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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 >> Emerald Supplies Ltd & Ors v British Airways Plc & Ors [2014] EWHC 3514 (Ch) (28 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/3514.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3514 (Ch) |
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HC13C01155, HC13F02027, HC13A02809 & HC13B0315 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Emerald Supplies Ltd & Ors |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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British Airways PLC |
Defendants |
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- and - |
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(1) Air Canada (2) Societe Air France (3) KLM NV (4) Cargolux Airlines International SA (5) Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd (6) Lufthansa Cargo AG (7) Deutsche Lufthansa AG (8) Martinair Holland NV (9) Qantas Airways Ltd (10) Singapore Airlines Cargo PTE Ltd (11) Singapore Airlines Ltd (12) Swiss International Air Lines AG (13) Scandinavian Airlines System Denmark-Norway-Sweden (14) Air-France KLM (15) SAS AB (16) SAS Cargo Group A/S (17) LAN Cargo SA (18) LATAM Airlines Group SA (1) Japan Airlines Co Ltd (2) Korean Airlines Co Ltd (3) Thai Airways International Public Co Ltd (4) Asiana Airlines Inc (5) Polar Air Cargo LLC |
Third Parties Fourth Parties |
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Mr J Turner QC & Mr C Patton (instructed by Slaughter & May) for the Defendants
Mr D Jowell QC (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP, Linklaters LLP, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, Squire Patton Boggs (UK) LLP, and Crowell & Moring) for the Third Parties and Fourth Parties (Air Canada,
Deutsche Lufthansa AG, Lufthansa Cargo AG, Swiss International Air Lines AG
LAN Cargo SA, LATAM Airlines Group SA, Scandinavian Airlines, System Denmark-Norway-Sweden, SAS AB, SAS Cargo Group A/S, Societe Air France, KLM NV, Martinair Holland NV, Air France-KLM, Korean Airlines Co Ltd)
Mr P Saini QC (instructed by Wragge & Co LLP) for the Fourth Parties (Thai Airways International Public Co Ltd)
Mr A Rodger (instructed by Steptoe & Johnson) for the Fourth Parties (Japan Airlines Co Ltd)
Mr D Beard QC & Mr T Sebastian (instructed by Squire Patton Boggs (UK) LLP and Latham & Watkins LLP) for the Third Parties (Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd and Singapore Airlines Ltd/Singapore Airlines Cargo PTE Ltd)
Mr B Kennelly (instructed by Bird & Bird) for the Fourth Parties (Part Polar Air Cargo LLP)
Hearing dates: 2nd, 3rd & 6th October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Smith J:
INTRODUCTION
1) The Defendants' ("BA") application dated 31st December 2013 for the striking out and/or summary dismissal of the Claimants' claims in the torts of unlawful means conspiracy and unlawful interference; and
2) The Claimants' application dated 17th April 2014 for two contentions of law in BA's Defence to be declared incorrect, struck out or summarily dismissed.
a) A cause of action in conspiracy cannot be based on foreign unlawful means; and
b) If foreign unlawful means can be relied upon as unlawful means for the purpose of a conspiracy claim, a breach of a statute in country A would (at most) confer a cause of action in respect of loss sustained in country A and not elsewhere.
THE TEST
"That the Statement of Case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim……."
"(a) it considers that:-
i) That Claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
ii) That Defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue and (b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial"
QUESTIONS OF LAW
BACKGROUND
STATUTORY BREACHES
CLAIMANTS' CASE
"5 BA was caused to participate in the Cartel by its senior employees who combined:
(1) with each other and/or with BA, with a view to taking BA into the Cartel and thereafter keeping BA within the Cartel (the "BA Conspiracy"); and
(2) on behalf of BA, with other Cartelists in the Cartel;
in each case with the intention of causing loss to the Claimants by unlawful means, namely the wrongful implementation of the Cartel worldwide, insofar as possible.
6 For these reasons:
(1) BA participated in the BA Conspiracy and/or the Cartel, each of which was a conspiracy to use unlawful means (namely unlawful price-fixing and deceit), and these conspiracies were entered into by BA with the intention to profit from the consequential harm caused to the Claimants and others;
(2) further or alternatively, BA has used the same unlawful means to interfere with the Claimants' businesses intending to profit from the harm caused to the Claimants; and
(3) further or alternatively, BA has breached Article 101 TFEU and/or Article 53 EEA, and is accordingly liable to the Claimants for the breach of their directly effective rights or for breach of statutory duty.
