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Law360, London (November 16, 2020, 5:42 PM GMT ) Insurance companies accused the Financial Conduct Authority on Monday of attempting to "reverse engineer" policies to win cover for hundreds of thousands of businesses forced to close during the coronavirus lockdown as arguments began at the U.K. Supreme Court in a test case.
A test case has got under way at the Supreme Court in London as six insurance companies seek to overturn a September ruling on pandemic cover. (Getty)
High Court Judges Christopher Butcher and Julian Flaux ruled in September that policyholders could be covered if it was possible to determine there had been a single case of COVID-19 within that radius.
But Kealey said the court should ask whether the lockdown would have happened, and whether businesses would have faced losses, even if those local cases had not happened — a legal test of causation.
"If someone with COVID-19 travels from London to Edinburgh by train, [any company] within 25 miles of that railway line would suddenly be able to recover all of their business interruption losses as a result of that one person," Kealey told the Supreme Court.
The FCA had sought to "reverse engineer those cases… into the insured peril," he added.
MS Amlin is one of six insurers seeking to appeal the judgment on Sept. 15, which was largely in favor of policyholders.
The test case on business interruption insurance was brought by the City regulator. It wants to determine whether a representative sample of eight insurers with 21 policy wordings would have to pay out on claims to thousands of businesses forced to close during the country's first COVID-19 lockdown, which started in March.
Several of the insurers in the case, including MS Amlin, provided cover for business interruption if a so-called notifiable disease outbreak within a fixed radius of the premises meant a company was forced to close temporarily.
The remainder of the insurers will continue making their case to the court on Tuesday before the FCA sets out its replies.
Justices Robert Reed, Patrick Hodge, David Kitchin, Nicholas Hamblen and George Leggatt are hearing the case for the Supreme Court.
The FCA is represented by Colin Edelman QC of Devereux Chambers, Peter Ratcliffe and Adam Kramer of 3 Verulam Buildings, and Max Evans of Fountain Court Chambers, instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP.
Arch Insurance UK is represented by John Lockey QC and Jeremy Brier of Essex Court Chambers, instructed by Clyde and Co LLP.
Argenta Syndicate Management Ltd. is represented by Simon Salzedo QC and Michael Bolding of Brick Court Chambers, instructed by Simmons & Simmons LLP.
Hiscox is represented by Jonathan Gaisman QC, Adam Fenton QC and Douglas Grant of 7 King's Bench Walk, and Miles Harris of 4 New Square, instructed by Allen & Overy LLP.
MS Amlin Underwriting Ltd. is represented by Gavin Kealey QC, Andrew Wales QC, Sushma Ananda and Henry Moore of 7 King's Bench Walk, instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP.
QBE UK Ltd. is represented by Michael Crane QC of Fountain Court Chambers, Rachel Ansell QC and Martyn Naylor of 4 Pump Court, and Sarah Bousfield of Brick Court Chambers, instructed by Clyde and Co LLP.
RSA is represented by David Turner QC, Shail Patel, Anthony Jones and Clare Dixon of 4 New Square, instructed by DWF Law LLP.
Zurich Insurance PLC is represented by Andrew Rigney QC and Caroline McColgan of Crown Office Chambers and Craig Orr QC and Michelle Menashy of One Essex Court, instructed by Clyde and Co LLP.
The Hiscox Action Group is represented by Ben Lynch QC, Simon Paul and Nathalie Koh of Fountain Court Chambers, instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP.
The lead case is Financial Conduct Authority (Appellant) v. Arch Insurance (UK) Ltd. and others (Respondents), case number UKSC 2020/0177, in the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.
--Editing by Ed Harris.
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