The Society of
Lloyd's v Clementson
QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION (COMMERCIAL COURT)
The Times 14 May
1996, (Transcript)
HEARING-DATES: 7
MAY 1996
7 MAY 1996
INTRODUCTION:
This is a signed judgment handed
down by the judge, with a direction that no further record or transcript need
be made (RSC Ord 59, r9(1)(f), Ord 68, r 1). See Practice Note dated 6 July
1990, [1990] 2 All ER 1024.
COUNSEL:
G Pollock QC, P Lasok QC and R
Jacobs for the Plaintiff; J Lever QC and R Slowe for the Defendant
PANEL: CRESSWELL J
JUDGMENTBY-1: CRESSWELL J
JUDGMENT-1:
CRESSWELL J:
A THE CLAIM AND COUNTERCLAIM AND THE
POSITION OF THIS CASE IN THE LLOYD'S LITIGATION
Mr Clementson was elected a Name at
Lloyd's with effect from 15.12.76. He signed an undertaking with the Society of
Lloyd's in which he expressly agreed that he would be bound by the provisions
of the Lloyd's Acts and Byelaws made thereunder. The Central Fund Byelaw (No.4
of 1986) empowered Lloyd's to recover from Names monies paid out of the Central
Fund as a civil debt. In this action Lloyd's sue Mr Clementson pursuant to para
10 of the Central Fund Byelaw (No.4 of 1986) as subsequently amended in respect
of sums applied out of the Central Fund to make good default by the defendant.
Mr Clementson (who was described by
Lloyd's as the standard bearer for 2,500 Names) contends that the Central Fund
arrangements are void by reason of art 85(2) of the EC Treaty and accordingly
Lloyd's claim under the Central Fund Byelaw must fail. The defendant
counterclaims on the following basis. It is alleged that Lloyd's, by making and
implementing the Central Fund arrangements and/or other relevant arrangements,
caused the defendant loss and damage which he would not have suffered in
conditions of undistorted competition and that the quantum of such loss and
damage is either the defendant's entire aggregated underwriting loss at Lloyd's
or inter alia his unacceptable losses and/or his losses and/or reductions in
profit resulting from opaque reinsurance, the XL spiral and/or inappropriate
RITC.
This trial follows a successful
appeal to the Court of Appeal (The Society of Lloyd's v Clementson [1995] LRLR
307, [1995] CLC 117 judgment delivered 10.11.94) against the judgment of
Saville J on 16.12.93. Saville J had held that in exercising its powers to seek
reimbursement for sums paid out of the Central Fund, Lloyd's was not engaged in
activities which are subject to arts 3(g), 5, 85 and 90 of the EC Treaty. I
refer to the report of the decision of the Court of Appeal for the detailed
reasons which led the Court of Appeal to hold that the issue as to whether
Lloyd's had infringed art 85 could not be determined as a preliminary point of
law, but should proceed to trial to be decided on the evidence.
The Lloyd's Litigation
This case forms part of the Lloyd's
Litigation. It is convenient to refer to the Lloyd's Litigation and indicate
the position that this case occupies in the Litigation.
The Lloyd's Litigation has been
divided for management purposes into the following categories:-
(a) LMX;
(b) Long Tail;
(c) Personal Stop Loss;
(d) Portfolio Selection;
(e) Central Fund Litigation;
(f) Other Cases.
(a) LMX Cases
In these cases Names claim that
those responsible for underwriting on their behalf were negligent in the
writing of business in the London Excess of Loss Market (the LMX) or at least
in failing to make adequate arrangements to reinsure the risks that they wrote,
with the result that they are now faced with enormous losses. The underwriting
years that have given rise to the greatest losses are 1987, 1988, 1989 and
1990. Action Groups have brought cases against managing and members' agents and
in some cases auditors and other defendants. Trials of Feltrim (main action and
1990 year), Gooda Walker (main action), Rose Thompson Young and Bromley have
been completed. Other cases in this category are pending.
(b) Long Tail Cases
(i) Run-Off Contract Cases
These cases are concerned with the
early 1980's when a number of Lloyd's Syndicates took over by way of
reinsurance the contingent liabilities of other Syndicates. Many of the
contingent liabilities were in respect of insurances or reinsurances of United
States asbestosis and pollution risks. These risks have generated and continue
to generate huge losses on the insurances and reinsurances taken over by the
Syndicates. The cases involve a detailed investigation into the underwriting of
such risks in the early 1980's. Names allege that it was negligent to take on
this business and that both the managing and members' agents are responsible
for this negligence. Some cases in this category include allegations of
negligence in the placing and/or commuting of run-off contracts. Limitation is
raised by way of defence in a number of actions.
(ii) Reinsurance to Close Cases
These cases concern the closing of
years into the following years where the outstanding liabilities included
contingent liabilities on asbestosis and pollution risks. It is contended that
years from about 1979 onwards should not have been closed and that as a result
the Names on subsequent years have been saddled with losses that should have
remained with earlier years. In these cases the Names have not only sued their
managing agents and members' agents but also the auditors. Limitation is again
raised by way of defence.
Trials have been concluded in
Merrett and Pulbrook 334. Other cases in this category are pending.
(c) Personal Stop Loss Cases
This category is concerned with
Syndicates which wrote Personal Stop Loss insurance for Names on other
Syndicates. The Names contend this underwriting involved the indirect
reinsurance of both LMX and Long Tail business and that the managing agents
should not have taken on such business, or at least should have arranged
adequate reinsurance. The members' agents are also being sued on the grounds
that they are contractually responsible for the alleged defaults of the
managing agents. Thus these cases cover topics addressed in LMX and Long Tail
actions but are in addition concerned with how the various Stop Loss
Underwriters concerned conducted their own underwriting.
The Kansa Names' case has been
heard. Other cases in this category are pending.
(d) Portfolio Selection Cases
In this category Names allege that
their respective members' agents either failed to advise them properly as to
which Syndicates they should join and/or as to spread of risk, or put them on
unsuitable Syndicates, or failed to advise them to leave Syndicates, when (the
Names allege) it was or should have been apparent that the Syndicates were not
suitable for the Names concerned. These cases in the main concern Names who
were put on Syndicates operating in the LMX market. Although they have in
common the nature and extent of the obligations owed by a members' agent to the
Names who engage that agent, each case turns on the particular circumstances in
which the Name in question contracted with the members' agent concerned. Some
plaintiff Names in the Portfolio Selection cases are also plaintiffs in LMX
cases and accordingly questions arise from the inter-relationship of the
separate bases of claim.
Judgment has been given in two pilot
cases, Sword-Daniels and Brown,(see Brown v KMR Services Ltd; Sword-Daniels v
Pitel and Others [1994] 4 All ER 385). Other cases in this category are
pending. Some claims of this type are proceeding by way of arbitration.
(e) Central Fund Litigation
In these cases the Society of
Lloyd's claims against the defendant Names under the Central Fund Byelaw for
reimbursement of payments made from Central Fund (withdrawal claims) or failure
to maintain the required level of security at Lloyd's (earmarking claims). The
present case forms part of the Central Fund Litigation.
Marchant and Higgins (claim by
agents/pay now sue later) was determined by an unsuccessful appeal to the Court
of Appeal against an order for summary judgment.
(f) Other Cases
There are a number of other cases
which concern the internal workings at Lloyd's. Some of these cases raise
points of general importance. The "first past the post" appeal was
heard by the Court of Appeal last year. Speeches of the House of Lords on an
appeal as to taxation issues were delivered in March.
Other cases in this category are
pending.
B THIS CASE IS CONCERNED WITH
ARTICLE 85 OF THE EC TREATY AND NOT A GENERAL INVESTIGATION INTO ALLEGED
REGULATORY FAILURES ON THE PART OF LLOYD'S
In The Society of Lloyd's v
Clementson supra it was argued that terms should be implied into the contract
made between a Name and Lloyd's, by signature of the form of general
undertaking, that Lloyd's should regulate and direct the business of insurance
at Lloyd's in good faith and/or exercise its powers of regulation and direction
for the purposes for which they were given under the contract, namely the
objects set out in s 4 of the Lloyd's Act 1911 and/or regulate and direct the
business of insurance at Lloyd's with reasonable care.
The Court of Appeal held that
necessity was the primary test for implying a term into the contract by law and
that there was no such necessity. This is not a case in which the suggested
terms were so obviously necessary to the efficacy of the contract as to obviate
the need to express them. Nor was there any ground for regarding the contract
as incomplete.
It is of fundamental importance to
note that this case is concerned with art 85 of the EC Treaty and not a general
investigation into alleged regulatory failures on the part of Lloyd's.
However, examination of the
defendant's case reveals that in many respects his case is an attempt to
utilise art 85 to advance a case of regulatory failure against Lloyd's, which
the Court of Appeal's adverse decision as to the alleged implied terms
precluded, and to dress up in an art 85 guise allegations of regulatory failure
on the part of Lloyd's.
It is necessary at all times to
distinguish between alleged regulatory failures on the part of Lloyd's and
alleged infringements of art 85(1). The judgments of this Court to date in the
Lloyd's Litigation reveal negligent underwriting on an unprecedented scale. I
can well understand the wish of the Writs Response Group (of which Mr
Clementson is a member) to obtain a full independent inquiry into the question
whether regulatory failures on the part of Lloyd's have caused or contributed
to or facilitated such widespread negligence, with grievous consequences to so
many Names. But this case is concerned with art 85(1). It is not open to Mr
Clementson to use this case as an opportunity to seek the full independent
inquiry that the Writs Response Group wishes to obtain.
Nothing in this judgment is intended
to belittle the seriousness of the negligence on the part of managing agents
(and members' agents) reflected in the judgments of this Court in Feltrim,
Gooda Walker, Rose Thompson Young, Bromley, Merrett, Pulbrook 334 (and Brown
and Sword-Daniels). Thousands of Names (including Mr Clementson) have suffered
grievously from negligent underwriting.
The Rowland Report stated that it
was a serious mistake to permit some individuals to join Lloyd's without
appropriate resources to pay losses and that the then current means test and
criteria for Names' wealth requirements paid too little attention to the
accessibility of capital backing Names' underwriting limits. Mr Wilshaw (who
was called by Lloyd's) said that a large number of Names who joined Lloyd's in
the 1980's were not Names which his members' agency would have recommended to
join at all. He referred to one particular members' agency who appeared not to
understand what they were doing and therefore gave inappropriate advice as to
portfolio selection. Professor Bain's revised Annex F to his fifth Report
(which reflects the agreed Wilshaw "Category 3" list of high risk
syndicates for the 1989 year of account) constitutes prima facie evidence of
widespread negligent portfolio selection advice on the part of Members' Agents,
but each Portfolio Selection case turns on the particular circumstances in
which the Name in question contracted with the Members' Agent concerned. The
above and other evidence in this case would be highly pertinent to an
independent inquiry into alleged regulatory failures, but my concern is with
art 85.
C PRINCIPLES OF EC LAW
The relevant principles of EC law
are as follows.
A Article 85 provides as follows:
"(1) The following shall be
prohibited as incompatible with the common market: all agreements between
undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices
which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or
effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the
common market, and in particular those which:
(a) directly or indirectly fix
purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions...
(2) Any agreements or decisions prohibited
pursuant to this Article shall be automatically void."
Article 85(3) sets out the
conditions for exemption by the Commission from the provisions of art 85(1) of
notified agreements.
B (1) Decisions fall within the
prohibition of art 85 if they have either the object or the effect of
preventing, restricting or distorting competition; it is not necessary to show
that they have this object if they have this effect.
(2) Decisions fall within the
prohibition of the Article if they have the object or effect of preventing or
restricting or distorting competition; it is, again, not necessary to show
prevention or restriction of competition if distortion is shown.
(3) Any decision by an association
of undertakings which may affect trade between Member States and which has as
its object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition
within the common market is automatically void.
(4) art 85 has direct effect and
national courts are accordingly bound to apply it.
(5) The power in paragraph (3) of
art 85 to declare inapplicable the prohibition in paragraph (1) in any given
case is exercisable only by the Commission. It is not exercisable by a national
government or a national court. Any association of undertakings seeking to show
that any of its decisions which may affect trade between Member States and
which has as its object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of
competition within the common market is not prohibited must accordingly notify
the Commission and obtain exemption. If a decision falls within the prohibition
in paragraph (1) of the Article, a national court cannot relieve the
association from the consequences in paragraph (2) on the ground that the
decision is in all the circumstances beneficial or economically justified.
(6) The conduct of insurance
business falls within the scope of art 85.
(As to (1)-(6) above see Sir Thomas
Bingham MR in The Society of Lloyd's -v- Clementson [1995] CLC 117 at 125).
1. Burden of proof
The burden lies on the defendant to
prove that art 85(1) has been infringed. In so far as matters need to be
established to enable Lloyd's to rely on the rule of reason, the evidential
burden of establishing those matters lies on Lloyd's.
2. Standard of proof
Lloyd's say that the standard of
proof is at the higher end of the usual civil standard of proof on a balance of
probabilities scale. The defendant does not agree and says that the standard of
proof is the balance of probabilities.
In Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc. -v-
Maclaine Watson & Co Ltd [1989] 3 CMLR 429 at 443 Webster J said:-
"An infringement of Article 85
carries with it a liability to penalties and fines; and I will, therefore,
apply the standard of a high degree of probability, but less than the standard
of proof in criminal matters."
In Chiron Corporation and Others v
Organon Teknika Ltd and Others (No.2) [1993] FSR 324 at 329 Aldous J referred
to the quotation from Shearson Lehman supra but said that at the stage of the
action with which he was concerned he would assume that the standard of proof
was the normal civil standard.
(See further Masterfoods Ltd t/a
Mars Ireland v H B Ice Cream Ltd [1992] 3 CMR 830 at 872-873 Keane J)
In Rhone-Poulenc -v- Commission
[1991] ECR II 867 at 954 Judge Vesterdorf acting as Advocate General said in
his Opinion:-
"There must be a sufficient
basis for the decision and any reasonable doubt must be for the benefit of the
applicants according to the principle in dubio pro reo".
I propose to follow the same course
as that adopted by Jonathan Parker J in George Michael v Sony 13 Tr L 532 (at
page 250 of the transcript) and, without ruling on Lloyd's submission, to apply
the normal standard.
3. Effect on trade between Member
States
The requirement of an effect on
trade between Member States is distinct from the requirement of an effect on
competition. Both the Court of Justice and the Court of First Instance have
consistently held that, in order that an agreement between undertakings may
affect trade between Member States within the meaning of art 85(1), it must be
possible to foresee with a sufficient degree of probability on the basis of a
set of objective factors of law or fact that it may have an influence, direct
or indirect, actual or potential, on the pattern of trade between Member
States, such as might prejudice the realization of the aim/objective of a
single market between Member States (Langnese-Iglo v Commission [1995] 5 CMLR
602).
It is irrelevant that the agreement
produces an increase in trade, even a large one, since the aim of the Treaty is
not to increase trade as an end in itself but rather to create a system of
undistorted competition (Bellamy & Child 4th Edition pages 111-112).
Community law covers any agreement
or any practice which is capable of constituting a threat to freedom of trade
between Member States in a manner which might harm the attainment of the
objectives of a single market between the Member States, in particular by
partitioning the national markets or by affecting the structure of competition
within the Common Market. Conduct the effects of which are confined to the
territory of a single Member State is governed by the national legal order.
(Hugin v Commission [1979] ECR 1869 at 1899).
As to partitioning the market and
altering the structure of competition see B&C 2-130 and 2-131. (The
defendant relies on altering the structure of competition). Trade between
Member States may be affected within the meaning of art 85(1) if the agreement
alters the competitive structure within the common market to an appreciable
extent.
Subject to the de minimis rule, it
is not necessary to establish that the agreement or conduct has in fact
affected trade between Member States; it is enough to show that it is capable
of having such an effect.
As to the de minimis rule, an
agreement will not be held to contravene art 85(1) unless the Court is
satisfied that it is likely to affect trade between Member States, and to
prevent, restrict or distort competition within the common market, to an appreciable
extent.
The Treaty does not require that
each individual clause in an agreement should be capable of affecting
intra-Community trade, provided the agreement as a whole satisfies the test
(Case 193/83 Windsurfing International v Commission [1986] ECR 611).
4. Establishment of effect on trade
between Member States
The existence of an effect (or
potential effect) on intra-Community trade is to be determined by comparing the
situation as it exists, with the agreement, decisions or concerted practice in
question, with the situation as it would exist, in the absence of the
agreement, decision or concerted practice.
5. Prevention, restrictions or
distortion of competition as an object or effect
In order to attract the prohibition
in art 85(1) it must, in relation to each of the agreements, decisions of an
association of undertakings or concerted practices alleged by the defendant to
infringe that provision, be established that that agreement, decision or
concerted practice has as its object or its effect the prevention, restriction
or distortion of competition in the relevant market.
In many cases there is no clear
distinction made between "object" and "effect". Nonetheless
it is correct to consider first "the object" of the agreement before
considering "its effects". The "object" of the agreement is
to be found by an objective assessment of the aims of the agreement in
question, and it is unnecessary to investigate the parties' subjective
intentions. If the obvious consequence of the agreement is to restrict or
distort competition, as a matter of law that is its "object" for the
purposes of art 85(1), even if the parties claim that such was not their
intention, or if the agreement has other objects (B&C pages 90-91). See
further B&C 2-100 (where objects ambivalent).
6. Prevention, restriction or
distortion of competition - effect
As to the effects of the agreement
on competition in Societe Technique Miniere v Maschinenbau Ulm [1966] ECR 237
the Court said:-
"This interference with
competition referred to in Article 85(1) must result from all or some of the
clauses of the agreement itself. Where, however, an analysis of the said
clauses does not reveal the effect on competition to be sufficiently
deleterious, the consequences of the agreement should then be considered and
for it to be caught by the prohibition it is then necessary to find that those
factors are present which show that competition has in fact been prevented or
restrictedor distorted to an appreciable extent"
As to rule of reason: market analysis
and "essential" restrictions see B&C page 68 2-063. The
"rule of reason" applies to agreements in the insurance sector. It
may be necessary for insurers to include an anti-competitive provision in their
arrangements if it is only by that means that effect can be given to other
acceptable provisions. So in Klim v DLG [1994] ECR 5641 the Court accepted that
a rule preventing members of one co-operative being members of a rival
co-operative was not a breach of art 85(1).
However, the anti-competitive restrictions
must be limited to what is necessary to render the arrangements as a whole
properly operable (Higgins v Marchant & Elliot Underwriting Ltd at page 10
Leggatt LJ). See further Klim supra where the Opinion of Mr Tesauro at page
1-5654 refers to "workable competition", at page 1-5655 refers to
agreements capable of performing "a more complex function" and at
pages 1-5655-6 lists examples of cases where the Court has held that art 85(1)
is not contravened by their object, provided that in certain circumstances they
do not engender anti-competitive effects and also where the Court stated at
page 1-5688 "in order to escape the prohibition... in Article 85(1)...,
the restrictions imposed on members by the statutes of cooperative purchasing
associations must be limited to what is necessary to ensure that the
cooperative functions properly and maintains its contractual power in relation
to producers".
The franchisor must be able to take
the measures necessary for maintaining the identity and reputation of the
network bearing his business name or symbol (Pronuptia [1986] ECR 353 at 382).
A cooperative association does not
in itself constitute anti-competitive conduct. That legal form is favoured by
the Community authorities because it encourages modernization and
rationalization in the agricultural sector and improves efficiency. In order to
escape prohibition, the restrictions imposed on members by the statutes of
cooperative associations intended to secure their loyalty must be limited to
what is necessary to ensure that the cooperative functions properly and in
particular to ensure that it has a sufficiently wide commercial base and a
certain stability in its membership. A combination of clauses such as those
requiring exclusive supply and payment of excessive fees on withdrawal, tying
the members to the association for long periods and thereby depriving them of
the possibility of approaching competitors, could have the effect of
restricting competition. Such clauses are liable to render excessively rigid a
market in which a limited number of traders operate who enjoy a strong
competitive position and impose similar clauses, and of consolidating or
perpetuating that position of strength, thereby hindering access to that market
by other competing traders. (H G Oude Luttikhuis v Verenigde Cooperative
Melkindustrie Coberco BA at pages 1-4 to 1-5).
In practice, in determining whether
competition is "distorted" three main considerations are important.
First, it is necessary to consider the competition that would occur in the
absence of the agreement in dispute. If the agreement contributes to an appreciable
divergence from "normal" conditions of competition there is a
"distortion" within the meaning of art 85(1). Secondly, it is
inherent in the concept of undistorted competition that "each economic
operator must determine independently the policy which he intends to adopt on
the Common Market". Article 85(1) thus requires that every undertaking
must act independently, taking its own decisions without co-operation with its
competitors. An agreement whereby competitors collaborate may "distort"
competition even if competition is not "restricted", for example if
the parties exchange competitive information, or jointly subsidise selling
activities, or confer on themselves a competitive advantage denied to others.
Thirdly, the competition which art 85(1) seeks to protect is that which would
occur in a true common market in which goods and services flow freely through
the Community. Thus an agreement which hinders the integration of the single
market is a particularly important example of a "distortion" of competition
within the meaning of art 85(1). (B&C pages 99-100).
7. Effect of arrangements to be
determined in their context
The effect of the agreement,
decision or concerted practice in question is a matter of fact to be determined
in the light of all the relevant facts and the legal and the economic context.
8. Comparison of situation "as
is" and "as would be"
The existence of an object or effect
to prevent, restrict or distort competition is to be determined in the light of
all the relevant facts and the legal and economic context by comparing the
situation as it exists, with the term or terms said to prevent, restrict or
distort competition, with the situation as it would exist, in the absence of
that term or terms.
9. Appreciability of effect on inter-State
trade and of prevention, restriction or distortion of competition
The effect on intra-Community trade
and the impact on competition must be appreciable. (See Beguelin Import Co and
others v SAGL Import Export [1971] ECR 949). Intra-Community trade means trade
between Member States and the effect may be actual or potential.
For a case where the Commission
considered the Rules and Regulations of the LSFM see Re The Application of the
London Sugar Futures Market Ltd [1988] 4 CMLR 138.
10. Ascertainment of appreciability
The appreciable nature of the
effect/impact is to be determined in the light of all the relevant facts and
the legal and economic context and, in particular, by examining the nature of
the alleged infringement of art 85(1), the strength of the position on the
market of the parties to the alleged infringement, the strength on the market
of competitors of the parties and the freedom with which other undertakings may
enter the market. (See Langnese-Iglo v Commission supra).
It is necessary, at the outset, to
define the relevant market before finding an infringement of art 85. For the
purposes of applying art 85, the reason for defining the relevant market is to
determine whether the agreement, the decision by an association of undertakings
or the concerted practice at issue is liable to affect trade between Member
States and has as its object or effect the prevention, restriction or
distortion of competition within the Common Market (Case T-29/32 SPO [1995] ECR
II 289 at pages 317-318).
An undertaking with 5% of the market
may be of sufficient importance for its behaviour to be caught by art 85(1).
However, undertakings with a market share of less than 5% may still be caught
by art 85(1) if, on the facts, a sufficiently appreciable effect can be
demonstrated (B&C page 119 and Case 19/77 Miller v Commission [1978] ECR
131).
11. Severance
Article 85 strikes down only those
provisions of an agreement which are anti-competitive. It is then for the
national law to decide what effect that has on the remaining provisions of the
agreement. Severance is permissible in English law where the offending parts of
an agreement can be struck out without rewriting the agreement or entirely
altering its scope and intention. If what remains stands as a contract in its
own right, it is enforceable. (Leggatt LJ in Higgins at pages 12-13). In
Higgins at page 13 Leggatt LJ said:-
"Mr Vaughan has addressed no
argument to the Court either orally or in writing about severance. Instead he
argues that it is necessary to look at the whole of the Lloyd's arrangements.
If then the 1988 Byelaw is anti-competitive or the SAA is anti-competitive, the
whole of what is comprehended within the arrangements is void. We agree with Mr
Pollock Q.C. that this approach is appropriate only in cases such as the cartel
cases where in order to see the scope and effect of the provisions creating the
cartel the court has to look at the whole of the context in which the offending
agreement was made".
And see Societe Technique Miniere v
Maschinenbau Ulm supra where the Court said:-
"This provision (Article
85(2)), which is intended to ensure compliance with the Treaty, can only be
interpreted with reference to its purpose in Community law, and it must be
limited to this context. The automatic nullity in question only applies to
those parts of the agreement affected by the prohibition, or to the agreement
as a whole if it appears that those parts are not severable from the agreement
itself. Consequently any other contractual provisions which are not affected by
the prohibition, and which therefore do not involve the application of the
Treaty, fall outside Community law."
12. Damages
Lloyd's say that if (which Lloyd's
deny) the prohibition in art 85(1) gives rise to a right to damages, damages
can be claimed only by a third party to the agreement, decision or concerted
practice in question. The defendant says that in circumstances such as the
present, where the claimant could not engage in the commercial activity in
question unless he joined the association of undertakings whose decisions are
impugned and/or became a party to the agreement that is impugned, without, in
each case, any real opportunity to negotiate the terms of the impugned
arrangements, the claimant is not disentitled from recovering damages by reason
of his membership of the association and of the fact that he is a party to the
agreement.
As to damages in English law see
B&C 10-037 et seq and the Opinion of Mr Van Gerven in H J Banks & Co Ltd
v British Coal Corporation [1994] ECR 1-1209 at 1250-1251.
In Clementson supra at 130 Sir
Thomas Bingham MR said:-
"If Mr Clementson is able to
establish that Lloyd's has acted in breach of Article 85, then it seems to me
at least arguable that he has a good counterclaim for damages on which he is
entitled to rely by way of set-off and that s.14 of the Lloyd's Act 1982 cannot
be effective to deprive him of that right. If it were otherwise I do not see
how national courts could help enforce the Community's competition regime, as I
understand they are expected to do. Whether s.14 may itself amount to an
infringement of Article 85, and not simply an ineffective defence to a claim
for breach of Article 85, seems to me more problematical. In the absence of evidence,
however, I do not think one can dismiss as fanciful the suggestion made by the
Commission in its Notice on co-operation between national courts and the
Commission in applying Articles 85 and 86 of the EEC Treaty:
'Companies are more likely to avoid
infringements of the Community competition rules if they risk having to pay
damages or interest in such an event.' "
13. Lloyd's say that without
prejudice to their submissions referred to in 12, it is consistent with EC law
to exclude liability in damages in respect of an infringement of art 85(1)
(such liability being owed to a member of the Lloyd's community) as long as (i)
similar claims under English law are treated in the same way and (ii) claims
based on art 85(2) and claims to injunctive relief in respect of an
infringement of art 85(1) are not precluded.
The defendant says the following:-
(i) irrespective of the treatment by
national law of claims for damages for infringement of a person's national law
rights, a provision of national law cannot exclude a right to recover damages
which, as a matter of EC law, that person is entitled to recover for
infringement of his EC law rights;
(ii) in any event a national court
is precluded by arts 5 and 85 of the EC Treaty from giving effect to a provision
of national law if and to the extent that that provision would exclude
liability for damages for breach of art 85(1) since, were the national court to
do so, it would remove one of the potential deterrents against infringement of
art 85(1);
(iii) the foregoing is without
prejudice to the defendant's contention that this issue is concluded as between
the defendant and Lloyd's by the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Clementson
supra.
14. Lloyd's say that no right to
damages arises unless the parties to the agreement, decision or concerted
practice had an intent to injure the person concerned. The defendant says an
intent to injure is not necessary.
15. Lloyd's say that if damages can
be claimed at all, they may be claimed only in respect of the loss caused by
the operation of a term of the agreement, decision or concerted practice that
is found to be prohibited by art 85(1). The defendant says that damages may be
recovered for loss caused to the claimant by an agreement or decision to which
art 85(1) applies, save to the extent that the loss was caused by provisions of
the agreement or decision that are not unlawful because they are capable of
being severed.
16. It is common ground that
questions of causation and remoteness of loss are determined by English law.
17. As to the conflicting
submissions referred to in 12 to 15 above it is not necessary to add to what
the Court of Appeal said as to these questions in Clementson supra, in view of
my conclusions set out below.
D THE REGULATORY BACKGROUND
In the Society of Lloyd's v
Clementson supra Sir Thomas Bingham MR described the regulatory background to
the Lloyd's insurance market as follows:-
"The regulatory background
Before turning to the Community law
issues it is perhaps helpful to touch, briefly and far from comprehensively, on
the regulatory background to the Lloyd's insurance market.
Under a contract of insurance the
insured pays a premium to the insurer and in return the insurer undertakes a
risk of loss which would otherwise fall on the insured. To perform his
contractual obligation the insurer must have the means to meet any valid claim
by the insured if and when it is made (together, of course, with other claims
made by other insureds). If the insurer misjudges the extent of his potential
liabilities, he may be unable to meet the claim of the insured and this risk is
compounded by the considerable time-lag which may well occur between the time
when the premium is received and the time when the insured's loss is known or
its extent ascertained. These peculiar features of insurance business, and the
bitter experience of insurance company failures, have triggered a series of
regulatory measures both in this country and abroad.
The London insurance market
comprises a companies market and the Lloyd's market. The capital of insurance
companies is ordinarily provided by shareholders whose liability is limited for
each shareholder to the amount of capital that he has subscribed. Lloyd's, in
contrast, is a society of individual underwriting names, grouped in syndicates:
each name is liable to meet debts incurred in his underwriting to the extent of
his personal fortune, but each underwrites risks for his own part and not for
anyone else. These differing forms of organisation would not readily lend
themselves to an identical regulatory regime, and have not in practice done so.
The Assurance Companies Act 1909 required insurance companies to deposit sums
in a specified amount with the Paymaster General on behalf of the Supreme
Court. Lloyd's underwriters were exempted from these requirements, but only on
condition that they complied with a somewhat different regulatory regime
applicable to them. This regulatory regime required each Lloyd's underwriter
also to deposit a sum of money, to be held so long as any liability under any
policy remained unsatisfied, and to deliver an annual statement to the Board of
Trade showing the extent and character of various classes of insurance business
undertaken by him. Since then these differences of treatment have persisted and
increased.
Until the accession of the UK to the
EEC the regulation of British insurance undertakings in the UK was a domestic
matter. But in July 1973 the Council adopted the first Insurance Directive
73/239, addressed to member states which by this time included the UK. The
recitals of this directive referred to the desirability of co-ordinating in
particular provisions relating to the financial guarantees required of
insurance undertakings; to the need to extend supervision in each member state
to all relevant classes of insurance; to the need for insurance undertakings to
possess a solvency margin, related to their overall volume of business and
determined by reference to two indices of security, one based on premiums and
the other on claims; and to the importance of guaranteeing the uniform
application of co-ordinated rules and of providing for close collaboration
between the Commission and member states. The directive recognised the
existence of Lloyd's underwriters as a form of organisation not found
elsewhere. Article 14 (in the original version) placed the responsibility for
supervising undertakings solely on the home member state, which was by art. 16
to require each undertaking to establish an adequate solvency margin in respect
of its whole business. Detailed rules were laid down for calculating the
required solvency margin, part of which was to constitute a guarantee fund.
The Insurance Companies Act 1982 was
enacted in part to give effect to the obligation of the UK under the directive.
Most of the detailed regulatory provisions of the Act are directed to the
companies market. Members of Lloyd's are exempted by s. 2(2) from the prohibition
in s. 2(1) on carrying on insurance business in the UK without the authority of
the Secretary of State and Pt. II of the Act, dealing with the regulation of
insurance companies, does not (by s. 15(4)) apply to a member of Lloyd's who
carries on insurance business of any class, provided that he complies with the
requirements set out in s. 83 and applicable to business of that class.
The requirements referred to in
s.15(4) were specified in subs. (2) to (7) of s. 83, which provide:
'(2) Every underwriter shall, in
accordance with the provisions of a trust deed approved by the Secretary of
State, carry to a trust fund all premiums received by him or on his behalf in
respect of any insurance business.
(3) Premiums received in respect of
long term business shall in no case be carried to the same trust fund under
this section as premiums received in respect of general business, but the trust
deed may provide for carrying the premiums received in respect of all or any
classes of long term business and all or any classes of general business either
to a common fund or to any number of separate funds.
(4) The accounts of every
underwriter shall be audited annually by an accountant approved by the
Committee of Lloyd's and the auditor shall furnish a certificate in the
prescribed form to the Committee and the Secretary of State.
(5) The said certificate shall in
particular state whether in the opinion of the auditor the value of the assets
available to meet the underwriter's liabilities in respect of insurance
business is correctly shown in the accounts, and whether or not the value is
sufficient to meet the liabilities calculated:
(a) in the case of liabilities in
respect of long term business, by an actuary; and
(b) in the case of other
liabilities, by the auditor on a basis approved by the Secretary of State.
(6) Where any liabilities of an
underwriter are calculated by an actuary under subsection (5) above, he shall
furnish a certificate of the amount thereof to the Committee of Lloyd's and to
the Secretary of State, and shall state in his certificate on what basis the
calculation is made; and a copy of his certificate shall be annexed to the
auditor's certificate.
(7) The underwriter shall, when
required by the Committee of Lloyd's, furnish to them such information as they
may require for the purpose of preparing the statement of business which is to
be deposited with the Secretary of State under section 86 below.'
Reference should also be made to s.
84 of the Act, which provides:
'(1) Subject to such modifications
as may be prescribed and to any determination made by the Secretary of State in
accordance with regulations, sections 32, 33 and 35 above shall apply to the
members of Lloyd's taken together as they apply to an insurance company to
which Part II of this Act applies and whose head office is in the UK.
