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Bombshell ruling for University of Exeter

Stuart Pemble considers the difficulties caused for the University of Exeter by an unexploded Second World War bomb.


Key points

  • The dropping of a Second World War bomb, rather than its subsequent explosion in 2021, has been held to be the proximate cause of loss caused by the explosion
  • As such, the insurance claim failed because it was caught by the war exclusion clause in the policy

I am not aware of many cases where a judge refers to Aristotle, Sir Francis Bacon and Hermann Göring when deciding the issues in question, but Judge Bird, in Allianz Insurance plc v The University of Exeter [2023] EWHC 630 (TCC), does just that. Aristotle’s writing on the “doctrine of cause” and Bacon’s analysis of legal causation from his 1596 text Maxims of Law are both used to decide whether the losses suffered by the university as the result of a controlled explosion of a Second World War bomb (nicknamed a “Hermann” after the notorious Nazi) were covered by the university’s buildings insurance policy issued by Allianz, the claimant insurer.

The facts

In February 2021, contractors working on a construction site adjacent to the university’s campus discovered an unexploded 1000k SC1000 thin-cased bomb dating back to 1942. Halls of residence were evacuated and the Royal Logistics Corps’ bomb disposal experts were called in. The bomb’s fuze was severely degraded and the bomb could not be moved safely for a controlled explosion elsewhere. It was therefore detonated on site. Despite all appropriate precautions being taken, the nearby halls of residence were damaged. The university claimed under its insurance policy to repair that damage and to compensate it for the cost of rehousing the students who had been evacuated. Allianz rejected the claim.

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