Roger Chown
Partner
Contact Information
(705) 722-4400
rchown@chcbarristers.com
Assistant:
Debbie Crews
(705) 722-4400 ext. 222
dcrews@chcbarristers.com
Law Clerk:
Traci Adams
(705) 722-4400 ext. 237
tadams@chcbarristers.com
The Court of Appeal adopted the analysis and conclusions of the application judge in their entirety, characterizing them as “masterful.” The application judge first set out the common law position that an insured is in control of litigation until it has been fully indemnified for its insured and uninsured losses. He then noted that there was nothing in the language of the subrogation clause of the insurance contract to alter the insured’s right under the common law. He rejected the insurer’s argument that the court should exercise residual discretion to give carriage to the insurer because the insurer had a larger claim for property damage ($1 million) than the insured’s uninsured claim ($700,000) for business losses. He found that it was unnecessary to consider whether the court had this discretion because, among other factors, “the insurer’s interest was not so vastly disproportionate to the insured’s interest” and counsel for the insured had been diligently pursuing the claims on behalf of both the insured and insurer.
The Court left open the possibility that, even in the absence of a contractual provision, a court might exercise discretion to allow an insurer to have carriage over litigation in an appropriate case. Neither the application judge nor the Court of Appeal defined what an appropriate case might be, i.e. in what circumstances is the insurer’s interest “vastly disproportionate” to the insured’s interest”?
Note that it is open to insurers to amend policy language to change the common law position. Per the application judge: “it would be a simple matter for the insurers to amend the Subrogation Clause to alter the common law position and to give carriage to the insurers, if they wished to do so.”
Recent Comments