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MARINE INSURANCE

MARINE INSURANCE. Lecture 15 Week 8. DEVELOPMENT. One of the earliest forms of insurance Developed out of bottomry and respondentia bonds Standard forms used by Lloyds Marine Insurance Act 1906 Often includes aviation insurance Different terminology. TYPES OF COVER. Hull Cargo Freight

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MARINE INSURANCE

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  1. MARINE INSURANCE Lecture 15 Week 8

  2. DEVELOPMENT • One of the earliest forms of insurance • Developed out of bottomry and respondentia bonds • Standard forms used by Lloyds • Marine Insurance Act 1906 • Often includes aviation insurance • Different terminology

  3. TYPES OF COVER • Hull • Cargo • Freight • Voyage • Collision

  4. TYPES OF VESSELS COVERED • Dinghies • Yachts • Cargo vessels • Liners • Super tankers • Oil rigs • Fishing vessels

  5. BASIC COVER • Perils of the sea and other navigable waters • Restraint of princes • Piracy • All risks

  6. FURTHER COVER • Pollution Hazard • War and strikes clause • Bursting boilers or breaking shafts • accident or negligence of a third party

  7. IMPLIED WARRANTIES • Seaworthiness • Damaged bottom • Insufficient crew • Legality • Marine Insurance Act 1906

  8. PARTICULAR AVERAGE • This means a partial loss • Covers loss caused by: • Perils of the sea rivers lakes or other navigable waters • fire, explosion • violent theft • jettison • piracy

  9. MEASURE OF INDEMNITY • s.69 Marine Insurance Act 1906 • Where ship has been repaired the reasonable cost of repairs less the customary deductions but not exceeding sum insured • Where partially repaired cost of repairs plus reasonable depreciation subject to not exceeding cost of complete repair • Not repaired - the reasonable depreciation

  10. EXAMPLES OF ADJUSTMENTS • Bottom end bearing fractured in generator as a result of latent defect led to damage to liner. • Cost • Bearing £5000 • Liner £4000 • Cylinder £3000 • Piston £6000 • Total £18000

  11. ADJUSTMENT • Excess £2000 • Standard policy would exclude replacing defective part • Thus total amount payable is £11000 • £18000 - £5000 (bearing) - £2000 (Excess) • Additional perils clause would have covered bearing

  12. TOTAL LOSS CLAIMS (SHIP) • Institute time clauses • Hulls total loss only including salvage, salvage charges and sue and labour • Hull total loss, general average and 3/4ths collision including salvage etc • Hulls disbursements

  13. TYPES OF TOTAL LOSS • Constructive total loss • Deprived of ship by insured peril • Recovery would exceed value • or repair exceeds value • Abandonment • Insured entitled to abandon loss when constructive total loss • Consequence is that if insured accepts notice of abandonment subject to assets and liabilities. May not accept abandonment

  14. SUE AND LABOUR CLAUSES • Covers expenses reasonably incurred by insured to save vessel and cargo • Paid in excess of sum insured.

  15. COLLISION LIABILITY • Covers three quarters of the cost of liability • Rest paid by Protection and Indemnity associations • It is a liability policy

  16. CARGO • Same risks and same methods • General average clause • Losses arising for the preservation of ship and cargo • Salvage loss • Follows forced sale of badly damaged cargo

  17. CARGO PARTIAL LOSS • Where goods delivered damage measure of indemnity is • Proportion of sum fixed by policy • equal to the gross sound value less damaged value at place of delivery • Example • Goods insured at £120,000; Damaged value = £80,000: Sound value = £100,000 • Depreciation or proportion is 20% • Apply this to £120,000 gives £24,000

  18. FREIGHT • Profit made by a shipowners out of ships used to carry cargo, both their own and others • The cargo includes all moveables • Loss occurs when cargo is not deliverable

  19. FREIGHT LOSS • Valued and unvalued policies • Indemnity is the proportion of freight lost to freight at risk applied to insured • This could be subject to Measure of indemnity clause which limits freight to amount actually lost.

  20. THE END ANY QUESTIONS

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