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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 >> Bookmakers' Afternoon Greyhound Services & Ors v Amalgamated Racing Ltd & Ors [2008] EWHC 2503 (Ch) (26 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/2503.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2503 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BOOKMAKERS' AFTERNOON GREYHOUND SERVICES & ORS | Claimant | |
-v- | ||
AMALGAMATED RACING LIMITED & ORS | Defendant | |
-v- | ||
SATELLITE INFORMATION SERVICES LIMITED | Third Party |
____________________
Peter Roth QC, Brian Doctor QC, Paul Harris, Ronit Kreisberger, Ewan West (instructed by Wiggin LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
Charles Hollander QC, Helen Davies QC, Victoria Wakefield (instructed by Olswang) appeared on behalf of the Third Party.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN: The introduction.
The procedural history.
"RUK has media rights agreements with the RUK racecourses, the RUK agreements, pursuant to which it is licensed to negotiate and/or enter into commercial media agreements with third parties, including agreements in respect of inter alia the rights to supply images, sound and data in respect of horseraces held at the RUK racecourses to LBOs in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland (the RUK relevant rights)."
"In relation to the defendants ..."
"Pursuant to the RUK agreements, RUK is entitled to negotiate commercial agreements on behalf of the RUK racecourses in respect of the RUK relevant rights."
"In or around December 2006, RUK, acting collectively on behalf of the RUK racecourses, negotiated an agreement with Amrac on an exclusive basis in respect of the RUK relevant rights (the Amrac Agreement), pursuant to which the RUK racecourses entered into 30 licences with Amrac on 31 January 2007 (the Amrac licences) granting exclusive rights to Amrac from 1 April 2007 in relation to the racecourses at Bangor, Chester, Goodwood, Newbury and York, and from 1 January 2008 in relation to the remaining RUK racecourses."
"The licensing of the RUK relevant rights to Amrac was negotiated and concluded by the defendants on a closed basis. Competitors to Amrac such as BAGS and SIS were not given the opportunity to negotiate or tender for the RUK relevant rights."
"The claimants submit that the RUK agreements, Amrac Agreement and Amrac licences are individually and/or collectively contrary to the prohibitions established by section 2(1) of the Competition Act 1998 (the Chapter 1 prohibition), further or alternatively, Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty, because they provide for or give effect to the collective exclusive licensing of the RUK relevant rights to Amrac on a closed basis."
"Further or alternatively, by virtue of the acts identified above, the defendants or some of them participated in a concerted practice contrary to the Chapter 1 prohibition, further or alternatively Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty, because they sought to procure, facilitate and/or give effect to the collective exclusive licensing of the RUK relevant rights to Amrac on a closed basis (the concerted practice)".
"In the premises, the RUK agreements, Amrac Agreement and Amrac licences are unlawful and automatically void."
"Insofar as the RUK agreements, Amrac agreement, Amrac licences and/or the concerted practice each provide for and/or give effect to the collective exclusive licensing of the RUK relevant rights on a closed basis, they have the object of restricting competition.
"Particulars of anti-competitive object.
"(a) The collective exclusive licensing on a closed basis prevents the individual RUK racecourses from being able to market their relevant rights individually. In the absence of such collective exclusive licensing on a closed basis, the individual racecourses would be entitled to set prices and other licence conditions independently of one another and in competition with one another. The collective exclusive licensing on a closed basis thus eliminates competition, including price competition, between individual RUK racecourses in respect of the marketing of the RUK relevant rights.
"(b) The collective exclusive licensing to Amrac on a closed basis prevents competitors to Amrac from having the opportunity to negotiate or tender for the RUK relevant rights. Such collective exclusive licensing on a closed basis forecloses competition from other actual or potential competitors to Amrac to the detriment of competition in the market for the provision of images, sound and data to LBOs in respect of horseracing at the RUK racecourses."
"A declaration that the collective exclusive licensing on a closed basis of the rights necessary for the supply to LBOs in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland of images, sound and data in respect of horseraces held at the RUK racecourses is contrary to section 2, subsection (1) of the Competition Act 1998 and Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty."
"As to the alleged collective licensing of RUK LBO rights to Amrac, (a) it is denied that Amrac took a collective licence of the LBO rights of all RUK courses as alleged by reason of the following:
"1. The LBO rights of the Jockey Club Racecourses are owned by a single undertaking, which during its negotiations with Amrac was represented separately from the remaining RUK racecourses. In the premises, the LBO rights for the Jockey Club Racecourses were not "collectively" licensed; and/or
"2. the operators of the remaining 17 RUK racecourses negotiated with Amrac, represented by a single solicitor -- see further paragraph 53 above -- and concluded separate licences with Amrac; and/or
"3. there is no collective licensor of the RUK LBO rights that negotiated the licences with Amrac. In particular, RUK did not collectively licence the LBO rights to Amrac."
"The RUK agreements facilitated the licensing of the RUK relevant rights on a collective basis, as indicated in paragraphs 25 and 27 of the defence, and as set out at paragraph 14 above, and therefore had the effect of restricting competition for the reasons set out at paragraphs 27(a), (c), (d), (f), (g) and (k) of the particulars of claim."
