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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> BHB Enterprises plc v Victor Chandler (International) Ltd [2005] EWHC 1074 (Ch) (27 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1074.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1074 (Ch), [2005] EuLR 924 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BHB Enterprises plc |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Victor Chandler (International) Limited |
Defendant |
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(1) Victor Chandler (International) Limited (2) Newcote Services Limited |
Part 20 Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BHB Enterprises plc (2) PA News Limited (3) British Horseracing Board Limited |
Part 20 Defendants |
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Mr David Lord and Jonathan D C Turner (instructed by Tarlo Lyons) for the Defendant and Part 20 Claimants
Mr Jeffery Onions QC (instructed by Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Nicholson Graham) for PA News Limited
Hearing dates: 17 – 19 May, 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Laddie :
"(1) the improvement of the financial position of horseracing; (2) funding of the administration of horseracing; (3) encouraging the maintenance and improvement of standards in horseracing, and exercising regulatory control ("Regulatory Functions"); (4) meeting the cost of the Regulatory Functions and assisting the Jockey Club; (5) encouraging and improving the breeding of bloodstock; (6) establishing the dates of Fixtures and the programme content of Fixtures; (7) considering and consulting on all questions affecting horseracing, advising and communicating views and recommendations to others, including the statutory and regulatory bodies in the horseracing industry; (8) initiating and promoting improvements in the law and local rules, regulations or practices; (9) making and publishing rules of practice and procedure for horseracing; (10) developing and maintaining programmes of training and education within horseracing; (11) each year creating the fixture list involving (currently) 1,209 race meetings in Britain annually; (12) weight adding and handicapping; (13) supervision of race programmes; (14) producing racing publications and stakesbooks; and (15) compiling data related to horseracing."
"22. The Pre-Race Data is essential to any bookmaking. It is not possible to run a book unless the bookmaker knows which horses are in which race."
i) excessive pricing of data and audio-visual rights;
ii) race and runner data bundled with data that are not needed by bookmakers;
iii) price discrimination;
iv) discriminatory effects arising from charges being based on percentage of turnover.
"following preliminary investigations the Director General has opened a full investigation into: BHB's commercial policy for charging for data and audio-visual rights [and] BHB's new arrangements for producing and delivering pictures, commentary and on-course data to licensed betting offices."
The dispute leading to these proceedings.
i) For leave to join the Board and PA as Defendants to the Part 20 Claim;
ii) For leave to amend the Defence and Counterclaim to plead, inter alia, an abuse of dominant position; and
iii) For injunctive relief preventing the Board or BHBE from instructing PA to terminate the daily feed of Pre-Race Data to Newcote and VCI and preventing PA from terminating the daily feed of Pre- Race Data.
The contract issues
"1. The PA will take all reasonable steps to ensure the accuracy and timely supply of the PA Material, but the PA does not warrant that the PA Material will be free from error or uninterrupted or, as provision of the PA Material is subject to availability of the necessary information to the PA, that specific items of information will be available.
9. During the Term, this Agreement may be terminated immediately by either party giving notice to the other if: (a) the other commits a material breach of a material term of this Agreement and such material breach is not remedied (if remediable) within 7 days of receipt of notice requiring remedy; or (b) any encumbrancer takes possession of, or a receiver is appointed over, any of the property or assets of the other party or the other party makes any voluntary arrangement with its creditors or convenes a meeting to consider proposals for a company voluntary agreement and/or files any documents with the court for a moratorium pending the outcome of such a meeting or becomes subject an administration order or goes into liquidation (except for the purposes of amalgamation or reconstruction not involving insolvency and in such manner that the entity resulting agrees to be bound by or assumes the obligation imposed on that other.
12. The Customer acknowledges that: (a) the copyright (including, for the purposes of this Agreement, database rights) and any and all other intellectual property rights used or embodied in the PA Material, including the manner in which it appears on delivery to the Customer, is the property of the PA or its licensors, and (b) the PA Material is provided on the basis that, if required, the Customer (or the relevant member of the Customer's Group) will enter into appropriate copyright and/or other arrangements direct with such licensors, and such provision is, in any event, subject to any restrictions or prohibitions imposed by the owner(s) of such information, whether directly or indirectly, either on the PA in respect of its provision of such information to the Customer (or any member of the Customer's Group) or on the Customer itself or any member of the Customer's Group. The PA may terminate this Agreement (or any part of it) if the Customer (or any member of the Customer's Group) challenges the validity of any of the rights of the PA or its licensors as set out above or is in breach of its licence agreement with the BHB (or any other licensor) or fails to conclude or renew any such licence."
"Use of racecards [i.e. including, but not limited to BHB's Pre-Race Data] is subject to the Customer having in place the necessary licensing and/or other arrangements with the relevant racing board/authority representative of the relevant racing board for this purpose."
"… if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of a word in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business common sense, it must be made to yield to business common sense." (p 201)
The Competition Act and Treaty of Rome issues.
"Abuse of Dominant Position
33. The Claimant, alternatively the Claimant together with BHB and/or Weatherbys Group Limited ("WGL"), has a dominant position in the market for the supply of Pre-Race Data for horse races in the United Kingdom.
Details
(1) The Claimant is a subsidiary of BHB and is exclusively entrusted by BHB with the commercial exploitation of the data relating to horse races which BHB controls.
(2) BHB controls the Pre-Race Data, prepared by WGL pursuant to a contract between them, in relation to all or substantially all professional horse races in the United Kingdom.
