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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> WH Newson Holding Ltd & Ors v IMI Plc & Ors [2013] EWCA Civ 1377 (12 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1377.html Cite as: [2014] BUS LR 156, [2014] Bus LR 156, [2014] 1 All ER 1132, [2013] WLR(D) 432, [2014] ECC 8, [2013] EWCA Civ 1377 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(CHANCERY DIVISION)
ROTH J
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
____________________
W.H. NEWSON HOLDING LIMITED & OTHERS |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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IMI PLC & OTHERS (Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of WordWave International Limited A Merrill Communications Company 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838 Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) |
Appellants |
____________________
Mr Thomas de la Mare QC & Mr Tristan Jones (instructed by Hausfeld & Co LLP) for the Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
(1) On its true interpretation section 47A permits a claimant to bring a conspiracy claim provided that all the ingredients of the cause of action can be established by infringement findings in the Commission's decision;
(2) An essential ingredient of the tort of conspiracy on which Newson group rely (unlawful means conspiracy) is intent to injure; and
(3) The Commission found that IMI intended to distort competition but not that IMI group had the requisite intent to injure.
Section 47A of the 1998 Act
(a) any claim for damages, or
(b) any other claim for a sum of money,
which a person who has suffered loss or damage as a result of the infringement of a relevant prohibition may make in civil proceedings brought in any part of the United Kingdom."
Background
"(a) IMI group and other cartelists were party to an infringement of Article 101 TFEU (ex Article 81 EC) and Article 53 of the European Economic Agreement concerning copper plumbing tubes (recitals 3 and 4);
(b) the cartel consisted of a single, continuous, complex and (in relation to some cartelists) multiform infringement, lasted from 3 June 1998 until 22 March 2001, and covered the geographic market of the European Economic Area (recitals 2 and 17);
(c) in such infringement the cartelists engaged in a common enterprise with a single common and continuing objective (recitals 442 and 445); such enterprise consisted of an agreement upon a "comprehensive plan" by which prices would be fixed for copper tubes, the "common aim" being the control of the European market for the sale of plain copper plumbing tubes (recital 452), such "overall plan" being in the nature of an "agreement" (recital 453); this "illicit arrangement" was also a "concerted practice with the object of controlling volumes and prices" (recital 454);
(d) by this comprehensive plan the cartelists stabilised market shares by allocating sales volumes by country, agreed upon and implemented price increases or prices, ensured implementation of the market allocation and price agreements by a monitoring system consisting of a market leader arrangement for various European territories, as well as of the regular exchange of confidential information on commercial strategies, sales volumes and targets, and occasionally prices and rebates (recitals 449 and 450);
(e) the cartelists had a "joint intention", "identical purpose" or "single economic aim" which the Commission variously described at being to refrain from competition, to raise or maintain prices above the competitive level, and to avoid competition (recitals 451, 455, 501 and 504). Indeed:
"Prices being the main instrument of competition he various collusive arrangements adopted by the producer had the purpose of inflating prices to their benefit and above a level, which would have been determined by free competition." (recital 501)
(f) the cartelists acted "with full knowledge of the illegality of their actions" combining in an "intentional infringement" that was "designed to restrict competition in a major industrial sector" and for this reason took explicit action to conceal their meetings and the cartel and to avoid detection of their anti-competitive agreements and documents (recitals 503 and 603);
(g) the agreements were actually put into effect, leading to coordinated price increases being implemented in the UK (recitals 213, 277, 452 and 483);
(h) IMI group had a "core role" in the infringement, took over the role of market leader in the UK, implemented heavy price increases in the UK, and took an active role in increasing the number of participants in the cartel (recital 490)."
"(a) The defendants, as cartelists, (and each of them) breached the statutory duty imposed by Article 101 TFEU (ex Article 81 EC) and/or s.2(1) of the European Communities Act 197[2].
(b) Further or alternatively, the defendants, as cartelists, (and each of them) participated in a conspiracy to use unlawful means, namely the agreed entry into arrangements contravening Article 101 TFEU (ex Article 81 EC).
(c) Further or alternatively, each company in IMI (and unknown directors or controllers thereof to be particularised upon disclosure herein), including specifically the First and Second Defendants, participated in a conspiracy to use unlawful means when they agreed and/or combined with the other IMI companies named in the Decision to effect IMI's participation in arrangements with the other Cartelists contravening Article 101 TFEU (ex Article 81 EC)."
