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Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introduction
2. Contract Law and Insurance Law: the Homogeneity
3. Rediscovering Expectations in Contract Law
4. Relating Good Faith to Reasonable Expectations
5. Revisiting the Doctrine of Reasonable Expectations in American Insurance Law
6. Reassessing the Objections to Policyholder’s Reasonable Expectations of Coverage in English Insurance Law
7. Policyholder’s Reasonable Expectations of Bonuses in With-Profits Life Insurance
8. Conclusion
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Yong Qiang Han is Lecturer in Commercial Law at the University of Manchester, UK.
Zusammenfassung
Over the past two decades, protecting contractual parties’ reasonable expectations has incrementally gained judicial recognition in English contract law. In contrast, however, the similar ‘doctrine’ of ‘policyholder’s reasonable expectations’ has been largely rejected in English insurance law. This is injurious, firstly, to both the consumer and business policyholder’s reasonable expectations of coverage of particular risks, and, secondly, to consumer policyholder’s reasonable expectations of bonuses in with-profits life insurance. To remedy these problems, this book argues for an incremental but definite acceptance of the conception of policyholder’s reasonable expectations in English insurance law. It firstly discusses the homogeneity between insurance law and contract law, as well as the role of (reasonable) expectations and their relevance to the emerging duty of good faith in contract law. Secondly, following a review and re-characterisation of the American insurance law ‘doctrine’ of reasonable expectations, the book addresses the conventional English objections to the reasonable expectations approach in insurance law. In passing, it also rethinks the approach to the protection of policyholder’s reasonable expectations of bonuses in with-profits life insurance through a revisit to the (in)famous case Equitable Life Assurance Society v Hyman [2000] UKHL 39, particularly to its relevant business and regulatory background.
Vorwort
The first detailed monograph on the divergence of UK contract and insurance law on policyholder's reasonable expectations.
Zusatztext
This book provides an analysis of the concept of the policyholder's reasonable expectations and an enquiry into the place this concept holds and should hold in English law on insurance contracts. In doing so the book addresses wider questions, such as the justifications for not making substantial distinctions in law between insurance contracts and contracts in general, the subsumed role of expectations in contract law, and the real significance of good faith in the performance of contracts under English law. It argues that English law's reluctance to engage with the policyholder's reasonable expectations as a contextualist interpretative principle is misplaced and unjustifiable. It is a thought-provoking, engaging and timely discussion of an issue the relevance of which is likely to increase in the aftermath of the reforms to English insurance law.