Home Breadcrumb caret News Breadcrumb caret Claims Reinsurers cannot collect duty-of-care (January 01, 2006) The UK Court of Appeal recently ruled that excess-of-loss coverage can not be denied even on the grounds that reinsurance buyers owe their reinsurer a duty of care to underwrite original risks prudently, unless this duty of care is stated in policy wordings. In the nonproportional energy reinsurance coverage case of ‘Bonner & Others vs. […] December 31, 2005 | Last updated on October 1, 2024 1 min read The UK Court of Appeal recently ruled that excess-of-loss coverage can not be denied even on the grounds that reinsurance buyers owe their reinsurer a duty of care to underwrite original risks prudently, unless this duty of care is stated in policy wordings. In the nonproportional energy reinsurance coverage case of ‘Bonner & Others vs. Cox & Others’ – aka “Aon 77” – the appellate court ruled that a cedent does not have to pay a duty of care so that a reinsurer can select and underwrite its own risks. The Aon 77 case is based on the fact that Lloyd’s of London energy syndicates that were covered by a policy brokered by the U.K. arm of Aon Corp. (Aon 77) for their energy insurance, were reinsured on a nonproportional basis. The cedents claimed approximatley $90 million under their Aon 77 coverage after experiencing underwriting losses. However, the claim was denied in part because the reinsurers felt that a duty of care for the buyer to underwrite prudently was implied in the contract. In 2004, a lower court in ruled the buyers did not owe a duty of care. “The fact that the reinsurer does not exercise his own judgment about the individual risks to be reinsured is a feature…of almost all reinsurance,” Lord Justices Waller, Tuckey and Moses said in their ruling. “The reinsurer exercises his judgment as to which underwriter he will reinsure and upon what terms.” Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo