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Property Law Conference 2008 - Looking to the futurePublication Date: 16-Jun-2008Author(s): Stuart Walker, John Harkness, Mark Henaghan, Helen Melrose, Robert Muir, John Greenwood, Duncan Webb, Murray Gilbert, Anne Wilson, Pedro Morgan, Andrew Petersen, Jim Guest, Jacqui Sibbald, Philip Blank, Anna Buchly, John Clark, David Chisnall, Dave Kelly, Tomas Kennedy-Grant KC, John Meads, Phillip Merfield, Graeme Olding, Stuart Robertson, Phil Shannon, Willy Sussman, Vaughan Underwood, Sam Wimsett, Jonathan Flaws |
NZ $110.00 | ||
Update on ContractPublication Date: 01-Oct-2003Author(s): John Burrows |
NZ $35.00 |
Author(s): Mel Easton, Nicole Edelman
Published: 11 September, 2000
Pages: 74
Introduction
Insurance law is often considered to be a speciality within the field of commercial civil litigation. The principles of insurance law can, however, affect any person who has ever taken out a contract of insurance. Problems can, and do, arise when prospective insureds are not familiar with their duties and obligations to insurers when completing proposals for contracts of insurance, nor do they always know whether or not the insurance they are purchasing is the correct cover in the circumstances.
All too often, parties mistakenly rely on insurance taken out by others, not being aware that this does not protect them from subrogated recovery actions by insurers or alternatively leaving them without cover altogether.
A knowledge and understanding of some basic insurance principles is essential to the prudent practice of all lawyers who act for clients involved in transactions relating to property that inevitably is, or needs to be, insured. One of the aims of this seminar therefore, is to provide some guidance as to those areas of insurance that might affect lawyers’ clients who are about to embark on a property transaction.
While not professing to be an in depth analysis of insurance law, the seminar should also provide an overview of recent developments in relation to certain aspects of insurance law such as the duty of good faith, the noting of interests on policies and the Law Commission’s 1998 recommendations.
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