"In respect of paragraph 65(a), for the avoidance of doubt, it is averred the 18 individual racecourses owners of the 30 RUK racecourses, either acting on their own behalf and/or through/with RUK and/or through/with RMS, acted collectively in negotiating the Amrac licences for the reasons set out in the particulars of claim, and those arising from the defence are set out at paragraphs 14 and 18 above."
"The claimants claim that the arrangements that underpin Turf TV are unlawful because (see particulars of claim paragraphs 20 to 27, re-amended reply and defence to counterclaim paragraphs 18 to 28) (a), the RUK racecourses licensed their LBO rights to Amrac on a collective basis at a common price."
"This conduct represents classic cartel behaviour. It comprises inter alia price-fixing, joint selling, and joint refusal to license rights."
"The object behind this agreement is candidly set out in the defendants' witness statements. It was no more and no less than a desire to increase the price at which they could licence their rights, ie they simply wanted more money. There can be no material doubt about this."
"Notwithstanding the hyperbole deployed, the accusation of price-fixing is without any basis in fact, law or economic theory."
"The Amrac licences do not have the object of restricting competition as described above, or indeed at all, and for the reasons given below, the claimants' suggestions to the contrary are wholly without merit."
"No horizontal agreement between courses."
"There is accordingly no horizontal price-fixing agreement between competing undertakings capable of giving rise to an object restriction of competition for the purposes of Article 81(1)".
"What is the essence of the claimants' case? The essence of the claimants' case may be summarised in the following way. First, that the RUK racecourses agreed to license their rights to Amrac on a collective basis, including for a common price, collective price-fixing, that they did so on an exclusive basis, collective exclusive price-fixing, that they did this on a closed basis; in other words, there was no open auction or tender process for their rights, collective exclusive closed price-fixing, and that this is an infringement of Article 81."
"Your Lordship knows that our submission in the present case is that the defendants' conduct in setting up Amrac to receive the exclusive licences is, stripped to its barest essentials, a naked, horizontal price-fixing arrangement, and it had as its avowed and express object the intention of raising prices. That is astonishingly clear from the defendants' witness statements."
"We basically take the position Mr Swift took ..."
"... that the suggestion that there is no collective selling is just simply impracticable, but he advised them of such and he said it's plain from the prior debates, exchanges of information, meetings between the RUK racecourses, common presentations, debates over prices, et cetera, et cetera, that that has to be viewed as collective selling involving the agreement of terms. It's quite plain from very, very, very many documents all the RUK racecourses met, they exchanged information, they used joint negotiators, et cetera, et cetera. That, if it results in an end result which is the same, is price-fixing."
"I have not yet addressed you on the question of whether it is or is not collective selling, which is a different thing from price-fixing. I'll come to that. The only point I was making was that one doesn't turn it into a price-fixing case through collective selling on the basis that this leads to one common price as opposed to lots of different prices, because in fact there is a greater price variation for the courses now across the board than there was before"
"The fact that this case concerns an agreement to fix prices is not now in dispute."
"The claimants' challenge is to the lawfulness of the Amrac licences pursuant to Article 81, on the basis that those licences are collective, exclusive and closed agreements which have the object and effect of restricting competition. The main thrust of the claimants' case as emerged during the trial is that the RUK courses entered into a price-fixing arrangement with the object of restricting competition. The claimants' skeleton paragraphs 20 to 21. It is contended that the agreement is therefore contrary to Article 81(1) on the basis of European Night Services, without any analysis being required of actual effect."
The proposed amendment.
"For the avoidance of doubt, the reference in paragraph 26(a) above to collective licensing which prevented the individual racecourses from setting prices independently of one another, and in competition with one another, constituted collective price setting by the defendant racecourses inter se and/or the defendant racecourses inter se together with the first and fourth defendants, which falls within Article 81(1) as a restriction by object."
The essential submissions on this application.
Discussion as to the meaning of the original and of the draft amended pleadings.
Should I grant permission to amend?
"The overriding objective is that the court should deal with cases justly. That includes, so far as practicable, ensuring that each case is dealt with not only expeditiously but also fairly. Amendments in general ought to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon, provided that any prejudice to the other party or parties caused by the amendment can be compensated for in costs, and the public interest in the efficient administration of justice is not significantly harmed. I cannot agree with the judge when he said there would be no prejudice to Greenwich in not being allowed to make the amendments which they are seeking. There is always prejudice when a party is not allowed to put forward his real case, provided that that is properly arguable."
"It is not uncommon for a version of the facts to emerge as a possible deduction from the evidence, which has so far been neither side's pleaded case but which one side wants now to plead as an alternative basis, either of liability or of defence. In my experience, it is normal and proper practice in the county courts and in the High Court too, to allow an amendment to such effect at the conclusion of the evidence, if, on any terms which are appropriate as to costs or recall of witnesses, this can be done without injustice to the other party or parties."
Conclusion.