Joint and several liability is the default English-law rule for concurrent wrongdoers: each defendant can be required to pay the claimant the full loss, leaving the defendants to sort contribution between themselves. It is the rule that PI insurers, professional firms, and claimants live with on virtually every multi-party claim — and the rule that net contribution clauses are drafted to displace.
What joint and several liability means in PI insurance
Where two or more parties have each caused, or each materially contributed to, a single indivisible loss, English law treats them as concurrent wrongdoers. The claimant may sue any one of them, several of them, or all of them. Each defendant proved to be at fault is liable to the claimant for the whole loss, not merely the share attributable to that defendant’s own fault. The claimant does not have to allocate fault between defendants; the claimant only has to prove that each defendant breached a duty and that the breach caused the loss.
Once the claimant has been paid in full by one defendant (or some defendants), that defendant may seek a contribution from any co-wrongdoer under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. The contribution claim asks the court to set what is “just and equitable having regard to the extent of that person’s responsibility for the damage in question”. Contribution is the way the English system reallocates the burden internally between wrongdoers; the claimant takes no part in that allocation.
For PI claims, joint and several liability has three practical consequences:
- The deep pocket pays. Where one defendant is uninsured, untraceable, insolvent or unwilling to engage, the remaining defendants together pay the whole loss. The shortfall sits with the solvent, insured defendants — usually the professional firm.
- Insurers carry contribution risk. A PI insurer paying out a settlement carries the burden of pursuing contribution from co-wrongdoers’ insurers afterwards, with all the cost, delay and uncertainty that involves.
- Allocation arguments matter. Defendants spend significant time arguing about share — and the share they end up bearing can swing materially with judicial discretion on the “just and equitable” test.
How joint and several liability works in practice
In a typical multi-party PI dispute — say, a defective basement on a commercial property — the claimant might join the architect, the structural engineer, the contractor, and the basement-waterproofing subcontractor. Each is a potential concurrent wrongdoer for the indivisible loss (the cost of remedial works plus consequential losses).
The procedural sequence is broadly:
- The claimant sues all defendants in one set of proceedings, or sues the easiest-to-find defendant and that defendant brings the others in by Part 20 (contribution) proceedings.
- Liability is decided first; each defendant proved at fault is liable jointly and severally to the claimant.
- The court (or the parties by agreement) then allocates contribution shares: for example, architect 30%, engineer 20%, contractor 35%, subcontractor 15%.
- If one defendant is insolvent or its insurer denies cover, the shortfall is borne by the others in proportion to their own shares — not by the claimant.
PI insurers and their defendant firms tend to settle multi-party claims through joint settlements with apportionment side-agreements. Those agreements record the contribution split agreed between insurers, so each insurer pays its share into the joint settlement pot without subsequent contribution litigation.
Worked UK example: joint and several in practice
Consider a UK commercial development. A specialist contractor and a structural engineer are both found to have contributed to a structural defect that costs the building owner £2.4m to remediate. Liability is apportioned 40% to the engineer and 60% to the contractor.
Under joint and several liability, the building owner can pursue either party for the whole £2.4m. If the contractor has gone into administration with no PI cover responding, the engineer is liable to the building owner for the full £2.4m, even though only 40% of the fault is attributable to it. The engineer’s PI insurer pays £2.4m to the claimant, then attempts to recover the contractor’s 60% share (£1.44m) via the contractor’s insurer or administrator. If recovery fails, the engineer’s PI insurer absorbs the loss.
By contrast, under a properly drafted net contribution clause in the engineer’s appointment, the engineer would have been liable to the building owner only for its 40% share (£960,000). The shortfall — the contractor’s £1.44m — would have fallen on the building owner instead of the engineer.
The numbers are illustrative. The structural point is that joint and several liability shifts the risk of an insolvent co-defendant from the claimant to the solvent co-defendants and their insurers.
When joint and several liability matters most
Three situations bring the rule into sharpest focus on PI claims:
Construction and multi-disciplinary professional teams. Almost every substantial construction or engineering claim involves multiple consultants and contractors. Without a net contribution clause, every consultant on the team is fully exposed to the full loss attributable to the team’s combined fault.
Claims involving insolvent co-wrongdoers. A claim where the contractor has gone bust, or the original designer has wound up without run-off cover, leaves the remaining defendants holding the bill. Insurers test their insureds’ contract terms hard on these matters.
Subrogated recovery actions. When a PI insurer pays out, it stands in the insured’s shoes to pursue contribution from co-wrongdoers’ insurers. Joint and several liability gives the insurer the right to chase the full share owed by any solvent co-wrongdoer.
