
Publication
Privacy gets teeth: Australia’s new statutory tort and how it might look in practice
As of 10 June 2025, every Australian now has the right to sue for serious invasions of privacy.
Global | Publication | September 2024
The Commercial Court held that a vessel owner should be entitled to make a claim of constructive total loss under its war risks insurance policy (American Institute Hull War Risks and Strikes Clauses dated 1 December 1977 and the Addendum thereto dated 1 April 1984) as losses arising from the vessel’s detention were fortuitous. The Commercial Court determined that the vessel’s detention was not “an inevitable or even ordinary consequence in the circumstances” as the vessel’s anchorage area “had for many years been used as an anchorage by hundreds if not thousands of vessels without problem” and there had been no known instances of detention until February 2019 when the vessel was detained.
This case is relevant for understanding what an English court would constitute as “fortuitous” loss in an insurance claim.
Delos Shipholding SA & Ors v Allianz Global Corporate and Specialty SE & Ors [2024] EWHC 719 (Comm). The full judgment can be found here.
Publication
As of 10 June 2025, every Australian now has the right to sue for serious invasions of privacy.
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