MedMilo
Well-Known Member
A great friend of mine is about to buy an Oyster 65 and is being told by his lawyer that he ought to incorporate a company via which to own the boat. The main reason given is that this will protect him from claims from 3rd parties who might sue him for damage caused in an accident. I think the idea is that, in suing a limited company, a claimant could only sue the company (which would have just one asset; the boat) and couldn’t bring a claim against him personally. He’s not trying to avoid VAT or other liabilities with this structure.
I’m pretty cynical about this strategy for a number of reasons;
Sorry for the long post and we may miss input from JFM (who’s likely double busy working towards being on the Lurssen client list ?) but would be very interested to know what others think...
I’m pretty cynical about this strategy for a number of reasons;
- any responsible boater (which he would certainly be!) would in any event take out 3rd party insurance via their normal yacht policy - this normally has pretty high limits; mine is £5m
- it’s hard to imagine a situation where a claimant successfully brings a claim against the owner but the insurer is able to successfully refute the claim thus leaving the owner with the bill
- in any case, in most situations wouldn’t it be more likely that the skipper would be held responsible for any accident, in which case my chum (who’ll mostly be the skipper) will be in the firing line for the claim, regardless of how the yacht is owned?
Sorry for the long post and we may miss input from JFM (who’s likely double busy working towards being on the Lurssen client list ?) but would be very interested to know what others think...
