Material non-disclosure
Insurance policies of any type are not worth the paper they are written on if you fail to make full and frank disclosure of all facts that might affect the risk that you wish to guard against.
In the case of Ashfaq v International Insurance Compay of Hanover PLC [2017], a property landlord found that out to his cost after neglecting to tell insurers that he was facing trial on an assault charge.
The man lodged a claim with insurers after a property that he let to students was gutted by fire. The proposal form for the insurance had specifically asked if he had any previous convictions or pending prosecutions, save in respect of motoring offences.
He answered that question in the negative although he was at the time awaiting trial on a common assault charge. He was subsequently convicted of that offence and received a £100 fine and a 24-month restraining order.
He launched proceedings against the insurers after they refused to indemnify him against his loss. His claim was, however, dismissed by a judge on the basis that it had no reasonable prospect of success. His non-disclosure of the pending prosecution was material and the insurers were entitled to refuse cover.
In dismissing his challenge to that decision, the Court of Appeal found that he had no viable argument that the relevant parts of the policy were unenforceable by virtue of the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999.
The policy was commercial in nature, in that he was letting the property to students as a business, and he could not be viewed as a ‘consumer’ within the meaning of the Regulations. The insurers thus had an unanswerable defence to his claim.
[edit] Find out more
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
Featured articles and news
Villa Wolf in Gubin, history and reconstruction. Book review.
Construction contract awards down £1bn
Decline over the past two months compared to the same period last year, follows the positive start to the year.
Editor's broadbrush view on forms of electrical heating in context.
The pace of heating change; BSRIA market intelligence
Electric Dreams, Boiler Realities.
New President of ECA announced
Ruth Devine MBE becomes the 112th President of the Electrical Contractors Association.
New CIAT Professional Standards Competency Framework
Supercedes the 2019 Professional Standards Framework from 1 May 2025.
Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds
Free exhibition at the RIBA Architecture Gallery until 31 May.
PPN 021: Payment Spot Checks in Public Sub-Contracts
Published following consultation and influence from ECA.
Designing Buildings reaches 20,000 articles
We take a look back at some of the stranger contributions.
Lessons learned from other industries.
The Buildings of the Malting Industry. Book review.
Conserving places with climate resilience in mind.
Combating burnout.
The 5 elements of seiri, seiton, seiso, seiketsu and shitsuke.
Shading for housing, a design guide
A look back at embedding a new culture of shading.
The Architectural Technology Awards
The AT Awards 2025 are open for entries!
ECA Blueprint for Electrification
The 'mosaic of interconnected challenges' and how to deliver the UK’s Transition to Clean Power.