Definition:Catch-all warranty
📋 Catch-all warranty is a broad representation and warranty provision in an insurance M&A agreement designed to capture liabilities and risks that fall outside the scope of more specific, enumerated warranties. Sometimes called a "general" or "sweeper" warranty, it typically states that the seller has disclosed all material information relating to the target, or that no undisclosed fact exists that would materially affect the value or operations of the business. In insurance transactions — where hidden exposures can lurk in long-tail reserves, legacy reinsurance disputes, or obscure regulatory commitments — catch-all warranties serve as a buyer's safety net against the unknowns that targeted warranties might miss.
⚙️ In practice, catch-all warranties sit alongside dozens of specific warranties covering discrete topics: the accuracy of reserves, compliance with insurance regulations, the status of licenses, the enforceability of reinsurance treaties, and the completeness of policyholder records, among others. The catch-all fills gaps between these targeted provisions — for instance, an unusual regulatory investigation that does not neatly fit within the litigation or compliance warranty, or an undisclosed side agreement with a distribution partner. Sellers and their counsel typically resist overly expansive catch-all language, arguing that it creates open-ended liability and undermines the carefully negotiated disclosure process. Buyers counter that the complexity of insurance operations — particularly in multi-jurisdictional groups or run-off portfolios with decades-old exposure — makes it unrealistic to anticipate every category of risk through specific warranties alone. The scope of the catch-all also affects warranty and indemnity insurance pricing and coverage, since W&I underwriters assess whether the catch-all creates unquantifiable exposure.
🎯 The enforceability and practical value of a catch-all warranty vary across jurisdictions and legal traditions. In common law systems such as England and Wales or the United States, courts generally uphold broad warranty language, though they may interpret it narrowly if it conflicts with more specific provisions — applying the principle that specific terms override general ones. In civil law jurisdictions across Continental Europe and parts of Asia, the interaction between contractual warranties and statutory protections for buyers may differ. For insurance-sector deals, the catch-all warranty's importance is amplified by the information asymmetry inherent in the business: the seller's management possesses granular knowledge of claims trends, regulatory correspondence, and underwriting exceptions that may never surface in a structured due diligence process. Including a well-drafted catch-all warranty — and backing it with meaningful indemnification and an appropriate indemnification cap — gives buyers a contractual mechanism to address the genuinely unforeseen.
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