Millers Marine War Risks
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CHAPTER 1
The history of the war risks policy
The history of the war risks policy
1.1 Whilst this new Fourth Edition of the book has been heavily updated in many places, we (the authors) could not better the masterly recapitulation of the history of the War Risk Policy penned by Michael Miller, and nor would we wish to. What follows below, therefore, subject to only the smallest of amendments, is the text from the Third Edition.The S.G. Form
1.2 The picturesque and archaically worded S.G. Form1 which was used by the London market up to 1983, had its origins in the bond or document by which seventeenth-century merchants and shipowners (in those days there was rarely the distinction that now exists between them), meeting together in Lloyd’s Coffee House, bound themselves one to another to make good any loss which any of them might suffer. This, in the course of time, emerged as a policy whereby one or several of them took all the risks in consideration of a premium. The S.G. Form was not a planned document and never during the whole of its long life did it acquire this characteristic. Risks and exceptions were added on an ad hoc basis as the demands of the insured shipowners, the practices of the market, and the decisions of the courts indicated were necessary. It was issued with the relevant clauses attached, usually by no more than a paperclip. For instance, an agreement to insure hulls or freight against marine risks would have required the attachment to the S.G. Form of the Institute Time Clauses, Hulls or Freight and an agreement to insure a ship against war risks, the attachment of the Institute War and Strikes Clauses. 1.3 Insured risks, exceptions and limitations were dotted about in the S.G. Form itself and in the attachments and often required experience and persistence to find them. Agreements varying the terms of the policy, whether made at the time that the Agreement to insure was made or subsequently, were evidenced by endorsement slips which were stuck on with paste. Sometimes clauses bore the puzzling words stamped on them with a rubber stamp “deleted”. The policy itself, particularly when compared with a conveyance of real property or a mortgage of a ship, had an untidy and unworkmanlike appearance. It was drawn up by the brokers who placed the risk, and was then checked and signed by the Lloyd’s Policy Signing Office from the broker’s slip, hardly a paragon of neatness and order in itself. This recorded each underwriter’s agreement to provide the insurance and hisPage 2
The MAR Form
1.5 Much to the disgust of those who had grown accustomed to its ways and to the despair of the nostalgic, the S.G. Form was swept away in 1983 to be replaced by the new form of Lloyd’s Marine Policy (in the case of the Institute of London Underwriters, the Companies Marine Policy) known as the MAR Form. It is the first policy for marine risks ever issued by the London market as a comprehensively planned document. No doubt over the years changes will be made to it, but there is a great difference to changing a document which has been planned as a whole from changing one which grew on an ad hoc basis. No doubt some measure of untidiness will remain because endorsements will still have to be added and the relevant clauses attached so that the paperclip and the paste will retain their essential use. 1.6 An examination of the MAR Form will, however, reveal how systematic it is. It begins with a declaration that in consideration of the payment of the agreed premium, insurance is provided against “loss, damage, liability or expense”—surely a most comprehensive definition—and makes it clear that each underwriter’s liability is confined to his agreed proportion. There follows a page devoted to the individual description of the subject matter insured and the agreed (insured) value with a space for the endorsements and another page to identify the underwriters who have accepted the risk and the proportions of the risk they have agreed to accept. Most importantly of all, and essential if the MAR Form is to be used for all marine insurances, be they hull and machinery, freight, cargo or war risks, or whatever variation the insurance is to assume, attached clauses, in our case the Institute War and Strikes Clauses, contain the insured risks, or perils, set out in a comprehensive list with the exclusions and other conditions also printed in their respective places in an easy-to-read format. No doubt questions will arise on some of the terms which are used and litigation will ensue, but it would be wrong not to pay tribute to Mr. Alan Jackson and to his Committee whose members laboured long and hard to produce some readable and comprehensive documents in which clarity is the main objectivePage 3
The development of war risks insurance, and the f.c. & s. Clause
1.8 It is difficult for anyone now living to remember that the very firm and concise distinction between marine and war risks which is so well known to us today has existed only since 1898. Before that date the distinction, whilst it had existed to a greater or lesser degree for many years, was nothing like so clear and the degree to which it did exist at any particular moment is best appreciated from the history of the f.c. & s. Clause which follows.2 The reader will find it helpful to compare the date of the case they are studying with this history. 1.9 From the start of the use of the S.G. Form in the seventeenth century, marine and war risks were insured by the same policy. No fewer than 12 (some would say more) of the perils we would today describe as war risks were insured by the same policy which also insured such marine risks as “perils of the seas”. Underwriters sometimes wished to exclude war risks and an early example of this is The Charming Peggy.3 In 1739 there was even greater tension than usual in the relations between the United Kingdom and France, so “capture and seizure” were excluded from the perils insured by the policy. Wars in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were fought on the seas as much as they were on the land and made the enemy’s seaborne trade an especial target. Even though Britannia ruled the waves, the powerful and omnipresent Royal Navy was never able to obviate entirely the depredations of skilled, determined and resourceful enemy seafarers. The Seven Years’ War, the American War of Independence, the 1812 War and the Napoleonic Wars emphasised that there was a real distinction to be made between marine and war risks, and a variety of exclusions were then added to the policies by endorsement as the chapters on war, capture and seizure will show. 1.10 A particularly favoured exclusion, which seems to have been directed at excepting risks to ships in European ports which may have been affected by Napoleon’s Continental system read: “Free of capture and seizure in the ship’s port of discharge.” This has a familiar ring and can be said to have been the beginnings of the f.c. & s. Clause as it later appeared. The perils thus excepted could be insured by underwriters willing to write war risks. They seem to have found the business very profitable, although several were ruined by the disaster in 1780, when only eight British ships out of a convoy of 63 escaped capture.Page 4
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Warranted free of capture, seizure, arrest, restraint or detainment, and the consequences thereof or of any attempt thereat; also from the consequences of hostilities or warlike operations, whether there be a declaration of war or not, civil war, revolution, rebellion, insurrection or civil strike arising therefrom, or piracy.