(2) The powers conferred on the
Secretary of State by sections 38-41, 44 and 45 above shall be exercisable in
relation to the members of Lloyd's if there is a breach of an obligation
imposed by virtue of subsection (1) above.'
Section 32 governs the margin of
solvency which an insurance undertaking is required to maintain. Section 33
applies where an undertaking fails to maintain the minimum margin of solvency.
Section 35 provides for the making of regulations to govern the form and
situation of the assets of an insurance undertaking. Sections 38-41, 44 and 45
confer certain reserve powers on the Secretary of State. Section 85 of the Act
governs transfers of business to and from members of Lloyd's, and s. 86
provides for the deposit by the Committee of Lloyd's with the Secretary of
State of an annual statement summarising the extent and character of the
insurance business done by the members of Lloyd's in the preceding twelve
months.
In these provisions repeated
reference is made to the Committee of Lloyd's. This is a body established when
Lloyd's was incorporated in 1871. Under the Lloyd's Act 1982 the Committee
consisted of the working members of Lloyd's who had been elected to the
Council. The Council was itself established by the 1982 Act and included a
minority of external members of Lloyd's and nominated members. Section 6(1) and
(2) of the Act provide:
'6(1)The Council shall have the
management and superintendence of the affairs of the Society and the power to
regulate and direct the business of insurance at Lloyd's and it may lawfully
exercise all the powers of the Society, but all powers so exercised by the
Council shall be exercised by it in accordance with and subject to the
provisions of Lloyd's Acts 1871-1982 and the byelaws made thereunder.
'6(2) The Council may:
(a) make such byelaws as from time
to time seem requisite or expedient for the proper and better execution of
Lloyd's Acts 1871-1982 and for the furtherance of the objects of the Society,
including such byelaws as it thinks fit for any or all of the purposes
specified in Schedule 2 to this Act; and
(b) amend or revoke any byelaw made
or deemed to have been made hereunder.'
The Lloyd's Act 1982, although a
private Act of Parliament, must be read in conjunction with the Insurance
Companies Act 1982 which became law three months later. The two Acts reflect a
quite deliberate decision, that Lloyd's should (subject to the reserved powers
and duties of the Secretary of State) be exempted from the ordinary regime of
regulation to which insurance companies were subjected and should (subject to
these powers and duties) be left to regulate itself. Consistent with this
legislative policy of self-regulation for Lloyd's, s. 42 of the Financial
Services Act 1986 also provides that Lloyd's and persons permitted by the
Council of Lloyd's to act as underwriting agents at Lloyd's are exempted
persons as respects investment business carried on in connection with or for
the purpose of insurance business at Lloyd's.
On 24 February 1983 the Minister of
State at the Department of Trade made The Insurance (Lloyd's) Regulations 1983.
These laid down certain rules governing calculation of the solvency margin of
Lloyd's members, the form of the audit certificate required by s. 83(4) of the
Act and the statement of business required by s. 86(1) of the Act."
E LLOYD'S
For the purposes of examination of
the question whether art 85(1) has been infringed it is necessary to examine
the complex legal and economic context of Lloyd's in detail.
Section E of this judgment is
largely drawn from statements of agreed facts. I have combined the various
statements of agreed facts, made a number of additions and omitted matters that
I do not regard as material.
1. INTRODUCTION
A The Operation of the Lloyd's
Market Generally
Structure of the Lloyd's Market
1.1 The expression
"Lloyd's" denotes an insurance market. This comprises an association
of separate economic entities, namely individual underwriters. Each person
accepts insurance business through an agent on a several basis for their own
profit or loss.
1.2 In 1871 the members of the
Lloyd's underwriting community were united by Act of Parliament into a Society and
Corporation and incorporated by the name of Lloyd's. The objects of the Society
are as follows:
The carrying on by members of the
Society of the business of insurance of every description including guarantee
business;
The advancement and protection of
the interests of members of the Society in connection with the business carried
on by them as members of the Society and in respect of shipping and cargoes and
freight and other insurable property or insurable interests or otherwise;
The collection publication and
diffusion of intelligence and information;
The doing of all things incidental
or conducive to the fulfilment of the objects of the Society. [Section 4,
Lloyd's Act 1911].
The Society does not itself accept
insurance nor does it assume liability for the business transacted by its
underwriting members.
1.3 Lloyd's underwriters must be
members of the Society and, with certain limited exceptions, brokers must be
approved by the Society in order to place business with Lloyd's underwriters on
behalf of their clients.
Underwriting
1.4 The underwriting members of
Lloyd's are known as Names. The Name is the 'insuring entity' that provides
capital to the market through participation in syndicates, carries the
underwriting risk and earns the underwriting profit or sustains the loss. Each
Name trades individually for his or her own account.
1.5 The mix of Names by nationality
remains predominantly British, and overwhelmingly from the English-speaking
world. The expression "external Names" refers to those Names who do
not work in the market and "working Names" refers to (a) a member of
the Society who occupies himself principally with the conduct of business at
Lloyd's by a Lloyd's broker or underwriting agent; or (b) a member of the
Society who has gone [s 2, Lloyd's Act 1982] into retirement but who
immediately before his retirement so occupied himself.
1.6 The amount of business a Name is
permitted to underwrite is circumscribed by the level of resources placed at
Lloyd's and is referred to as an Overall Premium Limit (OPL). This does not,
however, apply to premiums received for reinsurance to close earlier years of a
syndicate on which the Name is placed where the placing and receiving syndicate
are substantially similar. Further, since 1992 under the Syndicate Premium
Income (Amendment No. 3) Byelaw (No. 12 of 1991) premiums paid under quota
share agreements have been deductible when measuring premiums against OPLs
thereby increasing the effective capacity of the market.
Syndicates
1.7 Although a syndicate is an
economic entity comprising the aggregate of the underwriting capacities
allocated to it by its individual Names, it has no legal personality. In
principle, a Name underwrites his/her own risks through a managing agent (see
the standard managing agent's agreement). However, in practice an underwriting agent
aggregates the underwriting capacity of individual Names for whom it is acting,
so that the larger risks may be accepted. The grouping together of Names in
this manner does not affect the legal position of individual Names vis--vis
risk. Names trade on the basis of several liability and so are not responsible
for the debts of other Names within the syndicate.
1.8 Subject to reinsurance to close
being effected (see below), syndicates cease to trade at the end of a year and
are commonly described as annual ventures. The outstanding liabilities of the
syndicate participants and the benefits of any outstanding premiums expected
are reinsured not less than two years later, usually with participants in the
following year's syndicate. This reinsurance is known as reinsurance to close
(RITC). It has been Lloyd's policy to encourage syndicates to close years where
appropriate. However, where the managing agent is unable to make a realistic
assessment of what premium should be paid to the next year's Names on the syndicate
to take on liability for the outstanding and future claims, the managing agent
should declare an open year.
1.9 The fact that a syndicate is
limited to one year's life, has some effect on the nature of the business that
a syndicate will underwrite. As was noted at para 2.45 of the Rowland Report
(January 1992) a syndicate is restricted in making long-term future commitments
such as large multi-year insurance contracts without break clauses. A syndicate
may not buy reinsurance policies which bind future years of account, or enter
into long term contracts for physical assets.
1.10 Nonetheless, the management of
a syndicate's business is effectively an ongoing venture, carried out by a
managing agent. A managing agent employs underwriting and administrative staff
who develop and run the syndicate's business from year to year. The main duties
of managing agents, and their relationship to Names are dealt with below.
1.11 All members are required to
delegate the management and underwriting of their insurance business to the
managing agents of the syndicates in which they participate. Members are unable
to take any active part in the agent's conduct of insurance business on their
behalf. (See clause 7.3 of the standard managing agent's agreement).
1.12 Managing agents and active
underwriters depend primarily upon Lloyd's brokers bringing insureds and cedant
insurers to them. Business is also underwritten on behalf of syndicates through
binding authorities or, on occasion, through arrangements with service
companies established by managing agents to produce business such as personal
lines insurance (eg. household or motor). Binding authorities are arrangements
whereby third parties (often brokers) are authorised to accept risks on behalf
of the members of the syndicate subject to certain conditions and limits.
1.13 The active underwriter on each
syndicate is employed by the managing agent. The main functions of the managing
agent are to employ the active underwriter and to manage the business of the
syndicate; the services provided can include general management, accounting,
business development, computer services and other shared services. The cost of
the services so provided is charged to the syndicate as part of the costs of
underwriting. In addition, the managing agent charges a fee, based on the stamp
capacity of its syndicates, and receives a profit commission on the syndicates'
profits. For the 1990 and subsequent underwriting years the "vertical
deficit clause" was introduced which requires that the losses on a
syndicate be carried forward one year (until 1993, when this was changed to two
years) in the calculation of the managing agent's profit commission.
1.14 Most managing agents are now
limited companies (one or two are partnerships), which are privately owned or,
in a few cases, publicly quoted. Prior to the divestment process required by
Lloyd's Act 1982, some of the managing agencies were owned by Lloyd's brokers.
As a result of the divestment requirements, those broker-related agents were sold
off, frequently to the owners of the agency.
1.15 Active underwriters were
required by s 21 of the Underwriting Agents Byelaw (No. 4 of 1984) to be
directors of the managing agency, which employs them, and in some cases are the
chairman of the agency.
Raising of capital and serving the
capital base
1.16 Over the past 30 years, a
second agency function has evolved within the Lloyd's market: the members'
agency function. Originally, the managing agent fulfilled the role of
introducing new Names to the market and managing their affairs as underwriting
members. In the 1960s agents emerged whose function was to introduce new Names,
and advise them on syndicate selection and other issues.
1.17 Some members' agents operate,
so far as Lloyd's agency functions are concerned, exclusively as members'
agents and are referred to as independent agents; others are owned by, or are
members of a group that includes a managing agent in which case they and the
managing agent are referred to as combined agents. Some of the independent
agents are part of broking groups, who were able to retain ownership of members
agencies when they were required to sell off their managing agencies by the
divestment provisions of Lloyd's Act 1982.
1.18 Members' agents are remunerated
on a similar basis to managing agents, receiving both a fee based on allocated
capacity and a profit commission. In 1990, the horizontal deficit clause was
introduced, whereby profit commission for a members' agent was calculated from
the net total of profit/loss in any one year for each name across the
syndicates in which the name participated.
1.19 The functions of the members'
agents today are, broadly speaking, threefold: to raise new capital for the
market by introducing new Names; to advise new and existing Names on syndicate
selection and secure the required access to syndicate capacity; and to provide
administrative services to the Names in their capacity as such in respect of
their personal accounting, tax and investment needs.
The production and placement of
business
1.20 Business is brought to Lloyd's
by the worldwide networks of the Lloyd's brokers. A Lloyd's broker is a
partnership or corporate body permitted by the Council to broke insurance
business at Lloyd's on behalf of its clients. Most of the largest broking firms
in the world own a Lloyd's broking subsidiary. Lloyd's brokers do not place all
of their business through the Lloyd's market. They also deal with UK insurance
companies and overseas insurance markets.
1.21 The Lloyd's broker is the final
link in a chain from the policyholder to the Lloyd's underwriters which may
include a number of other intermediaries. The remuneration payable to the
Lloyd's broker (usually expressed as a percentage of the premium payable by the
insured) may be shared amongst all the intermediaries. The Lloyd's broker is
normally responsible for preparing the documentation which is used for
presenting the risk to underwriters (the "slip"). A typical risk will
be placed with a number of syndicates, with one particular underwriter (the
"leader") setting the premium rate, approving the policy wording and,
frequently, underwriting the largest "line" - or percentage - of the
risk. (See also para 2.8 below in relation to "Respect of Lead" agreements)
In most cases, once the risk has been placed, the broker issues a cover note
setting out the basic terms and conditions of the insurance, and the proportion
of the risk accepted by each insurer. There may be many participants in the
cover from outside the Lloyd's market. However, there will only be one policy
document for the participating Lloyd's syndicates. That document is usually
prepared by the broker, and checked by the Lloyd's Policy Signing Office
(LPSO), by which it is issued. It is also a further feature of the international
wholesale insurance market that reinsurance may be placed by a broker in
advance of underwriting a direct insurance. This is particularly so in respect
of treaty reinsurance, such as quota share, where a generic reinsurance
programme will be purchased in the expectation of business in relation to
specific risks, and where the rate for direct insurance can be properly
ascertained once the cost of laying off a proportion of that risk has been
assessed.
B Governance
The Council of Lloyd's
1.22 The Council of Lloyd's is the
body charged with the management and superintendence of the affairs of the
Society and the power to regulate and direct the business of insurance at
Lloyd's [s 6(1) Lloyd's Act 1982]. To that end, the Council is empowered to:
(i) make such byelaws as from time
to time seem requisite or expedient for the proper and better execution of
Lloyd's Acts 1871 to 1982 and for the furtherance of the objects [s 4 Lloyd's
1911 (set out in para 1.2 above)] of the Society, including such byelaws as it
thinks fit for any or all of the purposes specified in Sch 2 of the Act; and
(ii) amend or revoke any byelaw made
or deemed to have been made thereunder [s 6(2) Lloyd's Act 1982].
1.23 The composition of the Council
was established by Lloyd's Act 1982, as comprising 16 working Names, 8 external
Names and 3 Names nominated by the Council and confirmed by the Governor of the
Bank of England. In July 1987, following the Neill Report, this composition was
altered to 12 working Names, 8 external and 8 nominated Names. The composition
of the Council has subsequently been changed (in accordance with the Council's
powers under Lloyd's Act 1982 to vary its composition) to permit the
appointment of 6 working Names, 6 external Names and 6 nominated members. The Chairman
and Deputy Chairmen of the Council are elected on an annual basis by the
Council [s 4 Lloyd's Act 1982]. Under s 6(4) of Lloyd's Act 1982, any byelaw
passed by the Council may be amended or revoked at a general meeting of the
Society of Lloyd's by a majority of those voting, provided these represent a
third of the total membership of Lloyd's. This procedure may be invoked by 500
Names serving a notice in writing on the Council. The Council may delegate
certain powers to the Committee by special resolution (see para 1.24 below).
The Committee of Lloyd's
1.24 Until January 1993 the
Committee of Lloyd's was comprised of the 12 working members of the Council [s
5(1) Lloyd's Act 1982]. The market association chairmen also attended meetings
of the Committee. By means of special resolution, the Council delegated certain
functions to the Committee, namely:
(i) the making of regulations
regarding the business of insurance at Lloyd's; and
(ii) the carrying out or exercise of
any duties, responsibilities, rights, powers or discretions imposed or
conferred upon the Council by any enactment (other than an enactment in the
Act) or regulation made in pursuance thereof or by any other instrument having
the effect of law or by any other document or arrangement whatsoever, whether
or not such enactment, regulation, instrument, document or arrangement was in
force or in existence on the day when the Act came into force, in so far as
such delegation was not prohibited by any enactment, regulation, instrument,
document or arrangement [s 6(6) Lloyd's Act 1982].
The functions previously performed
by the Committee of Lloyd's are now divided between the Lloyd's Market Board
and the Lloyd's Regulatory Board (which have been in operation since January
1993) as set out below.
The Market Board
1.25 The Market Board has been in
operation since 1993 and at present has 17 members: 11 working members (being
the 7 working members of the Council and a further 4 working members), 3
executives from the Corporation of Lloyd's, including the Chief Executive
Officer, and 3 external members. It is chaired by the Chairman of Lloyd's. The
Market Board has the prime purpose of advancing the interests of Lloyd's
members, co-ordinating and leading in dealings with governments, media and
other outside bodies. It is responsible for the strategy to advance Lloyd's
competitiveness and for the provision of central services in areas such as
premium and claims handling, central accounting, the issuing of policies,
systems support, accommodation, overseas representation, surveying and
intelligence services. It also sets minimum standards in areas affecting the
reputation, efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the market as well as agreeing
standards of conduct applying to all types of businesses trading at Lloyd's.
The Regulatory Board
1.26 The Regulatory Board may have
up to 16 members. It currently comprises six nominated members of the Council,
five external members of the Council together with four working members of the
Society who are not members of the Council and the Director of Regulatory
Services. The Regulatory Board is responsible for establishing rules for
regulation of the Lloyd's market. The rules are designed to ensure compliance
with legal requirements, the protection of policyholders and of the interests
of Lloyd's members, solvency and the regulation of contractual arrangements
between members and their agents. The Board oversees the disciplinary functions
exercisable by the Council.
1.27 In turn, the Council (and prior
to January 1993, the Committee) has delegated powers to certain committees. The
terms of reference of the principal committees are set out below.
(a) Audit Committee
The Audit Committee was a policy and
advisory committee reporting to the Committee of Lloyd's on matters affecting
the solvency of members of Lloyd's and the security underlying Lloyd's
policies. The Audit Department of the Corporation provided administrative
support to the Audit Committee and was directly responsible to it. The Audit
Committee existed from 1960 until 1983 when it was renamed the Solvency and Security
Committee (SSC). This change of name reflected a re-organisation of
departmental functions within the Corporation and the formation of a new
department called the Members' Solvency and Security Department, rather than
any significant change in the Committee's area of responsibilities and
functions. Equally, the responsibilities of the Members' Solvency and Security
Department were similar to those of the Audit Department.
(b) Solvency and Security Committee
As indicated above, the SSC was
established in 1983.
(c) Solvency and Reporting Committee
The Solvency and Reporting Committee
(SRC) was formed in 1991. It assumed the role and functions of its predecessor,
the SSC, and in addition it assumed responsibility for the functions of the
Accounting & Auditing Standards Committee.
The SRC's terms of reference have
been varied from time to time. However, in general terms, its responsibilities
and functions remain essentially the same from year to year. The composition of
the SRC has also varied from time to time. Until recently, it was chaired by a
Deputy Chairman of Lloyd's. It includes underwriters, managing and members'
agents, accountants, auditors and the Director of Lloyd's Regulatory Services
Group. In summary, its terms of reference embrace the requirements of the
Names' annual solvency test and DTI returns, and the records to be kept by
syndicates and underwriting agents pursuant to those requirements. The SRC is
also concerned with other security requirements applicable to Names, the
monitoring of syndicate premium income, policyholder protection, the rules
relating to credit for solvency of reinsurance ceded and the requirements of
the Insurance Companies Acts.
(d)"O" Group
The "O" Group existed from
the 1970s to the early 1990s. It had no terms of reference as such but was
effectively a small committee set up to monitor Council papers. It included the
Chief Executive, Chairman and Deputy Chairman, and the group heads whose task
was to review the papers submitted for consideration at Council/Committee
meetings and discuss amendments etc to the papers.
(e) Membership Committee
The Membership Committee existed
from about 1978 to 1984. It was a policy and advisory committee reporting to
the Committee of Lloyd's on matters relating to membership requirements. It
also had responsibility for taking decisions upon membership matters in
accordance with the guidelines or policies established by the Committee of
Lloyd's.
Functions of the Corporation of
Lloyd's Services
1.28 The Corporation of Lloyd's is
the executive and administrative arm of the Society of Lloyd's. It is divided
into a number of directorates, including:
*Finance. This division is
responsible for the Corporation's financial and taxation affairs and represents
the interests of the society in taxation issues affecting Names or syndicates.
It also provides certain financial services to the market, including the
publication of Lloyd's Statutory Statement of Business.
*Marketing. This division has
primary responsibility, under the Market Board, for relationships between the
market and the Corporation, Lloyd's image at home and overseas, and further
developments of business in those countries which are important to Lloyd's.
Departments include International, Marketing, Communications and Market
Planning.
*Regulatory Services. The Corporation's
function in the self-regulation of Lloyd's is largely performed by departments
within this division. Responsibilities include registration and continued
supervision of underwriting agents and Lloyd's brokers, approval of
arrangements for the introduction of business, registration of auditors, and
handling of customer complaints.
*The Legal Services Department
provides legal advice to the Council and Corporation. It is also responsible
for the conduct of investigations and for the conduct of proceedings before the
Lloyd's Disciplinary Committee and Appeals Tribunal.
*Central Services Unit (CSU). CSU is
responsible for membership matters, Names' funds at Lloyd's and provision of
market services.
*Systems and Operations. This
division provides computer and telecommunications services to the market and is
responsible for developing systems to aid both the market and the Corporation
in their work. Lloyd's Policy Signing Office and Lloyd's Claims Office are
major departments within this division.
*Human Resources and Support
Services. This division is responsible for the pension, personnel, training and
property departments within the Corporation.
Society Regulation
1.29 The second main function of the
Corporation is to administer the regulatory framework for the Society. Under
the principles of self-regulation confirmed by the Neill Report, there is a
complex regulatory regime. (See further s 3 below). The Regulatory Services
Directorate at Lloyd's administers this regulatory process and is also responsible
for the review of brokers and agents within the market to ensure compliance
with the regulations.
Additional Underwriting Agencies
1.30.In 1979, the Committee of
Lloyd's ordered the establishment of a corporate vehicle known as Additional
Underwriting Agencies Limited (AUA) to take over the task of running the
liabilities of syndicates where the managing agents had failed. Originally, the
Corporation of Lloyd's ran AUAs with assistance from underwriting and managing
agency staff in the market. Where the failure of a managing agent now occurs,
it is more usual for the Corporation, on establishment of a "run-off"
vehicle, to sub-contract the task of running off the liabilities to an
appropriate underwriter who acts as Lloyd's agent.
Lioncover
1.31 As a result of large losses
suffered by the Names on those syndicates managed by PCW Underwriting Agencies
Limited (caused mainly by the fraud of its active underwriter), Lioncover
Insurance Company Limited (Lioncover) was formed in 1987 by the Society (as a
wholly-owned subsidiary under its control) as a vehicle to reinsure the
liabilities of syndicates formerly managed by PCW (later Richard Beckett
Underwriting Agencies Limited). It subsequently also reinsured WMD Underwriting
Agencies Limited, an associated agency. 73 syndicates were managed by these
agencies. They wrote broad-based marine, non-marine and aviation accounts,
including a large exposure to non-marine long-tail casualty business.
All PCW syndicates and Names are
reinsured to close into Syndicate 9001. This is a syndicate formed specifically
to enable Names on PCW syndicates to obtain reinsurance to close, thereby
ending their involvement in the PCW syndicates for regulatory and tax purposes
and enabling them to be released from membership of Lloyd's. Syndicate 9001
conducts no other business. Lioncover (as retrocessionaire) entered into a
whole account retrocession agreement with Syndicate 9001 (as retrocedant). #44
million was paid from the Central Fund to Lioncover to meet future liabilities
as they arose. In the event of a shortfall between the assets and liabilities
of Lioncover, the shortfall is recoverable from Lloyd's at Lioncover's request
under the terms of a bond given by Lloyd's to Lioncover. During 1989, #30.1
million was paid from the Central Fund to Lioncover to meet a shortfall.
1.32 In addition the Society itself
has given indemnities to each of the members of Syndicate 9001. It also entered
into cost funding agreements with each of the managing agents from time to time
of Syndicate 9001 - currently Syndicate Underwriting Management Limited (SUM)
(formerly Additional Underwriting Agencies 4 Limited) and previously Additional
Underwriting Agencies 3 Limited (AUA3).
Centrewrite
1.33 Centrewrite Limited
(Centrewrite), a wholly owned subsidiary of the Society, and under its control,
was formed in 1991 to provide reinsurance, on an arms-length, unlimited basis
for syndicates in run-off and for individual members of such syndicates. Since
1993 it has underwritten Lloyd's members' Estate Protection Plans (EPP). Any
shortfall that occurs in the funds of Centrewrite has been and will be met from
the Central Fund or other assets of the Society.
Lioncover and Centrewrite are
authorised by the DTI as insurance companies. AUA3, as a former substitute
members' and managing agent, is not authorised as an insurance company.
Lioncover, Centrewrite and AUA3 are wholly owned subsidiaries of the Society.
C Market Representation
1.34 In addition to the committee
structure, there is a series of market associations which represent the
interests of the various market constituencies: there are separate associations
for each underwriting market. They are independent from the Corporation of
Lloyd's and not under its control. They are: the LUA (marine), the LUNMA
(non-marine), the LMUA (motor), the LAUA (aviation). These different categories
of business are dealt with further below.
(a) LUA: Lloyd's Underwriters
Association was formed in 1909 and acts officially for all marine underwriters
at Lloyd's in all matters relating to their business. The committee of the
association meets regularly to discuss the underwriting and general administrative
problems which affect marine insurance. It frequently makes recommendations to
all members of the association with a view to improving the efficiency and
profitability of marine insurance. Also, the association keeps its members
supplied with all pertinent information that is likely to have some bearing
upon the underwriting of marine insurance at Lloyd's.
(b) LUNMA: In 1910 what is now
Lloyd's Underwriters' Non-Marine Association Ltd was formed 'with the object of
meeting periodically to consider matters relating to fire and non-marine
business at Lloyd's'. One of the chief functions of that association was then,
and still is, to circulate information to non-marine underwriters relating to
non-marine business throughout the world. It is not, however, the purpose of
the association to involve itself in underwriting. The association works
closely with the Council of Lloyd's, enabling Lloyd's underwriters to transact
non-marine business throughout the world. Membership of the association
comprises all the active underwriters at Lloyd's underwriting non-marine
business and they elect a board.
(c) LMUA: The introduction of
compulsory third party insurance in 1930 led directly to the formation of the
Lloyd's Motor Underwriters' Association in June 1931. The problem of
compensating the victims of untraced and uninsured motorists was identified
many years ago and the association played an important role in the formation of
the Motor Insurers' Bureau. Membership of LMUA comprises all Lloyd's syndicates
transacting compulsory motor insurance in the UK and they elect a committee.
(d) LAUA: Lloyd's Aviation
Underwriters' Association was formed in 1935 to represent the interests of the
Lloyd's aviation market. Membership comprises underwriters of any Lloyd's syndicate
writing aviation business. A committee acts on behalf of the members as a
whole, keeping them informed and sometimes making recommendations designed to
improve the efficiency of the market.
(e) LUAA: Lloyd's Underwriting
Agents' Association was formed in 1960 to look after the interests of
underwriting agents and to examine and report on matters which might be
referred to it by the Chairman or Council of Lloyd's. The association has no
regulatory power. The association acts as a forum for its members and, when
necessary, speaks collectively on their behalf. The association is represented
on a number of standing and ad hoc committees and it liaises with the various
departments of the Corporation of Lloyd's on matters affecting agents and the
names for whom they are responsible.
(f) BIIBA: The British Insurance and
Investment Brokers' Association was originally the British Insurance Brokers'
Association (BIBA) until the name was changed to the present one in January
1988. BIBA had been formed from what had been known as the British Insurance
Brokers' Council. The decision to form the British Insurance Brokers' Council
was taken earlier by the four former insurance broking associations (the
Association of Insurance Brokers, the Corporation of Insurance Brokers, the
Federation of Insurance Brokers, and Lloyd's Insurance Brokers' Association).
On 1 January 1978, the membership of the four associations was transferred to
BIBA and the old organisations dissolved to leave a single national body
representing the interests of insurance brokers in the United Kingdom. The
purpose was to ensure that, for the future, united action was taken on measures
to protect and promote the interests of the British insurance broking industry
and that a single representative body existed able to react to or express
opinion on matters affecting the industry.
(g) LIBC: The Lloyd's Insurance
Brokers' Committee is an autonomous committee of BIIBA. It is the direct
successor of Lloyd's Insurance Brokers' Association, which was formed in 1910.
In 1978 the committee of Lloyd's Insurance Brokers' Association became Lloyd's
Insurance Brokers' Committee of BIBA. The interests of Lloyd's brokers remain
in the hands of a committee of 16, elected by Lloyd's brokers themselves. While
the LIBC is, in fact, one of the regional committees of BIIBA, in so far as
matters affecting the interests of members of the Lloyd's region of BIIBA (ie.
Lloyd's brokers) are concerned, it is autonomous. It therefore continues to
represent Lloyd's brokers on, inter alia, all matters peculiar to their
relationships in the Lloyd's community. Through numerous technical
sub-committees, the LIBC for Lloyd's brokers (and BIIBA for all member
insurance brokers) provides a service on a very wide range of matters.
Names are represented through the
external members of the Council but they have also sought representation
through other channels, eg the Association of Lloyd's Members (ALM).
2. CATEGORIES OF BUSINESS CONDUCTED
AT LLOYD'S
2.1 The business of Lloyd's is
traditionally divided into four principal categories: marine, non-marine,
aviation and motor. Managing agents often describe the syndicates they manage
by reference to the main category in which they have traditionally operated.
However, these descriptions are not comprehensive and do not define syndicates
which frequently write a broader range of business than those titles might
suggest. A more precise description of the business which has been written by
each syndicate, and an outline of the business which is expected to be written
in the following two years, is required to be given by the active underwriter
in his annual report to members of a syndicate.
2.2 Each syndicate writes a
different mix of business, with each category of business carrying different
risks. There is an important distinction between "short-tail" and
"long-tail" risks. The term "short-tail" is applied to
business on which claims generally arise and are settled relatively soon after
the risk is accepted and the premium paid; "long-tail" denotes
business for which the notification or the settlement of claims, or both, may
take many years.
2.3 Lloyd's syndicates underwrite
both "direct business" (where the policyholder has a direct interest
in the underlying risk insured) and "reinsurance" (where the
policyholder is an insurance company or another Lloyd's syndicate). Reinsurance
can be of an individual risk (a facultative reinsurance) or a portfolio or
specified part of risks previously written or yet to be written (treaty
reinsurance).
2.4 The insurance industry is
international and, in many areas, highly competitive. In the calendar year 1991
over 60 % of Lloyd's premium income was derived from policyholders located
overseas, including some 35 % from the United States and Canada and 14 % from
other Member States of the EC.
2.5 In many countries, insurance can
only be provided by locally-based licensed insurers. However, Lloyd's
underwriters have been authorised to provide insurance under local insurance
legislation in a number of countries including Australia, Canada, New Zealand
and South Africa. In many of the countries where Lloyd's underwriters are so
authorised, they are required to fulfil a number of local requirements, which
may include the appointment of a general representative, the maintenance of
local deposits and the filing of statistical reports.
2.6 In other countries, Lloyd's
underwriters are able to accept business without having to be licensed
insurers. For example, in the USA, although licensed to write direct insurance
only in Illinois, Kentucky and the US Virgin Islands, Lloyd's underwriters are
eligible (except in Kentucky and the US Virgin Islands) to accept excess or
surplus lines business (ie. business which locally licensed insurers are unable
or unwilling to underwrite) in all states.
2.7 Lloyd's underwriters are also
able to write reinsurance of insurance companies, even in countries where they
are unable to write on a direct basis.
2.8 Respect of Lead Agreements,
which dealt with the basis upon which marine hull risks were renewed as between
the lead underwriter and the following market were in operation from the mid
1970s to 1991.
2.9 Lloyd's position in reinsurance
remains especially strong, particularly in the specialist risk areas. Lloyd's
continues to enjoy a high reputation in the US for handling difficult risks,
which many domestic carriers are unwilling to underwrite, eg. D&O, medical
malpractice and bankers' bond business.
3. DEVELOPMENT OF SELF-REGULATION AT
LLOYD'S
3.1 Lloyd's was established as a
society of underwriters in 1811 when a Deed of Association was executed by the
members at that time. By 1871, the business of Lloyd's had increased in size to
the extent that it was considered necessary to promote an Act of Parliament to
establish the Society of Lloyd's in a more permanent fashion. Lloyd's Act 1871
incorporated the then members and all persons subsequently admitted as members
into the Society of Lloyd's. That Act, with a few basic amendments, established
the Committee of Lloyd's as responsible for managing the affairs of Lloyd's and
laid down the framework upon which Lloyd's affairs have been conducted during
the ensuing 110 years. It laid down (inter alia) and confirmed two fundamental
rules for Names, that underwriting must be conducted only in the Underwriting
Room and a Name shall be a party to a contract of insurance underwritten at
Lloyd's only if it is underwritten with several liability, each underwriting member
for his own part and not for another, and if the liability of each underwriting
member is accepted solely for his own account.
3.2 During the late 19th and early
20 Century, the market saw the development of new forms of underwriting and
Lloyd's Act 1911 extended the object of Lloyd's to include the carrying on by
Names of insurance business of every description (previously it had been
limited to marine business). The Act also introduced the power of the
Corporation to suspend temporarily any Name if the Committee considered him to
have been guilty of any act or default discreditable to him as an underwriter.
3.3 Lloyd's Act 1925 gave enabling
powers in respect of the making of byelaws by the Society and modified some of
the rules governing the operation of the Committee. A further Lloyd's Act,
Lloyd's Act 1951, was promoted to give the Society full powers to borrow money.
Several parts of the Acts referred to above were repealed by Lloyd's Act 1982,
the purpose and provisions of which are dealt with further below.
The Cromer report
3.4 In the late 1960s the market was
struggling with severe underwriting losses and a falling membership. The
Committee therefore asked Lord Cromer to head a Working Party to investigate
and recommend "what should be done to encourage and maintain an efficient
and profitable Lloyd's underwriting market of independent competing syndicates,
which would be of a size to command world attention". The report was
delivered to the Committee of Lloyd's at the end of 1969. The recommendations
of the Cromer Report that were implemented were the reduction of the means test
applied to UK External Names from #75,000 to #50,000, the rationalisation of
Names' deposit arrangements and the reorganisation of deposit ratios. The
Cromer Report also made certain recommendations in relation to the remuneration
of agents and the issue of the conflict of interest inherent in joint ownership
of brokers and managing agencies. The Cromer report was made available to the
Names in October 1986.
