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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 >> Durham County Council v The Durham Company Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 729 (26 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/729.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 729 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COMPETITION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(SIR MARCUS SMITH, PRESIDENT)
[2023] CAT 14
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
____________________
DURHAM COUNTY COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE DURHAM COMPANY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Michael Bowsher KC and Ligia Osepciu (instructed by Tilly Bailey & Irvine LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6 June 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Julian Flaux C:
Introduction
Factual and legal background
"(1) A public authority—
(a) must consider the subsidy control principles before deciding to give a subsidy, and
(b) must not give the subsidy unless it is of the view that the subsidy is consistent with those principles.
(2) In subsection (1) "subsidy" does not include a subsidy given under a subsidy scheme.
(3) A public authority—
(a) must consider the subsidy control principles before making a subsidy scheme, and
(b) must not make the scheme unless it is of the view that the subsidies provided for by the scheme will be consistent with those principles."
"Review of subsidy decisions
(1) An interested party who is aggrieved by the making of a subsidy decision may apply to the Competition Appeal Tribunal for a review of the decision.
(2) Where an application for a review of a subsidy decision relates to a subsidy given under a subsidy scheme, the application must be made for a review of the decision to make the subsidy scheme (and may not be made in respect of a decision to give a subsidy under that scheme).
…
(5) In determining the application, the Tribunal must apply the same principles as would be applied—
(a) in the case of proceedings in England and Wales or Northern Ireland, by the High Court in determining proceedings on judicial review;
…
(7) In this Part—
"interested party" means—
(a) a person whose interests may be affected by the giving of the subsidy or the making of the subsidy scheme in respect of which the application under subsection (1) is made, or
(b) the Secretary of State;
"subsidy decision" means a decision to give a subsidy or make a subsidy scheme;
"the Tribunal" means the Competition Appeal Tribunal;
"Tribunal Procedure Rules" means rules made under section 15 of the Enterprise Act 2002."
Section 75 provides that an appeal lies to this Court on any point of law arising from any decision of the CAT.
The judgment below
The grounds of appeal and Respondent's Notice
(1) The judge erred in law in adopting a different starting point to costs management in applications for statutory review under section 70 of the 2022 Act from that in (i) proceedings for judicial review in the courts of each part of the UK, and (ii) proceedings for statutory review before those courts and the CAT.
(2) Further or alternatively, to the extent the judge capped the Council's costs incurred after 17 February 2023 at £60,000 on the basis that this was a generous estimate of the upper limit of what would have been a reasonable and proportionate amount for the Council to incur, he erred in law by imposing a cap at an irrationally low level.
(3) Further or alternatively, to the extent the judge capped the Council's costs incurred after 17 February 2023 at £60,000 on any other basis, he erred in law by (a) failing to provide adequate reasons for his decision, and/or (b) precluding the Council, in the event it was the successful party, from recovering its reasonable and proportionate costs in circumstances where the judge did not find that a protective costs order was justified in accordance with the criteria in R (Corner House Research) v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry [2005] 1 WLR 2600 at [74].
(4) Further or alternatively, the judge acted unfairly by determining that the costs cap should apply from 17 February 2023 in circumstances where (i) he had not invited submissions from the parties on that issue, and (ii) the effect of his decision is that almost all of the costs the Council has incurred in preparing its Defence and evidence and complying with its duty of candour are subject to an effective cap of £10,000 but Max Recycle's equivalent pleading and evidential costs had already been incurred before that date and hence are uncapped. There was no reasonable basis for a finding that the Council's costs of preparing its Defence and evidence and discharging its duty of candour should effectively be capped at £10,000.
Summary of the parties' submissions
"(d) the importance of not deterring small undertakings from bringing reasonable appeals from infringement decisions of the OFT: (e) the importance also of not deterring competitors from challenging a decision to clear a proposed merger where potential applicants may be very much smaller than the parties to the merger…"
Discussion
"CCOs are very rare. CPR PD 3F at 1.1 makes plain that they will only be made "in exceptional circumstances". The costs budgeting regime, introduced after costs capping as part of the Jackson reforms, is widely regarded as a more scientific way of achieving the same goal…"
Lord Justice Nugee
Lord Justice Newey