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Insurance
claims with keys left in car
The case studies below illustrate some of the situations where we
have agreed that the policyholder’s claim was valid.
01/06 motor – theft – exclusion for theft if keys left
in car – whether policyholder in breach of exclusion.
01/07 The policyholder arranged cover for her Fiat Marea, over the
telephone, on 9 August 1999. The next day the vehicle was stolen while
she was paying for petrol. She said she had inadvertently left her
keys in the ignition.
01/08 The policyholder was picking up his children from school. He
left his car in a busy street with the door shut but the keys in the
ignition while he went to speak to his son, about eight feet behind
the car. Less than two minutes later, two youths ran up, jumped into
the car and drove off, despite the policyholder’s best efforts to
stop them. The youths were involved in an accident and the policyholder’s
car was a total write-off.
01/09 The policyholder reversed his car out of his garage and got
out of the car to return briefly to the house, leaving the car keys
in the ignition and closing but not locking the car door. He said
he had only been away from the car for approximately 30 seconds but
came back out of the house to find the car had been stolen. The insurer
declined the claim on the ground that the policy excluded theft ‘if
the car is left unattended or unoccupied and the doors and boot are
not locked or any roof opening/hood has not been secured closed or
if the keys are not removed from the car’.
01/06 motor – theft – exclusion for theft if keys
left in car – whether policyholder in breach of exclusion.
TOP
The policyholder stopped his car on his driveway and got out, leaving
the engine running and the door open, in order to lift up his garage
door. However, before doing so he stopped to put his briefcase in
the unlocked porch adjacent to his garage. As he did this he heard
a noise and turned round to see someone jump into his car and reverse
away at high speed. He was very close to the car but could not prevent
it from being stolen.
The insurer declined the claim on the basis of exclusion for ‘losses
arising from the use of keys which had been left in or around the
vehicle’.
01/07 The policyholder arranged cover for her Fiat
Marea, over the telephone, on 9 August 1999. The next day the vehicle
was stolen while she was paying for petrol. She said she had inadvertently
left her keys in the ignition.
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The insurer rejected the claim, relying on a policy term excluding
theft ‘if the insured vehicle has not been locked, windows and sunroof
closed and keys removed, when left unattended or unoccupied’. The
policyholder maintained that when she telephoned to arrange the insurance
she had been told all the good points of the policy but not about
the restrictions, and the policy did not arrive until after the car
was stolen.
01/08 The policyholder was picking up his children
from school. He left his car in a busy street with the door shut but
the keys in the ignition while he went to speak to his son, about
eight feet behind the car. Less than two minutes later, two youths
ran up, jumped into the car and drove off, despite the policyholder’s
best efforts to stop them. The youths were involved in an accident
and the policyholder’s car was a total write-off.
TOP
The insurer refused payment on the ground that the policy excluded
claims for theft if ‘the car is left unattended or unoccupied and
the doors and boot are not locked or any window or roof opening/hood
has not been secured closed or if the keys are not removed from the
car’. It said that the policy wording was clear and that the commentary
in the policy also explained that theft was not covered ‘unless the
car is fully locked and the keys are removed when it is left unattended
or unoccupied’. The policyholder argued that he had left the car on
the spur of the moment because he needed to speak to his son; he had
been only feet away and the car had been in sight the whole time.
01/09 The policyholder reversed his car out of
his garage and got out of the car to return briefly to the house,
leaving the car keys in the ignition and closing but not locking the
car door. He said he had only been away from the car for approximately
30 seconds but came back out of the house to find the car had been
stolen. The insurer declined the claim on the ground that the policy
excluded theft ‘if the car is left unattended or unoccupied and the
doors and boot are not locked or any roof opening/hood has not been
secured closed or if the keys are not removed from the car’.
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complaints upheld
We considered the four complaints above were valid. We interpreted
these exclusions as removing theft cover only when the car driver
has clearly gone away from the vehicle. This applies regardless of
whether the exclusion referred to leaving the vehicle ‘unattended’
or simply stated there was no theft cover if the keys had been ‘left’.