The Fisher report
3.5 In 1979, the Committee of
Lloyd's established a working party, chaired by Sir Henry Fisher, its terms of
reference being:
"To enquire into
self-regulation at Lloyd's and for the purpose of such enquiry to review:
(i) the constitution of Lloyd's (as
provided for in Lloyd's Acts and Byelaws);
(ii) the powers of the Committee and
the exercise thereof; and
(iii) such other matters which, in
the opinion of the Working Party, are relevant to the enquiry.Arising from the
review, to make recommendations".
The principal recommendation of the
Working Party was that:
"... the constitution is no
longer appropriate and the Committee's powers are inadequate for
self-regulation in modern conditions. We have, therefore, recommended that the
Committee of Lloyd's should promote a new private Act of Parliament so that the
constitution of Lloyd's can be brought up to date and the powers of
self-regulation enlarged." [Letter of Working Party presenting Report to
Lloyd's Chairman dated 23 May 1980].
3.6 The report of the Working Party
(the Fisher Report) contained a draft bill to amend Lloyd's Acts 1871-1951.
That draft was the basis of the bill put forward to the Lloyd's membership for
approval at a meeting on 4 November 1980. On 27 November 1980, the Committee
presented the draft bill to Parliament for passage as a private Act of
Parliament. The Bill received royal assent on 23 July 1982.
The Neill report
3.7 In January 1986 the Financial
Services Bill was published and did not include Lloyd's within its scope.
However, during the second reading of the Bill, the Secretary of State for
Trade and Industry announced that Sir Patrick Neill, would head an inquiry into
the administrative and disciplinary framework of Lloyd's and the operation of
Lloyd's Act 1982. The terms of reference of the Neill Committee were:
"to consider whether the
regulatory arrangements which are being established at Lloyd's under the 1982
Lloyd's Act provide protection for the interests of members of Lloyds
comparable to that proposed for investors under the Financial Services
Bill".
3.8 The Neill Committee reviewed the
byelaws and codes of conduct made since 1983 and concluded that the Council had
transformed the self-regulation at Lloyd's and had acted with energy and
determination. The Committee did not recommend that the regulation of
membership of Lloyd's should be brought under the auspices of the Securities
and Investments Board. Nor did it recommend any amendments to Lloyd's Act 1982;
it stated that its recommendations could be effected by byelaws and resolutions
of the Council.
3.9 The Committee expressed a number
of views on the relationship between external and working members of Lloyd's
and made a total of 70 recommendations. These related to the following areas:
(i) the constitution of the Council
of Lloyd's: in particular, it recommended increasing by four the number of
members nominated by the Governor of the Bank of England and reducing by four
the number elected from working Names;
(ii) admission to membership;
(iii) the relationship between
Names, members' agents and managing agents: in particular, the structure and
terms of the standard agency agreement;
(iv) syndicate accounting and
disclosure;
(v) registration of underwriting
agents, Lloyd's brokers and syndicate auditors;
(vi) conflicts of interest:
especially in relation to common ownership of managing and members' agents;
(vii) enforcement of the system of
regulation;
(viii) compensation and complaints
by Names.
Recent Reports
Commercial future of Lloyd's
3.10 In 1991, the Council of Lloyd's
appointed a Task Force under the Chairmanship of Mr David Rowland to consider the
future organisation of the Lloyd's market. Its terms of reference were to
"examine and assess the advantages and disadvantages of the present basis
on which capital is provided to support underwriting at Lloyd's" and to
review the issues of the one year syndicate structure and of individual
membership with unlimited liability. The Task Force made a series of
recommendations, in relation to reforms to the current structure of the market,
the management of old and open years, changes in the agency system, limited
liability capital, and strengthening distribution channels. These included a
recommendation that the Council should "make a commitment to consider the
concept of value for syndicate participations in three years' time, and
evaluate the case for further development of the idea in the light of market
conditions and the degree of support from Names" (Rowland recommendation
no. 47).
Regulatory issues
3.11 In February 1992, the Chairman
of Lloyd's asked Sir David Walker to enquire into allegations that syndicate
participations at Lloyd's were arranged to the benefit of working Names and to
the disadvantage of external Names; and into the operation of the LMX spiral.
The report provided by the Walker Committee made a number of recommendations,
the most significant being in relation to Lloyd's systems of premium income
monitoring and the assessments of the riskiness of particular types of
business.
4. NOTIFICATION TO THE EC COMMISSION
4.1 From 1978, Lloyd's retained Mrs
Liliana Archibald as a consultant to advise it on EC matters in the light of
forthcoming regulatory changes at the EC level (which ultimately took place in,
inter alia, the Second Non-Life Directive). Mrs Archibald had previously been a
senior official at the EC Commission.
4.2 On 15 November 1982, Sir Peter
Green, the then Chairman of Lloyd's, wrote to Mr John Ferry, then the Director
for Competition responsible for the matter.
4.3 Following the enactment of
Lloyd's Act 1982 until 1984, all the byelaws then in draft form were submitted
to the Commission on a rolling basis, including the Recovery of Monies Paid Out
of the Lloyd's Central Fund or the Funds and Property of the Society Byelaw
(No. 5 of 1984), which provided for recoveries of payments made under the
Central Fund Deed by way of civil debt. The Central Fund Deed had also been
submitted. This process of consultation was referred to in Lloyd's Annual
Report and Accounts 1983. Under the heading of "Review of the
Corporation's Activities" it was stated that "The Society is
concerned to seek appropriate approvals for Lloyd's under the competition rules
of the Community ... the External Relations Department has maintained a close
liaison with the European Commission and the European Parliament and the
Community is therefore well informed about our regulatory plans."
4.4 On 23 May 1984, Mr Abramson, a
former Department of Trade official was retained as a consultant to start work
on a notification. Mr Abramson was stood down in late 1984. He has since died.
4.5 On 20 September 1984, the two EC
Commission officials responsible, Mr Norbert Menges and Mr Franco Giuffrida,
visited Lloyd's to see it in operation.
4.6 Subsequently, on 2 October 1984,
Mr Menges wrote to Lloyd's.
4.7 Lloyd's did not proceed with a
formal notification. A comfort letter was not issued.
4.8 On 28 February 1995, Lloyd's
notified the Central Fund Byelaw (No. 4 of 1986) to the EC Commission.
5. BECOMING A MEMBER OF LLOYD'S
5.1 In order to be eligible to
underwrite insurance at Lloyd's, an individual must apply and be accepted as a
member of Lloyd's. Preliminary application is made through a members' agent
with the sponsorship of an existing member. If this preliminary application is
approved by the Council, the applicant will be asked to provide information in
relation to his means. He will also be required to attend a Rota Committee
interview. The Rota Committee comprises representatives of the Council who
inquire into, and assure themselves of (inter alia) the applicant's awareness
and understanding of the concept of unlimited liability. Applicants who are
approved by the Rota Committee must then be elected as members by the Council.
5.2 The terms of a Name's membership
of the Society of Lloyd's are governed by a standard form agreement known as
the General Undertaking. Under the terms of this, the Name agrees to comply
during the:
"period of membership with the
provisions of Lloyd's Acts 1871-1982, any subordinate legislation made or to be
made thereunder and any direction given or provision or requirement made or
imposed by the Council or any person(s) or body acting on its behalf pursuant
to such legislative authority and shall become a party to, and perform and
observe all the terms and provisions of, any agreements or other instruments as
may be prescribed and notified to the Member or his underwriting agent by or
under the authority of the Council."
The long form and short form
undertakings between Mr John Clementson and the Society of Lloyd's are dated 1
January 1977.
Means
5.3 The amount of premium income
which a Name may accept and thus the level of business he may write is
determined by the level of means which he has proved to Lloyd's, and the level
of his funds at Lloyd's. The minimum means requirements for external Names for
the period 1971-1992 are set out in bundle 28, App 11.
Mini Names
In 1976, a new category of Names,
known as "Mini-Names" was introduced. A Mini-Name was permitted to
become a member of Lloyd's if he could show 50% of the funds normally required,
but was also subject to a corresponding limitation on the amount of business he
could underwrite. The Mini-Name category was abolished in 1984.
A table setting out the minimum
means and funds at Lloyd's requirements between 1971 and 1995 is at bundle 28,
App 12.
5.4 On admission to Lloyd's, Names
are required to provide to Lloyd's a Statement of Means setting out the assets
they have to support their level of underwriting. The statement must be signed
by an independent professional. Only assets which are beneficially owned by a
Name may be included on the Statement of Means: they must normally have been
possessed by the Name for 12 months prior to the date of the statement, must
not be charged or encumbered in any way and must not be used in any way which
may restrict their availability for the purpose of the individual's membership
of Lloyd's.
Acceptable assets for Means
5.5 Assets for the purposes of
confirmation of means are prescribed by the Council (under the Membership
Byelaw) and are divided into 2 main groups:
(i) Assets which must constitute not
less than 60% of the qualifying level of means. These include listed UK
securities, unit trusts, government stocks and National Saving Certificates,
cash, bank and building society guarantees, letters of credit, life policies
and gold;
(ii) Assets which must not exceed
40% of the qualifying level of means, including freehold and leasehold property
(from September 1994 this no longer includes the Name's principal residence).
From the early 1980s, a Name's
principal private residence could be used for general means purposes. A market
bulletin issued on 4 November 1981 covering membership requirements for 1983
specifically confirmed that the member's own home could be used as collateral
for bank guarantees/letters of credit. This practice was discontinued by a
market bulletin issued on 26 September 1994.
Maintenance of Means
5.6 Names are required to maintain
at all times the value of their means at the level required by the Council. If
the value falls below this qualifying level, Names must advise Lloyd's
specifying the amount of the deficiency and they may be required to provide a
new Statement of Means or reduce their underwriting.
Re-confirmation of Means
5.7 Subject to the above, a Name's
Statement of Means remained valid for a period of 3 years from the underwriting
year to which the statement related. Reconfirmation of means at the end of each
three year period was formerly requested in a form approved by the Council.
Since the early 1990s, this requirement to reconfirm means has been
discontinued although the Council retains a discretion to require such
reconfirmation if it sees fit.
Funds at Lloyd's
5.8 Under the Membership Byelaw, the
Council has powers to prescribe the amount and form of security to be provided
by a Name in respect of his underwriting business at Lloyd's. This security
(which is additional to the amounts held in a member's Premiums Trust Funds)
comprises a Name's funds at Lloyd's . A Name's funds at Lloyd's will include
his Lloyd's deposit, personal reserve fund and special reserve fund. The amount
of a Name's overall premium limit is calculated as a percentage of the
individual's funds at Lloyd's in accordance with ratios laid down by the
Council of Lloyd's.
5.9 All assets comprising a Name's funds
at Lloyd's must be beneficially owned by the member, be readily realisable and
free from any charge or encumbrance, unless the Council otherwise agrees.
Capacity
5.10 The introduction of mini-Names
facilitated an immediate growth in the market's capacity.
A graph illustrating the scale of
the over-supply of capital is at page 52 exhibit 42 of the Rowland Report.
5.11 The security of the Lloyd's
policy and the protection of the Central Fund requires that Lloyd's takes steps
to ensure that means are maintained at a level appropriate to support the
members' underwriting.
There are some Names for whom
membership is inappropriate, even if they could pass the means test.
Capacity growth can, inter alia, be
curbed by increasing deposit ratios and/or increasing real wealth requirements.
A graph (Baillie-Hamilton) on
probability of exceeding a loss threshold is found at page 87 exhibit 47 of the
Rowland Report.
The DTI's rgime
5.12 The DTI's rgime is designed
primarily to protect the policyholders and ensure that they get paid; not to
protect capital. The DTI do not accept responsibility for Names in so far as
they are suppliers of capital. When assessing the solvency of Lloyd's, the DTI
takes into account the provisions in the accounts of syndicates, the capital
already committed by Names which is callable to meet claims, the unconditional
guarantees that are callable and the Central Fund but not any further claims
that might be made on Names.
Names' debts
5.13 As Names have unlimited
liability, the calls for additional funds can be financially disabling for
members of a syndicate with very heavy losses. As at the end of 1994 Names owed
#732 million (1993 #630 million) in respect of amounts that had been called and
remained outstanding. Names' debts were approximately #1.1 billion at the end
of 1995. In broad terms the basis of allocation of debt credits in R & R
will be to assist those Names who, by virtue of having suffered
disproportionately large losses, will have the greatest difficulty meeting
their "finality" bills.
6. LEGAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NAMES
AND THEIR AGENTS
6.1 s 8(2) of Lloyd's Act 1982
provides that Names may only underwrite insurance at Lloyd's through an agent.
For these purposes, there are three
types of agents, a members' agent, a managing agent and a combined agent.
The role and duties of a Members'
Agent
Lloyd's Membership Manual (1988)
describes a members' agent as:
"an agent to whom members delegate
complete control of their Lloyd's affairs and who enter into sub-agency
agreements with managing agents to place Names on their syndicates".
For the 1990 year of account, this
has been superseded by a direct contract between Names and their managing
agents, executed by the members' agent on their behalf.
Members' agents do not underwrite
any risks. Their primary role is to introduce prospective Names to Lloyd's and
to act as an intermediary between Names and managing agents. Members' agents
are regulated by the Underwriting Agents Byelaw (No. 4 of 1984) which requires
registration of members' agents and sets out rules for the ownership and
control of such agencies. The Agency Agreements Byelaw (No. 8 of 1988)
prescribes a standard form contract which must be entered into between a Name
and any members' agent appointed.
6.2 The prime role of a members'
agent is to manage a Name's Lloyd's affairs other than the actual management of
the underwriting. The main duties of a members' agent are:
*advising Names on their suitability
for membership;
*advising and guiding Names through
the election process;
*advising which syndicates to join
and in what amounts;
*dealing with any changes in a
Name's overall premium limit;
*dealing with the administration of
the investment of a Name's personal and special reserve funds;
*dealing with the annual solvency
test and other statutory and regulatory requirements;
*accounting to Names for the results
of their underwriting, including payment of profit and collection of losses or
interim cash calls; and
*keeping the Names informed at all
times of material factors which may affect their underwriting.
The role and duties of a Managing
Agent
6.3 The Lloyd's Membership Manual
describes a managing agent as "an agent responsible for managing a
syndicate and appointing the active underwriter". The principal role of a
managing agent is to determine the underwriting policy of the syndicates it
manages and to make arrangements for the underwriting of risks. Managing agents
must appoint and supervise one or more individuals to be the active
underwriters for each of their syndicates, pricing and accepting risks on
behalf of the syndicate members, and placing reinsurance.
6.4 The role of a managing agent
includes the approval and supervision of arrangements for:
*the acceptance and pricing by the
active underwriters of the risks to be underwritten and the receipt of the
premiums agreed with brokers;
*the agreement and settlement of
claims made against the syndicate;
*the negotiation and management of
the syndicate's reinsurances;
*the management of the investments
held in the premiums trust fund of each syndicate member;
*the management and control of the
syndicate's expenses;
*monitoring and controlling the
premium income earned by the syndicate and taking reasonable steps to ensure
that members' syndicate premium limits are not exceeded;
*the maintenance of accounting
records and statistical data for the syndicate and the preparation and audit of
the syndicate's accounts;
*making, where necessary, cash calls
on members to provide for underwriting losses;
*compliance with relevant domestic
and overseas taxation and legislative requirements;
*the approval of the premium for and
effecting the reinsurance required to close each year of account; and
*communicating with members' agents.
6.5 Underwriting agents may also act
as "combined agents", performing both the role of members' agents,
and the role of managing agents.
Legal Relationships between Names
and Agents
6.6 The legal relationship between
Names and their agents is governed by the terms of an agency agreement and by
the common law. The structure of the various types of agency agreement was
changed in 1990, when the Agency Agreements Byelaw (No. 8 of 1988) took effect.
6.7 Until 1990, each Name entered
into one or more agreements with an underwriting agent, who was either a
members' agent or a combined agent. The agreement governed the relationship
between the Name and the members' agent, or between the Name and the combined
agent acting as members' agent.
The standard form agreements with
members' agents and managing agents were set out in the Agency Agreements
Byelaw (No. 1 of 1985).
6.8 Where the combined agent also
acted as managing agent for the Name, the agreement would govern the
relationship between the Name and the combined agent acting as managing agent.
Where the agreement was between the Name and the members' agent, or between the
Name and the combined agent who did not act as managing agent for that Name,
the members' agent would enter into a sub-agency agreement with a managing
agent. Under that agreement, the members' agent delegated the underwriting
authority which the Name had bestowed upon him to the managing agent.
6.9 Until 1990, there was no direct
contractual relationship between a Name and his managing agent (unless the
members' agent also acted as managing agent). However, the House of Lords in
Henderson and Others v Merrett Syndicates Ltd and Others [1995] 2 AC 145,
[1994] 3 WLR 761, upheld the Court of Appeal's judgment that the delegation of
the conduct of underwriting business did not remove the implicit promise by the
members' agent that the work of the managing agent would be carried out with
reasonable care and skill. In addition, managing agents were under a similar,
non-contractual duty to Names to exercise reasonable care and skill.
6.10 The Agency Agreements Byelaw
(No. 8 of 1988) was implemented on 7 December 1988 and applies to the 1990 and
following years of account. It prescribes forms for three standard agency
agreements and provides that it is compulsory for contracts between Names and
their agents to be in one of these three standard forms:
(a) Sch 1:the Members' Agent's
Agreement, between the Members' Agent and the Name. This authorises the agent
to enter into the Managing Agent's Agreement on behalf of the Name, and to
enter into the Agents' Agreement with the Managing Agent;
(b) Sch 2:the Agents' Agreement,
between the Members' Agent and the Managing Agent. This sets out the
relationship between the two agents to enable them to fulfil their obligations
to the Name eg. providing the other with certain information (unnecessary where
there is a combined agent); and
(c) Sch 3:the Managing Agent's
Agreement, between the Managing Agent and the Name. This authorises the
Managing Agent to conduct the underwriting business on behalf of the Name.
6.11 The 1988 Byelaw therefore
introduced with effect from the 1990 year of account a direct contractual relationship
between the Name and his managing agent. The Members' Agent's Agreement and the
Managing Agent's Agreement introduced by that Byelaw include express
contractual duties of care and skill and fiduciary duties.
Working arrangements in practice
6.12 A members' agent will recommend
the syndicates which a new member should join, which should in principle
provide a balanced spread of business (subject to any specific requirements
that Name may have) on syndicates throughout the main markets at Lloyd's with a
view to that Name's risk/return profile. Policies vary between agents as to the
minimum and maximum percentage of OPL which Names should have on syndicates.
The final decision as to whether to join a recommended syndicate rests with the
Name.
6.13 The members' agent should
monitor the syndicates on which it has placed Names and will make
recommendations to Names as to whether they should increase their participation
on a syndicate, join a new syndicate, reduce their participation or withdraw.
6.14 The active underwriter of the
syndicate and at least two directors/partners of each managing agent were
required by s 23 of the Underwriting Agents Byelaw (No. 4 of 1984) to
participate in the syndicates managed by them.
6.15 Although many Names remain with
the same members' agent throughout their membership of Lloyd's, it is possible
to transfer to another members' agency. The new agent may not have a
relationship with the managing agents of the syndicates on which the member
participated and may be unable to negotiate such a relationship. A transfer of
members' agent may therefore involve a change in the Name's syndicates.
7. STRUCTURE OF NAMES' ASSETS AT
LLOYD'S AND SOLVENCY REQUIREMENTS FOR UNDERWRITING
Part I: Names' Assets
Deposits
7.1 The Lloyd's deposit is held in
trust by Lloyd's (governed by the Lloyd's Deposit Trust Deed or Lloyd's
Security and Trust Deed). A separate deposit, known as the Lloyd's life
deposit, is required if a Name underwrites life business.
Maintenance and Re-Confirmation of
Deposits
7.2 The Corporation of Lloyd's
carries out an annual check as at 31 December to see whether the value of a
Name's Lloyd's deposit has been maintained. A Name will be required to make any
shortfall good by the following 31 October. Names failing to comply are
required to reduce their level of underwriting to an amount commensurate with
the value of their deposit. Names must provide the requisite additional
deposits if they wish to regain their former levels of underwriting.
Acceptable Assets for Deposit
7.3 A Name's deposit may be provided
by means of certain specified assets, including: bank guarantees or letters of
credit, building society guarantees, cash, life company guarantees and policies
and certain other approved securities. Names who were foreign nationals were
required until 1970 to provide their deposits by way of securities. In 1970,
bank guarantees and letters of credit were permitted as an alternative. A
market bulletin issued on 22 November 1976 restricted non-UK residents to bank
guarantees/letters of credit only. From 1 January 1987, new overseas Names were
permitted to provide deposits containing securities.
Special Deposits/Premium Limit
Excess Deposit
7.4 Any Name exceeding his premium
income limit in a particular year may be required to establish an additional
Special Deposit in the form of a bank guarantee/letter of credit or cash. This
will be held under an appropriate Deed but kept separate from the securities
forming the Name's normal Lloyd's Deposit.
Personal Reserve Fund
7.5 This fund is a reserve of cash
or certain specified investments, held under the terms of the Name's Premiums
Trust Deed, which may be retained by a members' agent (at the Name's
discretion) as a reserve against future liabilities and expenses from the
Name's underwriting business carried on through the agent. This reserve may be
built up by the members' agent retaining a proportion of the Name's profits.
The Special Reserve Fund (SRF)
7.6 The SRF enabled Names, within
limits, to accumulate reserves from their underwriting profits, which, when
transferred into the SRF would then be taxed only at the basic rate (rather
than the higher rates) of income tax. Such reserves were to be used to meet
underwriting losses. Payments into the SRF had to be approved by the Inland
Revenue. Payments out of the SRF were required to be made to cover losses
certified by the Inland Revenue, although payments could, within limits, be
made on a provisional basis in respect of estimated losses. The SRF was
required to be held on trust, with one trustee being the Corporation of
Lloyd's, and the other being the Name's members' agent. (With effect from the
1992 underwriting year, the SRF arrangements have been changed.)
Premiums Trust Fund (PTF)
7.7 Every member of Lloyd's is
required to hold all premiums received by him or on his behalf in respect of
any insurance business in a trust fund in accordance with the provisions of a
trust deed approved by the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry. This
requirement is imposed by s 83(2) of the Insurance Companies Act 1982.
7.8 Premiums trust fund monies can
be used to pay any underwriting liabilities and any expenses incurred in
connection with or arising out of underwriting. For these purposes liabilities
include losses, claims, returns of premiums and reinsurance premiums, while
expenses include any annual fee, commission and other remuneration of a
member's underwriting agents, any tax liabilities arising in respect of the
premiums trust fund or its income, and subscriptions and Central Fund
contributions or levies imposed by the Council.
7.9 The premiums trust deed provided
for separate treatment of overseas underwriting business, for which the Lloyd's
American Trust Fund (LATF) and Lloyd's Canadian Trust Funds (LCTF) have been
established. Those trust funds received the premiums on US dollar or Canadian
dollar policies issued in any country by Lloyd's members and paid any losses,
expenses, claims, returns of premiums, reinsurance premiums and other outgoings
in connection with the member's American or Canadian dollar business
respectively.
7.10 The way in which the assets
described above are used as part of Lloyd's overall chain of security is
described below.
Part II: Lloyd's Chain of Security
7.11 The purpose of security is to
protect policyholders. Lloyd's has frequently publicly explained its chain of
security and referred to the role of the Central Fund in it. [Mr Clementson
does not accept that the order set out below in para 7.12-7.15 has invariably
been followed.]
The First Link
7.12 The first link in the chain of
security is the premiums trust funds. To protect the interest of policyholders
all premiums are initially paid into premiums trust funds managed by the
managing agent of the syndicate. Payments from these funds may be made to meet
claims, reinsurance premiums or underwriting expenses: profit may not be
distributed to Names unless and until the underwriting account for the year has
closed, and therefore at or after the end of three years.
The Second Link
7.13 The second link is Name's funds
at Lloyd's which must be provided by the Name as security for his underwriting,
as described above. Funds at Lloyd's comprise the three trust funds in which
Name's assets may be held: the Lloyd's deposit, the Special Reserve Fund and
the Personal Reserve Fund held under the terms of the premiums trust deed (see
above).
The Third Link
7.14 The third link is the personal
wealth of individual Names. As stated above, each individual Name is required
to show a minimum level of personal wealth, but Names are further liable to the
full extent of their wealth to meet any claims arising from their underwriting
business.
The Fourth Link
7.15 The fourth link is the Central
Fund of the Society. The fund is available to the Council of Lloyd's to meet
Names' liabilities in connection with their underwriting at Lloyd's. For this
purpose, the Fund is not for the protection of the Name, who remains
responsible for his liabilities to the full extent of his wealth. The Central
Fund has also been applied by the Council to prevent or redress members'
failure to meet their underwriting liabilities. It also performs a function in
enabling members to pass the annual solvency test, as set out below. The
Central Fund has also been used (i) to support Lioncover and Centrewrite (ii)
to provide, by way of loans to syndicates, a stand-by facility to fund deposits
in overseas jurisdictions and (iii) to provide support for the hardship
arrangements introduced by Lloyd's for members in financial difficulty.
The Central Fund Arrangements have
enabled Names to pass solvency.
A summary of investor protection
arrangements and other means of ensuring the security of insurance companies in
the UK and elsewhere is set out in bundle 28, App 13.
Mutual Guarantee Policies
7.16 Mutual Guarantee Policies
(MGPs) were introduced in 1909 as a statutory requirement in respect of Lloyd's
non-marine policies. The statutory requirements were repealed in 1946, but the
Committee of Lloyd's extended the scheme in a modified form to marine insurance
in 1948 when premium limits were increased. Under the terms of the scheme,
every underwriting member of Lloyd's undertook to furnish a MGP subscribed by
other members. The policy ran for one year, commencing on 1 January of the year
of risk. MGPs were calculated by reference to the member's premium income
(subject to minimum limits) . The MGPs would only be called upon after the
Central Fund had been exhausted. Although each Name was required to enter into
a MGP on an individual basis, the MGPs were, in practice, issued on a
syndicate-to-syndicate basis whereby members of one syndicate would guarantee
the obligations of the members of another syndicate. A member was prevented
from guaranteeing himself or other members of his syndicate.
There were three types of MGP, each
in standard form:
*The Group Policy - used where more
than one member of the syndicate was named on the schedule;
*The Single Name Policy - used where
(as the title suggests) there was only one member named for the syndicates
covered; and
*The Additional to Deposit Policy -
used in respect of a single member to insure against risk over and above that
covered by a Single Name Policy. In practice, only a few ADPs were taken out
each year.
Lloyd's set out minimum requirements
as to the amount required to be covered by the MGP:
*Non-Marine: The guarantee was
required to cover the amount by which the member's premium income exceeded 90%
of his premium limit.
*Marine and Aviation: The guarantee
was required to cover the amount by which the Name's premium income exceeded
50% of his premium limit.
The Cromer Report recommended the
abolition of the MGPs for the following reason:
"We understand that no one has
ever been called upon to implement a guarantee policy. Even in severe losses in
an individual case in 1923/24, before the institution of the central fund, ad
hoc arrangements were made. If Lloyd's suffered a disaster or a series of
disasters which eroded the private means of members and swallowed up the
central fund, it is not clear what the guarantee policies would in fact be
worth. The annual renewal of policies involves a great deal of work. We
recommend that they should be abolished."
The Fisher Report concurred with
this recommendation. Acting thereon, MGPs were abolished in 1982. Members'
contributions to the Central Fund were subsequently increased.
Other Assets
7.17 The other assets of the Society
of Lloyd's are also available to meet underwriting liabilities in the last
resort.
Part III: The solvency test
7.18 The solvency requirements in
relation to insurance companies are set out in s 32 of the Insurance Companies
Act 1982 (the ICA), which implements art 16 of the First Council Directive on
Non-Life Insurance (the Directive). Thus, the section provides that insurance
companies shall maintain a margin of solvency of such amount as may be
prescribed by or determined in accordance with regulations made for the
purposes of that section.
7.19 Under the ICA, Lloyd's is
required to meet an annual solvency test. The annual solvency test is conducted
at two levels. The first is at individual Name level (the Name level test). The
second concerns Lloyd's collectively (the global test) whereby all members of
Lloyd's taken together must satisfy the solvency margin requirements under the
Insurance Companies Act.
(a) The Name level test
7.20 Under the provisions of s 83
ICA, each Name is required to provide annually to the Council of Lloyd's and to
the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry a certificate of solvency signed
by an approved auditor. The certificate, which is in a prescribed statutory
form, states (inter alia) that the Name has sufficient assets to meet his known
and estimated future underwriting liabilities in respect of his insurance
business at the previous year end.
7.21 In order to provide this
certificate, Lloyd's carries out an annual solvency test in relation to each
Name individually, drawing on information provided by managing agents at
syndicate level and by members' agents at individual name level. (see below).
The requirements of this annual solvency test, are set out in the Instructions
(prescribed by the Council) that Lloyd's issues to all managing agents and
recognised auditors. These Instructions include rules relating to the valuation
of liabilities which are approved annually by the Secretary of State for the
purposes of s 83(5) of the ICA (the Valuation of Liabilities Rules).
7.22 Every managing agent is obliged
to submit an audited syndicate return (the syndicate return) in prescribed form
giving details of the insurance transactions for each syndicate which it
manages. The syndicate return must be completed in respect of all open years of
account, all run-off years of account and all years of account closing as at
the relevant year end in order to reflect the total insurance business
transacted by the underwriting member. The information required in the
syndicate return is prescribed under the Solvency and Reporting Byelaw. Part 1
of the syndicate return must be audited. The syndicate return will specify the
syndicate's result for solvency purposes which is determined by reference to
the Valuation of Liabilities Rules and rules relating to eligible assets.
7.23 Under the Valuation of
Liabilities Rules, two tests must be applied in relation to each year of
account to determine the minimum reserves that must be established for solvency
purposes. Test 1 is a premiums based test; and Test 2 is a claims based test.
The reserves used for the solvency test for each year of account must be the
greater of the Test 1 or Test 2 calculation.
7.24 Test 1 depends on determining
net premium income for each class of business for each year of account, and
then applying an appropriate multiplier (specified in the Appendices to the
Instructions) to reflect the statistically determined appropriate reserve for
that class of business and for that year. Premium income for these purposes is
calculated as gross premiums less brokerage, premium taxes and levies,
discount, returns and premiums payable in respect of reinsurance ceded.
7.25 Provided that the level of
reinsurance ceded is kept at the threshold specified in App G of the solvency
instructions, the reinsurance premiums may be fully deducted from the gross
premiums and no special reserves need be set up. That threshold is called the
"permitted reinsurance limit". The relevant thresholds, as set out in
App G, are 20% (for all reinsurance), an additional 10% (for certain reinsurance
in respect of which security for outstanding claims has been given) and an
unlimited amount for reinsurance written by Lloyd's insurers. Where the
threshold is exceeded, additional reserves are required as specified in App G
(see 12 below).
7.26 Test 2 reserves are determined
by establishing a net reserve for each year of account, being the syndicate's
gross reserve less recoveries in respect of reinsurance ceded. This involves an
estimation of outstanding liabilities, including liabilities incurred but not yet
reported (IBNR). Test 2 reserves are estimated by reference to a combination of
factors including historical development of claims, actuarial projections and
the underwriter's own judgment and they reflect all costs relating to claims,
the estimated effects of inflation, possible bad debts relating to reinsurance
recoveries and additional reinsurance premiums payable. Subject to the amount
of expected recoveries under any reinsurance policy, there is no limit on the
credit that may be taken for reinsurance ceded by a syndicate, whether within
or outside Lloyd's. Test 2 reserves are the reserves used for RITC purposes
(see 14 below).
7.27 The individual member level of
the solvency test involves the members' agents. They are required to submit an
audited asset return (the asset return) giving the valuation of assets held by
them on behalf of every member underwriting through the members' agent,
including personal reserve funds, special reserve funds, any Lloyd's deposit
and the amount of any anticipated qualifying stop loss recoveries. On receipt
of the audited syndicate returns and asset returns from managing and members'
agents (together with a further return from Lloyd's, in cases where it holds
members' assets) the information contained in the returns is processed by
Lloyd's through the central solvency system to produce a solvency statement in
respect of every member for the purpose of the solvency test. The value of the
member's Lloyd's deposit held by the Corporation of Lloyd's is included in the
solvency calculation to offset the member's underwriting liabilities.
7.28 The solvency statement shows
the member's net underwriting result and the amount of eligible assets
available to meet any net liability arising. The net result of these two
amounts is the member's final solvency position. This solvency statement is
then sent to the individual Name's members' agent.
7.29 Every member who has a solvency
shortfall (ie who has insufficient assets at Lloyd's to meet his underwriting
liabilities) is required to make sufficient assets available to clear the
shortfall. If the member fails to do so, Lloyd's "earmarks" the
Central Fund on his behalf to make up the shortfall. This enables that member
to satisfy the requirements of the Name level solvency test ie by showing
sufficient assets to meet his liabilities even if some of the assets are
provided by the Society of Lloyd's from its central resources. Failure to clear
Central Fund earmarkings by providing additional funds would result in a Name
who, at the time of earmarking of the Central Fund, was an active underwriting
member of the Society, being suspended from underwriting at Lloyd's with effect
from the following 1 January.
