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Vnuk: an involuntary risk transfer

Published: Monday, January 4, 2016

We have seen the odd tabloid article telling Mr Smith that, because of the EU, he'll soon need to insure his ride-on lawnmower under a motor policy. However ludicrous that may sound, the reality is that could be true. While newspapers have chosen lawnmowers and golf buggies as commonly used 'vehicles', what some have failed to uncover is how far reaching the implications of the European Court’s decision in Vnuk judgment really are.

On 13 August 2015 it will be exactly eight years since a tractor knocked over the ladder on which Damijan Vnuk was standing while loading hay into the upper floor of a barn in rural Slovenia. He sued the tractor driver for compensation for his injuries. His claim ended up in the European Court last year.

As a result of this Europe-wide court case, the UK Government will very soon have to change the rules about motor insurance law and address accidents and risks that will, in future, have to be covered by compulsory motor insurance.

This imminent change will affect the insurance industry and virtually every one of its customers’ insurance arrangements, because some of the incidents currently covered under their employers’ liability (EL) and public liability (PL) insurance policies will have to switch over and be picked up by a motor policy. The current Road Traffic Act (RTA) will have to be amended in Parliament.

Incidents and vehicles caught

The law change is very likely to bring into scope a range of off-road vehicles and situations that would not previously have been included in motor policies, unless the Government makes a special exemption for specific types of vehicle when it consults on reform. We expect that to take place later this year.

Any vehicles used in off-road settings will now require insurance cover that complies with the RTA. This could mean that any vehicles such as quad bikes, sit-on cleaning equipment, cherry pickers and forklift trucks would be caught under the umbrella of a motor (fleet) policy.

Underwriters will need to consider the issues that arise from writing RTA-compliant cover for risks that were previously allocated to casualty classes of insurance business. Regulatory issues, underwriters’ business models, wordings, excesses and limits of indemnity will all need to be carefully reviewed. While there is no change in the underlying claims risk, the insurance and regulatory differences are important.

Impact and timing

The changes outlined here will not take effect until the Road Traffic Act is amended in Parliament and will apply only for claims happening after that has been done. It is entirely possible that the Act could be altered in the first half of 2016.

A legislative response to Vnuk is needed, but discussion of the right thing to do will inevitably be polluted by the troubled nature of the UK’s relationship with the EU as a whole. Predictably, the UK’s tabloid press has described the decision in Vnuk as “bonkers” and “insane”. It is neither. Instead, it should properly be seen as an incremental interpretation of the scope of compulsory insurance; a societal necessity recognised in the UK long before we joined the EU. What is crazy is the consequence that an F1 driver could end up having to be insured in the same way as a nervous learner driving a Ford Ka on a quiet suburban street.

The consultation which is expected start later in the year should be regarded as a great opportunity for insurers and other stakeholders to put forward constructive solutions. It’s about time to take your crash helmets off and put your thinking caps on.

Alistair Kinley is Director of Policy and Government Affairs at risk and insurance law business, BLM.

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England, UK
Practice Area:
Legal Risk Management
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Mike is the senior partner at BLM, the leading risk and insurance law business in the UK & Ireland and specialises in advising insurers, Lloyd's syndicates, underwriters, MGA's, brokers, corporates, public sector bodies, professional indemnifiers, and other risk and insurance market place organisations. Mike is responsible for the leadership and business development of the firm, it’s strategy and policy making, mergers, bolt ons and acquisitions. As well as this, Mike chairs the Executive Board and Partnership Board

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