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David Hutt Click here
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The New Brunswick Court of Queen’s Bench recently reviewed
the messy overlap between disability benefits and tort damages
for lost income, and had a go at tidying things up. In doing
so, it embarked on an interesting and topical analysis of
indemnity, subrogation and reimbursement.
In Wilson v. Great-West Life Assurance Co., [2007]
N.B.J. No. 92, the plaintiff, Beatrice Wilson, had been badly
injured in a motorcycle accident. She started a personal
injury action and began collecting long-term disability
benefits under a London Life group policy.
Wilson was 50 at the time of her personal injury trial in
1996. The trial judge found that, subject to a small
residual working capacity, she was and would remain disabled
from performing any employment in future. She was awarded
damages for past and future loss of income.
After the trial London Life demanded repayment of past
benefits, and Wilson complied.
Eight years later, in 2004, Wilson was still receiving
disability benefits and expected to receive them until
September of 2011 (her 65th birthday). Great-West Life (London
Life’s successor) advised her, however, that benefits would
instead terminate in April of 2005. She had, according to
Great-West, been fully indemnified.
The insurer reasoned that, but for her legal costs in the
tort case, Wilson was made whole by the 1996 future income
award. Accordingly, once legal costs had been repaid (by
monthly disability benefits), her entitlement to continuing
disability payments should terminate. She would be fully
indemnified.
Wilson went to court seeking a declaration that she was
entitled to continuation of benefits.
Her disability policy had no specific provisions for
subrogation or set-off of tort damages. Rather,
Great-West argued that it was a contract of indemnity giving
rise to equitable subrogation. The court had to determine the
nature of the disability policy and whether subrogation
principles apply to future income damages.
The case falls squarely into the middle of conflicting
decisions on the nature of disability insurance and
subrogation rights.
A contract of indemnity requires the insurer to pay its
insured upon proof of both a triggering event and a resulting
loss – for example a house fire and proof of property losses.
The claimant is literally indemnified. To the extent the
insured’s recovery from all sources exceeds 100 per cent of
his loss, however, he must account to the insurer for any
compensation received from third parties.
A policy is not a contract of indemnity if proof of actual
loss is not required. A triggering event results in a
fixed payout. In that case the insured does not need to
account, and may actually retain both the insurance proceeds
and compensation from third parties.
Disability policies have been called “income insurance,”
but do not usually require proof that the insured has lost
income. The insured only needs to prove disability and the
formula for determining benefits does the rest. That said, the
formula is usually based, at least in part, on the insured’s
prior income and other benefits. Disability policies
are, therefore, problematic.
The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal has held that a disability
policy is not a contract of indemnity. Disability benefits are
“a fixed amount established by contract prior to the
disability and requiring no proof of loss” (Mutual Life
Assurance Co. v. Tucker (N.S.C.A.) [1993] N.S.J. No. 56).
The British Columbia Supreme Court, however, reached the
opposite conclusion in Confederation Life v. Causton
[1988] B.C.J. No. 548.
Ultimately the court in Wilson followed the Nova
Scotia appellate authority, finding that the policy was not
one of indemnity. It also found that the insurer had no right
of subrogation, and in fact that subrogation was not even a
relevant principle in the case.
Strictly speaking no right of subrogation arises until a
claim has first been paid. Further, subrogation usually
describes an insurer’s right to step into the claimant’s shoes
and pursue the tort, rather than merely waiting to see the
results of the insured’s personal injury claim. The court
stated that waiting in the weeds may actually amount to
renunciation of any subrogation rights.
The court found that Great-West was asserting a
reimbursement right, not a right of subrogation. Unlike
subrogation, a right to reimbursement permits an insurer to
claim for money received from a third party regardless of its
own payments. Reimbursement rights arise only by contract, and
the Great-West policy contained no such terms. Wilson was
entitled to have her disability benefits reinstated to age 65.
The lesson for disability insurers: to set-off tort damages
for future awards, ensure the policy contains a reimbursement
right, and not just subrogation. And for plaintiff’s
counsel: read the policy. It’s probably not a contract of
indemnity, so look for express terms permitting subrogation or
reimbursement terms before beginning negotiations.
David Hutt is a partner at Burchell Hayman Parish in
Halifax, specializing in disability defence and insurance
litigation.
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