"Earmarking" solvency
deficits against solvency surpluses/assets
7.30 In relation to the 1989 and
prior years solvency tests, Lloyd's operated a process known as
"earmarking" (distinct from a Central Fund earmarking) which matched
any losses or deficiencies arising from the solvency test against a member's
available assets, surpluses and profits (ie funds available for solvency
purposes) in a predetermined order to cover the member's liabilities. These
assets included the member's Lloyd's deposit, SRF and any personal reserves.
7.31 For the purposes of the
solvency test, the member's Deposit was divided into three parts: the First
Reserve, the Second Reserve and the "Failsafe". Prior to the 1990
year of account, the failsafe amounted to 25% of a Name's deposit. Since 1990,
it has amounted to 10% of a Name's OPL.
7.32 In addition to those assets
referred to above a number of further funds (which were not automatically
included in the solvency test) are also available to cover a member's
liabilities; these comprised a member's Premium Limit Excess Deposit, bank
guarantees provided as part of a member's certified means, and (subject to
certain restrictions), anticipated recoveries under a member's Personal Stop
Loss and Estate Protection Plan policies. The order in which a member's assets
were earmarked depended on whether the liability to be covered arose in respect
of open year deficiencies or closed year losses, and is set out in the table
below.
DEFICIENCIES LOSSES
(Open Year) (Closed Year)
Funds Active Non-Active Active
Non-Active
Member Member Member Member
Closed year
profits 6 7 1 1
Open year
surpluses 1 1 N/A N/A
Other assets
Personal
reserves, 5 5 2 2
Special
Reserve Fund 4 4 3 3
Deposit first
reserve 3 3 4 4
Deposit
second
reserve 2 2 N/A 5
Deposit
fail-safe N/A 6 N/A 5
7.33 The First Reserve could be
earmarked in full to cover open year deficiencies (including deficiencies on
years of account which were in run-off) or closed year losses. The Second
Reserve could be earmarked in full to cover open year deficiencies only. The
failsafe could only be absorbed when a Name had died, resigned or otherwise
ceased underwriting.
7.34 The Deposit failsafe was
therefore the fund of last resort available for earmarking after all the Name's
other assets (including Special and Personal Reserves, and the assets specified
in para 7.32) had been taken into account and before the Central Fund was
earmarked. If the failsafe was earmarked the Name had to provide additional
funds to clear the earmarking of the failsafe, failing which his level of
underwriting in the following year of account would be proportionately reduced.
This is the so-called "coming into line" requirement.
Reduction in underwriting where
Deposit is earmarked
7.35 Where the First Reserve of a
Name's Deposit for an active Name was earmarked to cover a deficiency on a
closed year (ie. a loss), that earmarking had to be cleared by the Name
providing additional funds. Failure to do this would cause a proportional
reduction in the Name's premium limits (ie a reduction of his underwriting
limits) for the following year of account.
7.36 Where the First or Second
Reserve was earmarked to cover a solvency deficit in relation to an open year,
the earmarking did not have to be cleared and the Name could continue
underwriting to the same premium limit regardless of the earmarking.
Reduction in underwriting where
Special Reserve Fund is earmarked or released
7.37 A Name was also permitted to
earmark his Special Reserve Fund to cover a closed year loss or open year
deficiency. (However, where a Name had taken his Special Reserves into account
in setting his overall premium limit, all earmarkings to cover a closed year
loss or deficiency at the end of the third and subsequent year of an
underwriting account (but not a naturally open year deficiency) had to be
removed. Where such earmarkings were not so removed, the Name's premium limit
in the following year would be proportionately reduced).
Post 1990
7.38 From the 1990 solvency test, no
sequence of earmarking on members' assets has been applied. A Name's net
underwriting position is compared with all the combined assets of the Name. If
the liabilities exceed the assets, the member has a shortfall.
7.39 The First and Second Reserve
elements of the deposit were abolished but a similar process was maintained for
handling deficiencies. Specifically, losses on closing years or deficiencies on
run-off years may be earmarked against funds at Lloyd's but must be cleared in
order to avoid a reduction in the Name's level of underwriting. Deficiencies on
open years may be earmarked against funds at Lloyd's (except the failsafe)
without a reduction in the Name's capacity to underwrite.
7.40 However, if an open year
deficiency causes earmarking of the failsafe then, unless extra funds are made
available by the Name, he will suffer a reduction in his capacity to underwrite
proportionate to the earmarking of the failsafe.
(b) The Global Test
7.41 All members of Lloyd's taken
together must satisfy annually the solvency margin requirements under the ICA.
For this purpose, the assets and liabilities of all the members of Lloyd's are
aggregated. Assets include each Name's funds at Lloyd's, the assets in his
premium trust funds and the value of his other assets as shown in his most
recent means test, together with the Central Fund and other net assets of
Lloyd's. Liabilities are the aggregate of those reported as at the preceding
year end for the most recent year of account, the two intervening open years
and any run-off years of account.
(c) The Statutory Statement of
Business (SSOB)
7.42 Lloyd's is required under s
86(1) of the ICA to lodge a Statutory Statement of Business (SSOB) with the
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry every year, in the form prescribed by
the Insurance (Lloyd's) Regulations 1983. The SSOB summarises the extent and
character of the insurance business done by all members of Lloyd's in the
twelve months to which the statement relates. Even where a Name cannot continue
to underwrite because he has failed to provide sufficient funds, in order for
Lloyd's to file the SSOB it must ensure that (taking account of any Central
Fund earmarking which has occurred) each Name's assets are sufficient to meet
that Name's liabilities.
7.43 The information required in
order to complete the SSOB is provided by managing agents in the syndicate
return referred to in para 7.22 above.
8. STRUCTURE OF SYNDICATES' FINANCES
Three Year Accounting System
8.1 Lloyd's operates a three year
accounting system. The results of underwriting in any year are normally not
determined until a further two years have elapsed, and distribution to members
of underwriting profit or profit arising from investments comprised in the premium
trust funds can only be made after the end of the third year and then only when
the relevant year of account has been reinsured to close as described below. At
the close of a year of account, members' underwriting liabilities allocated to
the year are usually reinsured by way of RITC. Until the RITC is effected (at
the earliest, at the end of the third year of the account ie two years after
the end of the year of account) no profits of the relevant year of account can
be distributed to members.
A Syndicate Income
Premiums
8.2 Syndicates receive as their main
source of income premiums, deposit premiums, and additional or reinstatement
premiums and investment returns.
8.3 Deposit premiums represent the
minimum premium which the underwriter is prepared to accept in return for
underwriting the risk. Deposit premiums are usually received by a syndicate
during the period covered by the policy, often within the first twelve months
of the account.
8.4 Many Lloyd's policies allow the
insured to reinstate their insurance cover following a claim, by payment of a
further premium known as a reinstatement premium.
8.5 Additional premiums are payable
under a particular type of reinsurance contract known as a quota share treaty.
Under a quota share treaty, an insurer will cede to a reinsurer a predetermined
proportion of the risks he has underwritten. The reinsurer therefore receives a
fixed proportion of the premiums and pays the same proportion of the claims
resulting from the risks underwritten. When a syndicate has underwritten a
proportion of another insurer's risks by way of a quota share treaty, it will
receive a payment based upon the expected premium income of the reinsured. Where
subsequently the reinsured receives more premiums than was anticipated (or
receives reinstatement premiums), the reinsuring syndicate will receive their
share of these premiums as additional premiums.
8.6 Reinstatement and additional
premiums can be received at any time until the liabilities relating to the
risks insured are exhausted. This can be many years after the policy period has
expired.
Reinsurance to Close of a Preceding
Year of Account
8.7 A year of account will receive a
reinsurance premium from the preceding year of account in return for assuming
the liabilities of the preceding year (together with any years reinsured into
the preceding year). The premium will typically be credited to the third year
of the account.
Reinsurance Recoveries
8.8 When a syndicate pays claims on
policies which have been reinsured, it will claim a recovery from its
reinsurers. Reinsurance recoveries are usually received a few weeks or months
after payment of the reinsured claim for facultative reinsurance (reinsurance
of individual risks). The time lag may be longer for treaty reinsurance (quota
share or excess of loss, sometimes many years longer for excess of loss where
recoveries will not start to become payable until the total retentions of the
reinsured are exhausted).
Investment Income
8.9 Premiums are usually received
before claim payments are made and Lloyd's has created regulations which
control how premium income is invested. Lloyd's accounts for insurance business
in three currencies, namely sterling, United States dollars and Canadian
dollars. Any premiums received in other currencies are immediately converted to
sterling. As stated above, Lloyd's has created three premium trust funds into
which premium income must be paid, the funds being invested predominantly in
government bonds. Income from these investments is received into the trust fund
throughout the period during which the year of account remains open. When the
year of account is closed, the trust funds will be used to pay the RITC premium,
with any surplus being distributed to Names as profit.
8.10 Investment return is also
received in the form of realised capital gains and losses. This return accrues
until the RITC is paid and is taken into account in the syndicate result.
B Syndicate expenditure
Reinsurance Premiums
8.11 Syndicate underwriters take out
reinsurance protection for a number of reasons. The primary reasons are to
limit their exposure to large catastrophic losses, or to reinsure particular
risks within policies written to which they do not wish to be exposed. Premiums
are paid to reinsurers in the same manner as any insurance policy and both
deposit and reinstatement premiums may be payable.
Claims
8.12 Claims payments are made once
the syndicate has been notified of the loss and has agreed to pay its share of
the claim. The period between acceptance of the claim, and payment of the claim
can vary widely, depending on the type of risk underwritten. The time lag
between policy inception and claim payment is known as the tail. The tail can
be very short, for example where a satellite launch policy covers only the
first five seconds after lift-off. The launch is either successful, or is a
failure, and the result is known immediately. Other policies can have very long
tail claims, for example employer liability insurance. Claims are currently
being made in the Lloyd's market against employer liability policies written in
the 1930s and 1940s. The reason for the long delay is that the claims are being
made for asbestosis sufferers who were exposed to asbestos dust many years ago,
but whose asbestosis symptoms are only now manifesting themselves.
8.13 Each class of business tends to
have a characteristic length of tail, with accidental damage policies having a
relatively short tail, whilst policies providing legal liability cover have a
long tail. Claims may also be received some time after the year in which the
policy was accepted where the policy covers a period of more than one year (for
example where cover has been purchased for a long-term construction project
which lasts several years).
Run-off
8.14 Where an account goes into
run-off the RITC premium is not paid, the premium trust funds are maintained and
no distribution of profit to Names is permissible.
Syndicate expenses
8.15 Syndicates do not own assets
such as offices or computers. Such assets are acquired by the managing agent
for use by the syndicates. The expenses relating to the operation of the
syndicates are generally paid by the managing agent and are then re-charged to
the syndicate years of account. In performing the re-charge exercise, the
managing agent must ensure that the principle of equity between Names on each
syndicate and year of account is maintained. Some charges are directly debited
to the syndicate's bank account such as charges levied by Lloyd's.
8.16 The largest expense is salaries
and related costs and accommodation costs. The salary will be a flat rate and
is determined by the managing agent.
8.17 Graphical illustrations of:
(i) Premiums received and
reinsurance premiums paid;
(ii) Claims paid and reinsurance
recoveries made; and
(iii) Syndicate expenses,
over a three year period for a
typical Lloyd's syndicate are set out in bundle 28, App 15.
The costs of underwriting
8.18 The deductions from the
premiums received by the syndicates on behalf (ultimately) of the Names, will
include some or all of the following:
(a) claims paid out of the premiums
trust funds and return premiums;
(b) reinsurance premiums paid by the
syndicate, including related brokerage;
(c) the fees, expenses and
commissions of the managing agent and/or its sub-agents and/or the members'
agents (if any);
(d) the expenses of running the
syndicate;
(e) the fees and expenses of the
trustees of the premiums trust funds;
(f) contributions and levies paid to
the Central Fund;
(g) fees payable to Lloyd's and
certain taxes ;
(h) the costs of Lloyd's overseas
representatives and of maintaining overseas deposits, where applicable;
(i) other fees and expenses payable
to the Corporation or its subsidiaries for specific services provided to the
syndicate.
9. REINSURANCE AND THE XL MARKET
Introduction - XL and LMX Business
9.1 Under an excess of loss (XL)
reinsurance contract, the reinsurer agrees to indemnify the reinsured in the
event of the latter sustaining a loss in excess of a pre-determined figure,
(the "deductible"). The reinsurer is liable for the amount of the
loss in excess of the deductible up to an agreed amount, the deductible being
the amount retained, (or "retention"), for the reinsured's own
account. The purpose of excess of loss reinsurance is thus to limit the
exposure of the reinsured on any loss, whether this arises from a large
individual risk or through an aggregation of losses from a number of risks
affected by a single event or loss occurrence.
9.2 XL protection may be obtained
through "whole account" or "general" reinsurance, which
provides cover for all or a proportion of losses, net of recoveries, on
underlying policies. In practice, cover will normally be purchased in layers,
rather than through one single policy. "Specific" XL treaties provide
protection in respect of specific portfolios of business accepted by the
reinsured (eg. hull, cargo, oil rigs). The term XL can be used to describe all
these types of excess of loss business.
9.3 In providing cover to primary
insurers, accepting reinsurers may themselves accumulate exposures higher than
they wish to retain. To meet their requirements for protection, the
retrocession of excess of loss reinsurance developed as a mechanism that was
intended to spread exposures more widely.
9.4 LMX is not a term which is
uniformly used. It is excess of loss reinsurance written by London market
entities. It is written by both corporate reinsurers and Lloyd's syndicates.
The nature of LMX business is the same as that of other excess of loss treaty
reinsurance. LMX business is distinguished from other excess of loss business
in that it is, depending on usage, (i) reinsurance underwritten by underwriters
operating in the London market of risks originating in this same market, as
opposed to general excess of loss business that is reinsured on a worldwide
basis, or (ii) is an excess of loss reinsurance written in London of an excess
of loss contract. The "London" distinction is thus almost entirely a
geographical and cultural phenomenon, encouraged by certain brokers who
specialised in this business and reflecting their knowledge of and trading
relationships with the parties involved.
The "Spiral"
9.5 Writing high level XL on XL
business on a catastrophe account is high risk. The working of the "spiral"
which developed in the 1980s was complex, and it is convenient to describe it
only in a simplified form. The phenomenon of what is described as the
"spiral" was not new or peculiar to the operation of the market in
the 1980s. Before Hurricane Betsy in 1965, a similar "spiral" had
developed in the London market, and the losses that followed that catastrophe
demonstrated the effect of the spiral. The lesson had been forgotten by the
1980s. Many syndicates which wrote excess of loss (or "XL") cover
took out XL cover themselves. Those who reinsured them were thus writing XL on
XL. They, in their turn, frequently took out their own XL cover. There thus
developed among the syndicates and companies which wrote XL business a smaller
group that was responsible for creating, in relation to some risks, a complex
intertwining network of mutual reinsurance, which has been described as a
"spiral". When a catastrophe led to claims being made by primary
insurers on their excess of loss covers, this started a process whereby
syndicates passed on their liabilities, in excess of their own retentions,
under their own excess of loss covers from one to the next, rather like a
multiple game of "pass the parcel". Those left holding the liability
parcels were those who first exhausted their layers of excess of loss
reinsurance protection. Following Hurricane Alicia in 1983, the non-marine
market introduced higher retentions, co-insurance and the exclusion of XL of XL
business from whole account or general programmes written. The marine market
did not take similar measures.
9.6 So far as the individual
syndicates were concerned, the effect of the spiral was to magnify many times
the number of claims flowing from a particular loss. This is because claims
were repeatedly made in respect of the same loss as it circulated in the
spiral. For example, claims in respect of the Piper Alpha loss exceeded by a
multiple of about 10 the net loss that was covered on the London market.
9.7 This gearing effect did not
result in an ultimate payment of a greater indemnity than the initial loss. As
the loss passed through the spiral, however, it impacted repeatedly on
successive layers of reinsurance cover (which it progressively absorbed), and
once the total underlying retention was breached, ultimately concentrated on
those reinsurers who found their cover exhausted.
The spiral effect of claims was,
however, diminished or extinguished by individual retentions, whether before
reinsurance protection commenced or after it had been exhausted, by co-insurance
and by 'leakage' to reinsurers who did not reinsure with the same insurers. The
effect of the spiral was, however, significantly to reduce the comfort that
could properly be derived from being exposed only to what appeared to be a very
high layer of loss.
9.8 Lloyd's Underwriting Claims and
Recovery Office saw 43,000 claims on 11,500 excess of loss policies in respect
of the Piper Alpha loss. In the case of Piper Alpha, gross claims transactions
totalled about $15 billion for the whole of the London market, whereas the
actual loss was $1.4 billion.
There was a claims turnover of ten
times the actual loss in relation to the Exxon Valdez claim
Growth of the LMX market during the
1980s
9.9 Certain underwriters identified
commercial opportunities in writing substantial LMX business in the 1980s. It
was perceived that there was an opportunity to write profitable LMX business in
circumstances in which underwriting capacity was increasing rapidly and other
underwriting business (eg marine) was sluggish or in decline. However, the
business involved exposures and a need for judgments different from those with
which many of these underwriters were familiar. In the event, a number of
Lloyd's syndicates and others in the London market suffered very heavily from
their decision to write such business. Further details of the nature of the XL
"spiral", and the reasons for the heavy losses suffered, are
contained in the decisions of Phillips J in the Gooda Walker and Feltrim
litigation. The parties have agreed the facts set out in those judgments
relating to the manner in which the business was written on those syndicates,
and the findings of Phillips J as to the negligence of the underwriters
concerned.
9.10 There was also an increase in
the number of companies in the so-called "fringe" market in London at
this time. Many of the companies that then went into reinsurance were highly
inexperienced in reinsurance and were used by the brokers to drive prices down
or to get unacceptable clauses accepted. One reason that brought people into
the market was the opportunity for so-called "cash flow"
underwriting. The 1980s were a time when returns on investment were high. A
high cash flow would produce high investment returns. This led to some
reinsurers pricing reinsurance at rates that would in normal circumstances have
been considered too low in terms of pure underwriting rates of return. The big
continental reinsurance groups in many cases also made pure underwriting and
overall losses on specific catastrophe accounts but were able to spread the
losses across other segments of business. There were only a very few years when
they lost large amounts overall. The worst hit were those who did not have a
spread of business; this also applied to the worst hit syndicates in Lloyd's.
Continental reinsurers generally had the benefit of equalisation and other
reserves which was a great help to enable them to weather the bad years by
spreading their losses over more than 12 months.
9.11 Gross premiums for business
written in the 1988 account showed a 61% increase by comparison with premiums
for business written in the 1983 account, with a growth of 201% in premium
income of the LMX syndicates over the same period. Gross premium income of the
LMX syndicates as a proportion of Lloyd's total gross premium income rose from
13.1% for the 1983 account to 24.6% in 1988 and 26.4% in 1990. Premium rates
for LMX business fell substantially in the 1980's.
9.12 In the period 1987 to 1990,
insurance and reinsurance markets were impacted by an unprecedented number of
major catastrophe losses, viz 1987, North European storms; 1988, Piper Alpha
and Hurricane Gilbert; 1989, Hurricane Hugo, the San Francisco Earthquake,
Exxon Valdez, and Phillips Petroleum; 1990, North European storms. The
cumulative impact of these losses was severe on both companies and syndicates.
For the 1987 Northern European storms, Piper Alpha, Hurricane Hugo and the 1990
Northern European storms, companies (including direct insurers and major
reinsurers) carried 69%, 45%, 64% and 64% of the liability respectively, but
still leaving substantial losses for Lloyd's syndicates. On the basis of the
syndicates analysed in the Walker Report, losses were concentrated on a
relatively small number of syndicates: although 87 syndicates were writing
significant LMX business in 1988 or 1989 - in one case 93% of that syndicate's
stamp capacity - 95% of the losses attributable to those syndicates for the
1988 account were encountered on 12 of those syndicates and 79% of the losses
of the LMX syndicates for the 1989 account were attributable to 14 of them.
[Walker Report, para 2.1]
Profitability of LMX business
9.13 In the 1980s premium rates for
LMX business fell substantially. In circumstances of apparently reasonable
profit levels (in the years between 1965 and 1987, the worldwide reinsurance
market was relatively undisturbed by major catastrophes, thus generally leaving
reinsurers with a 22 year span of profitable results) and increasing capacity,
premium rates in 1987 and 1988 had fallen to only 10% of those being charged
ten years earlier and were reduced in higher layers as a consequence of the
perceived diminution in exposure. [Walker Report, para 2.20(b)]
Catastrophe reinsurance rates have
risen since 1989. The expectation of the world-wide reinsurance industry in
April 1995 was that substantial withdrawals of capacity from the industry as a
whole that had taken place would keep reinsurance rates hard over the medium
term.
The risks
9.14 The high risk nature of the
spiral exposures accepted by the syndicates and the level of reinsurance
purchased to protect them was not appreciated by many Names. Had the Names been
better aware of the risks involved they might have ceased or reduced their
participation.
Gross inter-syndicate reinsurance
premiums
9.15 Gross inter-syndicate
reinsurance premiums as a proportion of Lloyd's total gross premiums passing
through Lloyd's Policy Signing Office rose from 9.1% in 1984 to 14% in 1988 and
16.1% in 1990.
10. THE ASBESTOS ISSUE
10.1 In the early 1980s, there were
several types of claim causing underwriters concern. These included Agent
Orange (a defoliant used in the Vietnam War, which contained dioxin which is
alleged to have carcinogenic properties), DES (diethylstilbestrol - a synthetic
oestrogen given to pregnant women to avoid miscarriage, which has been blamed
for cancer abnormalities occurring in children), Love Canal (a pollution
problem at a residential site near Niagara Falls), the Dalcon Shield (an
intra-uterine contraceptive device), environmental pollution and asbestos.
10.2 The concern of the London
market (ie. Lloyd's and London insurance companies) in relation to asbestos
developed as a result of the many uncertainties relating to the unknown
potential number and size of asbestos-related claims. These unknowns were
brought to underwriters' attention via inter alia, reports which they had been
receiving from their own US attorneys, through wide-spread press comment at the
time, and through discussions with other underwriters.
10.3 As a result of an initiative
taken by then leading non-marine underwriters, Mr Robin Jackson and Mr Rokeby
Johnson, a working party was formed in August 1980 which became known as the
Asbestos Working Party (the AWP). Interested underwriters were advised of the
AWP's formation and were invited to subscribe to it. By December 1981, 88
Lloyd's syndicates and 23 companies had subscribed to the AWP.
10.4 The functions of the AWP were,
primarily, to:
(a) provide a forum for discussing
problems relating to asbestosis claims and to seek market agreements to assist
underwriters in their handling of claims;
(b) advise on coverage matters when
requested to do so by the leading underwriters;
(c) consider facultative reinsurance
as well as direct insurance;
(d) explore solutions to the
asbestosis problem otherwise than by litigation or traditional claims handling;
and
(e) assist in the establishment and
development of a database to provide claims information for reserve purposes.
10.5 The AWP did not undertake any
executive function and it acted in an advisory capacity only. It considered
that it was not its place to usurp the functions of underwriters and others to
whom it communicated in the market with regard to information that came to
hand.
10.6 The AWP, which was not a
Lloyd's initiative but rather a London market initiative, had no agency or
other legal relationship with Lloyd's, and Lloyd's is not, and never has been,
responsible for the acts or omissions of the AWP.
10.7 At a meeting of Lloyd's Panel
Auditors on 10 November 1981, when discussing 'any other business', reference
was made to asbestos-related claims. It was agreed that the topic would be
raised again in the new year. At their next meeting, on 15 January 1982, the
asbestos situation was again discussed.
10.8 On 24 February 1982 Neville
Russell, on behalf of themselves and five other firms of auditors on the
Lloyd's Panel, wrote to the Manager of the Underwriting Agents and Audit
Department. The letter asked Lloyd's for instructions on the issue of reserving
for asbestos claims. At that time, the auditors did not know their respective
clients' positions.
10.9 As a result of this letter a
meeting took place on 9 March 1982, between representatives of Lloyd's
Underwriting Agents and Audit Department, Lloyd's Audit Committee, the Panel
Auditors and the AWP. The AWP representative, Mr Nelson, provided an update of
the asbestos situation. The meeting was informed that it appeared that
substantial uncertainty remained as to the number and size of asbestos-related
claims.
10.10 On 18 March 1982 the Deputy
Chairman of Lloyd's wrote to all underwriting agents. On the same day the
Manager of Lloyd's Underwriting Agents and Audit Department, Mr Randall, wrote
to all Panel Auditors. Both of these letters referred specifically to
asbestos-related claims and, inter alia, the reserving issues arising
therefrom.
11. CENTRAL FUND BYELAW (No.4 of
1986)
11.1 The Lloyd's Central Fund is
held and administered by the Society of Lloyd's in accordance with the Central
Fund Byelaw (No. 4 of 1986) (the Byelaw). Members contribute to the Fund each
year based on a percentage of their gross allocated capacity.
11.2 As part of Lloyd's solvency
procedure, certain assets of the Fund may be used to cover underwriting
deficiencies of Names at the preceding 31 December to enable them to pass the
solvency test and meet the requirements of the Department of Trade and
Industry.
Evolution of the Central Fund
Byelaw:
(i) The 1927 Agreement Constituting
the Central Fund
11.3 The 1986 Central Fund Byelaw
(No. 4 of 1986) replaced the Central Fund Agreement of 1927.
11.4 This embodied the provisions of
the guarantee scheme (the immediate predecessor of the 1927 Agreement). The
Fund was set up to meet the liabilities of members who had been declared in
default of their obligations, and was also available for the "advancement
and protection of members", at the Council's discretion. It was funded
through contributions from members based on premium income of the previous
year.
11.5 The catalysts that provoked the
making of the 1927 Agreement were the Burnand (1903) and Harrison (c.1923)
cases. Both involved deliberate fraud on the part of the underwriters and
caused considerable losses for Names. As a direct result, the Chairman in the
mid 1920s, Mr Arthur Sturge, suggested that #200,000 be subscribed by all
underwriters in proportion to their premium incomes.
11.6 Clause 3 of the 1927 Agreement
stated as follows:
"The Central Fund shall consist
of (a) #49,988-8s-0d now in the hands of the Society and arising from earlier
guarantee schemes which have now been discontinued (b) the contributions of the
Subscribing Members hereinafter mentioned (c) the investments for the time
being representing such fund and contributions and (d) any other monies which
may be at any time added to the Central Fund".
11.7 The Central Fund was held and
administered by the Committee of Lloyd's (and, following the recommendation of
the Fisher Working Party, the Council (see below)), on behalf of all members in
accordance with the 1927 Agreement and subsequent amendments.
(ii) The Report of the Fisher
Working Party: May 1980
11.8 The 1927 Deed was replaced by
the Central Fund Byelaw (No. 4 of 1986) as a result of the findings of the
Fisher Working Party in 1980.
11.9 The Fisher Working Party
recommended that the Council of Lloyd's should be given express power by an
amendment to Lloyd's Acts to maintain the Central Fund, to decide (and to alter
from time to time) the purposes to which money in the Fund may be applied, to
require members of Lloyd's to contribute to it, and to fix the rate of
contribution and to alter it from time to time.
11.10 Whether or not this was done,
they considered that the 1927 Agreement required consideration by the Council
with a view to possible revision. In particular the Council should review:
"(a) the purposes for which
money in the Fund may be used;
(b) the investment of the Fund in
the light of the purposes for which the money in the Fund may be required;
(c) the provision that money in the
Fund may not be applied in payment of claims on policies underwritten by a
Member until he has been declared to be in default;
(d) the rates of contribution fixed
by the 1927 Agreement, and the procedure for increasing contributions in case
of need;
(e) the practice in relation to the
formalities required for adhesion to the 1927 Agreement."
11.11 Fisher Task Group 19 was given
the task of considering these recommendations. It recommended that:
(i) Names should be required as a
condition of membership of Lloyd's to consent to variation of the Central Fund
1927 Agreement
(a) removing the maximum
contribution limit of 0.45% of premium income and empowering the Committee by
regulation to levy contributions at rates to be determined;
(b) removing the proviso against
increasing the financial liability of Names;
(c) enabling future modifications or
variations to the Central Fund 1927 Agreement to be effected by Byelaw rather
than by Deed;
(ii) the 1927 Agreement should be
amended to allow payment of claims without a declaration of default where Names
subscribing a risk cannot be identified;
(iii) the default declaration
proviso in Clause 10 should not be immediately removed but by amendment to
Clause 15 (to be agreed to by Names in a supplemental deed) the Council should
be empowered subsequently to remove it by byelaw;
(iv) a Byelaw should require all
Names to subscribe to the Central Fund.
11.12 All the Task Group
recommendations were agreed by the Committee with two modifications: first,
they proposed a maximum rate of contribution of 21/2% of premium income to the
Central Fund, and secondly, they proposed that it remain necessary for a member
to be declared in default before his claims could be met by the Central Fund.
11.13 The recommendations were
considered by the Council on 21 March 1983. The Council approved the recommendations
made by the Task Group save that it agreed with the Committee that the default
declaration provisos should not be removed. The Council did not, however, agree
to the suggested maximum rate of contribution, but deferred a decision until a
final decision had been taken as to the future form of the Fund.
11.14 The Council also approved the
Committee's proposal that, as from 1984, the basis for calculating the levy
should be gross premium income (ie. without deduction of reinsurance premiums
paid) instead of net premium income. It was calculated that the change was
equivalent to increasing the levy on net premium income from 0.45% to 0.60% and
that this increase was an amount which was not less than the premium which
Names would have been required to pay for the guarantee policies which ceased
to be required in respect of years of account later than 1981 (and the premiums
on which ceased to be paid in the 1984 year of account).
(iii) The Central Fund Byelaws
Recovery of Monies Paid Out of
Lloyd's Central Fund Byelaw (No. 5 of 1984)
11.15 The 1984 Byelaw was passed as
a result of the anticipated failure of many Names (especially those on the PCW
Syndicates) to make good audit deficiencies before the deadline for the filing
of the Lloyd's solvency certificate.
11.16 Lloyd's was advised that a
proportion of the Central Fund could be earmarked as being available to meet
deficiencies; because of the large numbers involved, it was felt that it was
prudent to pass a byelaw at the same time requiring the Name to repay to the
Society, on demand, any payment made out of the Central Fund on the Name's
behalf, in the event of his defaulting.
11.17 This byelaw provided that
where a sum had been paid from the Central Fund to meet a member's default, the
member should repay the Fund if called upon to do so: it gave Lloyd's the right
to bring proceedings to recover such sum as a civil debt where the member did
not make repayment. Clause 1 of the Byelaw stated that:
"..any such Member shall on
demand pay forthwith to the Trustees of Lloyd's Central Fund and/or the Society
(as the case may be) any amounts ...applied in respect of or on account of or
for the benefit of that particular Member".
Recovery of Monies Paid Out of
Lloyd's Central Fund Byelaw (No. 2 of 1985)
11.18 This byelaw was passed to
afford the Society the necessary rights of recovery from the Names who had
benefited from Central Fund payments.
11.19 The 1984 Byelaw was considered
insufficient in two ways: (a) it was limited to the recovery of Central Fund
monies applied in the payment of claims "on any policy" and did not
cover the expenses of paying those claims; and (b) it incorrectly assumed that
Central Fund monies would be used to discharge liabilities then assessed as
being due from each "insolvent" Name: in fact these liabilities were
being met by third parties from the funds and borrowings of other Names or from
the funds of the Central Accounting system. Therefore, Central Fund monies were
not being employed in the payment of claims but in the repayment of third
parties whose funds had been drawn upon for the payment of the insolvent Names'
liabilities.
11.20 Thus the new byelaw (No. 2 of
1985) differed from the old byelaw in two ways:
(i) in order better to establish the
right of the Society to use its own assets to discharge underwriting members'
liabilities, the proposed byelaw made it clear that Society assets may be used
for this purpose; [Byelaw No. 2 of 1985, clause 2]
(ii) the form of the amendment
proposed with respect to the recovery of Central Fund monies, was to introduce
a provision which: (a) permitted the recovery of any monies paid out of the
Central Fund, regardless of the precise nature of the application of the
payment provided that the payment was attributable to a particular member from
whom recovery was sought; (b) widened the use of the byelaw to permit recovery
where Central Fund monies were not directly used to discharge the underwriting
liabilities of a member; and (c) covered the situation where the Society itself
took over the responsibility of the underwriting agent and, for example,
incurred expenses in ascertaining outstanding liabilities.
The Central Fund Byelaw (No. 4 of
1986)
11.21 This byelaw replaced the
Central Fund Agreement 1927.
11.22 It provides for the
management, investment and application of Lloyd's Central Fund under the
direction of the Council of Lloyd's.
11.23 It requires that as a
condition of underwriting insurance business at Lloyd's, members contribute to
the Central Fund and gives the Council the right to raise levies and fix the
rates of contribution at its discretion.
11.24 paras 7 and 10 re-enact the
provisions of Byelaw No. 2 of 1985 which empowered the Society to apply monies
out of funds and property of the Society (other than the Central Fund) for the
purposes specified in para 8 of the Byelaw, and to recover from members monies
paid out of the Central Fund or from other funds of the Society as a civil
debt. For the first time, these provisions gave the Council a power to raise an
unlimited levy.
The Central Fund (Amendment) Byelaw
(No. 10 of 1987)
11.25 This byelaw allowed the
Council of Lloyd's to charge interest on late contributions to the Central
Fund.
