8.insurance Law BL1
8.insurance Law BL1
8.insurance Law BL1
(The Insurance Act 1996 has been repealed by section 271, FSA 2013).
What is insurance?
Insurance is about indemnification through financial compensation in the event one is faced with the
misfortune of theft, accidents, fire or natural perils resulting in the loss of life or property.
In the contract is an arrangement whereby for a premium, the burden of risk is transferred from one
party, known s the insured or policyholder, to another party known as the insurer. The contract is called
an insurance policy.
Policy: When the insurer and the insured enter into a contract of insurance this is evidence by a
document containing the terms of the insurance contract called the policy.
Premium: Premium is an amount paid periodically to the insurer by the insured for covering his
risk.
General business concerns mostly with all other types of insurances, which is not life insurance, such as
marine insurance, fire insurance, accident insurance, motor vehicle insurance and aviation insurance etc.
1
The requirements for insurance contract are the same as the requirements of other types of contract.
Although the Contracts Act 1950 has jurisdiction regarding insurance contracts but in the event of
conflict or inconsistency between the Contracts Act and the Financial Services Act 2013, the latter shall
prevail.
Paragraph 1 (2) Schedule 9, FSA 2013 states that where there is a conflict or inconsistency between a
provision of the Contracts Act 1950 and the provision of this schedule, the latter shall prevail.
In an insurance contract, the proposer i.e. the insured, is the offeror whilst the insurance company
i.e. the insurer, is the offeree.
S84(1) FSA 2013 states that no licensed insurer shall assume any risk in respect of such description of
general policy as may be prescribed unless and until the premium payable is received by the licensed
insurer in such manner and within such time as may be prescribed by the bank.
1. Insurable Interest
Not all risks are insurable. A person who wants insurance must have an ‘insurable interest’ in the
risk.
He is said to have insurable interest if he will suffer loss in the event of property being destroyed.
E.g. If you are the owner of a house, you have insurable interest on the house because if the house
is damaged by fire or flood, as the owner. you would suffer a loss.
Similarly, a person would purchase an insurance policy because he has an insurable interest on his
own life e.g. if he loses his life or a limb, he would suffer a loss as he would not be able to earn an
income.
2
It was held that the insurance company was right in not paying. The plantation company was a
legal entity in its own right, separate from its shareholders. Therefore, the plantation company
had an insurable interest on the plantation but it had no insurance policy. Macaura, on the other
hand, had a policy but he had sold the plantation to the company and therefore no longer had any
insurable interest at the time of the loss.
With regards to life insurance, someone having an insurable interest in you means that
they would experience financial loss and hardship should you die
Exception to the General Rule – S 128 & Paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 8 FSA.
A person shall be deemed to have an insurable interest in the life of another person if that other
person is :
NOTE: With regards to life insurance, someone having an insurable interest in you means
that they would experience financial loss and hardship should you die
This is because insurance contract are based on mutual trust and confidence between the insured
and the insurer – contract of uberrimae fidei.
The law assumes that in an insurance contract the insured is in possession of facts which would
influence the mind of an insurer in calculating the risk he is to undertake in order to underwrite
the insurance.
3
S 150 (1) imposes a duty of the propose insured to disclose matters that are relevant to the
insurer so that the insurer may make a decision whether to accept the risk and insure the
proposer. (See case below)
4
There was medical evidence that the decease had tuberculosis between 1958 to 1959 but in the
insurance application form when asked, “Have you ever had advice about heart or lung or for
cough?” he had declared as “No”.
Held: The assured had been treated for the deceased in the hospital not long before he took up
the insurance policy. His answer in the declaration form was a deliberate lie. The insurance
contract was therefore void.
The proposed insured is not expected to disclose all facts. He is only required to disclose material
facts.
Lambert v Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd. (1975) – the court of Appeal held that the duty to
disclose extends to information which is material in the eyes of a reasonable insurer.
New India Assurance Co. Ltd. v Pang Piang Chong & Anor. (1971) MLJ 34.
The insured was killed in a road accident. His dependants made a claimed of damages for
negligence from his insurance policy which covered such liability.
The insurer refused to pay on grounds that the insured did not disclosed a material fact. One of
the questions in the insurance form was, ‘have you or any person who to your knowledge will
drive, been convicted during the past five years of any offence in connection with the driving of
any motor vehicle? The insured answered ‘No”. In fact, the insured had been convicted under the
Road Traffic Ordinace 1958 for driving without a license and not displaying the ‘L” plate.
The court held that the statutory offences for which he was convicted did not show that he was
irresponsible for the purpose of the insurance coverage and he was therefore not a bad risk. His
answer to the question did not constitute a non-disclosure of a material fact. Thus, the claimed
was valid and the insurer had to pay the insured.
In indemnity insurance contract the insured is entitled to recover the actual commercial value of
what he has lost through the occurrence of an insured event e.g. damage to property, fire or theft.
In the case of a loss, the insured is entitled to be indemnified i.e. to be compensated for his loss
but he cannot recover more than his actual loss.
5
Indemnity contracts is to restore the insured to as closed as possible to his original financial
situation. The insured is not to profit from the loss. The indemnity amount to be paid is not base
on an agreed amount but is calculated after the loss had occurred.
In a non-indemnity insurance contract the sum in which the insured is entitled to receive does not
necessarily equate or bear any relation to the actual loss e.g. life insurance, medical insurance or
personal accident insurance.
4. Doctrine of Subrogation
Under common law, the rule is that the person who caused the loss or who was primarily liable
must be responsible for the damages sustained. Therefore, in insurance law, the insurer, having
paid to the insured the amount loss, has a right of action against the person responsible for the
loss.
The doctrine give the insurer whatever rights the insured possessed, to sue the person or third
party who is responsible for the damages.
Thus, the insured’s rights are subrogated to the insurer i.e. the insurer steps into the shoes of the
insured, and make a claimed against the third party who was responsible for the loss. The insurer
will sue the third party in the name of the insured.
End of Topic