It is very common for insurers to adopt policy wording
that has the effect of modifying the application of proximate cause rules. Two
examples of such practice are given below:
(a) ‘Directly or indirectly’: There are a
whole number of ways that an insurer can frame his policy wording for the
purposes of specifying what he wants to cover or not to cover. For instance, it
may use such wording as ‘loss caused by …’, ‘loss directly caused by …’ and
‘loss proximately caused by …’. Well do they mean different things to you? Will
any of them have the effect of modifying the rules of proximate cause? The
answer is that they have been held to mean the same thing. That is to say,
whether the term ‘directly’ or ‘proximately’ is adopted or left out, the legal
rules to be applied are exactly the same and the same scope of cover is given
or excluded, as the case may be. But what if the term ‘indirectly’ is used? A policy
exclusion that says that loss ‘directly or indirectly’ arising from a particular
peril (excepted peril) is excluded has been construed by the courts to mean
that a loss will not be recoverable even where the operation of that excepted
peril has only been a remotely (as opposed to ‘proximately’) contributory
factor. Read the following decided court case for illustrations:
An army officer was insured under a personal accident
policy, which excluded claims ‘directly or indirectly caused by war’. During
wartime, the insured was on duty supervising the guarding of a railway station.
Walking along the track in the darkness, he was struck by a train and killed.
It was held that although the war was merely an ‘indirect’ cause of the death,
the policy wording meant that the insurer was not liable.
(b) ‘Loss proximately caused by delay, even though
the delay be caused by a risk insured against’ (an exclusion wording
quoted from a marine cargo insurance clause most commonly used): Suppose an
insured shipment of calendar for the year 2011, expected to arrive on 1
December 2010, does not arrive until 15 February 2011 because of a collision
(insured peril) involving the carrying vessel during the insured voyage. By
relying on the exclusion, the insurer can deny a ‘loss of market’ claim from
the insured even though the loss is due to an insured peril.
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