The Central Fund (Amendment No. 2)
Byelaw (No. 9 of 1988)
11.26 This byelaw gives the Council
the right to start legal action to recover the amount of the Central Fund
earmarked in a member's name as a civil debt, where assets have been earmarked
to enable the Name to meet the requirements of the annual solvency test,
notwithstanding that no payment has actually been made out of the Central Fund
on behalf of the member.
(iv) Contributions to the Central
Fund
11.27 In summary:
*from 1972 until 1984, Names made
annual contributions of a maximum of 0.45% of their net written premiums of the
previous year;
*in 1984, the assessment was changed
(from 0.45% of net premiums) to a maximum of 0.45% of gross premiums. It was
calculated that the change was equivalent to increasing the levy on net premium
income from 0.45% to 0.60% and that this increase was an amount which was not
less than the premium which Names would have been required to pay for the
discontinued guarantee policies;
*in 1987 the basis of assessment
changed to gross allocated capacity.
1992 Special Levy
11.28 On 3 June 1992, in view of the
existing and anticipated heavy losses in the market, the Council of Lloyd's
resolved that a special levy of #500 million be made on the Names for payment
of further contributions to the Central Fund (ie in addition to the annual
Central Fund contribution) in order to ensure that there were sufficient funds
in the Central Fund to enable solvency requirements to be met and to meet
claims of policyholders that had to be met centrally where there had been a
failure or refusal to pay by Names. The levy was made on members at the rate of
1.66% of their gross allocated capacity for the underwriting years of account
1990, 1991 and 1992.
Total resources of Lloyd's,
percentage breakdown of Lloyd's total resources and earmarking of the Central
Fund (1970 - 1993).
11.29 The following tables show the
total resources of Lloyd's, percentage breakdown of Lloyd's total resources and
earmarking of the Central Fund (1970 - 1993).
Total resources of Lloyd's
#m as at December 31 each year
Premium Funds at Confirmed Central
Other Total
Trust Lloyd's Personal Fund(*)
Central Resources
Funds Wealth Assets
1982 4,248 1,072 1,750 108 100 7,278
1983 5,052 1,358 1,931 134 114 8,589
1984 6,724 1,655 2,268 194 141
10,982
1985 6,839 2,078 2,591 229 120
11,857
1986 8,200 2,605 3,300 301 132
14,538
1987 8,096 3,166 3,256 269 146
14,933
1988 8,655 3,522 3,492 313 168
16,150
1989 10,388 4,257 3,700 404 248
18,997
1990 9,806 4,418 3,036 377 279
17,916
1991 12,258 4,652 2,643 445 263
20,261
1992 16,663 4,497 1,880 1,147 252
24,439
1993 19,650 4,718 1,749 904 283
27,304
(*) :Before earmarking. In 1982 and
1983, after provision for taxation.
The proportions of Lloyd's total
resources represented by each of these elements in each year are shown in the
next table.
Percentage breakdown of Lloyd's
total resources
% Breakdown of Lloyd's total
resources
Premium Funds at Confirmed Central
Central Total
Trust Lloyd's Personal Fund Assets
Resources
Funds Wealth
1982 58.4 14.7 24 1.5 1.4 100
1983 58.8 15.8 22.5 1.6 1.3 100
1984 61.2 15.1 20.7 1.8 1.2 100
1985 57.7 17.5 21.9 1.9 1.0 100
1986 56.4 17.9 22.7 2.1 0.9 100
1987 54.2 21.2 21.8 1.8 1.0 100
1988 53.6 21.8 21.6 1.9 1.1 100
1989 54.7 22.4 19.5 2.1 1.3 100
1990 54.7 24.7 16.9 2.1 1.6 100
1991 60.5 23.0 13.0 2.2 1.3 100
1992 68.2 18.4 7.7 4.7 1.0 100
1993 72.0 17.3 6.4 3.3 1.0 100
Earmarking of the Central Fund (1970
- 1993)
Year Net assets before Earmarkings
(#m) Central Fund
earmarking (#m) balance as at
31 December (#m)
1970 21.2 0.4 20.8
1971 24.3 0.6 23.7
1972 28.5 0.6 27.9
1973 29.1 0.7 28.4
1974 23.0 0.2 22.8
1975 35.9 0.1 35.8
1976 38.8 ---- 38.8
1977 52.3 ---- 52.3
1978 58.1 0.1 58.0
1979 59.8 0.5 59.3
1980 72.5 0.8 71.7
1981 83.4 0.8 82.6
1982 108.8 0.5 108.3
1983 135.8 1.7 134.1
1984 173.4 6.2 167.2
1985 211.5 64.8 146.7
1986 279.2 237.3 41.9
1987 254.4 24.0 230.4
1988 303.6 12.9 290.7
1989 384.5 21.8 362.7
1990 376.2 30.3 345.9
1991 438.0 67.9 370.1
1992 1,113.0 354.9 758.1
1993 903.7 661.6 242.1
There was a belief that valid claims
on Lloyd's policies would always be paid.
11.30 The continued success of
Lloyd's depends inter alia upon its reputation and the security of its policy.
One reason for the success of the Lloyd's market has been the security of the
Lloyd's policy and the perception of that security. Lloyd's has never failed to
pay a valid claim. This reputation is part of the foundation of Lloyd's
success. Despite recent problems, Lloyd's continues to be well known among
insurance clients for whom it is synonymous with security, reliability and
innovation. Lloyd's strength has been demonstrated by its ability to withstand
a period of unprecedented losses and maintain its record of always paying valid
claims. The chain of security and structure in place at Lloyd's has ensured
that all liabilities of failed syndicates to date have been duly met. The
cumulative global losses since 1988 exceed #8 billion but despite this, the
market has continued to pay all valid claims. As far as Lloyd's customers and
competitors are concerned, Lloyd's has encouraged the belief that a Lloyd's
Policy will always pay any valid claim. Security at Lloyd's is guaranteed by
Lloyd's mechanisms including the Central Fund.
The Central Fund is the ultimate
safety net at Lloyd's whereby all the members have in practice made up the
deficiencies caused by individual defaulting Names.
The fact that valid Lloyd's policies
have always been paid is a great competitive strength for Lloyd's, in
particular against the background of the fragility and failure of some
corporate reinsurers in the 1980's. (see The Walker Report).
In practice, brokers and assureds
did not at the material times carry out credit risk assessments of individual
Names.
11.31 Insureds, including other
Lloyd's syndicates, generally did not assess the creditworthiness of a
syndicate providing them with reinsurance protection. All participants in the
market have benefited from the security and the brand name of Lloyd's. The
protection of policyholders and the passing of the solvency test is critical to
Lloyd's competitive position and the attitude adopted to Lloyd's by regulatory
authorities around the world. Standard & Poor's "stability ratings
relating to Lloyd's syndicates" do not constitute credit ratings of
Lloyd's syndicates.
12. PERMITTED REINSURANCE LIMITS
12.1 The provision relating to
permitted reinsurance limits referred to in para 72 of the Points of Defence
and Counterclaim formed part of the instructions to auditors for the conduct of
the annual solvency test. The first audit instructions were issued in 1908 and
included the following provision:
"in cases where the
reinsurances amount to 20% of the premium income, the auditor must satisfy
himself that the reinsurance policies form a good asset".
12.2 No distinction was drawn
between Lloyd's and non-Lloyd's policies. This provision was amended from time
to time in the following years. A summary of the relevant amendments is set out
below.
1922 The percentage limit was
reduced from 20% to 10% of premium income.
1924 The wording of the audit
instructions was amended to state that "if reinsurances exceeded 10% of
the gross premium income less brokerage and discount, the full amount thereof
cannot be allowed, and the auditor must apply to the Committee for
instructions". No distinction was made between Lloyd's and non-Lloyd's reinsurances.
1932 The percentage limit was raised
from 10% to 15%.
1940 Auditors were additionally
requested to furnish particulars of the extent to which the excess above the
then 15% limit was represented by reinsurances at Lloyd's.
1945 The percentage limit was
reduced from 15% to 10%.
1948 The clause was amended to read:
"Where the reinsurance premiums
exceed the limits set out above (10%), only that portion (if any) of the excess
which is represented by reinsurances effected at Lloyd's on terms as original
may be deducted in calculating premium income for the purpose of applying the
audit test and no deduction may be made in respect of the balance of the
excess".
1964 The limit was increased from
10% to 121/2%.
1966 The limit was increased again
from 121/2% to 15%.
1968 A further limit of 5% of gross
premiums less brokerage and discount was introduced in respect of reinsurance
where the reinsurer had agreed to cover its proportion of outstanding losses.
1975 The current wording and limits
were introduced and set out in App G to the instructions issued by the Council
of Lloyd's for the Annual Solvency Test.
With effect from 31 December 1975,
the definition of "permitted limits" for the purposes of calculating
permitted reinsurance limits under App G was amended to enable premiums on all
reinsurance effected at Lloyd's to be taken into account. Previously, only
reinsurance effected at Lloyd's "on terms as original" was taken into
account. The phrase "terms as original" is difficult to define, but
for this purpose it is understood to have been intended to refer to
proportional reinsurance only.
At the same time, the reinsurance
requirements in relation to the calculation of premium income limits were
discontinued (as set out in bundle 28, App 20).
The notification to the market of
these changes was dated 11 December 1975.
By way of example App G of the
Instructions for the Annual Solvency Test of Underwriting Members of Lloyd's -
31.12.89 provided:-
"Appendix G - Permitted Reinsurance
Limits
The permitted reinsurance limit in
respect of reinsurance ceded is the sum of:
(a) 20% of the gross premiums less
brokerage, discount and returns; plus
(b) Premiums on all reinsurances
effected at Lloyd's; plus
(c) A further 10% of gross premiums
less brokerage, discount (in the case of motor business within the United
Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, commission not exceeding 25%) and returns
in respect of reinsurances where reinsurers have agreed to cover their
proportion of outstanding losses, either by cash loss reserves established with
the syndicates concerned, or by a letter of credit drawn on a bank approved by
the Council of Lloyd's for this purpose.
For the purposes of ascertaining
whether a syndicate has exceeded the permitted reinsurance limit, the Sterling,
U.S. dollar and Canadian dollar accounts are to be combined. The permitted
limit is to be applied to each of marine, non-marine, motor and aviation
business as a whole, and not to the separate audit categories comprising such
business.
Where outstanding losses have
arisen, the underwriter must take the necessary steps to obtain cash loss
reserves or letters of credit before taking advantage of the additional 10%
reinsurance allowance in (c) above.
The additional reserves to be
created on reinsurance premiums in excess of the permitted reinsurance limit
are:
Year of Account
1987 10%
1988 25%
1989 60%
Where a syndicate exceeds the
permitted reinsurance limit, the additional reserve may be created in Sterling,
U.S. dollars or Canadian dollars regardless of the currency which gave rise to
excess."
On 23.12.92 a market bulletin
announced changes to the Instructions for the Annual Solvency Test of
Underwriting Members to apply to the years of account 1992, 1991 and 1990. As
at 31.12.92 the additional reserves to be created on reinsurance premiums in
excess of the permitted reinsurance limit were
Year of account
1990 nil
1991 10%
1992 25%
12.3 The Reinsurance limits
recognise the increased risk that could result from utilising security outside
Lloyd's. The Reinsurance limits for audit apply for reasons of security. The
Reinsurance limits applied at the material times in the 1980s equally to Excess
of Loss and other reinsurances and were not limited to reinsurances at Lloyd's
on terms as original, because Lloyd's security was deemed to be good.
13. PREMIUM INCOME LIMITS/QUOTA
SHARE REINSURANCE
13.1 Until 1969, the premium income
limit calculation used to determine a syndicate's allocated capacity, was made
on a gross rather than net basis, ie without deduction of any reinsurance
premiums paid by the syndicate. Deductible reinsurance allowances were
introduced in about 1969.
13.2 From 1969 until the Syndicate
Premium Income Byelaw (No. 6 of 1984) was passed, deductible reinsurance
allowances for the purpose of calculating a syndicate's allocated capacity were
set by the Audit Committee and the Committee of Lloyd's. From 1984 until 1990
Lloyd's reverted to calculating premium income limits on a gross basis. In
1990, the basis of the calculation changed to net premiums and deductible
reinsurance allowances were reintroduced. A summary of the allowances set in
each year from 1972 to 1993/94 is set out in bundle 28, App 20.
13.3 Mr Clementson actively
underwrote from 1 January 1977 until 31 December 1991. During this period, the
quota share reinsurance allowances drew a distinction between Lloyd's and
non-Lloyd's reinsurance (in relation to some or all types of business) between
1978-81 and 1990-92.
14. REINSURANCE TO CLOSE
The Reserving Process - The current
position
14.1 At the close of a year of
account, members' underwriting liabilities allocated to the year are usually
reinsured by way of RITC. Unless and until the RITC is effected (at the
earliest, at the end of the third year of the account ie two years after the
end of the calendar year corresponding to the year of account) no profits of
the relevant year of account can be distributed to members.
14.2 Against the payment of a RITC
premium, all syndicate members' undischarged liabilities in respect of risks
allocated to the relevant year of account (including liabilities in respect of
RITC of any preceding year of account) are reinsured without limit in time or
amount into a succeeding, (usually the next) year of account of the same
syndicate; they may also, on occasion, be reinsured to close by another
syndicate. When RITC is underwritten by a successor syndicate, the premium is
set by the underwriter of both syndicates, acting for the Names of both years
of account. The Syndicate Accounting Byelaw (No 18 of 1994, previously No. 11
of 1987 and No 7 of 1984) requires the premium set to be fair and equitable
between the two syndicates.
14.3 The premium for reinsurance to
close is determined by reference to the total estimated outstanding liabilities
(including IBNR risks) in respect of risks allocated to the closing year of
account, including undischarged risks from previous years which have been
closed by RITC into that year of account.
14.4 The managing agent currently
derives his express authority to assess and conclude RITC from the agency
agreement prescribed by the Agency Agreements Byelaw (No. 8 of 1988) which
provides that he may effect a contract of reinsurance to close under which:
(i) the reinsuring members agree to
indemnify the reinsured members against all known and unknown liabilities of
the reinsured members arising out of insurance business underwritten through
the Managed Syndicate and allocated to the earlier year; and
(ii) the reinsured members assign to
the reinsuring members all the rights of the reinsured members arising out of
or in connection with that insurance business (including without limitation the
right to receive all future premiums, recoveries and other monies receivable in
connection with that insurance business);
and to debit the reinsured members
and credit the reinsuring members with such reinsurance premium in respect of
the reinsurance to close as the agent, subject to any requirements of the
Council, thinks fair. Previously, the agent's authority derived from the
agreement prescribed by the Agency Agreements Byelaw (No. 1 of 1985).
14.5 The agent also has the power to
reinsure liabilities into any year that remains open, or not to close the year
at all but to leave it in run-off (subject to the provisions of the Run-off
Years of Account Byelaw (No. 17 of 1989) see para 14.9 below). These
requirements are contained in, inter alia, byelaws, market bulletins and
notices issued to the market. Whilst the managing agent must have proper regard
to the interests of both groups of Names (in the reinsured and reinsuring years
of account of the syndicate), no Name or group of Names has, or can have, the
right to approve or veto the RITC. However, Names are entitled to request
information regarding the RITC.
14.6 The Syndicate Accounting Byelaw
(No. 11 of 1987) imposes a duty that the premium set between different years of
account of the same syndicate should be equitable between Names. The RITC must
be fully documented and audited by independent auditors.
14.7 A Name has been regarded by the
DTI as ceasing to conduct insurance business when all his open years have been
closed by RITC. Because RITC is treated as ending a Name's involvement in a
syndicate for regulatory and tax purposes, it is effectively the mechanism
whereby a Name is able to be released from his membership of Lloyd's.
Run-off Accounts
14.8 A run-off account is a year of
account which has not been closed by RITC at the usual time. This may happen
for a number of reasons, but usually as a result of uncertainty as to future
levels of liability and a consequent inability to fix a premium which is fair
as between the reinsured and the reinsuring members. In these circumstances,
closure of the year of account may take a number of years, during which,
without the consent of the Council, there can be no release to a member of
funds at Lloyd's nor of profits arising from the underwriting or investments of
a syndicate to which the member belongs.
14.9 The Run-off Years of Account
Byelaw (No. 17 of 1989) imposes a number of duties on managing agents:
(i) to commission a report from an
independent actuary;
(ii) to prepare a run-off year of
account report which will contain details of why the year is to be left open
(the syndicate auditor will then report on the managing agent's run-off
report);
(iii) to communicate any run-off
decision to all relevant members' agents and, as soon as possible thereafter,
to convene a syndicate meeting at which the reasons for the run-off decision
may be examined by members; and
(iv) to close any run-off year of
account covered by the byelaw as soon as possible.
14.10 The byelaw then goes on to
specify measures which are to be complied with, mainly by managing agents. The
steps prescribed by Pt B are largely administrative and are designed to assist
the managing agent in deciding whether to close years of account of syndicates
managed by it. Where no such decision is taken, the steps prescribed by Pt C
(which are the subject of a measure of discretion on the part of the Council)
have effect and place managing agents under restrictions so long as any relevant
year of account remains open.
Development of RITC
14.11 Until the 1960s, RITC was
rarely evidenced in writing, consisting instead of accounting entries made by
the managing agent as between the reinsured and reinsuring years of account.
Since the 1960s, there has been gradual standardisation of the RITC wording,
and since the mid-1980's a series of byelaws have been introduced to codify
RITC practices as set out below.
Syndicate Premium Income Byelaw (No.
6 of 1984)
14.12 This byelaw provides that RITC
premium paid is not treated as premium income of the reinsuring syndicate, if
the reinsuring syndicate is the same as the reinsured syndicate, so that the
RITC premium is then disregarded for the purposes of calculating premium income
limits. Where the reinsuring syndicate is different, the RITC premium will be
treated as premium income of the reinsuring syndicate unless the Council, at
its discretion, determines that the premium for the RITC should not be taken
into account when assessing whether the reinsuring syndicate is within its
premium limits, which the Council may do if the RITC qualifies as a transfer of
assets (ie if the reinsuring syndicate is simply effecting a takeover of the
business of the reinsured syndicate).
Agency Agreements Byelaw (No. 1 of
1985) and (No. 8 of 1988)
14.13 See above.
Reinsurance to Close Byelaw (No. 6
of 1985)
14.14 para 2 of this byelaw provides
that a Name shall accept or place RITC only from or through a Lloyd's broker or
the managing agent of the reinsured or reinsuring Names. Paragraph 3 provides
that RITC agreements must be evidenced in writing.
Syndicate Accounting Byelaw (No. 7
of 1984) and (No. 11 of 1987)
14.15 These byelaws defined RITC as;
"an agreement under which underwriting
members ('the reinsured members') who are members of a syndicate for a year of
account ('the closed year') agree with underwriting members who comprise that
or another syndicate for a later year of account ('the reinsuring members')
that the reinsuring members will indemnify the reinsured members against all
known and unknown liabilities of the reinsured members arising out of insurance
business underwritten through that syndicate and allocated to the closed year,
in consideration of:
(i)a premium; and
(ii)the assignment to the reinsuring
members of all the rights of the reinsured members arising out of or in
connection with that insurance business (including without limitation the right
to receive all future premiums, recoveries and other monies receivable in
connection with that insurance business)".
Syndicate Accounting Byelaw (No. 18
of 1994)
14.16 This sets out the current
definition of RITC as follows;
"reinsurance to close"
means: (a) an agreement under which underwriting members ("the reinsured
members") who are members of a syndicate for a year of account ("the
closed year") agree with underwriting members who comprise that or another
syndicate for a later year of account ("the reinsuring members") that
they will indemnify the reinsured members against all known and unknown
liabilities of the reinsured members arising out of insurance business
underwritten through that syndicate and allocated to the closed year, in
consideration of: (i) a premium; and (ii) the assignment to the reinsuring
members of all the rights of the reinsured members arising out of or in
connection with that insurance business (including without limitation the right
to receive all future premiums, recoveries and other monies receivable in
connection with that insurance business); or (b) an unlimited syndicate run-off
reinsurance contract between members of a syndicate for a year of account and
Centrewrite Limited, Lioncover Insurance Company Limited or any other
authorised insurance company designated by the Council for the purposes of this
definition whereby the company agrees to indemnify the members of the syndicate
for a particular year of account against all known and unknown liabilities
arising out of insurance business underwritten through the syndicate and allocated
to that year of account."
The RITC provisions
14.17 The Central Fund is
potentially available to meet the obligations of a member of Lloyd's who
defaults on his liabilities under an RITC agreement, and to that extent it
underpins the RITC mechanism and has been able to support the RITC system.
Where a member defaults on an RITC obligation, it is open to the agent to apply
for payment from the Central Fund rather than seeking to have recourse to the
Names on the year of account in which the policy was written.
14.18 The existence of 253 open
years of account erodes the wealth and commitment of those members of those
syndicates who remained members of other Lloyd's syndicates. Problems have
arisen because syndicates had closed years with inadequate RITC which had to be
funded by the current Names out of current trading and the continuing
deterioration of this situation was proving serious. (Standard & Poor's:
The Profile 1993 p 15)
The Merrett litigation
The parties have agreed that my
judgment given on 31 October 1995 in Merrett can be referred to as evidence of
the facts found in it in relation to:
(i) the regulatory background
relating to RITC (see in particular pages 84-110 of the judgment);
(ii) the manner in which the RITC
was carried out on the relevant syndicates, and the manner in which it should
have been carried out;
(iii) the findings as to the
negligence, or (where relevant) the lack of negligence, of the underwriters
concerned.
15. PERSONAL STOP LOSS
15.1 The trends in PSL are set out
in the Rowland Task Force Report.
15.2 In October 1987 the figures
estimated by seven brokers relating to the PSL market were as follows:
(i) number of PSL clients (1989)
15,000
(ii) total limit of PSL liability
placed at Lloyd's
(excluding the effect of retrocessions)(1986)
#1,418m
(iii) total PSL premium income
(1986) #11.5
(iv) number of syndicates writing
more 14
than 1% of their syndicate's net
premium income (1985)
(v) number of specialist PSL
syndicates. 3
15.3 In 1978 syndicate auditors were
required to report to Lloyd's where PSL insurance business exceeded 3% (1% in
1980) of a syndicate's MPI. This enabled Lloyd's to keep a check on the volume
of PSL written at Lloyd's. On 20 September 1993, as a result of a
recommendation made by the Syndicate 387 Loss Review, Lloyd's banned the
establishment of new specialist PSL syndicates.
16. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS AT LLOYD'S
Members' agents pooling arrangements
16.1 A members agent's pooling
arrangement (or MAPA) is an arrangement whereby a members' agent pools
underwriting capacity and the members participating in the arrangement share
rateably in participations across a spread of syndicates. It can enable members
to diversify their risk by writing smaller lines across a large range of
syndicates. Individual members may choose whether or not to participate in a
MAPA operated by their members' agent, to continue underwriting on the
traditional basis or to underwrite partly on one basis and partly on the other.
High level stop loss cover
16.2 In 1993, Lloyd's introduced a
scheme to provide stop loss cover against individual members underwriting
losses. Each individual member is required to contribute an annual levy (of an
amount determined by the Council) to the high level stop loss fund, which may
be made available to pay members underwriting losses. (However, the scheme does
not provide a guarantee of reimbursement, and if the funds available in the
high level stop loss fund are insufficient to meet all demands on it, liability
to discharge the losses will remain with the member.) The scheme is to be
discontinued with effect from the 1996 year of account.
New arrangements for EPP
16.3 Since 1993, Centrewrite, a
wholly owned subsidiary of the Society of Lloyd's (see paragraph 1.33) has
extended its activities to underwrite the Lloyd's members estate protection
plan (EPP) to enable the estates of deceased members to be wound up.
Corporate capital
16.4 With effect from the 1994 year
of account, Lloyd's has admitted corporate capital (in addition to individual
members) to strengthen the capital base and to support long term growth in
capacity. The requirements in relation to the admission of corporate members
are set out in a document entitled "A guide to corporate membership"
published by Lloyd's in September 1993.
Risk Profiling
16.5 The Regulatory Board is
attempting to guard against problems which arise from undue and unrecognised
aggregation such as occurred in the LMX spiral. In particular, it plans to
introduce systems of risk profiling to assist the assessment and control of
aggregation and for syndicate monitoring. Every syndicate will be required to
produce a "disaster plan" showing the impact of realistic disaster
scenarios. These will in theory reveal syndicates with very high aggregate
exposure. Syndicates intending to write business in certain categories exposed
to catastrophic losses will be required to notify their supporting members'
agents of that intention and must disclose (a) the maximum amount of capacity
to be utilised and (b) the maximum aggregate liability to the syndicate which
will be accepted, both gross and net of any reinsurances. (Lloyd's Business
Plan April 1995).
Risk Based Capital ("RBC")
16.6 The Walker Report recommended
the introduction of a system of risk weighting as a means of preventing
repetition of the LMX losses and as a tool to improve monitoring of syndicates.
In August 1995, Lloyd's published a paper entitled "Risk Based Capital for
Lloyd's: a consultative document" outlining proposals for the introduction
of risk based capital at Lloyd's, whereby funds at Lloyd's required to support
a member's underwriting would depend on the classes of business underwritten
and the syndicates on which that member participates. Lloyd's has sought the
views of the market on these proposals, and that consultation process is
continuing.
In theory the fact that more
supporting capital is needed for a particular risk code would make the writing
of that business (all other things being equal) less attractive than would be
the case without the capital increase and so the RBC formula would in theory
act as a brake on the deployment of capital to less desirable areas.
The introduction of the RBC system would
in theory provide members with more information as to the nature of the risk
associated with specific classes of business within their underwriting
portfolios. In theory, the RBC system should serve to focus members' minds on
the risk/reward ratio of membership.
Syndicate auctions
16.7 In August 1995, Lloyd's
launched a scheme for allocating capacity by auction. A series of four weekly
auctions for the 1996 year of account were held, and capacity was traded on 99
syndicates.
Lloyd's: reconstruction and renewal
16.8 In May 1995 Lloyd's published a
document entitled "Lloyd's: reconstruction and renewal"
("R&R"). This document (to which reference should be made for its
full terms) lays out a plan for the reconstruction and renewal of Lloyd's. It
aims to achieve two complementary goals: first, to resolve the problems of the
past; second, to build a strong market for the future. #450 million is to be
raised from members as part of R & R in the form of a special contribution
from those underwriting in 1993, 1994 and 1995 which can be offset against
future Central Fund Contributions. The contribution by members of #450 million
towards R & R would translate into a charge of approximately 1.5% of
capacity for each of the three years of account.
To finance Reconstruction &
Renewal, including the costs of settlement, Lloyd's proposes to draw first on
the existing resources of the Society, specifically the assets of the current
Central Fund.
Events over the years leading up to
1992 caused serious damage to the confidence not only of Names who had suffered
large or catastrophic loss but also of those who will have to contribute to the
relief of the biggest losers and the maintenance of the Central Fund.
(See further R & R Progress
Report October 1995 and subsequent R & R publications).
17. LLOYD'S MARKET SHARE
17.1 According to Statistics
Relating to Lloyd's 1995 Lloyd's share of World Non-Life Premiums (Gross Basis)
was as follows:-
1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
1991 1992 1993 1994
Lloyd's Share of the
World Direct &
Facultative
-Marine 20.6% 20.2% 19.8% 18.7%
19.1% 17.6% 18.2% 16.4% 15.6% 15.7% --
-Non-Marine
1.3% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 1.3% 1.3% 1.6%
1.9% 1.8% 1.7% --
-Aviation19.8% 9.5% 20.8% 21.3%
19.4% 18.9% 19.8% 26.8% 27.4% 26.2% --
-Motor 0.5% 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% 0.7% 0.6%
0.6% 0.8%. 0.9% 0.9% --
Total Direct &
Facultative
1.9% 1.9% 1.8% 1.8% 1.7% 1.5% 1.7%
2.0% 1.9% 1.9% --
Total Direct (e)
1.5% 1.5% 1.4% 1.5% 1.4% 1.3% 1.4%
1.5% 1.4% 1.4% --
Total Treaty
Reinsurance
4.2% 4.1% 3.8% 3.6% 4.0% 4.2% 4.6%
4.5% 3.9% 4.3% --
Total
Reinsurance (e)
6.1% 6.1% 5.5% 5.2% 5.6% 5.5% 6.1%
6.6% 6.1% 6.9% --
18 LOSSES AT LLOYD'S
18.1 Losses at Lloyd's 1988 to 1991
were as follows.
1988-1991
(i) Pre-tax loss to Names after
syndicate expenses but before Annual subscriptions
and levies, Agents' fees and Agents'
profit commission ("Personal Expenses")#5.356 billion
(ii) Annual subscriptions and
levies, Agents' fees and Agents' profit commission #1.584 billion
(iii) Pre-tax loss to Names #6.940
billion
Annual subscriptions and levies,
Agents' fees and Agents' profit commission increased the pre-tax loss to Names
before Personal Expenses by, on average, 30%.
Estimation of Lloyd's losses for the
years 1989 to 1992
18.2 It is difficult to produce
precise figures for Lloyd's losses by category of business because of (i)
definitions of business type' are not precise and (ii) Lloyd's records do not
break down figures between categories of business. Thus the following table is
based upon the losses suffered by individual syndicates which have been
identified on the basis of where that syndicate's major problem lies.
Year Syndicates with
"Spiral"
latent liability Syndicates writing
(in particular
Asbestos and a Cat Book but not
Pollution) including casualty
XOL business
1989 (299) (1226)
1990 (388) (1402)
1991 Pure 0 (403)
Run-Off Years (616) (268)
1992 Pure 0 (139)
Run-Off Years (589) (39)
Total (#M) (1892) (3477)
Source: Chatset
Generally, "Spiral
Syndicates" have been taken as including those syndicates which effected
retrocessional business in the London Market.
The definition of "Spiral
Business" does not correlate with what may be necessarily understood as
"LMX" business. Chatset does not believe that it is practical to
precisely determine "LMX" losses given the problems of data and
terminology.
Chatset has also calculated the
losses suffered by the 14 major syndicates in the "LMX" market over a
similar period and these amount to #2.25bn.
The losses in the previous four
years (1985 to 1988 inclusive) suffered by syndicates with latent liability was
approximately #1685m, making an approximate total over the eight year period of
#3577m.
F THE WITNESSES
The witnesses called by the
defendant
Professor BAIN.
Professor Bain is an academic
economist, specialising in monetary economics and the economics of the financial
sector. After graduating in Economics from Cambridge University in 1959, he
held research and teaching posts at Cambridge and Yale Universities, before
taking up a two year secondment at the Bank of England. From 1966 to 1984 he
held professorial posts, first at the University of Sterling and then at the
University of Strathclyde. He then moved to the City as Group Economic Advisor
at Midland Bank, and held that post from 1984 to 1990. Since October 1991 he
has held a part-time professorial post in the Department of Political Economy
at the University of Glasgow and has been a (non-executive) Board Member of
Scottish Enterprise. He was a member of the Wilson Committee on the City, a
member of the Monopolies and Mergers Commission and of the Advisory Committee
on Science and Technology.
In his first report Professor Bain
considered Lloyd's arrangements and the relevant markets, the Lloyd's policy
and the Central Fund, direct consequences of the Central Fund arrangements,
solvency regulations, the excess of loss spiral and reinsurance to close.
In his second report Professor Bain
considered Lloyd's consultative report "Risk-Based Capital for
Lloyd's" (August 1995) and replied to the expert reports served on behalf
of Lloyd's under the headings the Central Fund, moral hazard, markets for
insurance, causes and effects of changes in capacity, the reinsurance
provisions and RITC.
Professor Bain's third report was an
interim report as to effect on trade between member states and his fourth
report replied to the joint report of Professor Yamey and Mr Aaronson as to
effect on trade between member states. Professor Bain's fifth report was on CSU
data analysis.
Professor Bain helpfully, at a late
stage in the trial, revised Annex F to his 5th report to reflect the agreed
Wilshaw "Category 3" list of syndicates for the 1989 year of account.
Professor Bain's conclusions are set
out in Ch 8 of his first report, although these were to some extent
supplemented/modified in his subsequent reports and in evidence.
Professor Bain is highly intelligent
and extremely articulate. He has considerable expertise in the field of applied
economics. He is not however an expert in the workings and practices of
Lloyd's. Professor Bain was not assisted by the fact that the defendant called
no expert evidence from the market.
In considering Professor Bain's five
reports and oral evidence it is essential to distinguish between matters
falling within and without Professor Bain's area of expertise. Professor Bain
was not always inclined to observe this distinction. Further at times he had a
tendency to assume the role of advocate.
In considering Professor Bain's five
reports and oral evidence it is further essential to distinguish between those
parts of his evidence which are relevant to the issues I have to decide in
relation to art 85, and those parts of his evidence which are relevant to (and
which might usefully be deployed in connection with) an inquiry into alleged
regulatory failures on the part of Lloyd's. This case is concerned with art 85
and not a general investigation into alleged regulatory failures on the part of
Lloyd's - see B above.
At one point in his evidence
Professor Bain said "in my (first) report I have frequently used
"causation" where perhaps if I had spelt it out fully I would have
said the Central Fund "permitted" certain things to happen and in the
circumstances that existed these things, as a result of other factors as well
as this permissive regime did happen... I am not saying that the Central Fund
caused anybody at Lloyd's to... retain for themselves bad business. I would say
that the Central Fund permitted people to do that".