7 In consequence, the Claimants claim from BA the loss and damage (together with interest) they have suffered as a result of the Cartel."
INTENT TO INJURE THE CLAIMANTS
WRONGFUL INTERFERENCE
OTHER AUTHORITIES
"The judgment of the Chancellor
10 The Chancellor gave a detailed judgment. It is sufficient, however, to say that he was satisfied that the amended Particulars of Claim are apt to raise against the UK defendants both a so-called "follow-on" claim (where liability is based on the findings in the Decision), and a so called "stand-alone" claim (where, so far as is necessary to establish liability, there is reliance on allegations and facts which are not to be found in the Decision itself): for the difference see Enron Coal Services Ltd v English Welsh and Scottish Railway Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 2 at paragraph [8] (Lloyd LJ). The Chancellor also found that, in so far as it was necessary to prove knowledge on the part of the UK defendants as to the cartel agreement or arrangements, an initial failure to plead knowledge had been remedied in correspondence between the parties' solicitors. Bearing in mind certain observations of Aikens J in Provimi Ltd v Roche Products Ltd [2003] EWHC 961 (Comm), [2003] 2 All ER (Comm) 683, and of Teare J in Cooper Tire & Rubber Company Europe Ltd v Shell Chemicals UK Ltd [2009] EWHC 2609 (Comm), the Chancellor said he had no hesitation in dismissing the applications of the UK defendants insofar as they were based on CPR 3.4(2)(a).
11 So far as concerns the applications for summary judgment against the claimants, the Chancellor examined the principal witness statements on behalf of the UK defendants and noted the absence of evidence from the claimants in response to some of them. He concluded as follows:
"51. … But there has been no disclosure. As the Court of Appeal pointed out in Cooper Tire paragraph 43 the strength of the claimants' case cannot be assessed, let alone particularised, until after disclosure of documents. The fact that the claimants do not now have evidence to refute that of Mr Weyler or Mr Herold does not enable me to conduct a mini-trial, let alone, predict the outcome of the actual trial. The fact is that these defendants too were part of the same group and were involved in the same economic activity as the undertaking found by the Commission to have infringed Article 101. In my view these defendants have not shown that the claim against them does not have a real prospect of success."
The appeal
12 The original and supplementary "skeleton" arguments of the first to fourth defendants on this appeal run in aggregate to 200 paragraphs. There was a further written skeleton argument of the ninth defendant. Substantial oral submissions were made, on behalf of the first to fourth defendants, by Mr Daniel Beard QC and Mr Romano Subiotto QC, ably supported, on behalf of Outokumpu, by Ms Kassie Smith. The oral hearing lasted one and a half days. In the final analysis, I consider that the defendants' applications and this appeal turn on a short point of interpretation of the claim form, the amended Particulars of Claim and some correspondence and a short and clear point of law.
13 Stripped to its essentials the argument of the appellants is that (1) the respondents' statements of case do not disclose an arguable cause of action against KME UK, and (2) there is a complete lack of evidence to support key allegations against KME UK such that the proceedings have no real prospect of success. I do not accept the first limb of that argument. I reject the assertion underlying the second limb that the Chancellor's refusal to grant summary judgment against the claimants was not a proper exercise of judicial discretion.
14 The appellants' pleading point rests upon their submission that an essential element of conduct which infringes Article 101 is a meeting of minds or concurrence of wills between rival parties to conduct themselves on the market in a specific way which gives rise to an unlawful agreement. They say that implementation of an unlawful anti-competitive agreement reached between others is not enough, even if the implementation is with knowledge of the agreement. The respondents' statements of case, they say, do not contain an allegation against KME UK of that essential element." (per Lord Justice Etherton)
and
"20 Mr Beard complained that the allegation of KME UK's knowledge is still insufficiently particularised to comply with CPR 16PD 8.2, but I am satisfied that it is sufficiently pleaded to constitute a valid allegation of infringement of Article 101 by KME UK and, in the particular circumstances of the present case, to withstand an application to strike out the claim or for summary judgment in favour of the appellants. "
31 So far as concerns the appellants' reliance on the lack of evidence to support the allegations against KME UK in paragraphs 42 and 43 of the amended Particulars of Claim, Mr Subiotto took us to various witness statements on behalf of the appellants in support of the applications to strike out or for summary judgment. I consider that the Chancellor was perfectly entitled to exercise his discretion by refusing summarily to dismiss the claim despite the current paucity of evidence to support the allegations against KME UK.
