Where an insured holds two or three policies for
    the same risk, recover can only be made once.

15
Average
  • Amount payable
  • Value stated in policy x loss
  • 80 of real value

16
Insurable interest
  • Traditionally, the insured had to have an
    insurable interest in the subject matter of the
    insurance.
  • The ICA has abolished the need for an insurable
    interest (ss. 16, 18).
  • The insured must suffer a pecuniary or economic
    loss, but they do not need to show legal or
    equitable ownership of any property lost or
    damaged (s. 17).

17
Value
  • Indemnity
  • The amount paid by the insurer to the insured is
    not more than the loss sustained the insured
    should not profit by the happening of the event
    insured against.
  • Replacement
  • The cost of replacing the item with a new item
    (i.e.) the insured gains value

18
Subrogation
  • After an insurer has paid to the insured the
    monies indemnifying the loss suffered, the
    insurer is then entitled to recover from any
    third party at fault the damages for causing the
    loss which otherwise could have been sought by
    the insured.

19
Standard Cover
  • Provides for standard insurance cover for
  • Car
  • home building
  • home contents
  • sickness and accident
  • consumer credit and
  • travel
  • Unless insurer has informed insured of any
    departures from standard cover (s 35)

20
Notification by Insurer
  • Insurer cannot rely on unusual terms unless prior
    to the contract the insurer gave the insured
    written notice of the unusual term (s 37)
  • s22 Insurer to clearly inform insured in writing
    of general nature effect of duty of disclosure
    (prescribed form may be used) (s22)

21
Duty of Disclosure
  • Part IV provides a code for
  • Breach of the duty of disclosure
  • Misrepresentation
  • Fraud
  • by the insured (s33)

22
Duty of Disclosure
  • Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) s. 13
  • A contract of insurance is a contract based on
    the utmost good faith and there is implied in
    such a contract a provision requiring each party
    to it to act towards the other party, in respect
    of any matter arising under or in relation to it,
    with the utmost good faith.

23
Duty of Disclosure
  • Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) s. 21
  • Subject to this Act, an insured has a duty to
    disclose to the insurer before the relevant
    contract of insurance is entered into, every
    matter that is known to the insured, being a
    matter that
  • the insured knows to be a matter relevant to the
    decision of the insurer whether to accept the
    risk and if so on what terms, or
  • a reasonable person in the circumstances could be
    expected to know to be a matter so relevant.

24
Duty of Disclosure
  • Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) s. 21
  • The duty of disclosure does not require the
    disclosure of a matter
  • that diminishes the risk
  • that is of common knowledge
  • that the insurer knows or in the ordinary course
    of his business as insurer ought to know or
  • as to which compliance with the duty of
    disclosure is waived by the insurer.

25
Duty of Disclosure
  • Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) s. 21
  • Where a person
  • failed to answer, or
  • gave an obviously incomplete or irrelevant answer
    to,
  • a question included in a proposal form about a
    matter, the insurer shall be deemed to have
    waived compliance with the duty of disclosure in
    relation to the matter.

26
Duty of Disclosure
  • Where a question in the insurance proposal is
    ambiguous and a person answered in a reasonable
    way, the question will be taken to have that
    meaning (s. 23).
  • Where a statement by the insured is untrue but
    made on the basis of a reasonably held belief,
    the statement is not to be taken as a
    misrepresentation (s. 26).

27
Ambiguous Questions (s23)
  • Where
  • a statement is made in answer to a question asked
    in relation to a proposed contract of insurance
    and
  • a reasonable person in the circumstances would
    have understood the question to have the meaning
    that the person answering the question apparently
    understood it to have
  • that meaning shall be deemed to be the meaning of
    the question.

28
Reasonable Belief (s26)
  • Where a statement that was made by a person in
    connection with a proposed contract of insurance
    was in fact untrue but was made on the basis of a
    belief that the person held, being a belief that
    a reasonable person in the circumstances would
    have held, the statement shall not be taken to be
    a misrepresentation.

29
Relevant to Risk (s26)
  • A statement that was made by a person in
    connection with a proposed contract of insurance
    shall not be taken to be a misrepresentation
    unless the person who made the statement knew, or
    a reasonable person in the circumstances could be
    expected to have known, that the statement would
    have been relevant to the decision of the insurer
    whether to accept the risk and, if so, on what
    terms.

30
Failure to Answer (s27)
  • A person shall not be taken to have made a
    misrepresentation by reason only that the person
    failed to answer a question included in a
    proposal form or gave an obviously incomplete or
    irrelevant answer to such a question.

31
Remedies (s 28)
  • Applies where a person under a contract of
    general insurance
  • failed to comply with the duty of disclosure or
  • made a misrepresentation to the insurer
  • before the contract was entered into
  • but does not apply where the insurer would have
    entered into the contract, for the same premium
    and on the same terms and conditions if there was
    no breach or misrepresentation

32
Remedies (s28)
  • If the failure was fraudulent, the insurer may
    avoid the contract.
  • If the insurer is not entitled to avoid the
    contract or, being entitled to avoid the contract
    has not done so, the liability of the insurer in
    respect of a claim is reduced to the amount that
    would place the insurer in a position in which
    the insurer would have been if the failure had
    not occurred or the misrepresentation had not
    been made.

33
Relief (s 31)
  • If a contract has been avoided by the Insurer for
    fraudulent
  • Breach of the duty of disclosure
  • Misrepresentation
  • A court may, if it would be harsh or unjust not
    to do so
  • Disregard the avoidance
  • Allow the insured to recover the whole or part of
    his claim

34
Relief (s 31)
  • A court shall only do so if the insurer has
  • Not been prejudiced by the fraud or
  • The prejudice is minimal
  • A court shall have regard to
  • The need to deter insurance fraud
  • The culpability of the insured

35
Payment of Claim
  • Interest payable on claims for period during
    which unreasonable for insurer to have withheld
    payment (s57)
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