Competing law
suits against Bay of Plenty Regional Council claiming damages in excess of
seventy million dollars for damage to Edgecumbe homes following flooding in
2017 saw the High Court allow insurers’ subrogated claims led by IAG go to
trial, a proposed class action promoted by Australasian litigators Shine
Lawyers disallowed.
There is no
love lost between the insurance industry and class action litigators.
BOP Region
had already signalled which of the two adversaries it prefers to face; allowing
multiple insurers to join IAG’s litigation against BOP Region even though they
were technically out of time.
The High
Court was told IAG Insurance, Vero Insurance, AA Insurance, Tower and QBE
Insurance (Australia) have collectively paid out some 490 policyholders for
damage to their Edgecumbe properties after a Rangitaiki River stopbank was
breached in April 2017 following cyclone Debbie.
Exercising
rights of subrogation, these insurers are suing BOP Regional Council seeking to
recover their losses. Subrogation is the
legal rule allowing insurers to ‘stand in the shoes’ of customers paid out on
an insurance policy, enforcing whatever legal rights the customer may have in
order to recover what are now the insurer’s losses.
BOP Region
is responsible for flood management, charging property owners a differential
levy. Insurers allege negligence,
nuisance and breach of statutory duty by BOP Region. It denies liability.
Separate
from insurers’ claim for compensation, Shine Lawyers has signed up 550
prospective plaintiffs in a class action similarly seeking compensation from
BOP Region. There is considerable
double-counting, with about three-quarters of Shine Lawyers’ clients being
property owners who have previously received insurance payouts.
At its
simplest: a successful claim by affected insurers against BOP Region sees these
insurers recovering part or all of insurance claims paid out; a successful
claim by Shine Lawyers sees its clients getting a share of whatever financial
payout is recovered.
A win for
either of these two plaintiffs requires either a favourable court ruling or
successful negotiations with BOP Region and its insurer.
As part of
pre-trial procedures, the High Court was asked to rule how each claim could
continue, or whether they should be combined.
This pre-trial hearing descended into a slanging match with rival
plaintiffs denigrating the other’s case.
The
insurers claim does no more than recover their claim costs, with no further
benefit for either insured or uninsured property owners, Shine Lawyers said.
Shine
Lawyers claim is riddled with conflicts of interest, insurers said. In particular, Shine has an incentive to
settle out of court in circumstances and at a time which best ensure Shine
maximises its fees on time spent plus its agreed twenty per cent share of any
payout. Plus, Shine’s clients could be
facing up-front costs even if there were never any payout, insurers claim.
Associate
Judge Taylor allowed the insurers’ claim to continue.
It is
arguable that these insurers could additionally claim for property owners
uninsured losses, providing further compensation for insured property owners, he
said.
Shine
Lawyers strongly dispute whether it is legally possible for insurers exercising
their rights of subrogation to recover more than the amount paid out on a
claim.
Shine
argued insurers have conjured up a non-existent right labelled equitable
subrogation to bolster their argument that more than claim costs can be
recovered.
Judge
Taylor dismissed Shine Lawyers proposed class action application.
Most of the
property owners affected will likely best benefit from their claims for
uninsured losses being advanced by their insurers with legal costs carried by
these insurers, he ruled.
McConnachie
v. Bay of Plenty Regional Council and IAG New Zealand Ltd v. Bay of Plenty
Regional Council – High Court (2.04.26)
26.126