32 In their letter dated 28 June 2011 to the solicitors for the fifth to eighth defendants the respondents' solicitors said that "in view of the elaborate steps taken to conceal and ensure the secrecy of the illegal activities of the cartel the Claimants are not in a position to further particularise their case until after the Defendants have made disclosure." If the underlying allegation is true, that is a fair point. It is clear that KME UK was for a period of time, however short, involved in the supply of the relevant goods to the first claimant. There is exhibited to the 1st witness statement of Ronald McLean an "Agency Agreement" between KME UK and the third defendant, which is consistent with the allegation in paragraph 43.3 of the amended Particulars of Claim. There is no further direct evidence in relation to KME UK. As was stated by the Court of Appeal in Cooper Tire & Rubber Company Europe Ltd v Dow Deutschland Inc [2010] EWCA Civ 864 at paragraph [43], however, it is in the nature of anti-competitive arrangements that they are shrouded in secrecy and so it is difficult until after disclosure of documents fairly to assess the strength or otherwise of an allegation that a defendant was a party to, or aware of, the proven anti-competitive conduct of members of the same group of companies. That same generous approach was for the same reason taken by Sales J in Nokia Corporation v AU Optronics Corporation [2012] EWHC 731 in dismissing an application to strike out or to grant summary judgment against the claimant in proceedings for damages for infringement of Article 101. That approach is appropriate in the present case prior to disclosure of documents." (per Lord Justice Etherton)
"29 So far as the application to strike out is concerned, I accept Mr Beal's submission that Mr Lasok's submissions overlook two important qualifications, one of general application and the other specifically referable to competition claims. First, the court will not grant an application to strike out a claim unless it is certain that the claim is bound to fail: see Hughes v Colin Richards & Co [2004] EWCA Civ 266, and where any defect in a statement of case is capable of being cured by amendment, the court should refrain from striking out unless it has afforded an opportunity to the party to amend its statement of case. That is a point which becomes of relevance when considering the so-called follow on claim in paragraphs 27 and 28 of the Particulars of Claim.
30 Second, that where the claim involves damages arising out of infringements of competition law by cartels which by their nature are clandestine and the court is considering an application by an alleged participant in the cartel to strike out a claim prior to disclosure and evidence, the court will tend to allow a more generous ambit for pleadings, where what is being alleged is necessarily a matter which is largely within the exclusive knowledge of defendants, than it might in other cases. I agree that a more generous approach to pleadings is appropriate and has been recognised in a number of such cases. The principles in play are well described by Sales J in Nokia Corporation v AU Optronics Corporation [2012] EWHC 731 (Ch) at [62-67]:
"62. In a case involving an allegation that a secret cartel has operated in breach of Article 101 there is an inevitable tension in domestic procedural law between the impulse to ensure that claims are fully and clearly pleaded so that a defendant can know with some exactitude what case he has to meet (and also so that disclosure obligations can be fully understood, expert witnesses given clear instructions and so on), on the one hand, and on the other the impulse to ensure that justice is done and a claimant is not prevented by overly strict and demanding rules of pleading from introducing a claim which may prove to be properly made out at trial, but which will be shut out by the law of limitation if the claimant is to be forced to wait until he has full particulars before launching a claim. In working out how that tension is to be resolved, it is important to bear in mind the general and long established approach referred to above and the existence of other protections for defendants within the procedural regime, including the following. [He then identifies procedural protections such as requests for further information and summary judgment applications where appropriate, together with the professional obligations of counsel in relation to pleadings]
67. In my judgment, the availability of such procedural protections for a defendant to ensure that a claim is fully and properly explained in good time before trial (as against the possible loss to a claimant of an entire, potentially meritorious claim), indicates that in resolving the tension referred to above and determining whether a cause of action has been sufficiently pleaded in a statement of case (particularly in the claim form and/or the particulars of claim when an action is commenced), the balance is to be struck by allowing a measure of generosity in favour of a claimant. Such an approach is appropriate and in the overall interests of justice and the overriding objective set out in CPR Part 1.1. It is an approach supported by the authorities cited above."