This interpretation required evidence that the driver had either gone
a significant distance from the vehicle or had left it for an extended
period. It was not sufficient for the driver merely to have turned
his back or gone inside his home briefly. While we would not generally
interpret such exclusions in a wide sense, we would not require insurers
to meet this type of claim if we were satisfied the driver had behaved
in a reckless fashion.
The following case summaries illustrate complaints we rejected.
01/010 motor – theft – lack of reasonable care – policyholder
aware of risks – whether loss excluded.
01/011 motor – theft – exclusion for car left unattended
and doors unlocked – whether car left unattended.
01/012 motor – theft – exclusion for theft if keys left
in unattended car – whether car unattended.
01/010 motor – theft – lack of reasonable care
– policyholder aware of risks – whether loss excluded.
TOP
In May 1999, the policyholder paid £17,000 cash for a Volkswagen Golf
GTI turbo to be imported from Belgium. He arranged insurance to take
effect on the anticipated delivery date. Nine days after accepting
the car, he filled it with petrol. Later that afternoon, he returned
to the filling station to put the car through the jet wash.
Leaving the key on the driver’s seat, he went to the tap to wash his
hands. The policyholder noticed a man who did not appear to have a
car and who was standing in front of the jet wash.
However, the policyholder did not feel particularly concerned. As
he was washing, he heard a car revving up. At first he did not realise
the car was his, but then he saw it being driven out of the garage
by the man he noticed earlier. The insurer rejected the theft claim
on the ground that the policyholder had breached the duty to take
reasonable care of his car.
complaint rejected
The courts had decided that the duty of reasonable care was breached
if the individual acted ‘recklessly’ – meaning that the individual
recognised a risk but deliberately took no steps to avoid it or took
steps that were clearly inadequate.
In this case, the policyholder saw someone loitering near his car
but had left the car unlocked with the keys on the driver’s seat.
We were satisfied he had taken no steps to protect his car from a
known risk of theft.
01/011 motor – theft – exclusion for car left unattended
and doors unlocked – whether car left unattended.
TOP
The policyholder was building a house and, in January 1999, visited
it to drop off some equipment. He parked his Mazda off the road, leaving
it unlocked and the car key among a bunch of keys in the lock on the
front door of the house. The car was stolen and was later recovered
in a damaged condition, requiring nearly £3,000 to repair.
The insurer rejected the claim. It explained that the policy excluded
liability for thefts if ‘the car is left unattended or unoccupied
and the doors…. are not locked’. The policyholder argued that he had
acted reasonably and he produced photographs showing that the car
would have been visible only to someone close to the house. He also
pointed out that his household insurer had met his claim for tools
and equipment stolen with the car.
complaint rejected
We were satisfied that the car was both unattended and unoccupied
at the time of the theft. We accepted that the household insurer was
satisfied that the policyholder had behaved reasonably, but that was
not the motor insurer’s reason for declining liability and was therefore
not relevant in this situation.
01/012 motor – theft – exclusion for theft if keys
left in unattended car – whether car unattended.
TOP
The policyholder’s husband parked their Landrover Discovery in front
of a terraced house where he was working. He removed the keys from
the ignition, but left the vehicle unlocked. A spare set of keys was
kept in the car in the pocket on the driver’s side. The driver entered
the house to close windows upstairs and downstairs and to set the
alarm. He returned to the pavement to see the car disappearing up
the road.
The insurer rejected the policyholder’s theft claim on the ground
that the policy excluded any claim for ‘loss or damage if the Motor
Car has not been locked, with the windows closed and ignition key
removed, when left unattended or unoccupied’.
complaint rejected
The case law established that an item was ‘unattended’ if someone
was not in a position to observe any attempt to interfere with it,
and was close enough to have a reasonable prospect of preventing any
unauthorised interference. It was clear that the husband had not been
in any position to observe the attempt to interfere with the vehicle.
We were satisfied that the car was ‘unattended’ and therefore within
the scope of the exclusion.
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Produced by the communications team at the Financial Ombudsman Service
© Financial Ombudsman Service Limited, January 2001 |
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