By Carolyn Cohn
LONDON (Reuters) – Hiscox
The policyholder groups would be able to present their views directly alongside the Financial Conduct Authority, which is consolidating the case for policyholders, High Court Judge Christopher Butcher told a hearing.
“It is necessary…that the argument is fully and properly put,” he said at the hearing to discuss the procedural issues of the case.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) turned to the courts after small businesses, from restaurants to leisure groups, said they faced ruin after attempts to claim millions of pounds collectively in compensation for lost business were rejected by insurers.
The case against eight insurers, including Hiscox and QBE, is designed to clarify whether the pandemic and a government lockdown should trigger business interruption policies that provide cover when insured premises cannot be used because of restrictions imposed by a public authority and in the event of a notifiable disease or infection.
The test case is expected to provide clarity for tens of thousands of policyholders, including those who have policies with similar wordings sold by other insurers.
Aviva is not a defendant in the case but the HIGA action group which represents Aviva and QBE policyholders said wording being tested in the case was “materially similar” to the Aviva policy.
The FCA had agreed the policyholders could join and insurers did not oppose, the hearing heard.
However, the judge declined to allow a policyholder with a pubs policy with RSA, another of the insurers in the case, to join. The pubs policy focused on physical damage to property which was not within the scope of the case, he said.
Hiscox declined to comment while Aviva, RSA and QBE did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Mark Killick, a member of the Hiscox Action Group steering committee, which represents almost 400 Hiscox policyholders, said the decision would give policyholders a voice in the case, but the group was also continuing with a separate claim against Hiscox.
The case is due to come to trial in late July.
($1 = 0.8050 pounds)
(Additional reporting by Kirstin Ridley; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Louise Heavens)