31 This generous approach to the pleadings in cartel claims has been endorsed by the Court of Appeal, not only in Cooper Tire & Rubber Company Europe Ltd v Dow Deutschland [2010] EWCA Civ 864 but most recently by Etherton LJ in KME Yorkshire Ltd v Toshiba Carrier UK Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 1190 at [32]:
"As was stated by the Court of Appeal in Cooper Tire & Rubber Company Europe Ltd v Dow Deutschland Inc [2010] EWCA Civ 864 at paragraph [43], however, it is in the nature of anti-competitive arrangements that they are shrouded in secrecy and so it is difficult until after disclosure of documents fairly to assess the strength or otherwise of an allegation that a defendant was a party to, or aware of, the proven anti-competitive conduct of members of the same group of companies. That same generous approach was for the same reason taken by Sales J in Nokia Corporation v AU Optronics Corporation [2012] EWHC 731 in dismissing an application to strike out or to grant summary judgment against the claimant in proceedings for damages for infringement of Article 101. That approach is appropriate in the present case prior to disclosure of documents."
32 In the case of applications for summary judgment, it is well established that the court should not engage in a mini-trial where there is any conflict of evidence. The dangers of too wide a use of the summary judgment procedure were emphasised by Mummery LJ at [4-18] of his judgment in Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical [2006] EWCA Civ 661. [5] and [18] of that judgment seem to me particularly apposite to the present case:
"5. Although the test [whether the claim has a real prospect of success] can be stated simply, its application in practice can be difficult. In my experience there can be more difficulties in applying the "no real prospect of success" test on an application for summary judgment (or on an application for permission to appeal, where a similar test is applicable) than in trying the case in its entirety (or, in the case of an appeal, hearing the substantive appeal). The decision-maker at trial will usually have a better grasp of the case as a whole, because of the added benefits of hearing the evidence tested, of receiving more developed submissions and of having more time in which to digest and reflect on the materials.
…
18. In my judgment, the court should also hesitate about making a final decision without a trial where, even though there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case."
33 The same point was made by Lewison J (as he then was) in Federal Republic of Nigeria v Santolina Investment Corporation [2007] EWHC 437 (Ch), at [4(vi)] citing the Doncaster Pharmaceticals case:
"Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case.""
ANALYSIS OF BA'S CONTENTIONS
"146 It was the intention of the participants in the BA Conspiracy and the Cartel to use such unlawful means to injure the Claimants and each of them, by causing each to pay for Air Cargo Services prices higher than those payable but for the existence of the Cartel ("Overcharges"), thereby achieving the Price-Fixing Goal.
147 In support of the foregoing, the Claimants will rely on the following facts and matters, in particular:
(1) The increased profits for BA and the other Cartelists intended by the Price-Fixing Goal could only be realised by or derived from Overcharges levied upon the purchasers of Air Cargo Services.
(2) Furthermore, as set out at paragraphs 61 and 62(4) above, the Fuel Surcharges (and it is to be inferred the Security Surcharge) were designed in such a way that they would be passed on in full by any intermediaries (such as Freight Forwarders) to the end consumer of Air Cargo Services, as:
(a) The Cartelists principally chose to achieve their Price Fixing Goals through Surcharges rather than by increasing Base Rates, as they could not be negotiated or discounted by Freight Forwarders.
(b) By refusing to pay a commission on such Surcharges, the Cartelists intended to ensure there could be no competition in relation or discounting of the Surcharge component.
(c) To this same end of preventing discounting or competition, the methodologies employed by the Cartelists specified that the Fuel Surcharges should be separately identified on AWBs and would be ineligible for commission charges by Freight Forwarders.
The unlawful means were necessarily targeted at a class of person, namely each and every prospective end purchaser, alternatively each and every purchaser of Air Cargo Services. The Claimants were on either view such purchasers.