In his first report Professor Bain
said "The Central Fund Arrangements and the Reinsurance Provisions were
the principal causes of the (LMX) spiral". When asked whether, when he
read the judgment of Phillips J in Gooda Walker, he felt any doubt about his
conclusions as to the cause of the spiral, he said "Not at all". When
asked whether the argument to the effect that losses flowing from the spiral
had been caused, not by negligent underwriting but by the Central Fund, might
not have been a useful point for the Gooda Walker defendants to have taken, his
answer was "The points run by (lawyers) are a source of amazement to
me".
I refer to the National Justice
Compania Naviera SA v Prudential Assurance Co Ltd ("The Ikarian
Reefer") [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep 68 at 81 where I summarised the duties and
responsibilities of expert witnesses in civil cases. (Proposition (4) is
subject to the qualification that it is not always possible to confine each
expert to his area of expertise - see the National Justice Compania Naviera SA
v Prudential Assurance Co Ltd ("The Ikarian Reefer") [1995] 1 Lloyd's
Rep 455 at 496, Stuart-Smith LJ). The problems with Professor Bain's evidence
underline the importance of adherence to the guidelines in the Ikarian Reefer.
The witnesses called by Lloyd's
Liliana ARCHIBALD.
There was no dispute as to the
contents of the statement of Liliana Archibald (although the defendant disputed
its relevance).
Liliana Archibald was EC advisor to
Lloyd's from 1978 to 1985. Her statement dealt with Lloyd's and the European
Commission under the headings:- initial contacts with the Commission, late
1979-early 1980: contacts with the Commission over Market Agreements and the
draft letter from the Chairman of Lloyd's to the Chairmen of the four Market
Associations, the Fisher Report and the Lloyd's Bill, informal clearances and
notification, chronological summary of contacts relating to informal clearance
and the Commission's various positions on notification.
Liliana Archibald explained the
position relating to the Central Fund as follows:-
"at no time did the Commission
indicate that either the Central Fund arrangements, or the way it was funded,
would pose any concern in relation to the competition provisions of the Treaty
of Rome. I understand from the files that the Central Fund Byelaw (No. 4 of
1986) was never actually sent to the Commission during the process of informal
clearances. However, the Commission had received copies of the Central Fund
Agreement of 1927, and the Byelaw entitled "Recovery of Monies Paid Out of
the Lloyd's Central Fund or the Funds and Property of the Society" (No. 5
of 1984), which were the precursors to the Central Fund Byelaw that is now in
issue. This Agreement and Byelaw taken together do not differ substantially
from the Central Fund Byelaw No. 4 of 1986..."
Mr Robin WILSHAW.
Mr Wilshaw provided a report as an
expert Lloyd's underwriter. He has been involved in the Lloyd's market for over
30 years. He has had long experience in the underwriting of both direct
insurance and reinsurance with the underwriting agency of R J Kiln &
Company Ltd., where he was employed from 1969 until his retirement in 1992. His
experience has been in the non-marine market, where he specialised in writing a
short tail account.
Mr Wilshaw dealt in his main report
with the nature of XL reinsurance in the non-marine market, the factors
determining the way in which risk was priced and placed in the Lloyd's market,
the effect of the Central Fund on the underwriting of business in the Lloyd's
market, the necessity for and mechanics of the Lloyd's system of RITC, the
factors affecting underwriters' decisions in relation to the purchasing of
reinsurance cover, the effect of the Reinsurance Provisions on the purchasing
of reinsurance cover and the losses suffered at Lloyd's relevant to the present
proceedings. Mr Wilshaw also provided an expert report in reply.
Mr Wilshaw has provided expert
reports (and in some cases given evidence) in a number of LMX and Portfolio
Selection cases (categories 1 and 4 in the Lloyd's Litigation). Mr Wilshaw's
witness statements in other cases are collected together in bundle 41.
I was impressed by Mr Wilshaw's
approach to assisting the Court as an expert witness. I consider that his
evidence was generally balanced and reliable. He did not hesitate to criticise
managing agents, members' agents and Lloyd's where criticism was due and yet
provided practical and credible answers in relation to the workings of the
Central Fund and the Instructions for the Annual Solvency Test, drawn from his
experience as an underwriter.
Dr Peter FREY.
Dr Frey has been active in the
reinsurance market since 1959 when he joined Bavarian Reinsurance Company, in
Munich, a member of the Swiss Re Group. He became Chief Executive Officer of
Bavarian Re in 1975, a position which he held until 1992. From 1993 until the
end of March 1995 he was responsible for all activities of the Swiss Re Group
outside Zurich. Throughout his career he was competing with Lloyd's and engaged
in buying reinsurance from Lloyd's.
Dr Frey provided an impressive view
of the markets, Lloyd's and risk adjustment from a continental perspective.
Mr Raymond SALTER.
Mr Salter has been involved in
broking for 40 years. In March 1993 he retired as a Director and Deputy
Chairman of Willis Faber Dumas Ltd., the major international insurance and
reinsurance broking arm of the Willis Corroon Group, one of the world's largest
insurance broking groups.
Mr Salter provided helpful expert
evidence, based on his experience of broking insurance, particularly
reinsurance. He dealt with the broker's role in the market, price and risk
sharing, the placing of insurance business: the importance of security, the
Central Fund and solvency and premium income limits.
Mr Tony BERRY.
Mr Berry was called as an expert
marine excess of loss underwriter with particular experience in the
underwriting of LMX business. Mr Berry has been involved in the XL market for
the past 30 years, primarily underwriting marine XL reinsurance. He is
currently Managing Director of Cotesworth & Co Ltd and the Active
Underwriter of Syndicate 536.
Mr Berry's main report summarised
some relevant aspects of the nature and history of the XL market (and the
spiral) and the key factors involved in writing XL business and explained what
factors in his view gave rise to the heavy losses sustained by much of the XL
market in the late 1980's and early 1990's. In addition Mr Berry commented on
certain of the defendant's allegations.
As to XL business Mr Berry's main
report considered writing XL business, relevant controls (the use of Probable
Maximum Loss factors, aggregate exposures and experience) and reasons for the
losses in the XL market in the late 1980's (the unprecedented number of major
man-made and natural catastrophes occurring during this period and underwriting
practices).
Mr Berry pointed out in his report
that the term LMX business is commonly used in relation to the cover provided
to London domiciled insurers or reinsurers. There are two possible definitions
of the term "LMX". The first, (the definition to which Mr Berry
adheres) is that of London market Excess of Loss business - ie. the
reinsurances of Lloyd's syndicates and insurance or reinsurance companies
underwriting in the London market. The second definition adhered to by some
underwriters (with which Mr Berry disagrees) is that LMX is limited purely to
London market XL of XL ie. so-called "spiral" business.
Mr Berry provided a second report in
reply.
Mr Berry said that the underwriting
techniques which he applied were those which he was taught by some very good
people back in the 1960's, lessons which he learnt following Hurricane Betsy.
His basic premise was not to underwrite on a rate on line basis and to control
aggregate liabilities. PML from the aggregates was derived daily and there were
very tight controls on the book. He was more than prepared to say no. He did
not feel under an incentive to use all available capacity. He said "I
believe that, as far as the capacity given to me by the Names was concerned, I
had to use my professional judgment as to whether or not I should apply the
extra risk, because obviously that capacity, the deposits, are already
invested, and whether it is worth, in my view, on the risk reward/ratio, to
take the extra risk." The above principles were key, in Mr Berry's
opinion, to proper underwriting. Other people in the market were not following
those principles. Other people in the market regretfully were being rate on
line driven. The problem with the 3% rate on line is that it takes no account
of whether the underlying exposures on each of the individual risks at 3% on
line are all the same. Mr Berry said that a fundamental basis of proper excess
of loss underwriting is to ensure that the underwriter reinsuring with you has
an interest in the outcome. In the late 1980's people were not running sufficient
retentions. Quite often you would not be given details of the underlying
programme.
If everybody in the market had
followed his approach the losses would still have occurred, but if they had
occurred at syndicate level they would have been less, because rates would have
been higher.
Mr Berry struck me as a thoroughly
practical underwriter who had benefited from a good apprenticeship and who
continued to apply the principles he had learned many years ago. As he put it
one of the reasons for the losses that Names suffered in certain syndicates
caught up in the spiral, was that some underwriters did not have a sufficient
feel for or understanding of the business at a time of world wide
over-capacity.
Mr Jeremy DICKSON
Mr Dickson is a chartered accountant
and a partner in the firm of Coopers & Lybrand. For over 25 years he has
been engaged in a number of large auditing engagements and since 1970 has
concentrated on audits in the insurance industry. Mr Dickson has been the audit
partner on the audits of various Lloyd's syndicates and brokers. As to Lloyd's
syndicates he has been concerned with one long tail syndicate, but his
experience does not extend to LMX syndicates.
Mr Dickson provided s V1 of Mr
Aaronson's second report, which considers Reinsurance provisions under the
headings Permitted Reinsurance Limit and First Non-Life Directive.
Mr Robin AARONSON
Mr Aaronson is a partner in the firm
of Coopers & Lybrand and a specialist professional adviser on the economics
of competition. He was formerly a member of the Government Economic Service
(GES), which he joined following completion of a Masters degree in economics at
the London School of Economics. In the GES he served first at H M Treasury and
then, for a period of three years, at the Monopolies and Mergers Commission
(MMC) where he was one of the two Senior Economic Advisers on the permanent
staff. In this capacity he advised members of the Commission on the economic
aspects of some twenty cases referred to the MMC for investigation. Mr
Aaronson's work at Coopers & Lybrand has included consultancy advice to the
European Commission. Throughout 1994 he directed a study for
Directorate-General IV of the Commission, which developed a methodology for
carrying out market definition in cases involving insurance.
Mr Aaronson's first report considered
market definition, non-life insurance business - worldwide structure and
trends, Lloyd's syndicates in the context of worldwide non-life insurance
business, inter-syndicate competition, Lloyd's syndicates' performance in
context, Lloyd's Central Fund and other assets and reinsurance/retention
practices. Mr Aaronson's second report considered impact of risk-adjusting
Central Fund contributions, sources and uses of capacity at Lloyd's, capacity:
Lloyd's and corporates, solvency regulations - the 50% rule and the 20% rule
and commentary on the data in Professor Bain's first report. Mr Aaronson's
third report was a joint expert report with Professor Yamey as to the effect on
trade between member states. Mr Aaronson's fourth report replied to Professor Bain's
report dated 5.1.96. Mr Aaronson's fifth report contained analyses of
mini-Names and "1983 joiners".
Mr Aaronson struck me as a careful
witness who was generally fair in the answers which he gave. It is necessary to
distinguish between matters falling within his area of expertise as an
economist and matters as to which he was dependent on the reports and evidence
of the market practitioners. Subject to this I found Mr Aaronson's evidence
persuasive as to many of the issues with which he dealt.
Professor YAMEY
Professor Yamey was a Professor of
Economics at the London School of Economics from 1960 to 1984, in which year he
retired with the title Professor Emeritus. He was elected a Fellow of the
British Academy in 1977. His publications include books and articles on the
economics of monopoly and restrictive practices. He was a member of the
Monopolies and Mergers Commission from 1966 to 1978, during which time he was
co-signatory to some thirty reports.
In his first report Professor Yamey
analysed the economic aspects of key features of the Lloyd's system for
supplying insurance services, considered the place of Lloyd's in the insurance
markets defined in Mr Aaronson's first report and examined the allegation that
the Central Fund arrangements led to "under-pricing" of insurance and
reinsurance business by Lloyd's syndicates and the proposition that Names'
contributions to the Fund should not be strictly proportional to their premium
incomes but, instead, should reflect differences in the likelihood that their
liabilities may have to be paid by the Fund.
In his second report Professor Yamey
commented on the main arguments and analysis Professor Bain put forward in his
first report as regards the Central Fund arrangements under the headings:-
contributions to the Central Fund, adjusting for the risk of Central Fund
drawdowns, capacity and premium levels, distortion of competition and did
failure to have risk-adjusted Central Fund contributions have adverse effects?
Professor Yamey also provided a
joint report with Mr Aaronson as to the effect on trade between member states.
Professor Yamey was an impressive
witness.
G THE DEFENDANT'S SUBMISSIONS
Mr Lever QC on behalf of the
defendant submitted as follows. There was distortion of competition, most
notably in the distinct category of reinsurance business constituted by the
provision of catastrophe cover. The distortion was appreciable. In what was essentially
international business, there was an effect on trade between Member States and
that effect was appreciable. A substantial proportion of all Names suffered
large losses in the years 1988-91; to a substantial extent those losses were
attributable to their having been over-exposed to risk; the over-exposure to
risk was the very thing to be expected to result, in the conditions of the
1980s, from the removal by Lloyd's of the normal constraint of counterparty
credit risk assessment.
The defendant's case in relation to
LMX losses, in the form of a flow chart, was as follows:-
The Central Fund Arrangements led to
the absence of counterparty credit risk assessment which in the absence of any
Constraints led to moral hazard which led to the risk of agents acting
incompetently which risk eventuated to an appreciable extent such that Names
participated inappropriately on high-risk syndicates in appreciable numbers
which increased capacity in those syndicates to an appreciable extent which
reduced rates and lowered retentions which caused adverse selection attracting
yet more high-risk business at low rates and with low retentions thus
distorting competition and affecting trade [the pure Defence] so that when
catastrophes occurred the natural consequence was that losses fell on those
Names [the Counterclaim].
The defendant's 14 propositions
The defendant's case was set out in
14 propositions as follows.
PROPOSITION 1
(a) The Central Fund Arrangements
attracted the operation of art 85(1);
(b) the elements in the Central Fund
Arrangements by reason of which the Arrangements attracted the operation of art
85(1) are
(i) the provisions for the
maintenance of a Central Fund with power to apply it to inter alia the payment
of Names' Lloyd's liabilities;
(ii) the provisions for raising
contributions and levies to or for the Central Fund;
(iii) Lloyd's decisions to exercise
those powers as they were exercised;
(c) para 10 of the Central Fund
Byelaw forms an integral and unseverable part of the Arrangements created by
the provisions referred to at (b) above and is rendered unenforceable by art
85(2) and/or cannot be enforced by Lloyd's since the sums sought to be
recovered arose as a result of Lloyd's infringements of art 85(1);
(d) Lloyd's infringements of art 85(1)
through the making and operation of the Central Fund Arrangements (alone or in
combination with the Other Relevant Arrangements) give rise to the cause of
action pleaded in the Counterclaim.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
For the definitions of the Central
Fund Arrangements and the other Relevant Arrangements, see 5 Schedule to the
PDC. The Central Fund Arrangements distorted competition (see paragraph (c)
below) and para 10 of the Central Fund Byelaw 1986 cannot be severed from the
provisions for the maintenance and use of the Central Fund to provide a system
of mutualization of last resort and de facto guarantee by Lloyd's of Lloyd's
policies. Lloyd's cannot contend that even if the Central Fund Arrangements
attract the operation of art 85(1), they are entitled to enforce para 10 of the
Byelaw because by so doing they are not distorting competition; that was
precisely what Lloyd's argued before Saville J and the Court of Appeal rejected
the argument.
With regard to distortion of
competition in the relevant insurance markets, the defendant relies on the
raising of contributions and levies at the same rate for all Names
indiscriminately as constituting a failure to operate a Constraint (PDC, para 2
(iv) (a)) rather than as an independent infringement of art 85 (1); whereas he
had contended that in the market for syndicate participations the raising of
contributions and levies in that way itself had the effect of distorting
competition; but this distortion is no longer relied upon.
The Central Fund Arrangements have,
as an effect, "prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within
the common market" in that they vary the conditions of competition between
Lloyd's and other insurers and do so in a way that does not mean merely that
Lloyd's syndicates operate in the marketplace like other insurers (whereas
without the Central Fund arrangements they could not operate in the marketplace
at all).
If as a matter of law (contrary to
Professor Bain's view as a matter of economics), distortion of competition
requires a deleterious effect on the competitive position of an actual or
potential competitor and not also the creation of competition of an abnormal
kind, the characterisation of the effects of the Central Fund Arrangements as
competition-distorting is unaffected - the capacity of Lloyd's as a whole and
of high risk syndicates in particular was artificially inflated, prices were
thereby driven down and, in turn, the amount of high risk catastrophe business
written by Lloyd's syndicates was inflated; it is self evident that the effects
cannot have been confined to Lloyd's.
PROPOSITION 2
The Central Fund Arrangements opened
the door to the realisation of moral hazard on the part of Lloyd's active
Underwriters and thereby distorted competition.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
Moral hazard exists wherever there
is a risk that one person may avoidably cause loss to another; the risk may be
aggravated because the first person has an incentive to act in a way that may
cause such loss but an incentive to act in such a way is not a necessary
condition for the existence of moral hazard (a householder, unless intending to
perpetrate a fraud on his insurer, has no incentive to leave his house open to
burglars, yet moral hazard may operate on his behaviour in avoidably so doing).
In a developed society there are
many constraints on realisation of moral hazard, ranging from social
disapprobation to the most severe criminal penalties.
In the field of financial services,
a particularly important constraint on the realisation of moral hazard that
normally exists is counterparty credit risk assessment ("CCRA"). CCRA
greatly limits the ability of an undertaking operating in the field of financial
services avoidably to cause loss to those with whom the undertaking does
business. Thus, in conditions of undistorted competition, because of CCRA, in
order to gain and maintain business, an insurer needs to establish a reputation
that it does not (whether because the underwriter is a gambler, is negligent or
is plain stupid) underwrite business beyond the resources that are available to
the insurer to support the insured risks in so far as they are perceptible.
Thus, in conditions of undistorted competition, CCRA and reputation are two
sides of the same coin: reputation depends on favourable CCRA and the need for
reputation constrains the ability of an underwriter, for whatever reason, to
get business beyond the resources that are available to the insurer to support
the perceptible risks.
By contrast, at all times material
to these proceedings, because a Lloyd's underwriter was (even from Day 1 of his
operations) able to underwrite Lloyd's Policies with the de facto guarantee of
Lloyd's to back those Policies, every Lloyd's underwriter, whether a gambler,
negligent or plain stupid, had the ability to get business without being
susceptible to CCRA and therefore without the necessity of establishing a
reputation for not writing business beyond the resources available to support
the underwritten risks so far as they were perceptible.
PROPOSITION 3
Because of Proposition 2, the door
was opened to the admission by Lloyd's of individuals as Names, being
individuals who did not have the assets required to support underwriting at
Lloyd's at all (moral hazard operating on the behaviour of Lloyd's itself).
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
In so far as Lloyd's membership
comprised individuals who, in circumstances in which CCRA had operated, would
have been wholly unacceptable to customers as a source of security for the
policies written in their name, Lloyd's arrangements distorted competition. Yet
a significant proportion of those in fact admitted to membership by Lloyd's in
the second half of the 1970s and in the 1980s were precisely the sort of people
whom, for all Lloyd's or customers knew, no sane customer would have accepted
as a source of security for an insurance policy, let alone a policy providing
cover in a high risk area.
Bain V establishes that large
numbers of such Names appeared on policies written by high risk syndicates and,
in particular, Wilshaw-classified Category 3 LMX syndicates. Even for full
External Names, the minimum required shown means fell even shorter in real
terms below the minimum recommended by Cromer in 1969 - itself a reduction of
one-third on the pre-existing minimum - so that by 1989 the minimum was only
some 30% of Cromer's recommended minimum.
In the years 1976 to 1983 persons
who demonstrated only half the (in real terms much reduced) means required to
be shown by a full External Name were attracted into Lloyd's. As the
"kick" to membership through the admission of Mini-Names was running
out, a new "kick" was provided by allowing Names to use bank
guarantees secured on their principal residence as security in their totality
both as shown means and for use as their Lloyd's deposit.
The Court does not have to decide
how many financially inadequate Names were admitted: all that is relevant is
that one of the effects of the Central Fund arrangements was to enable such
Names to join Lloyd's who would otherwise either not have been able to do so or
would not have been minded to do so.
PROPOSITION 4
Because of Proposition 2 and/or
Propositions 2 and 3, the door was opened to the placing of Names by Members'
Agents on syndicates when the Name did not have the assets required to support
such membership of the syndicate having regard to the nature of the syndicate's
business, the Name's line on the syndicate in question and the Name's exposure
to risk on other syndicates (moral hazard on the part of Members' Agents).
There was in place no effective
substitute for the normal market discipline of counterparty credit risk
assessment to prevent the operation of moral hazard resulting therefrom.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
It was because syndicate
underwriters and their Managing Agents were not constrained to reject
unsuitable Names as members of their syndicates or to decline excessive
participations by even Names who were in principle suitable for membership of
their syndicates, that Members' Agents were able to place their Names as they
did. Bain V, as revised, shows that no alternative constraint operated to
prevent a substantial proportion of Members' Agents placing a substantial
proportion of Names on Category 3 LMX syndicates (i) when they should not have
been on them at all or (ii) if any participation was appropriate, when their
actual participation was grossly excessive. This is the danger of having a
system which removes the normal market discipline of CCRA without having any
effective alternative constraint in place.
If, because CCRA of Lloyd's
syndicates was impracticable, moral hazard and the kind of aberration that
occurred in the 1980s were unavoidable (and therefore may recur), the
consequence is that the application of art 85(1) to Lloyd's arrangements is
unavoidable (and Lloyd's must satisfy the EC Commission that the best
arrangements that can be devised are such that Lloyd's, with some inevitably
concomitant distortion of competition, is better (within the terms of art 85(3)
EC) than no Lloyd's at all). No such balancing operation is open to a national
Court faced with the question whether art 85(1) applies.
The problems could have been at
least substantially mitigated by the adoption of constraints - which might have
been a great deal less elaborate than the scheme proposed in the Consultative
Document. What was required was a system under which, making some allowance for
the reduction in risk that could be achieved through diversification of a
Name's Lloyd's portfolio and for the relationship between a Name's APL and the
means that he chose to disclose to Lloyd's, a Name with a higher proportion of
his portfolio in syndicates that were identifiable ex ante as high risk
syndicates was permitted to write less business than a Name with the same Funds
at Lloyd's whose portfolio was more heavily weighted with syndicates that were
identifiable ex ante as lower risk syndicates. The fact that it would have been
difficult, and probably impossible, to devise a conceptually perfect system is
not a reason for treating as acceptable the omission to introduce any system
such as would at least have substantially improved the situation.
Lloyd's recognised in principle the
need to monitor and control Names' risk exposure - hence the establishment of
Premium Income Limits. But the PIL system was manifestly irrational in the
sense that no reasonable man applying his mind to the relevant considerations
could have adopted it: thus -
(i)two Names with the same shown
means, the same funds at Lloyd's and equally diversified portfolios could write
the same premium income, even though the one was much more heavily exposed than
the other on syndicates that were ex ante identifiable as high risk syndicates;
and
(ii)no attempt was made to adjust
PILs when, as a result of even major changes in premium rates, any given
premium income exposed a Name to much more (or much less) risk than previously.
PROPOSITION 5
Because of Proposition 3, the
overall capacity of Lloyd's including its capacity in the relevant markets was
artificially inflated and excess capacity developed, thereby contributing to a
depression of premium rates at Lloyd's to levels below the true risk/cost and
distorting competition.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
Between 1983 and 1988 real total
gross capacity at Lloyd's doubled, the increase in nominal terms (money of the
day) amounting to 156%. Elections of new members in 1982 to 1987 (ie. of those
who commenced underwriting in 1983 to 1988) numbered 15,366 and by 1989 a half
of the active External Names had joined in the preceding 6 years.
A substantial proportion of the
increase was attributable to the admission of Names who commenced underwriting
with an APL precisely consistent with their having shown only the minimum
required means. Until 1990 there was a fixed ratio of a Name's PIL to his shown
means; and from 1985 onwards total gross 'allocated capacity' amounted to
upwards of 97% of total gross capacity so that generally speaking Names
allocated the whole of their PIL.
By the 1980s the minimum required
shown means were grossly inadequate whether measured by
(i) what had been thought appropriate
in the 1960s (upwards of #600,000 at 1990 values);
(ii) what was recommended by Cromer
in 1969 as a reduced minimum (still over #350,000 at 1990 values);
(iii) what common-sense would regard
as the minimum required to support unlimited liability in a market that traded
in risks (even in the 1980s someone who could show #100,000 of means, perhaps
in the value of his home, could scarcely have been characterised as rich on
that account); and
(iv) the minimum that Lloyd's itself
in 1990 recognised to be required for external membership, namely #250,000.
There is no evidence to support the
speculation that, in the 1980s, on a substantial scale, External Names may have
shown means in excess of the minimum required yet have chosen an APL of just
the amount that was supportable on the basis of the minimum required shown
means. The only direct evidence of means shown is provided by the statistics at
App 6 to the Neill Report. Those statistics show that 55% of all External Names
in 1986 had shown means of less than #150,000 (the top relevant wealth band
being #100,000 - #149,999, so that many in that band are likely to have been
External Names who showed the then required minimum means of #100,000).
Post 1982 External joiners
contributed nearly 60% of the increase in Lloyd's capacity in the period
1983-1988.
With this huge influx of new Names,
very substantial overcapacity opened up at Lloyd's in the mid-1980s: it is
shown in graphical form in Exhibit 32, (entitled "Oversupply of
capital") of the Rowland Task Force Report (which is agreed).
The general excess capacity would
have been exacerbated in 1988 and 1989 when External Names (other than
"Foreign") were permitted to write up to 5 times their Lloyd's
Deposit instead of the previous limit of 4 times and "Foreign"
External Names were permitted to write up to 3.57 times their Lloyd's Deposit
instead of the previous limit of 2.86 times.
Further, throughout the 1980s the
problems relating to asbestos and pollution were worsening, the risks involved
in exposure to deterioration increased and, accordingly, the capacity of those
exposed to such risks to write new business was commensurately less; but no
account was taken of such exposure in calculating a Name's PIL. See now the
Chatset estimate of losses suffered over the period 1985 to 1992 of syndicates
so exposed of #3,577m.
If there is too much capacity and
too little demand, rates come down. Exhibit 32 to the Rowland Task Force
Report, showed the oversupply over capital at Lloyd's. The oversupply of
capacity resulted in conditions in which pricing was driven down.
Given Lloyd's importance in the
marketplace these developments were bound to have, and had, substantial
consequences.
PROPOSITION 6
Because of Propositions 3 and 4:
(a) the capacity of, and business
written by, high risk syndicates at Lloyd's, operating in the relevant markets,
were artificially inflated, thereby distorting competition and increasing
Lloyd's aggregate exposure to catastrophe losses; and
(b) excess capacity for the
transaction at Lloyd's of high risk business developed, thereby contributing to
a depression of premium rates at Lloyd's for such business below the true
risk/cost of such business, giving rise to adverse selection and further
distortion of competition.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
Mr Rowland told the House of Commons
Treasury and Civil Service Select Committee that:
"Some Names who joined Lloyd's
in the 1980s were unable to obtain places on older-established syndicates and
joined syndicates, some of whose underwriters (as demonstrated by the judgments
of Phillips J in Gooda Walker and Feltrim) acted negligently."
The capacity of LMX syndicates was
greatly increased and their gross premiums rose by 200% over the period
1983-1988 and the proportion of total Lloyd's gross premium income accounted
for by LMX syndicates doubled to over a quarter by 1990 and this occurred
despite a very substantial decline in LMX premium rates.
The Lloyd's CSU statistics and the
work of Mr Wilshaw have enabled Professor Bain to demonstrate that by 1989 over
50% of the stamp capacity of Wilshaw-classified Category 3 LMX syndicates was
attributable to inappropriate and excessive participations such as could not
have occurred if counterparties had had any concern with the creditworthiness
of the body with which they were dealing, viz. the syndicate.
The 50% figure in fact substantially
understates the artificial inflation of the capacity of Category 3 LMX syndicates
since it treats as excessive only the excess over 10% of Names' portfolios
accounted for by Category 3 LMX syndicates: in fact many of the Members of such
syndicates should not have been on them at all and very few of their members
should have been on them to an extent exceeding 5% of their portfolio. By 1989
about #1 billion of Category 3 LMX syndicate capacity was contributed by Names
who should not have been on such syndicates at all or by the accrued excess of
their participations over and above the maximum to which they should have been
exposed.
Moreover by 1989 more than 50% of
all External Names had exposure to Wilshaw-classified Category 3 LMX syndicates
in excess of 10% of their APL which again demonstrates the systemic nature of
this aberration.
It was not only Category 3 LMX
syndicates the capacity of which was inflated by the participation of Names who
should not have been on such syndicates at all or whose participation was
excessive. The same was true of at least the specialist PSL syndicates.
There was nothing to prevent Names
whose position at Lloyd's in 1988 and 1989 was liable to deteriorate
dramatically because of worsening of IBNRs on long tail syndicates of which
they were members from participating without limit subject only to their not
writing in the aggregate an amount of new business in each of those years in
excess of:
(i) 2.5 times their shown means; and
(ii) 5 times their Lloyd's Deposit.
[Subject to a ceiling of #1,000,000
and #1,300,000 respectively].
The combination of excess capacity
at Lloyd's, the artificial inflation of capacity of high risk Lloyd's
syndicates, skilful brokers who were unconcerned with the creditworthiness of
the syndicates with which they placed business, however risky and at whatever
rates, a general shortfall of demand relative to capacity (not confined to
Lloyd's) and "adverse selection" had the now well known but
predictable disastrous consequences.
PROPOSITION 7
The Reinsurance Provisions infringed
art 85(1). The defendant's submissions in support of this Proposition included
the following.
The Reinsurance Provisions referred
to are the relevant provisions of the 1989 instructions and their predecessors
and the Syndicate Premium Income Byelaw (No. 6 of 1984) as amended and the
previous required practice which they reflected and which (a) permitted Names
and syndicates to take full credit for all reinsurance effected at Lloyd's, and
(b) further distinguished between reinsurance effected at Lloyd's and elsewhere
(see E 7.20 to 7.25 and 12.1 to 12.3 above).
Because the Reinsurance Provisions
ex facie imposed an obligation to provide additional reserves where reinsurance
with corporate insurers, no matter how strong, exceeded a specified limit but
not where reinsurance was placed with any Lloyd's syndicate, the Reinsurance
Provisions had as an object the prevention, restriction or distortion of
competition; and they also had that effect.
The Reinsurance Provisions, by
treating all corporate reinsurers alike and less favourably than Lloyd's
syndicates, lacked objective justification, failed to respect the principles of
Equal Treatment of Equal Situations and Proportionality and could not be saved
by any application of any Rule of Reason however formulated.
Further or alternatively the
operation of the Reinsurance Provisions must be taken into account in assessing
the loss and damage caused to the Defendant by the Central Fund Arrangements
which were their raison d'Itre.
The Reinsurance Provisions are
relevant as Lloyd's arrangements which depended for their rationale on the
Central Fund Arrangements (which were thought to make unlimited reinsurance
within Lloyd's somehow risk-free) and which aggravated the effects of the
Central Fund Arrangements that are relied upon for the purposes of the
Counterclaim.
When in 1975, Lloyd's removed the
pre-existing restraint (through the operation of Premium Income Limits and the
Permitted Reinsurance Limits) on unlimited reinsurance within Lloyd's, it
abandoned
the principle that a good underwriter
should seek to make a profit on his gross book, using reinsurance protectively
not aggressively. In the result, Lloyd's ended up with the Reinsurance
Provisions that lasted until the end of 1992 with disastrous consequences. Not
only did the Reinsurance Provisions restrict reinsurance outside Lloyd's,
however secure the reinsurer (thus penalising those who paid more for better
security), but also created a situation which encouraged unlimited reinsurance
within Lloyd's. Any system which permits let alone encourages intra-reinsurer
reinsurance risks creating a spiral.
The environment in the mid-to-late
1980s was "an accident waiting to happen". The Reinsurance Provisions
guaranteed that, when the accident happened, Lloyd's syndicates involved in the
higher levels of retrocession in which a spiral is most prevalent would
inevitably be part of (and an important part of) that spiral.
It would have been entirely
practicable to have required additional security for the purposes of Test 1
solvency margins in the case of second class corporate reinsurers in the same
way as has been done in allowing quota share reinsurance with some but not all
corporate reinsurers for the purposes of premium income monitoring.
In that the relevant parts of the
Reinsurance Provisions (Annex G to the Solvency Instructions - Test 1) operates
at its most penal in the first two years, it must have a direct impact on the
initial placing of reinsurance in the case of any syndicate that has a
particularly heavy need for reinsurance.
To suppose that the need to provide
potentially substantial additional security in certain circumstances
(reinsuring outside Lloyd's beyond a limited extent rather than within Lloyd's)
did not affect the minds of syndicate underwriters who had heavy reinsurance
needs would be to deny the normal operation of normal economic considerations
in the present circumstances. Additionally the discriminatory preferential
treatment of inter-syndicate reinsurance (which Lloyd's treated as being -
without limit - acceptable) relative to corporate reinsurance was calculated to
engender and must have engendered a psychological attitude on the part of
syndicate underwriters that unlimited reinsurance within Lloyd's was good practice
whereas limitation of reinsurance outside Lloyd's was also good practice.
Equal treatment of equal situations
is a fundamental principle of EC law; discrimination otherwise than for
objectively sufficient reasons is inconsistent with the principle. The
principle applies in the context of the rules on competition of the EC Treaty,
and in particular arts 85 and 86. An agreement between undertakings, a decision
of an association of undertakings (or the act of an undertaking in a dominant
position) which, without objective justification, discriminates between
comparable persons infringes the rules on competition of the Treaty.