Judgment of the judge
My reasons
(1) On its true interpretation section 47A permits a claimant to bring a conspiracy claim provided that all the ingredients of the cause of action can be established by infringement findings in the Commission's decision
"It is not open to a claimant such as ECSL to seek to recover damages through the medium of s.47A simply by identifying findings of fact which could arguably amount to such an infringement. No right of action exists unless the regulator has actually decided that such conduct constitutes an infringement of the relevant prohibition as defined. The corollary to this is that the Tribunal (whose jurisdiction depends upon the existence of such a decision) must satisfy itself that the regulator has made a relevant and definitive finding of infringement. The purpose of section 47A is to obviate the necessity for a trial of the question of infringement only where the regulator has in fact ruled on that very issue.... The task of the Tribunal […is] to identify the findings of infringement and award damages for any loss or damage which they have caused." (paragraphs 31 and 60)
(2) An essential ingredient of the tort of unlawful means conspiracy is an intent to injure
"This form of the tort is committed where two or more persons combine and take action which is unlawful in itself with the intention of causing damage to a third party who does incur the intended damage. It is not necessary for the injured party to prove that causing him damage was the main or predominant purpose of the combination but that purpose must be part of the combiners' intentions."
"Intent to injure
164 I turn next, and more shortly, to the other key ingredient of this tort: the defendant's intention to harm the claimant. A defendant may intend to harm the claimant's business either as an end in itself or as a means to an end. A defendant may intend to harm the claimant as an end in itself where, for instance, he has a grudge against the claimant. More usually a defendant intentionally inflicts harm on a claimant's business as a means to an end. He inflicts damage as the means whereby to protect or promote his own economic interests.
165 Intentional harm inflicted against a claimant in either of these circumstances satisfies the mental ingredient of this tort. This is so even if the defendant does not wish to harm the claimant, in the sense that he would prefer that the claimant were not standing in his way.
166 Lesser states of mind do not suffice. A high degree of blameworthiness is called for, because intention serves as the factor which justifies imposing liability on the defendant for loss caused by a wrong otherwise not actionable by the claimant against the defendant. The defendant's conduct in relation to the loss must be deliberate. In particular, a defendant's foresight that his unlawful conduct may or will probably damage the claimant cannot be equated with intention for this purpose. The defendant must intend to injure the claimant. This intent must be a cause of the defendant's conduct, in the words of Cooke J in Van Camp Chocolates Ltd v Aulsebrooks Ltd [1984] 1 NZLR 354, 360. The majority of the Court of Appeal fell into error on this point in the interlocutory case of Miller v Bassey [1994] EMLR 44. Miss Bassey did not breach her recording contract with the intention of thereby injuring any of the plaintiffs.
167 I add one explanatory gloss to the above. Take a case where a defendant seeks to advance his own business by pursuing a course of conduct which he knows will, in the very nature of things, necessarily be injurious to the claimant. In other words, a case where loss to the claimant is the obverse side of the coin from gain to the defendant. The defendant's gain and the claimant's loss are, to the defendant's knowledge, inseparably linked. The defendant cannot obtain the one without bringing about the other. If the defendant goes ahead in such a case in order to obtain the gain he seeks, his state of mind will satisfy the mental ingredient of the unlawful interference tort. This accords with the approach adopted by Lord Sumner in Sorrell v Smith [1925] AC 700, 742:
'When the whole object of the defendants' action is to capture the plaintiff's business, their gain must be his loss. How stands the matter then? The difference disappears. The defendants' success is the plaintiff's extinction, and they cannot seek the one without ensuing the other.'"
(3) The Commission's findings do not include a finding that IMI group had the requisite intent to injure
"36. In my judgment, although the Defendants' purpose in entering into the cartel was to promote their own economic interests, it is wholly unrealistic to regard this as divorced from the causation of loss to purchasers of copper plumbing tubes, even if the loss caused to the Claimants might not correspond to the Defendants' gain. On the basis of OBG, I consider that this element of the tort can be established on the basis of the finding of infringement in the Decision alone."
Conclusions
Lord Justice Patten
Lord Justice Beatson