(3) Pursuant to these arrangements, the Claimant has a monopoly or virtual monopoly in the supply of the Pre-Race Data for professional horse races in the United Kingdom.
(4) The Pre-Race Data are an essential facility required for any bookmaking in relation to professional horse racing in the United Kingdom.
34. The Claimant (or the Claimant together with BHB) has abused and is abusing this dominant position.
Details
(1) The Claimant purports to license the right to receive, display and use Pre-Race Data to bookmakers only on its standard terms, including charges of 10% of the bookmaker's gross profit or 1.5% of the bookmaker's turnover relating to bets taken in LBOs and/or Licensed Media activity.
(2) These charges are particularly high and not justified by objective criteria. The cost of preparing the Pre-Race Data is approximately £4 million per year. The total income from data licensing was stated in 2002 to be expected to amount to £600 million over 5 years.
(3) In accordance with the ruling of the European Court of Justice in the William Hill proceedings, the Pre-Race Data is not protected by any intellectual property rights.
(4) As set out below, the Claimant has threatened and arranged to prevent the supply of the Pre-Race Data to the Defendant and other bookmakers who have declined to pay the Claimant's unlawful charges, notwithstanding that the Pre-Race Data is an essential facility required by the Defendant, without objective justification. The non-payment of the Claimant's charges does not constitute an objective justification, since those charges are not justified, as pleaded above.
35. The said abuses may affect trade within the United Kingdom or part thereof and/or trade between member states of the European Union to an appreciable extent.
Details
(1) The charges are a substantial levy on bookmaking services supplied to members of the public in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
(2) A large part of the sums raised by the charges is used to subsidise horse racing and breeding in the United Kingdom, thereby distorting competition between horse racing and breeding services in the United Kingdom and corresponding services in other EU member states, and hence the patterns of trade in those services between member states.
(3) Preventing the supply of the Pre-Race Data to bookmakers who decline to pay the Claimant's charges would prevent those bookmakers trading in relation to horse racing in the United Kingdom.
36. The Claimant (or the Claimant together with BHB) has thereby infringed and is infringing the Chapter II prohibition of the Competition Act 1998 and Article 82 of the Treaty of Rome, and its charges under the Agreement are unlawful."
"18(1) Subject to section 19, any conduct on the part of one or more undertakings which amounts to the abuse of a dominant position in a market is prohibited if it may affect trade within the United Kingdom.
(2) Conduct may, in particular, constitute such an abuse if it consists in –
(a) directly or indirectly imposing unfair purchase or selling prices or other unfair trading conditions. …"
"248. The imposition by an undertaking in a dominant position directly or indirectly of unfair purchase or selling prices is an abuse to which exception can be taken under Article 86 of the Treaty.
249. It is advisable therefore to ascertain whether the dominant undertaking has made use of the opportunities arising out of its dominant position in such a way as to reap trading benefits which it would not have reaped if there had been normal and sufficiently effective competition.
250. In this case charging a price which is excessive because it has no reasonable relation to the economic value of the product supplied would be such an abuse.
251. This excess could, inter alia, be determined objectively if it were possible for it to be calculated by making a comparison between the selling price of the product in question and its cost of production, which would disclose the amount of the profit margin; however the Commission has not done this since it has not analysed UBC's costs structure.
252. The questions therefore to be determined are whether the difference between the costs actually incurred and the price actually charged is excessive, and, if the answer to this question is in the affirmative, whether a price has been imposed which is either unfair itself or when compared to competing products.
253. Other ways may be devised – and economic theorists have not failed to think up several – of selecting the rules for determining whether the price of a product is fair."
"At one time, the Commission was inclined to hold that Article 81(1) could apply to an agreement on the basis that it had the effect of making one of the parties "less competitive", for example where a licensee was subject to an onerous obligation to pay royalties after the expiry of a patent. But the current approach pays greater respect to a freely negotiated commercial agreement, unless it has an appreciable foreclosure effect on third party suppliers or customers. The purpose of Article 81(1) is not to provide a general escape route for those wishing to avoid complying with contractual obligations which turn out to be more onerous than expected." (paragraph 2-115)
"56. First, it is apparent that the right to choose one's trading partners and freely to dispose of one's property are generally recognised principles in the laws of the Member States, in some cases with constitutional status. Incursions on those rights require careful justification.
57. Secondly, the justification in terms of competition policy for interfering with a dominant undertaking's freedom to contract often requires a careful balancing of conflicting considerations. …
58. Thirdly, in assessing this issue it is important not to lose sight of the fact that the primary purpose of Article 86 is to prevent distortion of competition – and in particular to safeguard the interests of consumers – rather than to protect the position of particular competitors.
62. In assessing such conflicting interests particular care is required where the goods or services or facilities to which access is demanded represent the fruit of substantial investment. That may be true in particular in relation to refusal to license intellectual property rights. Where such exclusive rights are granted for a limited period, that in itself involves a balancing of the interest in free competition with that of providing an incentive for research and development and for creativity. It is therefore with good reason that the Court has held that the refusal to license does not of itself, in the absence of other factors, constitute an abuse.
69. To accept Bronner's contention would be to lead the Community and national authorities and courts into detailed regulation of the Community markets, entailing the fixing of prices and conditions for supply in large sectors of the economy. Intervention on that scale would not only be unworkable but would also be anti-competitive in the longer term and indeed would scarcely be compatible with a free market economy."