(v) No honest belief in the lawfulness of the conduct
148 Further, and so far as it is relevant, no participants in the Cartel or in the BA Conspiracy believed that the Cartel (or the entry of BA into the Cartel, in the case of the BA Conspiracy) was lawful. The Claimants make this plea on the basis that BA was informed:
(1) in January 1997, that it would expose itself to anti-trust risks if it implemented Fuel Surcharges based on the IATA Methodology before government approval was granted, as set out in paragraph 59 above;
(2) in March 1997, that the European Air Shippers' Council had complained to the Commission that IATA and its members had unlawfully consulted, agreed and imposed non-negotiable Fuel Surcharges on Shippers, as set out at paragraph 60 above;
(3) in March 2000, that the USDOT found Resolution 116ss to be "fundamentally flawed and unfair to Shippers" and breached US anti-trust law, as set out in paragraph 67 above;
(4) in April 2000, by IATA that if an Air Carrier implemented a Fuel Surcharge based on the IATA Methodology and Index it could expose itself to serious anti-trust liability, as set out in paragraph 70 above.
(c) Interference with the Claimants' businesses by unlawful means
149 Further and alternatively, by reason of the matters set out at paragraphs 142 to 148, BA intended to interfere with the Claimants' businesses through unlawful means and thereby to cause them loss.
150 In particular:
(1) BA and the Cartelists' conduct was in substantial part directed at the Shippers through their intermediaries, namely the Freight Forwarders (the "Third Parties");
(2) such conduct was unlawful for the reasons set out at paragraphs 142 to 145 above;
(3) BA intended, through its participation in and implementation of the BA Conspiracy and the Cartel, to use the Third Parties as a means of interfering with the Claimants' Businesses, for the reasons set out at paragraph 146 to 147 above."
BA'S RESPONSE
"Causing loss by unlawful means: elements of the tort
45. The most important question concerning this tort is what should count as unlawful means. It will be recalled that in Allen v Flood [1898] AC 1, 96, Lord Watson described
the tort thus—
"when the act induced is within the right of the immediate actor, and is therefore not wrongful in so far as he is concerned, it may yet be to the detriment of a third party; and in that case…the inducer may be held liable if he can be shewn to have procured his object by the use of illegal means directed against that third party."
46. The rationale of the tort was described by Lord Lindley in Quinn v Leathem [1901] AC 495, 534-535:
"a person's liberty or right to deal with others is nugatory, unless they are at liberty to deal with him if they choose to do so. Any interference with their liberty to deal with him affects him. If such interference is justifiable in point of law, he has no redress. Again, if such interference is wrongful, the only person who can sue in respect of it is, as a rule, the person immediately affected by it; another who suffers by it has usually no redress; the damage to him is too remote, and it would be obviously practically impossible and highly inconvenient to give legal redress to all who suffer from such wrongs. But if the interference is wrongful and is intended to damage a third person, and he is damaged in fact - in other words, if he is wrongfully and intentionally struck at through others, and is thereby damnified - the whole aspect of the case is changed: the wrong done to others reaches him, his rights are infringed although indirectly, and damage to him is not remote or unforeseen, but is the direct consequence of what has been done."
47. The essence of the tort therefore appears to be (a) a wrongful interference with the actions of a third party in which the claimant has an economic interest and (b) an intention thereby to cause loss to the claimant. The old cases of interference with potential customers by threats of unlawful acts clearly fell within this description. So, for the reasons I have given, did GWK Ltd v Dunlop Rubber Co Ltd (1926) 42 TLR 376. Recent cases in which the tort has been discussed have also concerned wrongful threats or actions against employers with the intention of causing loss to an employee (as in Rookes v Barnard [1964] AC 1129) or another employer (as in J T Stratford & Son Ltd v Lindley [1965] AC 269). In the former case, the defendants conspired to threaten the employer that unless the employee was dismissed, there would be an unlawful strike. In the latter, the union committed the Lumley v Gye tort of inducing breaches of the contracts of the employees of barge hirers to prevent them from hiring the plaintiff's barges.
48. In Stratford, at pp 329-330, Viscount Radcliffe expressed some disquiet about using the question of whether the actual or threatened strike was or would have been in breach of contract as the touchstone of whether the union or its officers were liable for causing loss by secondary action. These remarks were made in the context of industrial relations, where the use of secondary action has since been comprehensively regulated by statute. In principle, the cases establish that intentionally causing someone loss by interfering with the liberty of action of a third party in breach of a contract with him is unlawful.
