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France: New Consumer Protection Law

The French Parliament has passed a new consumer protection law.

Thu 24 Jul 2014

Law No. 2014-344 of 17 March 2014 on Consumer Protection (known as the Hamon Law) makes a number of changes to provisions for insurance contracts covering property damage where the insured is a consumer. These include the rights of insureds and obligations of insurers in respect of the cancellation of a contract.

Under the Law, property damage refers to all material damage to movable or immovable property, eg, buildings, contents, livestock, mobile phones and motor vehicles. Consumers are natural persons who are not acting in a professional capacity.

In summary, the changes are as follows:

For further details of the above, please refer to the relevant section of Crystal – Class specific regulations/Motor, Pre-contractual information, Master policies or Cancellation and non-renewal.

Class Actions

The Law also makes the commencement of class actions easier. Class actions can be brought by a recognised consumer association on behalf of individual consumers (not corporate entities) for failure of a business to comply with its legal or contractual obligations or in respect of anti-competitive practices. Managing agents are advised to check whether any of their counterparts that sell goods or services to consumers in France would potentially have an exposure to class actions. Lloyd’s brokers are advised to check that their clients have appropriate professional indemnity or other liability insurance in place.

Some measures are subject to further details in a decree that will be published in summer 2014. Lloyd’s will provide the market with these details when they are available.