In relation to the application to
the Reinsurance Provisions of the principles of equal treatment of equal
situations and the prohibition of discrimination without objective
justification, guidance is to be found in certain decisions of the EC
Commission in the field of insurance. Thus in Nuovo Cegam [1984] 2 CMLR 484 at
paras 16 and 20 of its decision, the EC Commission held that an obligation on
members of a group of insurers to place their reinsurance with other members of
the group infringed art 85(1) and had to be removed before an exemption could
be granted. In Teko OJ 1990 L13/34 the Commission noted, at paras 21 and 23 of
its decision, that art 85(1) applied where the operations of an association of
insurers led to a practice whereby members brought their reinsurance into the
group and only exceptionally reinsured outside the group even though there was
no rule requiring reinsurance within the group and members were free in
principle to seek external reinsurance cover. In Assurpol OJ 1992 L 37/16 the
Commission held, at para 31 of its decision that an obligation on members of a
group of insurers to propose for reinsurance only reinsurer members of the
group attracted the operation of art 85(1).
PROPOSITION 8
The RITC Provisions are to be taken
into account in assessing the loss and damage caused to the Defendant by the
Central Fund Arrangements which were their raison d'Itre.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
The defendant no longer relies upon
this aspect of his case as a separate head of claim but he does say that:
(i) when considering the distortions
created by the existence of the Central Fund arrangements it is necessary to
consider the entire environment in which those arrangements were operated
including the absence of any reserving risk charge in determining capacity; and
(ii) Names' systemic over-exposure
to risk was exacerbated by the absence of any such reserving risk charge.
PROPOSITION 9
By reason of their actual or
potential effects (and in the case of the Reinsurance Provisions, by reason of
their object) the Central Fund Arrangements and the Reinsurance Provisions have
attracted the operation of art 85(1) at all times since the accession of the
United Kingdom to the EEC (now the EC) on 1 January 1973.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
Proposition 9 is simply intended to
define the time since when art 85(1) has applied to the Central Fund
Arrangements and the Reinsurance Provisions. Until the 1980s distortion of
competition was, at least largely, potential rather than actual. Potential, as
well as actual, restriction of competition attracts the operation of art 85(1).
The point is of academic rather than practical significance since well before
the time when Lloyd's sought to invoke para 10 of the Central Fund Byelaw of
1986 the distortion of competition had eventuated. Equally the Counterclaim
relies on actual and not merely potential distortion of competition, so again
the antecedent potential distortion is of no practical consequence.
Nevertheless the correct analysis is that by reason of potential distortion of
competition by the Central Fund Arrangements, those arrangements technically
attracted the operation of art 85(1) from the date of the accession of the
United Kingdom to the Community, ie. 1 January 1973. A fortiori the Reinsurance
Provisions attracted the operation of art 85(1) from the same date.
PROPOSITION 10
The magnitude of the effects
referred to at Propositions 2-8 above and the volume of business that they
affected are such that the prevention, restriction and/or distortion of
competition within the relevant markets were appreciable and, by reason of the
international nature of those markets, the effect on trade between Member
States was appreciable.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
In looking at the statistics it is
necessary to bear in mind that some reinsurance is not open to international
competition and that some of it is transacted by protected local reinsurers who
do not engage in international competition. Even if all reinsurance is taken
together Lloyd's share has still been about 6% over the decade 1984-1993 ie.
over the 5% level frequently referred to in connection with the de
minimis/appreciable effect condition.
AS to Marine and Aviation insurance
in the decade 1984-1993 Lloyd's average share of the Marine market (direct and
facultative) was 18% and of the Aviation market (direct and facultative) 22%.
PROPOSITION 11
The very thing to be guarded against
as likely to result from the creation of moral hazard caused by the elimination
by the Central Fund Arrangements of CCRA, by itself and/or combined with the
effects of the Reinsurance Provisions and/or the RITC Provisions, was that, in
circumstances such as developed in the 1970s and 1980s, avoidable losses would
be caused to Names through their exposure to risks that their available assets
were insufficient to support: pleas by Lloyd's of novi actus intervenientes
and/or other extrinsic causes are therefore unsustainable.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
Where a distortion of competition is
brought about as a result of the creation of moral hazard and is relied on as a
cause of action sound in Damages, it is almost inevitable that the direct cause
of the loss suffered by a claimant under art 85(1) will be a harmful act by a
third party - the creation of the moral hazard being the creation of the
opportunity for the third party to cause avoidable harm to the claimant. Unless
one is to rule out more or less a priori the sustainability of such a cause of
action, the fact that the direct or proximate cause of the claimant's loss was
a breach of Duty by a third party (here a Lloyd's Agent) is entirely to be
expected - and certainly not a ban to the action against the creator of the
moral hazard which Lloyd's seems to believe it to be. The relevant question is
whether the acts of the third parties (ie. here Lloyd's Agents) constituted the
very thing that the creation by Lloyd's of the moral hazard complained of had
made likely.
PROPOSITION 12
The Rule of Reason, however
formulated, is inapplicable to the Central Fund Arrangements because:
(i) they did not simply enable a
Lloyd's syndicate to operate on the market in the same sort of way as an
insurance company that had assets comparable to those that were available
(without recourse to the Central Fund) to the syndicate but, on the contrary,
enabled Lloyd's Syndicates to engage in conduct of a kind and on a scale that
would have been impossible for such a non-Lloyd's insurer in conditions of
undistorted competition; and/or
(ii) Lloyd's failed to take any, or
any sufficient steps to remove or mitigate the effects of moral hazard created
by the elimination of CCRA and indeed was itself affected by that moral hazard.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
There are two reasons why Lloyd's
cannot rely on the Rule of Reason however formulated.
First, the Central Fund Arrangements
whether viewed alone or in conjunction with the Reinsurance Provisions,
manifestly did not result merely in Lloyd's syndicates operating in the market
like comparable insurance companies; instead they enabled the syndicates to
operate in a way that was inconsistent with normal operations in normal
competitive conditions. Thus, Lloyd's relevant arrangements fail any Rule of
Reason test because they did not merely enable the persons concerned to operate
in the market place in a manner which was equivalent to, and on a par with,
other undertakings which were not governed by the arrangements in question.
Second, Lloyd's relevant
arrangements were not, as required by any formulation of a Rule of Reason, the
minimum necessary for any legitimate purpose. In this context "minimum
necessary" means "fashioned so as to cause the minimum prevention,
restriction or distortion of competition", required for some
pro-competitive purpose.Thus, even if, in general terms, provisions of some
kind are "necessary", the EC Commission will not treat the
arrangements as being thereby taken outside art 85(1) if something less would
suffice. Once one is in the realm of weighing up the advantages conferred by
going beyond the bare minimum that is necessary as against any disadvantages in
so doing, one moves from art 85(1) to art 85(3) - the application of which is,
of course, outside the jurisdiction of a national court.
PROPOSITION 13
1 s 14 of the Lloyd's Act is not
available to deny the Names a remedy in damages against the Society of Lloyd's.
2 s 14 of the Lloyd's Act is not
available to deny the Names a remedy in damages against the Society of Lloyd's
as a matter of res judicata.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
The Court of Appeal reversed Saville
J's affirmative answer to Preliminary Issue 3(c)(i) with regard to s 14 of
Lloyd's Act 1982. The issue was dealt with by only Sir Thomas Bingham MR who
said ([1995] CLC at page 130 E-G):
"If Mr Clementson is able to
establish that Lloyd's has acted in breach of art. 85, then it seems to me at
least arguable that he has a good counterclaim for damages on which he is
entitled to rely by way of set-off and that s.14 of the Lloyd's Act 1982 cannot
be effective to deprive him of that right. If it were otherwise I do not see
how national courts could help to enforce the Community's competition regime,
as I understand they are expected to do. Whether s. 14 may itself amount to an
infringement of art.85 and not simply an ineffective defence to a claim for
breach of art.85, seems to me more problematical. In the absence of evidence,
however, I do not think one can dismiss as fanciful the suggestion made by the
Commission in its Notice on co-operation between national courts and the
Commission in applying articles 85 and 86 of the EEC Treaty:
'Companies are more likely to avoid
infringements of the Community competition rules if they risk having to pay
damages or interest in such an event'"
Steyn and Hoffmann LJJ. concurred.
The first of the grounds relied upon
by the Master of the Rolls stands without further comment by the Defendant.
With regard to the second of the grounds, the extent, if at all, to which
Lloyd's was influenced in its conduct by a belief that it enjoyed a statutory
immunity from liability for damages for breach of art 85(1) is a matter wholly
within the knowledge of Lloyd's and no officer or official of Lloyd's has been
called to give evidence on the matter. In any event, the first ground of the
Master of the Rolls judgment is by itself determination of the issue
irrespective of the state of mind of Lloyd's itself.
PROPOSITION 14
The Defendant is a person who is
entitled to invoke art 85(1) as a basis for claiming compensation from Lloyd's.
The defendant's submissions in
support of this Proposition included the following.
If an association of undertakings
takes a decision that infringes art 85(1) and that thereby injures someone,
whether or not because it prevents, restricts or distorts competition by that
person or because it prevents, restricts or distorts competition by a third
party to his disadvantage, the injured party is entitled to sue the
association.
H LLOYD'S SUBMISSIONS
Lloyd's response to the defendant's
14 propositions was as follows.
PROPOSITION 1
Lloyd's rejects Proposition 1 for
the reasons set out below.
PROPOSITION 2
The first part of Proposition 2
("the CF Arrangements opened the door") reveals a yawning chasm at
the outset of the argument. It is no longer the case, as was originally
asserted quite unequivocally by Professor Bain, that the Central Fund caused
any distortion of competition. The case now put is that the Central Fund merely
allowed distorting events to occur. This shift occurred very noticeably during
Professor Bain's cross-examination, when he abandoned the language of causation
and adopted the language of permission. There is nothing in any of the European
authorities which gives support to the idea that Art 85 renders illegal and
void an agreement or decision which does not cause a prevention restriction or
distortion of competition but merely allows subsequent events or behaviour to
produce such a consequence. Principle must suggest that such cannot be the
correct approach, and the language of Art 85 - "which have as their object
or effect" - plainly imply a definite causal link.
Without a direct and definable
causal link between the Central Fund and the alleged distorted effects, the
defendant's case necessarily fails.
The second part ("to the
realisation of moral hazard on the part of Lloyd's active underwriters")
introduces the protean concept of moral hazard. The definition provided by the
defendant that moral hazard exists wherever there is risk that one person may
avoidably cause loss to another is hitherto unknown, useless as an analytical
tool and unjustifiable. A definition couched in these terms is so all-embracing
as to become meaningless.
Apart from the fact that it is
difficult to see how the mere existence of the Central Fund renders it any more
likely that an underwriter will behave recklessly or negligently, such an underwriter
is subject to so many other constraints or disincentives as to render any
supposed effects created by the existence of the Central Fund negligible.
The essence of the defendant's
argument revolves around the absence of counterparty credit risk assessment, ie
the theory is that if CCRA took place the moral hazard inherent in the position
of an active Lloyd's underwriter would not lead to the infliction of avoidable
loss on another, sc a Name. This wholly artificial construct is wrong inter
alia for the reason that it is not the existence of the Central Fund which
explains the absence of CCRA in the case of a Lloyd's underwriter, but rather
the practical impossibility of carrying out a CCRA in the case of a Lloyd's
syndicate.
The third part ("and thereby
distorted competition") involves a complete non-sequitur. There is no
logical connection between the existence of a moral hazard, whether naturally
occurring or created, and a distortion of competition. The proposition that
competition is distorted if individuals in a market are not prevented from
acting in a way that involves avoidable risk of loss to other willing
participants in the market is one that only has to be stated for its absurdity
to become evident.
A clear and comprehensible statement
as to what is alleged to constitute a distortion of competition is lacking.
All that the defendant has shown is
that Lloyd's is different to a corporation; an obvious fact that is clearly
recognised by European legislation. There is nothing in competition law or
European legislation that suggests that every type of competitor must adopt the
same structure. European legislation and competition law permit different
structures. It may be that each structure gives rise to different types of
"moral hazard" as defined by the defendant; the absence of individual
CCRA in the case of Lloyd's or indeed any partnership, and the absence of
unlimited liability in the case of corporates. There is no legal or rational
reason for saying that Lloyd's "distorted competition" because it did
not conform to a corporate structure, any more than saying that corporates
"distorted competition" by not conforming to the Lloyd's structure.
For the same reasons the defendant is mistaken to focus on the supposed lack of
CCRA. CCRA is impossible at the individual level. To enable an individual
market such as Lloyd's to function it is therefore necessary to provide an
alternative, namely CCRA of the body of Lloyd's Names as a whole.
PROPOSITION 3
The first part of Proposition 3
("because of Proposition 2") implies a causal connection between
propositions 2 and 3 so that the latter follows logically from the former. This
is not the case. There is no logical connection between an alleged moral hazard
operating on active underwriters and the prior decisions of the Society of
Lloyds as to whom to admit to membership. Equally there is no logical
connection between an alleged distortion of competition and the admission of
Names.
The second part ("the door was
opened to the admission by Lloyd's of individuals as Names ...who did not have
the assets required to support underwriting") highlights again the lack of
any relevant causal connection between the various parts of the defendant's
argument. It is not suggested that proposition 2, or any constituent part
thereof, caused the admission of any particular type of Name, simply that it
allowed it to happen.
It is difficult to understand the
role of the third part - "moral hazard operating on the behaviour of
Lloyd's itself" - in the argument.
PROPOSITION 4
The first part of Proposition 4
("Because of Proposition 2") refers to causal connection. It is
impossible to see how the supposed behaviour of Members' Agents in placing a
name on a syndicate can be regarded as the causal consequence of the active
underwriter's subsequent actions.
The second part ("and/or
Propositions 2 and 3") also asserts that causal connection and introduces
Proposition 3. Since Proposition 3 identifies the relevant Names as being inadequately
resourced to undertake any underwriting at all, it does not advance the
argument very far to point out that such names were, ex hypothesi, inadequately
resourced to be members of any syndicate.
The third part ("the door was
opened to the placing of Names by Members' Agents on syndicates when the Name
did not have the assets required to support such membership of the syndicate
having regard to the nature of the syndicate's business, the Name's line on the
syndicate in question and the Name's exposure to risk on other
syndicates") raises again the contrast between causing and permitting.
Apart from that, it appears to state no more than that a Members' Agent could
be in error, whether negligently or otherwise, in his placement of Names.
The fourth part ("moral hazard
on the part of Members' Agents") identifies the risk of error on the part
of a Members Agent as moral hazard on the part of the Agent. This does not
advance the argument or lead to any obvious conclusion.
The principal fallacies in the
defendant's arguments on CCRA and the Central Fund are as follows.
The argument assumes that the
absence of CCRA, or the creation of moral hazard, is to be equated with
distortion of competition for the purposes of art 85. There is no authority
which supports this. Indeed, there are in Europe and throughout the world
numerous "guarantee" schemes, such as the Policyholders Protection
Act in the UK, which to a greater or lesser extent remove the need for CCRA in
the corporate sector.
The argument assumes that the only
permissible form of insurance undertaking is a corporate body where CCRA of the
corporate body is possible, and other forms of structure such as Lloyd's are in
principle illegal unless "constraints" are put in place to
"substitute" for the removal of CCRA of individual Names. There is no
authority which supports this, and European legislation clearly regards the
Lloyd's structure as a permissible form of undertaking.
The argument assumes that CCRA is an
effective method of preventing insurance companies from overexposing
themselves; indeed so effective that unless it is put in place at Lloyd's,
there is a distortion of competition. But the evidence is that is only a
relatively recent development in the market, it is crude, and there is no evidence
that it is an effective protection against insurance companies overexposing
themselves; see the evidence of corporate casualties in the spiral and
elsewhere.
The argument assumes that the
Central Fund has "removed" CCRA from the Lloyd's marketplace. In
truth, CCRA at the individual or syndicate level is not possible, and the
Central Fund has not "removed" it.
The defendant argues that Lloyd's
needed to put "constraints" in place as "substitutes" for
CCRA. There is no EC authority which has taken this approach, and it is in any
event misconceived. CCRA at the individual level is not possible, and none of
the supposed "constraints" are in any sense "substitutes"
for CCRA. They are regulatory measures which have no connection with CCRA or
its absence. The defendant is simply invoking the absence of CCRA as a means of
deploying his regulatory argument. There is no EC authority which even hints
that it is contrary to art 85 for an organisation to operate without CCRA. Nor
indeed is there any authority which suggests that any illegality can be
"cured" by appropriate constraints.
PROPOSITION 5
The second part of Proposition 5
("the overall capacity of Lloyd's including its capacity in the relevant
markets was artificially inflated and excess capacity developed") depends
upon the concept of an "artificial" inflation of capacity. It appears
to mean an actual increase in capacity brought about by the admission into the
market of Names whose limited asset base made it unwise for them to expose
themselves to the vagaries and risks of the insurance business. The result in
the market, namely an actual increase in capacity brought about by an increase
in the number of competitors, is wholly independent of the wealth
characteristics of the new competitors. No methodology or evidence has been put
forward by the defendant to enable one to judge the extent of the alleged
"artificial" inflation in capacity.
As to the third part ("thereby
contributing to a depression of premium rates at Lloyd's to levels below the
true risk/cost") it is true that an increase in capacity, if sufficiently
widespread, will tend to push rates down. The extent to which any particular
excess in capacity will contribute to any particular movement in rates is both
unknown and probably unknowable. It is certainly impossible to say whether any
particular excess in capacity has influenced rates to drop below "the true
risk/cost", whatever that particular concept may signify.
As to the fourth part ("and
distorting competition") distortion of competition only arises if the
increase in capacity is "artificial" ie. comes form competitors who ought
not to be allowed to compete in the market for their own benefit. It is not
clear why a rush of rich names into Lloyd's with a consequent downward pressure
on rates should be regarded as perfectly competitive, whereas an identical
increase in capacity with identical consequences brought about by some rich
Names and some less rich Names should be characterised as distortive of
competition.
PROPOSITION 6
Proposition 6 raises similar points
to those addressed above. Further there is no evidence that premium rates at
Lloyd's were lower than rates anywhere else and there is no evidence of adverse
selection in any accepted sense of the term.
There is one further important
preliminary point. At the heart of much of the defendant's argument lies the
idea that it is in some way improper, and distortive of competition, for a
market participant to carry on economic activities which are not wholly
supported by his own capital resources. It is of the essence of competition
that a competitor is entitled to organise his affairs in such a way as to
maximise his own competitive advantages and to minimise his competitive
disadvantages. This has been recognised by European Law in a number of areas,
including those which are relevant to capitalisation. Franchising (see Pronuptia
supra) is an obvious example. The same situation obtains in the case of a
cooperative: see Gottrup-Klim supra. There are other obvious examples. A
partnership places the capital of each of its members at the disposal of each
individual member. Thus an individual partner can engage in business, and
enjoys a credit rating, which reflects the standing of the partnership as a
whole, not just his own individual capital base. In the case of Lloyd's the
competitive market place is the world insurance market. An individual, even a
wealthy individual, cannot participate in that market on the basis of his own
individual resources. He can only participate on the basis that he is admitted
to Lloyd's with the consequence that, in the last resort, the resources of
other members of the market are available, via the Central Fund, to stand
behind his liabilities. There is never any question of CCRA in relation to the
individual member of Lloyd's, nor even in relation to a syndicate. Thus an
individual at Lloyd's, who inevitably suffers various disadvantages as an
individual, neutralises the major disadvantages of his individual status by
participating in a mutual support system.
PROPOSITION 7
Appendix G, which applies only in
the context of Test 1, provides for the creation of an additional reserve where
the amount reinsured outside Lloyd's exceeds a certain level. Its specific
context is the complicated Lloyd's solvency regime.
Since this issue goes to the
counterclaim, the key question is whether the defendant has demonstrated that
the 20% rule had an appreciable effect. An argument on "object" does
not advance the case; unless there was the requisite effect, causation does not
get to first base.
The defendant has not called a
single underwriting or other witness who has testified to the rule having any
effect on his or anyone else's decision-making process.
The evidence from the market
witnesses is to the effect that the 20% rule did not have any effect at all on
the decisions of underwriters as to where to place reinsurance and certainly
did not cause the LMX spiral.
The defendant's case that the 20%
rule had an appreciable effect is no more than theory and assertion.
The 20% rule is not anti-competitive
in object, because it is merely but a small part of substantial and complex
solvency regulation, and because its overt purpose is not to prohibit or
mandate any particular course of action on the part of underwriters but merely
to assign different values for solvency purposes to acts which were carried out
in the past.
It cannot be said that the object of
App G is anti-competitive. Further, there is no evidence at all that it was or
could be anti-competitive in effect.
PROPOSITION 8
Although the Central Fund is
available to meet all of a defaulting Names's obligations (including those
obligations which the Name undertakes under a RITC), the Central Fund
Arrangements are not the raison d'tre of the RITC provisions.
PROPOSITION 9
There is no warrant for suggesting
that you strike down an agreement, decision or concerted practice which is not
producing a prevention, restriction or distortion of competition now, which one
cannot even say will, or is likely, to produce such a restriction, prevention
or distortion of competition, but about which one can only say, if the world
changes in ways which at the moment are not immediately predictable or
foreseeable, then such results might occur.
PROPOSITION 10
The relevant markets are the worldwide
marine, aviation and reinsurance markets.
The effect of the Lloyd's
arrangements (if any) must be considered in the context of the relevant market
as a whole.
Commission decisions treat
reinsurance as a whole.
A fundamental objection to the
defendant's case on appreciability lies in the evidence. Lloyd's cannot be
regarded as a single undertaking. Lloyd's itself does not engage in insurance
business. The Lloyd's syndicates do; and they are in competition with each
other. A simplistic test, such as the 5% test found in Case 19/77 Miller
International Schallplaten v Commission [1978] ECR 131, cannot be applied.
Dr Frey's evidence was that even
Swiss Re and Munich Re in combination could not move the market. Accordingly,
it is fantasy to suppose that Lloyd's syndicates constantly engaging in
competition with each other and with corporate (re)insurers could do so.
As to effect on trade between member
states the defendant has not demonstrated any or any significant effect on
intra-Community trade in relation to the relevant market. No causal connection
between the contested decision and any effect on intra-Community trade has been
established.
PROPOSITION 11
The counterclaim is based upon the
assertion that underwriting losses suffered by Names at Lloyd's have been
caused by breaches of art 85. Even if those breaches were to be established,
the counterclaim would fail on grounds of causation. The features of Lloyd's
which the Defendant attacks are not new; they were present during the many
profitable underwriting years prior to the late 1980's.
Causation requires the application
of commonsense: Yorkshire Dale SS v Ministry of War Transport [1942] AC 691 at
698 and 706, Galoo Ltd (in liquidation) and Others v Bright Grahame Murray ( a
firm) and Another [1995] 1 All ER 16, [1994] 1 WLR 1360.
The commonsense view is that the
effective causes of Name's losses were the decisions taken by Names and their
underwriting agents, against the background of worldwide losses arising from
eg. asbestos. pollution and catastrophes. In general, the voluntary acts of a
third party (eg. the Name or the underwriter) will break the chain of
causation: Chitty on Contracts, 27 Edition, Volume 1 paras 26-015 - 26-017.
At the very most, the alleged
breaches of art 85 might be said to have set the scene or opened the door to
the making of underwriting losses. Even if this were the case, it is
insufficient to establish causation: Quinn v Burch Brothers (Builders) Ltd
[1966] 2 QB 370, [1966] 2 All ER 283 Deeny and others v Derek James Walker and
others (Gatehouse J) (unreported - November 1995), Banque Brussels Lambert SA v
Eagle Star Insurance Co Ltd and Others [1995] QB 375, [1995] 2 WLR 607, at 621
of the latter report (Bingham MR) Clementson (Saville J at p 87).
The commonsense view is that
underwriting decisions, together with decisions of Members' agents and Names as
to what syndicates to join, caused the losses with which this case is
concerned. The commonsense view is supported by the evidence of Mr Wilshaw and
Mr Berry, both of whom have great experience in the market. They reject
entirely the suggestion that the Central Fund or the 20% rule caused the spiral
or the losses.
Without prejudice to the above, the
defendant's damages claim should fail for other reasons.
The question of remoteness of damage
is governed by English law. It is difficult to see how underwriting losses,
particularly on LMX business, are the foreseeable consequence of the breaches
of art 85 of which the Defendant complains.
PROPOSITION 12
Professor Bain accepts that the
Central Fund is essential to the operation of Lloyd's and the point is conceded
(see para 2(ii) of the Revised Points of Defence and Counterclaim).
Since membership of Lloyd's is the
only means by which individuals can write insurance business and Lloyd's is
generally pro-competitive, it follows that the "rule of reason"
applies. The limit placed on the "rule of reason" by the European
Court is that it does not exclude from the prohibition in art 85(1)
restrictions on competition that are not necessary in order to render the
arrangements as a whole properly operable.
It should be noted that, subject to
that limit, the "rule of reason" permits "restrictions of
competition", that is, terms or provisions that have a direct adverse
impact on the ability of the persons concerned to compete. In this case, there
is no allegation that the Central Fund has that effect at all. The idea that
the Central Fund has "caused" the distortion of competition has been
abandoned. The only assertion now made is that the Central Fund "permitted"
distortions of competition to emerge. If a direct restriction of competition is
protected from prohibition by the "rule of reason", it is implausible
to assert that something that does not even cause a distortion of competition
but merely permits it cannot be protected by the "rule of reason".
PROPOSITION 13
Lloyd's is entitled to immunity
pursuant to s 14 of the Lloyd's Act 1982.
PROPOSITION 14
The defendant has been a willing
participant in the various arrangements of which he now complains. For example,
he joined Lloyd's and continued as a member knowing that contributions were
assessed by reference to premium income. He paid contributions on that basis,
and enjoyed the benefits which Lloyd's membership brought. He is not entitled
to claim damages arising from an aspect of the system in which he was a willing
participant.
Further there is no liability for
damages for breach of art 85 in the absence of an intention to injure: see
Whish: Competition Law, 3 Edition, page 326.
European Legislation
The suggestion that Lloyd's and its
Central Fund is illegal flies in the face of common sense and European
legislation, which (i) permits this unique system of trading to take place at
Lloyds, thereby recognising that it is an acceptable form of economic activity,
(ii) implicitly recognises the acceptability of mutualization and (iii)
expressly recognises the Central Fund.
Lloyd's referred in particular to
The First Non-Life Directive (73/239/EC), The First Life Directive 1979 and The
Insurance Companies Accounts Directive 1991.
Approbation
For completeness I should record
that Lloyd's abandoned an argument based on the doctrine of approbation (having
regard to the position adopted by Mr Clementson in the Gooda Walker
litigation).
I ANALYSIS
The scheme of this part of the
judgment is as follows. I will first consider a number of topics which call for
individual attention:-
*The relevant principles of EC law
*The Central Fund is essential to
the operation of Lloyd's
*The Central Fund is the fourth link
in Lloyd's Chain of Security
*If insurance business at Lloyd's is
conducted prudently the likelihood of losses absorbing a Name's entire wealth
is very small
*Moral hazard
*Counterparty Credit Risk Assessment
*Risk-Based Capital
*Some concerns of the Court of
Appeal in Society of Lloyd's v Clementson
*The defendant's losses were not
caused by any of the matters complained of in these proceedings.
I will then consider the defendant's
14 propositions in turn. Finally I will deal with severance.
The relevant principles of EC law
The relevant principles of EC law
are set out at C above. I apply these principles in reaching the conclusions
set out below.
The Central Fund is essential to the
operation of Lloyd's
The Central Fund is essential to the
operation of Lloyd's. The Revised Points of Defence and Counterclaim concede in
para 2(ii) that "it was not practicable for insurance business on the
scale and of the types underwritten at Lloyd's to be transacted at Lloyd's...
without Lloyd's having or being perceived to have... Support
Arrangements." (see further Professor Bain's first Report para 3.3.6,
Professor Bain's concessions to this effect when giving evidence and the
evidence of the market witnesses). The role of the Central Fund is explained in
E above.
The Central Fund is the fourth link
in Lloyd's Chain of Security
Lloyd's Chain of Security is set out
in E 7.11 to 7.15 above. The Central Fund is the fourth and last link in the
Chain after premiums trust funds (first link), Names' funds at Lloyd's (second
link) and the personal wealth of individual Names (third link). The Fund is not
for the protection of a Name, who remains responsible for his or her
liabilities to the full extent of his or her wealth.
If insurance business at Lloyd's is
conducted prudently the likelihood of losses absorbing a Name's entire wealth
is very small
In para 2.2.4 of his first Report
Professor Bain stated:-
"The Names at Lloyd's trade
with unlimited liability. In principle, therefore, each Names' entire capital is
at risk. In practice, however, if the insurance business is conducted
prudently, the probability that losses will absorb a Name's entire wealth is
very small."
Professor Bain confirmed this
statement in cross-examination. If business was conducted prudently the risk of
a call on the Central Fund (following the absorption of a Name's entire wealth)
would be minuscule.
Moral Hazard
The principles underlying the duty
of disclosure of material facts imposed on the assured were stated by Lord
Mansfield in the well-known case of Carter -v- Boehm (1766) 3 Burr. 1905. The
concept of "moral hazard" is frequently employed in cases involving
allegations of material non-disclosure. The first reference I have found to
moral hazard in this context is in Regina Fur Company Ltd v Bossom [1957] 2
Lloyd's Rep 466. (See further Roselodge Ltd (formerly "Rose" Diamond
Products Ltd) v Castle [1966] 2 Lloyd's Rep 105, CA; March Cabaret Club &
Casino Ltd v The London Assurance [1975] 1 Lloyd's Rep 169; Woolcott v Sun
Alliance and London Insurance Ltd [1978] 1 All ER 1253, [1978] 1 Lloyd's Rep
629; Reynolds and Anderson v Phoenix Assurance Co Ltd and Others [1978] 2
Lloyd's Rep 440, 247 EG 995; Container Transport International Inc and Reliance
Group Inc v Oceanus Mutual Underwriting Association (Bermuda) Ltd [1984] 1
Lloyd's Rep 476, CA; La Banque Financiere de la Cite SA (formerly named Banque
Keyser Ullmann en Suisse SA) v Westgate Insurance Co Ltd (formerly named Hodge
General & Mercantile Insurance Co Ltd) [1990] QB 665, [1988] 2 Lloyd's Rep
513; Inversiones Manria SA v Sphere Drake Insurance Co plc Malvern Insurance Co
Ltd and Niagara Fire Insurance Co Inc ("The "Dora") [1989] 1
Lloyd's Rep 69; Darville v Ernest A Notcutt & Co Ltd 18.3.91, CA
unreported; BPC Group Holdings Ltd v Sovereign Marine General Insurance Co Ltd
& Others 18.2.94, CA unreported; Pan Atlantic Insurance Co Ltd and Another
v Pine Top Insurance Co Ltd [1995] 1 AC 501, [1994] 3 All ER 581, HL; PCW
Syndicates v PCW Reinsurers [1996] 1 All ER 774, [1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep
241,31.7.95, CA and Group Josi Re (formerly known as Group Josi Reassurance SA)
v Walbrook Insurance Co Ltd and Others [1996] 1 All ER 791, [1996] Lloyd's Rep
345 2.10.95, CA).
The defendant was not able to point
to any reference to any concept of moral hazard in any decision of the Court of
Justice. Mr Lever stated that the closest the defendant's legal team had come
to finding a reference to moral hazard was in the Opinion of the Advocate
General in Verband Der Sachversicherer v Commission of the European Communities
[1978] ECR 405, but in my view nothing in that Opinion provides any material
support for the defendant's case as to moral hazard.
It could be argued that there is
more scope for the defendant's novel and protean concept of moral hazard in the
case of corporates (with limited liability) than in the case of Lloyd's (with
the Lloyd's Chain of Security including unlimited liability on the part of
Names).
Counterparty Credit Risk Assessment
Central to the defence is the
allegation that the Central Fund arrangements infringed art 85(1) because
"in themselves, they distorted competition by obviating the need for
counterparty credit risk assessment" (Revised Points of Defence and
Counterclaim para 2(i)(a)). The defendant's notes to Proposition 2 ("The
Central Fund Arrangements opened the door to the realisation of moral hazard on
the part of Lloyd's active Underwriters and thereby distorted competition")
state:-
"At all times material to these
proceedings, because a Lloyd's underwriter was able to underwrite Lloyd's
Policies with the de facto guarantee of Lloyd's to back those Policies, every
Lloyd's underwriter, whether a gambler, negligent or plain stupid, had the
ability to get business without being susceptible to CCRA and therefore without
the necessity of establishing a reputation for not writing business beyond the
resources available to support the underwritten risks so far as they were
perceptible."
As to moral hazard see above.
As to CCRA:-
(i) The Central Fund is the fourth
link in Lloyd's Chain of Security (see above). The fourth link is only reached
after premiums trust funds, funds at Lloyd's and the personal wealth of individual
Names. The Fund is not, as I emphasise, for the protection of a Name, who
remains responsible for his liabilities to the full extent of his wealth. The
Central Fund did not serve to remove any or any significant constraints on
Lloyd's underwriters inter alia because
(a) Underwriters and managing agents
depend for their income (see E at 1.13 above) and livelihood on the syndicates
with which they are concerned retaining support from a significant number of
Names. That support will be lost if a syndicate sustains serious losses, with
the result that the first three links in the Chain of Security are called on.
(b) As the active Underwriter and at
least two Directors/Partners of each managing agent were required to
participate in the syndicates managed by them (see E at 6.14 above), such
persons are subject to the first three links in the Chain. As Lloyd's
submitted, a Lloyd's underwriter would not maintain his reputation, and could
not even remain a Name, if he went bankrupt (or refused to pay) and the Central
Fund had to step in.
