Give client a coverage opinion – whether peril or loss is covered by terms of the policy
Duty to defend – when third party brings a claim against you, insurer provides indemnity to third party. Insurance company’s duty to defend insured is separate from duty to indemnify.
When determining if insurance company owed client duty to defend, start with pleadings (Monenco and Commonwealth Insurance Company [2001] SCC). Must see whether any allegations are covered under terms of the policy
When insurer has liability policy and look at duty to defend, they are required to examine where facts alleged in pleadings, if proven to be true, would require insured to indemnify insured for the claim. Duty triggered by mere possibility that claim could succeed.
Progressive Homes [2010] SCC: great summary of policy interpretation at paras 21-24
Weird random issue: standard mortgage clause
It forms a separate contract with the mortgagee (bank). Universal rule is that mortgagee has coverage even is loss is excluded
This is because standard mortgage clause w.r.t. bank supersedes policy terms including exclusions in policy that are in conflict with the standard mortgage clause
This is usually made explicit in words of the mortgage clause
Purpose is to indemnify bank if anything happens to the property, bank has no control over what insured does
Only exception to standard mortgage clause is where bank is aware of insured’s wrongful act
E.g. bank is aware that insured has a grow-op and receives monthly mortgage, bank may not be able to recover if house burns down
Two threshold issues before getting into policy interpretation
If you’re dealing with a third party policy, is the policy a claims made or occurrence based policy?
Occurrence based policy: must first see what dates are alleged in lawsuit, events must have occurred during policy period
Claims made policy: must find out when the claim was first made against the insured. When did insured first learn of the claim, and when did insured first give notice of claim to insurer.
E.g. If a potential third party decides to sue, like a lawyer’s insurance fund, that a party has made default judgment against you. You have an obligation to report that to lawyer’s insurance fund. No claim against you right now, but there is a potential that your client can’t put forward defences.
If insured reports potential claim during appropriate time, policy will provide coverage even if third party doesn’t bring their claim until after expiry of the coverage – tail coverage
Whether the loss falls within the grant of coverage
Onus is on insured to demonstrate that claim falls within the grant of coverage
Is the person claiming under policy an insured person?
Policy will have named and unnamed insured like you and people in your household in a homeowner’s policy. Unnamed may be able to recover under the policy
If the issue is damage to property, have two different types of policies
Specified perils policy: must ask if property damage was caused by one of the insured perils. At this stage, onus on insured to demonstrate that loss caused by a specified peril and not an exclusion
All risk/all perils policy: a policy where everything is covered; and perils are defined through exclusions. Onus is on insurer that excluded peril caused the loss.
At minimum, must have agreement about the definition of risk (subject matter of insurance and perils), duration of risk, the premium and amount of insurance
This agreement must be express or reasonably inferred from the circumstances
Usually customer makes offer, insurer accepts or rejects it
If acceptance contains new terms, this is a counter-offer, no contract until customer accepts the revised terms
Consideration
Customer’s main obligation under contract is to pay the premium
Acceptance of an offer may be signified in writing or orally
An insurer cannot unilaterally create a contract and impose on the customer the obligation to pay a premium by issuing a policy
Renewals
Renewal can be the substitution of a new contract rather than an extension of the old one
Where insurance contract merely requires unilateral action of customer for it to be extended, typically insurer who makes offer and customer accepts
There are some circumstances where insurer may bind itself to continuing cover without customer signifying acceptance
Patterson: if an insurer in fact issues a policy or document that can be construed as a policy under the Insurance Act, the insurer cannot avoid liability on the ground that there was no contract
There is a provision in the Act which provides that a contract of insurance is binding on the insurer on delivery of a policy even if no premium has been paid
Goal of policy interpretation is to give effect to plain meaning of provision by reading it in context of the whole policy
Catsikinorous [1990] SCC: policies should be interpreted same way average person applying for insurance would understand them (pg 1043)
If language remains ambiguous despite reading contract as a whole, go on to next step
Resolve ambiguity
Look at general rules of policy construction
Reasonable expectations: courts should prefer interpretation consistent with reasonable expectation of parties as long as it is supported by text of the policy. Reasonable expectations assessed at time parties entered into insurance contract. Test for reasonable expectations is objective
Unrealistic result: court should avoid interpretation that gives rise to this, or would not have been in contemplation of parties at time when policy concluded
Consistency: courts should strive to ensure that similar insurance policies are construed consistently
Jackson [2012] BCCA: w.r.t. eligibility provisions, court looked at broader commercial context involving large pension plans and other benefit schemes. Even though provisions complex, not ambiguous
Hypothetical Scenario – How insured advances a claim
For insured to advance claim for insurance proceeds, insured must prove on a BofP , i) that he is an eligible insured under the policy, ii) loss was caused by insured peril
Once insured proves above, then onus shifts to insurer to prove that insured’s claim is excluded from coverage due to policy terms
If exclusion clause deemed applicable to claim, onus shifts back to insured to establish that loss falls within an exception to the exclusion either under policy provisions, statutory terms or case law
***There is no higher threshold than proving something on BofP, this is the only standard that applies in insurance cases/civil actions
No higher evidentiary burden for cases of arson or fraud