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Insurance Agents and Brokers (ALRC Report 16) and
Insurance Contracts (ALRC Report 20)

Reports

Final Report—Insurance Agents and Brokers (ALRC Report 16) (tabled September 1980)
Final Report—Insurance Contracts (ALRC Report 20) (tabled December 1982)

Background

ALRC Report 16

When the reference was given to the ALRC, the law regulating insurance contracts had not kept pace with the growth of a national insurance industry. Considerable confusion surrounded an agent's authority when contracting on behalf of insurance companies. Some companies were using contracts as a means of evading responsibility for information communicated by their agents. For this reason, more powerful measures were needed to attach responsibility to insurers.

With brokers, however, the appropriate course of action was not as clear. In many cases, brokers acted as agents for the insured. However, it was also possible for a broker to function as an agent of the insurance company. This made it difficult to decide who should bear responsibility for the broker's actions.

It was accepted that legislative mechanisms were needed to protect the insured against the loss of their funds through the wrongful actions of their brokers.

ALRC Report 20

An Issues Paper (ALRC IP 2) and a Discussion Paper (ALRC DP 7), both titled Insurance Contracts, were released in 1977 and 1979 respectively.

ALRC Report 20 examined the adequacy and appropriateness of the law of insurance contracts, given that it was a mixture of common law principles and a number of imperial, federal and state statutes.

In particular, ALRC Report 20 considered:

  1. Conduct before the contract:
    1. the information that the insurers and the prospective insured should provide to one another;
    2. what kind of interest is able to be insured; and
    3. the circumstances where an insurer may refuse to insure a person.
  2. Cancellation and renewal of the contract:
    1. the consequences of a failure by an insured to comply with the terms of the contract; and
    2. the circumstances in which an insurer may cancel a contract.
  3. Where a claim is made:
    1. what limits should be placed on the rights of the insurer and the insured; and
    2. ways of allowing the insured to protect and enforce their interests.

The Commission observed that in some cases the interests of an insured person acting honestly were not adequately protected. An insured's duty of disclosure, which required them to give the insurer all information that a prudent insurer would think relevant, imposed a standard that was too difficult for a lay person to understand. Where an insured person breached the contract, the insurer was able to refuse to pay a claim, even if the insurer did not suffer any loss as a result of the breach. In addition, where the insurer became insolvent, the insured may have suffered a disastrous loss.

In deciding whether to recommend intervening in the market place to address these problems, the Commission balanced the economic costs of reform and the importance of ensuring fairness in the relationship between insurer and insured.

Key recommendations

ALRC Report 16

ALRC Report 20

Implementation

ALRC Report 16

The Insurance (Agents and Brokers) Act 1984 (Cth), which was passed on 25 June 1984, implemented the Commission's recommendations. It provides that all insurance intermediaries apart from brokers should operate under written authorisation from insurers and that an insurer is responsible for the conduct of their agents. It sets out a registration scheme for insurance brokers requiring them to be registered by the Life Insurance or General Insurance Commissioner. It also imposes duties on brokers in relation to money received by them from clients and imposes duties of disclosure on both brokers and insurance intermediaries.

The Financial Services Reform Act 2001 (Cth) repealed the Insurance (Agents and Brokers) Act and replaced it with a single licensing regime which applies to a product issuers—including life insurance and general insurance companies, friendly societies, banks and superannuation funds—who carry on a financial service business and who sell products to clients.

ALRC Report 20

The Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) substantially implemented the Commission's recommendations regarding the duties owed by the insurer and the insured. Instead of stating what terms should be included in each type of contract, the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 prevents insurers from attempting to avoid paying a claim where the terms of the contract are not typical for that kind of contract.

Under the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 (Cth) and the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (Cth) discrimination in the provision of insurance is unlawful apart from situations where the discrimination is based on reliable actuarial data. Discrimination in the provision of insurance on the grounds of race is also unlawful under the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth).

Continuing issues

The Australian Law Reform Commission considered the specific area of marine insurance, in its 2001 report, Review of the Marine Insurance Act 1909 (ALRC Report 91).

The Australian Law Reform Commission, in conjunction with the Australian Health Ethics Committee of the National Health and Medical Research Council, considered issues relating to insurance as part of its inquiry into the use of human genetic information culminating in the final report, Essentially Yours: The protection of human genetic information in Australia (ALRC Report 96).

 

The information on this page was current as of January 2010
This page was updated 20 January 2010

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