(ii) As Dr Frey stated when giving
evidence, Lloyd's had a triple A rating because of three matters - first
reputation, second a record of always paying valid claims and third the
unlimited liability of Names.
(iii) As Dr Frey pointed out there
are significant difficulties with CCRA in the insurance industry, for example
the problem of knowing whether in the case of Long Tail business the loss
reserves are sufficient and the problem of assessing the riskiness (and changes
in the riskiness) of a particular portfolio.
(iv) There are additional
difficulties with CCRA in the case of the complex structure of Lloyd's
syndicates. A person dealing with a Lloyd's syndicate deals with a large number
of Names each of whom has a different portfolio of risks. The impossibility of
carrying out CCRA at the Name or syndicate level was accepted by Professor
Bain.
(v) If insurance business at Lloyd's
is conducted prudently, the likelihood of losses absorbing a Name's wealth (and
thus bringing the Central Fund into operation) is very small.
(vi) The problems of Long Tail
business and the LMX spiral were not confined to Lloyd's. A long list of
corporate failures was produced during the trial. CCRA (to the extent that it
was practicable) did not prevent these failures.
Risk-Based Capital
RBC is referred to in E 16.6 above.
The defendant's pleaded case (para 2(iv) of the Revised Points of Defence and
Counterclaim) was that:-
"...The Central Fund
Arrangements were not formulated so as to avoid competition-distorting effects
and Lloyd's made no attempt so to formulate them as it might have attempted to
do, in particular by the adoption of the Constraints, that is to say:
(a) By requiring Names to make
contributions to the funding of the Central Fund Arrangements that would
properly reflect the specific risk of them having to be operated in the case of
the Names in question and the likely cost to the Central Fund if that risk eventuated,
and/or
(b) By controlling the business that
was permitted to be underwritten on behalf of a Name (for example by applying
risk-based capital principles)
so that, having regard to the
personal circumstances of the Name (such as shown means, funds at Lloyd's, PSL
and letters of credit), business would not be written of an amount and nature
such as to give rise (a) to an above-average risk to the Central Fund...and/or
(b) to any appreciable risk of any unacceptable loss."
Professor Bain changed his original
opinion so as to end up favouring (b) above (RBC) rather than (a) above
(risk-based contributions to the Central Fund).
As to risk-based contributions to
the Central Fund, in his second Report Mr Aaronson concluded that on realistic
assumptions about the degree of adjustment to Central Fund contributions which
would have been necessary to reflect the risk of a call on the Central Fund,
changes in Central Fund contributions would have been extremely small. Although
Professor Bain criticised Mr Aaronson on this point it is significant that he
changed his original view to end up favouring RBC rather than risk-based
contributions to the Central Fund.
I formed the clear impression that
the defendant's reliance on RBC gradually diminished as the various
difficulties with RBC were identified.
Professor Bain agreed that the RBC
system, the subject of the consultation process, does not deal satisfactorily
with reinsurance.
Mr Wilshaw said that there are many
problems which have to be sorted out before RBC can be made workable and
equitable.
Dr Frey was sceptical about RBC. It
was he said very difficult to get at the volatility of different classes of
business. He referred to the spearhead of development and going with fashion.
In App B to his fourth Report Mr
Aaronson considered the effect of applying RBC methodology to Mr Clementson. He
concluded that on the basis described, application of the RBC methodology to Mr
Clementson shows that his RBC percentage for 1990 would have been 31% (as
opposed to the standard 30% capital requirement).
Professor Yamey contended that the
capital charges which are levied at the Name level do not impinge directly on
the decision-making environment of the Underwriter. He pointed out that RBC
should not be discussed in the abstract. It is necessary to balance the
drawbacks and limitations of the present system against those of alternative
approaches. Professor Yamey referred to the limitations mentioned in the
consultative document itself and said that the model may be a perfectly good
indication of what has happened in the past but is not necessarily a good
indication of what will happen in the future. He referred to the difficulties
of adjusting for the probability that a Name will cause a call on the Central
Fund, noting that the system ignores any wealth held by individual Names
outside Lloyd's and yet claims to be designed to equalise the probability that
Names will cause a call on the Central Fund.
As Lloyd's pointed out RBC is in
part a substitute for the current system of portfolio selection which relies on
(competent) assessments being made by particular Members' Agents (a
non-centralised system). The role and duties of Members' Agents are explained
in E 6.1 and 6.2 above.
Reference to the judgment in Merrett
shows that RBC would not have assisted the problems of Names who at the start
of the 1980's were on Long Tail syndicates.
RBC raises highly complex issues, a
number of which are yet to be resolved. The consultation process at Lloyd's is
still continuing.
RBC methodologies are a relatively
modern development (see for example Dr Frey's evidence) and yet the failure to
adopt RBC principles is an important plank in the defendant's pleaded case that
the Central Fund arrangements have attracted the operation of art 85(1) since
1.1.73.
Some concerns of the Court of Appeal
in Society of Lloyd's v Clementson
In Society of Lloyd's v Clementson
supra Bingham MR said:-
"If it is possible that Lloyd's
underwriters have been able to attract business by offering lower premiums, in
effect gambling on the chance that a risk will not materialise, in knowledge
that, if all else fails, the Central Fund will be used to indemnify the
assured, then that would in my view make it arguable that the existence and
mode of operation of the Central Fund have had the effect of distorting
competition withinthe Common Market."
Following a full investigation of
the facts, I find that this did not happen inter alia for the following
reasons. The possibility referred to by the Master of the Rolls could not apply
to the Long Tail business written over several decades which gave rise to
losses of #3577m in the years 1985 to 1992 and which represents a very serious
continuing problem for many syndicates (see E 10 above).
As to LMX business, the judgment of
Phillips J in Deeny v Gooda Walker Ltd [1994] CLC 1224 at 1275 summarises the
reasons for the finding of negligent underwriting in that case as follows:-
"Mr Walker... was deliberately
running a net exposure to risk without monitoring the precise level of that
exposure or correctly informing his Names of this. He made no attempt to
estimate how often his Names might have to face a year of loss and he
mis-appreciated the level of catastrophe that risked bringing that result
about. His rating was not based on any assessment of the earnings his syndicate
needed to make in the good years to balance the losses in the bad, but on an
acceptance of the structure and level of rates prevailing in the market. In these
respects, the plaintiffs' allegations of breach of duty are made out."
(See further the judgment of
Phillips J in Arbuthnott v Feltrim Underwriting Agencies Ltd [1995] CLC 437 and
see also Rose Thompson Young, Morison J and Bromley, Langley J both unreported).
Professor Bain in his second Report
stated that he had seen no evidence "to suggest that the underwriters
attracted business by offering lower premiums because they knew that, if all
else failed, the Central Fund could be used to pay valid claims."
Further the possibility referred to
by the Master of the Rolls was refuted by the evidence of the market witnesses.
Finally regard must be had to the
commercial realities. In considering the level of premiums it should be
remembered that the relevant market is a subscription market in which companies
participate (see E 1.21 above). Further the Central Fund is the fourth link in
the Lloyd's Chain of Security (see above). The fourth link is only reached
after premiums trust funds, funds at Lloyd's and the personal wealth of
individual Names. The Fund is, as I have emphasised, not for the protection of
a Name, who remains responsible for his liabilities to the full extent of his
wealth. Underwriters and managing agents depend for their income and livelihood
on the syndicates with which they are concerned retaining support from a
sufficient number of Names. In addition the active underwriter of the syndicate
and at least two Directors/Partners of each managing agent were required to
participate in the syndicates managed by them. The negligent underwriting
reflected in the judgments of this court in the LMX cases is to be
distinguished from the possibility referred to by the Master of the Rolls.
There is significantly no reference to the Central Fund in the judgments of
Phillips J in Gooda Walker and Feltrim. The managing agents were the subject of
very serious criticisms in those judgments for the reasons given, but reference
to the judgments does not provide any support for the possibility that the
Lloyd's underwriters concerned "attract(ed) business by offering lower
premiums, in effect gambling on the chance that a risk will not materialise, in
the knowledge that, if all else fails, the Central Fund will be used to
indemnify the assured."
The defendant's losses were not
caused by any of the matters complained of in these proceedings
In opening it was accepted on behalf
of the defendant that the pure defence "may... be of very limited
practical significance for Mr Clementson and other Names like him", inter
alia because of the decision of the Court of Appeal in Higgins supra. The counterclaim
seeks damages for loss allegedly caused by Lloyd's infringements of art 85(1),
being loss allegedly caused by the Central Fund arrangements and Reinsurance
provisions and the RITC provisions separately or in combination.
Mr Clementson's syndicate allocations
and results 1982-1991 are found at App 24 to the Statement of Agreed Facts. His
overall result over 9 years amounted to a net loss of #1,185,138. Mr Clementson
was a Name on numerous syndicates several of which feature in the Lloyd's
litigation (although Mr Clementson was not always a Name on years in respect of
which a claim has been made). Mr Clementson's losses were caused in part by
negligent underwriting. Mr Clementson was a Name on Gooda Walker 164/290/298
and as such with other Names obtained judgment in Deeny v Gooda Walker Ltd
supra. This provides a clear example of a case where Mr Clementson's losses
were caused in part by negligent underwriting. I refer to the judgment of
Phillips J for the detailed reasoning which led to the finding of negligent
underwriting. Mr Clementson's losses were caused by negligent underwriting to
the extent that he has already established (or establishes in the future)
liability on this basis in LMX, Long Tail, PSL or other cases forming part of
the Lloyd's Litigation. So far as I know Mr Clementson is not pursuing a
portfolio selection claim. Save as aforesaid Mr Clementson's losses were caused
by market conditions (including asbestos and pollution claims and the
unprecedented number of major catastrophe losses referred to in E 9.12 above).
Even if contrary to my express findings there was any infringement of art 85,
Mr Clementson's losses were not caused by any such infringement.
The defendant's 14 Propositions
I turn to consider the defendant's
14 propositions in turn.
PROPOSITION 1
The component parts of this
Proposition, which summarises the defendant's case, are considered under
Propositions 2-14 below. The complexity and width of the defendant's
Propositions are a reflection of the fact that the defendant's case is an
attempt to dress up in art 85 guise allegations of regulatory failure on the
part of Lloyd's (see B above).
PROPOSITION 2
("The Central Fund Arrangements
opened the door to the realisation of moral hazard on the part of Lloyd's
active Underwriters and thereby distorted competition").
The use of the words "opened
the door to" are highly significant. I have already referred to the change
during Professor Bain's cross-examination from "caused" to
"permitted", hence the use of the phrase "opened the door
to". In order to attract the prohibition in art 85(1) it must be
established that the agreement, decision or concerted practice has as its
object or its effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition
in the relevant market.
As to "moral hazard" and
CCRA see above. The defendant was not able to point to any reference to any
concept of moral hazard in any decision of the Court of Justice.
The Central Fund did not serve to
remove any or any significant constraints on Lloyd's underwriters, inter alia
because underwriters and managing agents depend for their income (see E at 1.13
above) and livelihood on their syndicates retaining support from a significant
number of Names. Such support would be lost if a syndicate sustained serious
losses, with the result that the first three links in the Chain of Security
were called on.
European legislation and competition
law permit different structures. The particular structure of Lloyd's has been
recognised by European legislation.
As pointed out above, it could be
argued that there is more scope for the defendant's novel and protean concept
of moral hazard in the case of corporates (with limited liability) than in the
case of Lloyd's (with the Lloyd's Chain of Security involving unlimited liability
on the part of Names on a Syndicate, among whom will be the active Underwriter
and two Directors/Partners of the Managing Agents).
PROPOSITION 3
("Because of Proposition 2, the
door was opened to the admission by Lloyd's of individuals as Names, being
individuals who did not have the assets required to support underwriting at
Lloyd's at all (moral hazard operating on the behaviour of Lloyd's
itself)").
There is no logical connection
between Proposition 2 (opening the door to the supposed moral hazard on the
part of active underwriters) and the matters asserted in Proposition 3. The
reference in Proposition 3 to "the door was opened" again reflects
the change which occurred during Professor Bain's cross-examination from the
language of causation to the language of permission.
Important regulatory questions arise
as to whether the criteria for admission adopted by Lloyd's from time to time
were appropriate (see B above).
PROPOSITION 4
("Because of Proposition 2
and/or Propositions 2 and 3, the door was opened to the placing of Names by
Members' Agents on syndicates when the Name did not have the assets required to
support such membership of the syndicate having regard to the nature of the
syndicate's business, the Name's line on the syndicate in question and the
Name's exposure to risk on other syndicates (moral hazard on the part of
Members' Agents). There was in place no effective substitute for the normal
market discipline of counterparty credit risk assessment to prevent the
operation of moral hazard resulting therefrom").
It is to be noted that the
defendant's case includes assertions of moral hazard on the part of Lloyd's
active Underwriters (Proposition 2), moral hazard operating on the behaviour of
Lloyd's itself (Proposition 3) and moral hazard on the part of Members' Agents
(Proposition 4).
A logical connection between
Propositions 2, 3 and 4 is lacking. The relevant order of events is admission as
a member of Lloyd's, portfolio selection advice by Members' Agents (which may
or may not be given competently) and exposure to the consequences of
underwriting decisions by active Underwriters on a number of syndicates (which
decisions may or may not be made competently). These separate processes are
explained in E above.
Again Proposition 4 reflects the
change which occurred during Professor Bain's cross-examination from the
language of causation to the language of permission.
As to CCRA I have dealt with this
subject above under a separate heading.
PROPOSITION 5
("Because of Proposition 3, the
overall capacity of Lloyd's including its capacity in the relevant markets was
artificially inflated and excess capacity developed, thereby contributing to a depression
of premium rates at Lloyd's to levels below the true risk/cost and distorting
competition").
PROPOSITION 6
("Because of Propositions 3 and
4: (a) the capacity of, and business written by, high risk syndicates at
Lloyd's, operating in the relevant markets, were artificially inflated, thereby
distorting competition and increasing Lloyd's aggregate exposure to catastrophe
losses; and (b) excess capacity for the transaction at Lloyd's of high risk
business developed, thereby contributing to a depression of premium rates at
Lloyd's for such business below the true risk/cost of such business, giving
rise to adverse selection and further distortion of competition").
It is convenient to consider
Propositions 5 and 6 together.
Professor Bain's revised Annex F to
his fifth Report (which reflects the agreed Wilshaw "Category 3" list
of high risk syndicates for the 1989 year of account) constitutes prima facie
evidence of widespread negligent portfolio selection advice on the part of
Members' Agents. In the fourth category of the Lloyd's Litigation (Portfolio
Selection Cases) Names allege that their respective Members' Agents either
failed to advise them properly as to which syndicates they should join and/or
as to spread of risk, or put them on unsuitable syndicates, or failed to advise
them to leave syndicates, when (the Names allege) it was or should have been
apparent that the syndicates were not suitable for the Names concerned. These
cases in the main concern Names who were put on syndicates operating in the LMX
market. Although they have in common the nature and extent of the obligations
owed by a Members' Agent to the Names who engaged that agent, each case turns
on the particular circumstances in which the Name in question contracted with
the Members' Agent concerned. Judgment has been given in two pilot cases
(Sword-Daniels and Brown) and an appeal has been heard in the latter. There are
a number of outstanding Portfolio Selection cases and some cases of this type
are proceeding by way of arbitration.
As each Portfolio Selection case
turns on the particular circumstances in which the Name in question contracted
with the Members' Agent concerned, it is not possible to say any more by way of
general conclusion on this aspect of the case than is set out above. I
emphasise however that it was one of the main duties of a Members' Agent to
advise Names as to which syndicates to join and in what amounts. The
defendant's Propositions fail to reflect this important and distinct function
on the part of Members' Agents (see E 6.1 and 6.2 above).
The relevant markets for the
purposes of the defendant's art 85 case are the worldwide marine, aviation and
reinsurance markets. There was considerable discussion in evidence as to the
effects of increased capacity at Lloyd's on these markets. Some of the
difficulties in the defendant's contentions in Propositions 5 and 6 were
identified by the following witnesses.
Mr Wilshaw pointed out that Lloyd's
syndicates could not buck the world trend on prices because Lloyd's is part of
the world trend in the relevant markets.
Dr Frey said that between 1976 and
1989 German reinsurers trebled. In 1949 German reinsurers had no market share
of non-German business because they were not allowed to do business after the
war outside Germany. Now, of the fifteen largest professional reinsurers, seven
are domiciled in Germany with a market share above 20%. This was achieved by
competitive pricing.
Mr Salter distinguished between
exclusively corporate insurers' business, business where Lloyd's had a 100% and
the majority of business which is written on a subscription basis. He said that
if Lloyd's syndicates as a group, say with 45% on a slip, all took the same
view and said "these rates are too high and we are going to put them down"
that would have an influence, but individual syndicate attitudes would not move
the market. It is as always vitally important to understand how the markets
worked. Mr Salter said that the vast majority of risks in the LMX market were
written on a subscription basis. By way of example one of the largest LMX
placements for a very large syndicate, with a programme of six or eight layers
of coverage (not necessarily XL on XL), would involve about two hundred
entities from the world market, counting Lloyd's as one. In the non-marine
market, a whole range of corporate insurers/reinsurers were co-insuring with
Lloyd's. There have been significant corporate casualties as a result of the
losses that occurred in the late 1980's and early 1990's.
Mr Berry said that in the 1980's
there was undoubtedly a worldwide over capacity in excess of loss business.
Mr Aaronson said that a particular
outcome in terms of prices or availability of a product cannot be considered in
relation to one player in a market in isolation. As to the reinsurance market
he referred to the worldwide increase in capacity which led to a softening of
reinsurance rates offered by all players in the market. No player could be
insulated from that trend in a competitive market and this led to many
reinsurers making losses. This applied to corporate reinsurers as well as
Lloyd's reinsurers.
Professor Yamey pointed out that
excess capacity (whether in Lloyd's or in the corporate sector) would not force
rates below what a prudent insurer would be prepared to accept in the light of
his assessment of the risks involved. In the case of Lloyd's in particular,
capacity in terms of capital and Names admitted would not affect the decisions
of prudent underwriters.
Once again it is important to
distinguish between distinct events (in the relevant order) and distinct
functions - admission as a member of Lloyd's, portfolio selection advice by
Members' Agents (which may or may not be given competently) and exposure to the
consequences of underwriting decisions by active Underwriters on a number of
syndicates (which decisions may or may not be made competently).
PROPOSITION 7
("The Reinsurance Provisions
infringed Article 85(1)").
This Proposition is relevant to the
counterclaim.
The Reinsurance Provisions
complained of are found in App G to the Instructions for the Annual Solvency
Test (see E 7.20 to 7.25 and 12.1 to 12.3 above). Appendix G applies only in
the context of Test 1. It has no application to Test 2. Reserves must be
established as at the solvency test date being the greatest of the Test 1 or
Test 2 reserves or the reinsurance to close. In relation to Test 1, wherever
professional judgement and/or statistical evidence so suggest, provision must
be made over and above the minimum percentage reserves to take account of the
particular circumstances of individual syndicates.
The 20% provision in App G is not
anti-competitive in object because it forms part of a complex system of
solvency regulation; its purpose is not to prohibit or mandate any particular
course of action on the part of Underwriters but merely to assign different
values for solvency purposes to reinsurance ceded in the past.
I refer to Mr Dickson's explanation
of the 20% provision - "a fairly blunt-edged" approach - compare the
complications of rating numerous reinsurers from time to time (and applying
such ratings to individual syndicates).
I find on the evidence called before
me that the effect (if any) of the 20% provision on competition was not
appreciable and that the effect (if any) of the provision on intra-Community
trade was not appreciable. My reasons are as follows.
No underwriting or other witness was
called by the defendant in support of the contention that the 20% provision had
any effect on his or anyone else's decision-making process.
The market evidence called by
Lloyd's was to the effect that the 20% provision did not have any effect upon
the decision-making process of Underwriters. I will refer to the evidence of Mr
Berry, Mr Wilshaw, Mr Salter and Dr Frey in turn. The evidence of these four
witnesses struck me as compelling on this aspect of the case.
Mr Berry doubted whether
Underwriters gave any attention to the details of the Solvency Provisions. They
were regarded as a back-office function to do with Lloyd's administration and
as not material to the process of generating profitable business and ensuring
good reinsurance protection. There were practical reasons why this should be
so. First, an Underwriter could not have known the overall solvency position of
his Names at any point during the year. He would not be able to take into
account the performance of the other syndicates in which the Names on his
syndicate were involved, or whether the Names were likely to have any surplus
amounts across those syndicates. Some of Names' eligible assets at Lloyd's
could also be taken into account in ascertaining their overall solvency
position - again, the Underwriter would have no way of knowing what these
assets were or how much they were. Second, an Underwriter would not have a
system for obtaining details of a Name's participation on other syndicates or
be able to monitor a Name's solvency position overall. The main factor which an
Underwriter has in mind when obtaining reinsurance protection (subject to
security considerations) is the price, because this has a direct and
significant impact on the profitability of the syndicate. Third, reinsurance
programmes were generally purchased by an Underwriter up to 15-18 months before
solvency was calculated. Reinsurance would be put in place before or at about
the same time as the business was written in order to manage the net exposure of
the syndicate. At the time the programme was placed, the Underwriter would not
be thinking about the possible implications for the Name's solvency test 1-2
years later. Fourth, most Underwriters would not have known enough about the
solvency rules or their detailed application to identify their effects, to the
extent that such effects might be relevant to their underwriting.
Mr Wilshaw said that at no stage in
his decisions on constructing his syndicate's reinsurance programme and
choosing the reinsurers did the issue of the solvency of his Names in general,
or the issue of the solvency penalty under Lloyd's Permitted Reinsurance
Limits, ever operate as a factor. He wanted to have his reinsurances completed
at a competitive price with good security; solvency issues were too remote and
little understood to be a factor influencing his decision. He had no idea at
the time of purchasing reinsurance whether his syndicate would have a solvency
shortfall for that year (and therefore whether the solvency penalty would have
any effect at all). Furthermore, even if he had known that for some reason his
syndicate was going to have a solvency deficiency, he would not have known how
it would affect individual Names. He would not have known their off-setting
surpluses from other syndicates. He never applied any kind of notional
"discount" to non-Lloyd's reinsurance policies by reason of their
particular status under the Lloyd's solvency rules. Solvency is dependent on
many factors and was far too far removed and too imprecise for him to take it
into account when underwriting. He did not consider that the 20% provision
would have any effect on a competent Underwriter's thinking. He was not aware
at the time of people who were encouraged to insure or not insure within Lloyd's
because of the provision. He said that the amendment of App G on 23.12.92 (see
E 12.2 above) could at most have only a marginal effect on the possible
emergence of a spiral in the future.
Mr Salter said that in forty years
as a broker at Lloyd's he could not recall any reference to Lloyd's solvency
regulations nor to its rules on premium income limits being made by Lloyd's
syndicates when purchasing their reinsurance cover. He was never asked to place
reinsurance exclusively or partly within Lloyd's because of solvency
considerations based on Lloyd's solvency rules. He never got the idea that
solvency considerations affected a decision to place reinsurance.
Dr Frey said he was not aware of the
20% rule and that he did not believe that most of his continental colleagues
were aware of it. He was never aware of any Lloyd's regulatory reason why he
could not sell as much reinsurance protection to Lloyd's syndicates as he
wanted to. It was a very free market. There were fundamental commercial and
objective insurance reasons why reinsurers other than Lloyd's may not have
wished to purchase risks retroceded from Lloyd's syndicates.
The market evidence on this subject
was supported by Mr Dickson (as a Lloyd's auditor). He said that a syndicate
exceeding the PRL would only have had an impact on a Name (via the syndicate's
Test 1 and the Name's overall solvency test) in a relatively limited number of
instances. Even then, any actual cost of this to a Name would have been limited
to an "opportunity cost" - the difference between the investment
return earned on the extra assets paid in to the deposit at Lloyd's and the
return which would have been earned if the assets had been kept invested
outside Lloyd's. A call for additional capital would be more likely to have been
a problem for new joiners. In the case of a new Name spread across ten
syndicates if, when the solvency calculations are undertaken in the second
year, it is found that on one of those ten syndicates there is a solvency
shortfall, but on the others there is a surplus, the Name is entitled to use
the surplus in order to make up the shortfall.
Mr Dickson did not consider that the
PRL would ever appreciably affect Underwriters' decisions regarding their
purchase of reinsurance. The main reasons for this were as follows. First, the
PRL only applies in respect of a syndicate if Test 1 rather than Test 2 applies
for the solvency test, and the syndicate for a year of account has exceeded the
PRL for external reinsurance. Second, Test 2 is likely to apply for the third
year of account for the great majority of syndicates (and the PRL is irrelevant
for syndicates in run-off). Third, in respect of the first and second years of
account (when Test 1 is relatively more likely to apply), the PRL only has a
direct impact upon a Name if, taking account of all relevant syndicates and
years, the fail-safe element of his/her deposit is required to cover
liabilities or the Name has a solvency shortfall. Fourth, for any such possible
impact to influence Underwriters' decisions, a syndicate Underwriter would need
to be aware of and react to the prospective overall solvency positions at
Lloyd's of all the Names on his syndicate, with each Name's position depending
in turn on decisions taken by the Underwriters on all the Name's other
syndicates. He would also need to be aware of these factors when purchasing his
reinsurance, which would often be early in each year.
Further and in any event the
defendant's losses were not caused by the Reinsurance Provisions complained of.
Mr Clementson's losses were caused by negligent underwriting (to the extent
that he has already established, or establishes in the future liability on this
basis in LMX, Long Tail, PSL or other cases forming part of the Lloyd's
Litigation) or by market conditions (see above).
PROPOSITION 8
("The RITC Provisions are to be
taken into account in assessing the loss and damage caused to the Defendant by
the Central Fund Arrangements which were their raison d'tre").
The defendant does not rely on the
RITC Provisions standing alone as giving rise to a claim for damages under the
counterclaim. The defendant has correctly recognised that this head of
counterclaim was misconceived. As to reinsurance to close see E 14 above. The
Central Fund Arrangements were not "the raison d'tre of the RITC
Provisions".
PROPOSITION 9
("By reason of their actual or
potential effects (and in the case of the Reinsurance Provisions, by reason of
their object) the Central Fund Arrangements and the Reinsurance Provisions have
attracted the operation of Article 85(1) at all times since... 1 January
1973").
This Proposition serves to underline
the width of the defendant's submissions. I reject it for the reasons set out
above.
PROPOSITION 10
("The magnitude of the effects
referred to at Propositions 2-8 above and the volume of business that they
affected are such that the prevention, restriction and/or distortion of
competition within the relevant markets were appreciable and, by reason of the
international nature of those markets, the effect on trade between Member
States was appreciable").
The relevant markets are the
worldwide marine, aviation and reinsurance markets.
For the reasons set out above the
Central Fund Arrangements (whether considered alone or in combination with the
Reinsurance Provisions) did not have as their effect the prevention,
restriction and/or distortion of competition. If there was an impact on
competition it was not appreciable.
For the reasons set out above the
Central Fund Arrangements (and the Reinsurance Provisions) have not had an
influence, direct or indirect, actual or potential, on the pattern of trade
between Member States such as might prejudice the realization of the
aim/objective of a single market between Member States. If there was an
influence it was not appreciable.
PROPOSITION 11
("The very thing to be guarded
against as likely to result from the creation of moral hazard caused by the
elimination by the Central Fund Arrangements of CCRA, by itself and/or combined
with the effects of the Reinsurance Provisions and/or the RITC Provisions, was
that, in circumstances such as developed in the 1970s and 1980s, avoidable
losses would be caused to Names through their exposure to risks that their
available assets were insufficient to support: pleas by Lloyd's of novi actus
intervenientes and/or other extrinsic causes are therefore
unsustainable").
For the reasons set out above the
defendant's losses were not caused by any of the matters complained of in these
proceedings. Mr Clementson's losses were caused by negligent underwriting to
the extent that he has already established (or establishes in the future)
liability on this basis in LMX, Long Tail, PSL or other cases forming part of
the Lloyd's Litigation. Save as aforesaid Mr Clementson's losses were caused by
market conditions. Even if contrary to my express findings there was any
infringement of art 85, Mr Clementson's losses were not caused by any such
infringement.
PROPOSITION 12
("The Rule of Reason, however
formulated, is inapplicable to the Central Fund Arrangements because:
(i) they did not simply enable a
Lloyd's syndicate to operate on the market in the same sort of way as an
insurance company that had assets comparable to those that were available
(without recourse to the Central Fund) to the syndicate but, on the contrary,
enabled Lloyd's Syndicates to engage in conduct of a kind and on a scale that
would have been impossible for such a non-Lloyd's insurer in conditions of
undistorted competition; and/or
(ii) Lloyd's failed to take any, or
any sufficient steps to remove or mitigate the effects of moral hazard created
by the elimination of CCRA and indeed was itself affected by that moral
hazard").
The Central Fund is essential to the
operation of Lloyd's (see above).
Bellamy & Child 4 Edition at
2-063 states:-
"The case law of the Court of
Justice shows a certain tendency to adopt a "rule of reason"
approach, particularly in relation to restrictions which do not directly impede
trade between Member States. The cases also reveal two ways in which the rule
of reason can be applied. The first, established in a line of cases from
Technique Miniere to Delimitis, applies a rule of reason by stressing that
thorough analysis of the economic context surrounding the agreement and the
effect of the agreement in the relevant market is necessary to determine
whether the obligations are anti-competitive to any significant extent. The
second approach, adopted in cases from Metro 1 to Pronuptia and the
Commission's decision in Elopak/Metal Box-Odin focuses more on the terms of the
agreement itself, so that if on balance the economic advantages of the
agreement mean that the agreement can be seen to be pro-competitive overall,
any restrictions which are essential to the performance of the agreement fall
outside Article 85(1)."
The "rule of reason"
applies to agreements in the insurance sector. It may be necessary for insurers
to include an anti-competitive provision in their arrangements if it is only by
that means that effect can be given to other acceptable provisions. The anti-competitive
restrictions must be limited to what is necessary to render the arrangements as
a whole properly operable.
Without prejudice to the analysis
set out above, if and to the extent that it is necessary to do so, I hold that
the rule of reason applied to the Central Fund Arrangements. The Central Fund
Arrangements did not go beyond what was necessary to enable Lloyd's to function
properly.
PROPOSITION 13
("Section 14 of the Lloyd's Act
is not available to deny the Names a remedy in damages against the Society of
Lloyd's....").
PROPOSITION 14
("The Defendant is a person who
is entitled to invoke Article 85(1) as a basis for claiming compensation from
Lloyd's").
In view of my conclusions as to
Propositions 1 - 12 it is not necessary to add to what the Court of Appeal said
in Clementson supra in relation to Propositions 13 and 14.
Severance
Article 85 strikes down only those
provisions of an agreement which are anti-competitive. It is then for the
national law to decide what effect that has on the remaining provisions of the
agreement. Severance is permissible in English law where the offending parts of
an agreement can be struck out without re-writing the agreement or entirely
altering its scope and intention. If what remains stands as a contract in its
own right, it is enforceable (see further Leggatt LJ in Higgins supra).
If, contrary to my express findings,
the Central Fund Arrangements infringed art 85(1), para 10 of the Central Fund
Byelaw is severable. As Lloyd's point out, the fact that Lloyd's has recourse
against a Name in default whenever sums are paid out of the Central Fund on his
account, means that the Central Fund does not save Names harmless from the
consequences of their actions.
J CONCLUSIONS
The conduct of insurance business
1. The conduct of insurance business
falls within the scope of art 85.
The relevant "agreements
between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted
practices"
2. Lloyd's concede that Lloyd's is
an association of undertakings, the undertakings being the Names and the
Syndicates within Lloyd's. Lloyd's admits that its Byelaws, its decisions to
raise contributions to the Central Fund and its decisions authorising sums to
be withdrawn from the Central Fund are "decisions of an association of
undertakings" within the meaning of art 85.
The elements in the Central Fund
Arrangements alleged to attract the operation of art 85(1) are set out in
Proposition 1. The Reinsurance Provisions (as defined above) are also alleged
to infringe art 85(1).
The relevant markets
3. The relevant markets are the
worldwide marine, aviation and reinsurance markets.
"Which may affect trade between
Member States"
4. The Central Fund Arrangements
(whether considered alone or in combination with the Reinsurance Provisions)
have not had an influence direct or indirect, actual or potential, on the
pattern of trade between Member States, such as might prejudice the realization
of the aim/objective of a single market between Member States. If there was an
influence it was not appreciable.
"Which have as their object or
effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the
Common Market"
5. The Central Fund Arrangements
(and the Reinsurance Provisions) did not have as their object the prevention,
restriction or distortion of competition within the Common Market. Nor did
they, in the light of all the relevant facts and the legal and economic
context, have as their effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of
competition. If there was an impact on competition it was not appreciable. If
and to the extent that it is necessary to do so, I hold that the rule of reason
applied to the Central Fund Arrangements.
Severance
6. If, contrary to the foregoing,
the Central Fund Arrangements infringed art 85(1), para 10 of the Central Fund
Byelaw is severable.
The defendant's losses were not
caused by any of the matters complained of in these proceedings
7. The defendant's losses were not
caused by any of the matters complained of in these proceedings for the reasons
set out above.
K RESULT
Lloyd's claim against Mr Clementson
succeeds and Mr Clementson's counterclaim against Lloyd's fails.
DISPOSITION:
Judgment accordingly
SOLICITORS:
Freshfields; S J Berwin & Co