Facultative reinsurance is the oldest form of reinsurance and refers to the temporary entry by the original insurer into a reinsurance contract with another insurer regarding a specific item of insurance business (e.g. a very large risk or an item of insurance business that exceeds a certain limit). Reinsurance usually involves an insured subject matter and settlement risk of a large amount, and constitutes one of the important steps taken by insurance companies to control risks.
However, in actual reinsurance practice in China at present, the importance of compliance requirements in the course of the contract process is commonly overlooked. After being brought together through the offices of an insurance broker, the cedant and reinsurer are deemed to have concluded an agreement after simple communication by e-mail, fax, etc. Not only do they not execute a written contract, but they do not reconfirm changes in key conditions.
Such non-compliant operations conceal huge commercial risks as, if a large insurance settlement is triggered by the occurrence of an insured event, the reinsurer may strictly cite contract law rules and deny the existence of a reinsurance relationship, thus evading its liability to pay indemnities. Based on our lawyers’ experience in handling a number of reinsurance commercial disputes recently, we have seen that the key point of disagreement in reinsurance contract disputes comes down to whether a reinsurance contract is formed. The above-mentioned carelessness and points of non-compliance can result in the court denying that a contract has been formed, thereby greatly increasing the cedant’s risk of losing.
You must be a
subscribersubscribersubscribersubscriber
to read this content, please
subscribesubscribesubscribesubscribe
today.
For group subscribers, please click here to access.
Interested in group subscription? Please contact us.
你需要登录去解锁本文内容。欢迎注册账号。如果想阅读月刊所有文章,欢迎成为我们的订阅会员成为我们的订阅会员。
Harry Wu is an associate at Wintell & Co. in Shanghai