Insurance Law Monthly
Brokers: payment of commission
The role of brokers is something of an anomaly in English law. Many of the practices found in the modern market date back to the early days of marine insurance, in many situations before the development of legal principles against which the role of brokers could be judged. There is, for example, a long-standing rule that a broker is liable for the premium, and the courts have not objected to the ability of a broker to hold an open cover for insurers while at the same time acting as the agent of persons seeking that very cover.
The most difficult of the rules is, however, that which says that the broker acts as the agent of the assured in placing insurance
but is remunerated by the insurer for finding the business. The rule has raised eyebrows but remains intact, and indeed under
the Financial Services Authority Handbook a broker is not required to disclose the amount of his commission to a consumer
and need only do so at the request of a commercial assured. The legality of this has been tested before Reyes J in the Hong
Kong Court of First Instance in Hobbins v Royal Skandia Life Assurance Ltd and Anr [2012] HKCFI 10, and has survived.