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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 >> Secretary of State for Business, Innovation & Skills v PLT Anti-Marketing Ltd [2013] EWHC 3626 (Ch) (28 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/3626.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3626 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, INNOVATION & SKILLS | Petitioner/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
PLT ANTI-MARKETING LIMITED | Respondent/Applicant |
____________________
Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 104, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
(Instructed by Howes Percival Solicitors)
Counsel for the Respondent/Applicant: MR SIMON POPPLEWELL and
MR ADAM DEACOCK
(Instructed by Leathes Prior Solicitors)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
(a) That the company would not undertake any sales, save for:
(i) Variations to contracts it presently holds with existing customers; and
(ii) Completing sales procured as a result of a potential customer contacting the company; and
(m) That the company would in advance of any sale, whether such sale was made pursuant to undertaking (a)(i) or (a)(ii), require customers to be specifically advised that the company would register the customers' details with the Telephone Preference Service and the Mail Preference Service and that these services were free services otherwise available to them individually.
On the basis of those undertakings, and for the reasons I gave in my extemporary judgment, I adjourned the application for the appointment of a provisional liquidator to the hearing of the petition, and gave the petitioner permission to apply to restore the application prior to the hearing of the petition on three days' notice to the company. No such application to restore the provisional liquidator application has been made by The Secretary of State.
'Costs can sometimes be saved by identifying decisive issues, or potentially decisive issues, and ordering that they are tried first. The decision of one issue, although not itself decisive of the whole case, may enable the parties to settle the remainder of the dispute. In such cases a preliminary issues may be appropriate'.
(1) A commercial practice;
(2) That commercial practice must omit, or hide, material information, or otherwise provide such information in a manner which is unclear, unintelligible, ambiguous or untimely; and
(3) That, in consequence, this hiding of information, or omission to provide it, must cause, or be likely to cause, an average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise.
Mr Popplewell submits that there is no dispute that the company is engaging in a commercial practice, and that when customers sign up with the company they are taking a transactional decision. There is also no dispute that the company is not proposing to disclose to consumers that there is a similar free service available elsewhere, which can constitute an omission. The two areas of contention between the parties are:
(1) Is the fact that a consumer can sign up for a similar free service elsewhere 'material information' for the purposes of Regulation 6; and
(2) If so, has the failure to provide this material information caused, or is it likely to cause, a consumer to take a transactional decision that they would not have taken otherwise.
'The requirement to assume that the consumer is reasonably well informed, observant and circumspect reflects the common sense proposition that the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive exists to protect from being misled consumers who take reasonable care of themselves, rather than the ignorant, the careless or the over-hasty consumer.'
He drew my attention specifically to recital 18 to the Directive, which makes the point that:
'The average consumer test is not a statistical one. National courts and authorities will have to exercise their own faculty of judgment having regard to the case law of the Court of Justice to determine the typical reaction of the average consumer in a given case.'
'Generally speaking, the EU jurisprudence encourages the court to conduct that exercise so far as possible without recourse to statistical or other expert evidence about typical consumer behaviour, or even the evidence of particular consumers.'
Mr Justice Briggs, at paragraph 65, considered it unnecessary to require statistical or expert evidence, or the evidence of particular consumers, to be placed before the court. Mr Popplewell also emphasised the fact that Mr Justice Briggs observed at paragraph 70 that:
'Although it may be said that the general requirement to provide a "high" level of consumer protection may properly incline the court towards a lower rather than higher hurdle in the causation test, it needs to be borne in mind that consumer protection is not to become so paternalistic in its extent as to constitute a barrier to the free movement of goods.'
I also bear in mind that at paragraph 72 Mr Justice Briggs observed that:
'The combined effect of all relevant misleading acts and omissions must first be ascertained, and then subjected to the test whether, taken in the aggregate, it would probably cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision which he would not otherwise have taken. Otherwise a communication which contained misleading acts and omissions, none of which would separately satisfy the causation test, may escape from classification as an infringement, even though (as may have been intended by the trader) their combined effect would satisfy the causation test.'
'A literal reading of Regulation 6(3)(a) and its equivalent in Article 7.1 of the Directive might suggest that something approaching an utmost good faith obligation is imposed in relation not merely to the consumer's decision whether to contract, but also to every transactional decision.'
Mr Justice Briggs said in terms that he regarded that analysis as 'imposing an excessively high hurdle.' He said that it cannot have been the intention of the framers of the Directive to require an overly high level of disclosure because to do so would indeed 'cause barriers to the free movement of goods and services beyond that necessary to achieve a high degree of consumer protection.' In Mr Justice Briggs's judgment:
'The key to understanding this paragraph is the concept of "need". The question is not whether the omitted information would assist, or be relevant, but whether its provision is necessary to enable the average consumer to take an informed transactional decision.'
'While it is not unlawful to charge money for a reviewing and forwarding service, traders must be clear about the product or service they are offering and not trick consumers into parting with money for services they do not want.'
Mr Popplewell had relied upon that printout in support of the submission that it is not unlawful to charge money for a reviewing and forwarding service. Mr Popplewell had submitted that such a service is analogous to that being provided by the company in the instant case. Mr Mohyuddin, however, emphasises that the thrust of the point being made by the OFT is that consumers should not be tricked into parting with money for services they do not want. He says that the same should apply to services that they do not need because those services are available for free elsewhere.