49. In my opinion, and subject to one qualification, acts against a third party count as unlawful means only if they are actionable by that third party. The qualification is that they will also be unlawful means if the only reason why they are not actionable is because the third party has suffered no loss. In the case of intimidation, for example, the threat will usually give rise to no cause of action by the third party because he will have suffered no loss. If he submits to the threat, then, as the defendant intended, the claimant will have suffered loss instead. It is nevertheless unlawful means. But the threat must be to do something which would have been actionable if the third party had suffered loss. Likewise, in National Phonograph Co Ltd v Edison-Bell Consolidated Phonograph Co Ltd [1908] 1 Ch 335 the defendant intentionally caused loss to the plaintiff by fraudulently inducing a third party to act to the plaintiff's detriment. The fraud was unlawful means because it would have been actionable if the third party had suffered any loss, even though in the event it was the plaintiff who suffered. In this respect, procuring the actions of a third party by fraud (dolus) is obviously very similar to procuring them by intimidation (metus).
50. Lonrho plc v Fayed [1990] 2 QB 479 was arguably within the same principle as the National Phonograph Co case. The plaintiff said that the defendant had intentionally caused it loss by making fraudulent statements to the directors of the company which owned Harrods, and to the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, which induced the directors to accept his bid for Harrods and the Secretary of State not to refer the bid to the Monopolies Commission. The defendant was thereby able to gain control of Harrods to the detriment of the plaintiff, who wanted to buy it instead. In the Court of Appeal, Dillon LJ (at p 489) referred to the National Phonograph case as authority for rejecting an argument that the means used to cause loss to the plaintiff could not be unlawful because neither the directors nor the Secretary of State had suffered any loss. That seems to me correct. The allegations were of fraudulent representations made to third parties, which would have been actionable by them if they had suffered loss, but which were intended to induce the third parties to act in a way which caused loss to the plaintiff. The Court of Appeal therefore refused to strike out the claim as unarguable and their decision was upheld by the House of Lords: see [1992] 1 AC 448.
51. Unlawful means therefore consists of acts intended to cause loss to the claimant by interfering with the freedom of a third party in a way which is unlawful as against that third party and which is intended to cause loss to the claimant. It does not in my opinion include acts which may be unlawful against a third party but which do not affect his freedom to deal with the claimant."
"62. Finally, there is the question of intention. In the Lumley v Gye tort, there must be an intention to procure a breach of contract. In the unlawful means tort, there must be an intention to cause loss. The ends which must have been intended are different. South Wales Miners' Federation v Glamorgan Coal Co Ltd [1905] AC 239 shows that one may intend to procure a breach of contract without intending to cause loss. Likewise, one may intend to cause loss without intending to procure a breach of contract. But the concept of intention is in both cases the same. In both cases it is necessary to distinguish between ends, means and consequences. One intends to cause loss even though it is the means by which one achieved the end of enriching oneself. On the other hand, one is not liable for loss which is neither a desired end nor a means of attaining it but merely a foreseeable consequence of one's actions.
63. The master of the Othello in Tarleton v M'Gawley may have had nothing against the other trader. If he had gone off to make his fortune in other waters, he would have wished him well. He simply wanted a monopoly of the local trade for himself. But he nevertheless intended to cause him loss. This, I think, is all that Woolf LJ was intending to say in a passage in Lonrho plc v Fayed [1990] 2 QB 479, 494 which has proved controversial:
"Albeit that he may have no desire to bring about that consequence in order to achieve what he regards as his ultimate ends, from the point of view of the plaintiff, whatever the motive of the defendant, the damage which he suffers will be the same."
64. On the other hand, I think that Henry J was right in Barretts & Baird (Wholesale) Ltd v Institution of Professional Civil Servants [1987] IRLR 3 when he decided a strike by civil servants in the Ministry of Agriculture in support of a pay claim was not intended to cause damage to an abattoir which was unable to obtain the certificates necessary for exporting meat and claiming subsidies. The damage to the abattoir was neither the purpose of the strike nor the means of achieving that purpose, which was to put pressure on the government."
"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:"
THE GLOSS
"(2) An essential ingredient of the tort of unlawful means conspiracy is an intent to injure.
Paragraph 24(b) and (c) of the particulars of claim constitute claims that IMI group were parties to an unlawful means conspiracy. Like the judge, I set out the description of the tort from Clerk & Lindsell on Torts at paragraph.24-95:
"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."
33 So, to establish liability for this tort, