Insurance Law – May 4



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Scenario: if you work as a painter in the summer, you are outside, and you get bitten by a mosquito



  • you have some disability insurance that will pay you for replacement income if the reason for your disability is due to an accident

  • you develop West Nile Virus as a result of the mosquito bite

  • bearing the case of Martin in mind, is your disability the result of an accident

  • this set of facts is actually the case of Kolbuc

  • we are moving from situations of accident to bodily dysfunction or disease

    • at what point does the individual body's specific reaction to things enter into the picture?

    • here we are really looking at a natural event - the body's reactions to a natural cause

      • it is part of the natural course of life that one might be bitten by a mosquito, and there is always the possibility that disease might ensue (trial judge dismissed claim)

    • trial judge was overturned on appeal - appeal court said that this was an accident - the insured did not expect to develop this - there was no specific action on his part either (which separates it from Martin)

    • In Kolbuc, the event was considered an unexpected event

    • the Supreme Court later denounced this decision, however




Kolbuc v. ACE INA Insurance [2006] I.L.R. I-4474 and 2007 ONCA 364 – CML

Accident and Sickness Insurance - Accidental paralysis – Expectation test N/A



First Instance Judgment:
Facts: The insured contracted West Nile virus in 2002 as the result of a mosquito bite. He developed polio-like acute flaccid paralysis and was rendered permanently paraplegic. The insurer denied his claim under the policy, on the grounds that his injuries were not the result of an accident, but of disease. The insured argued that the mosquito bite constituted an accident, and that his injuries had been directly caused by that accident.

Issue: Were the Plaintiff’s injuries the result of an accident or a disease?

Held: Accident.

Reasoning:

  • The insured's injuries were not caused by an accident, by rather by a disease

  • There was a clear distinction in precedent establishing the difference between accident and disease

  • Being bitten by a mosquito and contracting West Nile virus was not within the ordinary meaning of the term accident.

Court of Appeal:

Held: Accident

Reasoning:

  • The appellant suffered an accident for which he was entitled to coverage under the policy.

  • At the time, while mosquito bites were common, there had been no reported cases of the West Nile virus in Ontario.

  • The appellant engaged in work, without intending to cause himself harm, and the harm that did result could not reasonably have been foreseen or expected.

  • The injuries were caused by an external source, namely a mosquito. This fell within the ordinary definition of an accident.

Ratio: Injuries caused by an external source, without the insured intending to cause himself harm, and the harm that resulted could not have been foreseen or expected will be characterized as an accident.

Comment: (1) This is a natural body reaction, but court found it to be within the ordinary definition of accident. (2) No action initiated by the insured, unlike Martin. Expectation test does not apply in natural causes cases.

An accidental death policy is an additional benefit that is contracted for as supplementary to a life insurance policy (it is not generally included by default)



  • accidental death benefit (or illness)

    • expect to die vs. accident

      • expect to die ---> "Russian Roulette"

      • accident --> bodily function vs. disease




Co-operators Life Insurance Co v Gibbens, 2009 SCC 59 – CML

Disease case, Expectation Test rejected, coverage rejected for Natural body reactions

Facts: The insured had unprotected sex with three women and acquired genital herpes, which in turn caused transverse myelitis, a rare complication of herpes that resulted in total paralysis from his midabdomen down.  He was aware of the risk of contracting a sexually transmitted disease but did not know that any of the women had genital herpes.  He claimed compensation under his group insurance policy which provided coverage for losses sustained “as a direct result of a Critical Disease or resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily Injuries occasioned solely through external, violent and accidental means, without negligence” on the insured’s part.  The definition of (critical) diseases in the policy does not include transverse myelitis. Insurer is refusing to pay indemnity.

Issue: Whether insured’s paralysis caused by “external, violent and accidental means” within meaning of insurance policy.

Held: No.

Reasoning:

  • The insured’s loss is not covered by the policy.  The interpretation of insurance policies should avoid unrealistic results that would not have been contemplated by the insured and the insurer when they entered into the policy agreement.  The word “accident” is an ordinary word to be interpreted in ordinary language as it would be understood by the average person applying for insurance. 

  • Accident insurance is not comprehensive health insurance and it is evident that the parties in this case did not expect the policy to cover all loss or bodily injury. 

  • TM is an unexpected consequence of genital herpes that occurs rarely but it is a normal incident or consequence of the disease.  Since the transmission followed the normal method by which sexually transmitted diseases replicate, the bodily injury proceeded from natural causes. 

  • Contrary to the inference sought by the insured through reference to Martin, there is no necessary equivalence between “unexpected” and “accident”. Accordingly, this test is unhelpful when it comes to consequences of a disease.

  • If such transmissions were classified as accidents, then an accident policy would become a comprehensive health policy despite the substantially lower premium. 

  • The onus is on the claimant to show that the loss is covered by the policy.  However, once the claimant leads evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie case that the bodily injury was caused by an “unlooked-for mishap or an untoward event which is not expected or designed”, the tactical burden then shifts to the insurance company to displace the prima facie case by some evidence that the bodily injury is not an accident but its “antithesis”, namely, the result of a disease picked up in the ordinary course of events. 

    • The burden of proof however, remains squarely with the plaintiff. 

Ratio: Accident insurance does not covers injuries, no matter how rare, sustained from a disease which proceeded from natural causes.
Class Notes


  • STRONGLY criticizes Kolbuc

  • policy here covers "bodily injury sustained by external, violent, and accidental means, without negligence"

    • question here was whether the bodily injury (paralysis) resulted from an external means

    • basically said that this did not fit the definition of an accident

      • it was simply a natural tragedy that occurred through the development of disease in the "ordinary course of events"

    • the problem wasn't that Gibbens engaged in a dangerous activity - nothing to do with 'courting the risk' (remember, CML doesn’t care about this)

      • there is always uncertainty and risk involved with living life (insurer can't escape paying out based on uncertainty and 'courting risk' by the insured)

  • insurer also, however, cannot be held as assuming the type of risk that paying out every case of disease would entail

  • the chain of events must be started by an 'accidental' cause to keep the possibility of an accident claim open

  • herpes was a sexually transmitted disease that Gibbens contracted in the normal course of events




 

***NEED TO READ GIBBENS FOR EXAM!!!!!!*****ALSO, READ THE GUILLET CASE AND WANG CASE (not necessary to read Wang) (Wang is one of the disease cases – bodies natural but unfortunate reaction to a normal course of events, unlike a situation where there is an external provocation of an accident (and even then, you must look at the entire chain of events))****EVERY YEAR THE EXAM DEALS WITH ELEMENTS OF THESE CASES

Look at basketball and pregnancy/childbirth examples


Consider case of someone who jumps off a roof while under the influence of LSD (thinking he can fly)
From a public policy perspective, what do we do with the innocent beneficiary when the act that potentially triggers the insurance payout is criminal?


Transamerica v Goulet 2002 SCC 21 – CVL

Life insurance – public order exception – insured does crime, innocent third party

Facts: The respondent’s husband died in 1994 when a bomb he was attempting to plant in a car exploded.  The respondent, in her capacity as designated beneficiary, claimed the indemnity provided for in the insurance policy her husband had taken out on his own life in 1990. Notwithstanding the fact that there was no clause precluding payment of the indemnity if the insured died while committing a crime, the insurer refused to pay.   It maintained that public order justified refusal to pay when the death had occurred during the commission of a crime. 

Issue: Whether public order exception that “no one may profit from his or her own crime” exists in Quebec insurance law — If so, whether exception is a bar to beneficiary’s right to claim insurance indemnity.

Held: Yes. No.

Reasoning:

  • An insurer never insures the intentional fault of the insured. 

  • In the context of a life insurance contract, the suicide of the insured during the first two years of the coverage (art. 2532) and an attempt on the life of the insured by the owner of the insurance contract (art. 2559) are the only intentional acts

  • Thus, in this case, act committed by an insurer was not an intentional act

  • The principle of public order that “no one may profit from his or her own crime” exists in Quebec insurance law. 

  • While this principle prevents the insured or the person entitled to receive the insurance indemnity from profiting from his or her own crime, insurance law does not preclude the protection of innocent third persons or beneficiaries from the consequences of criminal activity.

  • To prevent innocent third parties from recovery, the insurance contract must contain a clause specifically providing that the insurer is not required to pay the indemnity if the insured dies in the commission of an indictable offence

    • Art. 2550 CCLC cannot be used by the insurer to deny recovery to an innocent third party

    • Cannot be set up against the beneficiary causes of nullity / foreiture that have purely personal with the insured

Ratio: (1) Life insurance only has two types of intentional acts by the insured: Suicide and an attempt on the life of the insured. (2) Public order exception exists in QC insurance law that no one may profit from the proceeds of a crime. (3) This exception can only be set up against innocent third parties for indictable offences and if the contract contains a specific clause providing for this.
Class Notes
Goulet case says that there is only intentionality/intentional act of the insured in two cases when we are considering the context of life insurance

  • suicide

  • attempted homicide against the life insured

  • thus, in life insurance, we are generally not considering 'intentionality' - only exceptions are cases of suicide and attempted homicide

    • this is opposed to accident insurance, where intentionality is important, or in property/liability insurance, where intentionality is always relevant

  • idea of intentionality in life insurance was debated in Goulet

    • Quebec Court of Appeal initially said that CCQ 2464 (dealing with intentional acts - found in the damage insurance section) could also be applied to life insurance

      • SCC said that this was totally wrong (prof also finds this wrong!!!!)