The rule also matters in non-construction PI claims: solicitors and counsel involved in the same transaction; accountants and tax advisers giving overlapping advice; surveyors and valuers reporting on the same asset.
Common variations and contractual carve-outs
English law’s default position can be modified by contract. The most common modifications appearing on UK appointments are:
- Net contribution clauses (NCC). A clause limiting the consultant’s liability to the share that would be just and equitable having regard to the contributions of named other parties, assuming each of those other parties had paid its share. The clause turns joint and several into proportionate liability between the listed parties. NCCs have been tested in court (Bennett v Greenland Houchen, Hurley Palmer Flatt Ltd v Barclays Bank Plc, West v Ian Finlay) and are enforceable in principle.
- Liability caps. A cap on the maximum monetary liability of one party for any one claim or in the aggregate, regardless of fault share. Caps and net contribution clauses often appear together.
- Statutory carve-outs. Some statutory liabilities, such as those under the Defective Premises Act 1972 or under the Building Safety Act 2022, may not be contractually excluded or limited. PI insurers and brokers should check the relevant statute before assuming a contractual cap holds.
- Express joint-and-several wording. Some contracts confirm rather than alter the default, particularly where multiple parties act under one common appointment.
Joint-and-several liability also operates differently across other UK jurisdictions in some narrow respects. Scotland has its own equivalent in joint and several liability for delict, but the contribution mechanism is governed separately by Scottish statute and case law.
Related concepts
- Proportionate liability in PI — the contractual alternative to joint and several.
- Contribution rights between insurers — the mechanism used to reallocate joint-and-several settlements between insurers.
- Breach of duty of care in PI — the gateway question for being a concurrent wrongdoer.
- Quantum of a PI claim — how the indivisible loss is measured.
Frequently asked questions
What is joint and several liability in plain English?
It means each party found at fault can be required to pay the whole loss, not just its own share. The claimant gets paid in full by whoever is easiest to recover from; the defendants then sort out shares between themselves under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. It is the default rule for concurrent wrongdoers in England and Wales.
Is joint and several liability the same in Scotland and Northern Ireland?
The substantive principle is broadly similar across the UK jurisdictions — any one defendant proved at fault can be liable for the whole loss to the claimant — but the contribution machinery operates under different statutes (the 1978 Act in England and Wales and Northern Ireland; the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) (Scotland) Act 1940 in Scotland). PI cover with UK-wide jurisdiction picks up all three.
Does PI insurance respond to a claim made on a joint and several basis?
Yes. A PI policy responding to a claim against the insured pays the loss the insured is legally liable for, up to the limit and subject to terms. If the insured is jointly and severally liable for the whole loss, the policy responds to the whole loss; the insurer then pursues contribution from co-wrongdoers’ insurers under its subrogated rights.
How does a net contribution clause change the position?
A net contribution clause displaces the default. It limits the consultant’s liability to a fair share assuming co-defendants pay their own shares, which means the claimant — not the consultant — bears the risk of an insolvent or untraced co-defendant. NCCs are enforceable in principle if clearly drafted; they have been tested in English case law.
What is the difference between joint, several, and joint and several liability?
In short: “joint” means the defendants are jointly responsible and must be sued together; “several” means each is responsible for its own act and is sued separately; “joint and several” means the claimant can sue any one defendant for the whole loss or all of them together. English law applies joint and several liability to concurrent wrongdoers as the default.
Can my PI insurer refuse to pay because a co-defendant should also be on cover?
No. The insurer’s contract is with the insured, and it pays what the insured is legally liable for. If a co-defendant is uninsured or insolvent, that is a contribution problem for the insurer to manage — it does not reduce the cover available to the insured. Some indemnity provisions in inter-insurer agreements may, however, allow rateable contribution between insurers covering the same loss.
Where can I find the law on contribution between defendants?
The principal statute in England and Wales is the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. Section 1 establishes the right to contribution from “any other person liable in respect of the same damage”; section 2 sets the “just and equitable” basis for assessing share. Detailed analysis is set out in case law including Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond and subsequent authorities.
Does joint and several liability apply to limited liability partnerships and limited companies?
Yes. The rule attaches to the legal person liable, not to its form. An LLP or limited company can be jointly and severally liable to a claimant. The corporate veil protects partners and shareholders personally, but the LLP or company itself remains exposed for the whole loss, which is precisely what its PI cover responds to.
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About Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd
Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd is a Bristol-based insurance broker authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (firm reference number 724952). The company is registered in England and Wales under Companies House number 07014570. Contact: info@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk | 0117 325 0027.
Last reviewed: May 2026 by Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd.
Important: this article is general information, not advice on your specific circumstances. For advice on PI insurance for your firm, contact us on 0117 325 0027 or info@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk.