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Insurance Law Monthly

Arbitration time limits

A claimant relying on the Third Party (Rights Against Insurers) Act 1930 to enforce a judgment obtained against an insolvent insured can be in no better position against insurers than the insured would have been. In William McIlroy Swindon Ltd v Quinn Insurance Ltd [2010] EWHC 2448 (TCC) this principle, coupled with the court’s construction of a policy time bar upon arbitration, meant that the insured lost his rights against insurers before the third party claimants’ causes of action had even accrued. The case is analysed by Fiona Sinclair of 4 New Square.

The arbitration clause in the policy

Lenihan, a building contractor, took out public liability insurance with Quinn for 12 months from 21 July 2004, with two subsequent renewals. An arbitration clause in the policy (General Condition 16) provided that any dispute between Lenihan and Quinn as to Quinn’s liability in respect of a claim under the policy was to be referred to arbitration within nine months of the dispute arising and, if the dispute was not referred to arbitration within that period, the claim was deemed to have been abandoned.

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