      • remember that this was in the early 1990s and the new CCQ was still being figured out in its legal application

  • Madame Goulet was the widow and beneficiary of the life insurance proceeds from her husband's policy

    • he died when a car bomb he was planting at Dorval airport accidentally exploded and killed him

    • he didn't intend to die

      • and even if there had been an exclusion clause in the policy excluding suicide, it wouldn't have mattered because the policy had passed the 2 year maximum exclusion period for Quebec

    • there was no clause in the insurance contract precluding payment of indemnity if insured died in the commission of a crime

      • does death in the commission of a crime negate the possibility of receiving indemnity on public policy grounds?

        • triggers the public policy stance that 'no one can benefit from his/her own criminal activity'

    • Madame argues that there was no clause preventing payment of indemnity while committing crime

    • insurer counters this by saying that such a clause was unnecessary, since public order already prohibited such types of payouts

      • the objection to this, however, is that the innocent beneficiary (Madame Goulet) was not involved in the commission of the crime - she didn't trigger the event, and it would thus be against public order to deprive the innocent beneficiary of an indemnity payout

        • this type of public policy was laid out in Mutual of Omaha v. Stats

      • we thus have a case of competing public policies

        • again, insurer can avoid liability by including a clause that excludes payment of indemnity if death occurs during commission of a crime (subject to the limits of CCQ 2402)

          • CCQ 2402 says that insurer cannot exclude payment of proceeds relating to crime, except in cases of indictable offenses

            • drug trafficking would be an indictable offense, but drug consumption would not be

    • after a lot of discussion of the CCQ, and consideration of whether CCQ 2464 applied to life insurance (decided that it didn't), the SCC determined that an insurance company needed to have a clause specifically preventing payout to innocent beneficiaries if death of insured occurs in commission of an indictable offense

    • look at CCQ 2453 - insurer in Goulet tried to use this article to prevent beneficiary from benefitting from proceeds of crime

      • however, court says that we don't punish the beneficiary for getting the proceeds of the insurance policy, which are NOT the proceeds of crime

      • remember 'principle of dual patrimonies'

        • where there is a designation on the insurance policy of a beneficiary, the proceeds are paid to the beneficiary directly

        • otherwise they are paid to the estate of the deceased, which is the continuation of his/her patrimony

        • THIS BEGS AN IMPORTANT QUESTION: if the insurance proceeds are triggered by death of the insured during commission of a criminal act, and they are supposed to go to the estate of the insured, can the indemnity be paid, considering that he cannot benefit from the proceeds of crime?



In the context of criminal activity, there is also the issue of disclosure - could possibly make a case for fraud if the insured didn't disclose that they engaged in criminal activity (cocaine trafficking) when asked what their occupation was on the policy application



  • obviously this consideration is immaterial if they begin engaging in such risky criminal behaviour after the policy is in place

  • also an issue with the fact that someone can't be obliged to incriminate themselves, and thus, asking or expecting them to disclose involvement in criminal activity on a policy application is unreasonable




Guillet v American Home Assurance Company [2005] I.L.R. I-4349 – CML

Accident and Sickness Insurance



Facts: Appeal by the Insurer from a judgment awarding the plaintiff, Guillet, $200,000 as the benefit payable under a disability insurance policy. Guillet suffered a stroke that resulted in permanent injury. Insured was playing basketball, collapsed on court and lost use of legs. Finding of fact that he turned his neck and had a dissection in an artery, led to stroke, but this relies heavily on medical opinion. Expert opinions on behalf of G showed that he had no pre-existing condition that would have led to this injury. The Insurer's disability policy covered bodily injury caused by an accident.

Reasoning:

  • TJ held that deliberate acts of ordinary living, such as turning one's neck during a basketball game, fell within the definition of an accident under the Insurer's policy. He further held that no person in the position of Guillet would reasonably expect that turning one's neck during a basketball game would result in an injury of the nature suffered by Guillet, and therefore, was an accident within the meaning of the policy.

  • There was sufficient evidence for the TJ to make this inference on a balance of probabilities

Dissent – sees this injury as stroke (which caused the paralysis), but this is all natural progression of internal injury.

  • If you qualify the injury as the stroke, then it is the body’s natural reaction, and it is not an accident leading to indemnity

  • Wang - cannot give a bodies’ natural reaction the designation of accident.


Ratio (the applicable ratio for this class, not necessarily the ratio of the case): Deliberate acts of ordinary living that lead to unexpected consequences fall under the category of accident.

Comments:

  • Binnie [Gibbons para 57] cannot take in isolation an event to find an accident; one has to look at the entire chain of events as Martin told us to do.

  • Reinforces the position that ordinary everyday events can nonetheless constitute accidents giving rise to bodily injury.


Class Notes


  • Ordinary everyday events can nonetheless constitute accidents giving rise to bodily injury and indemnity under accident insurance





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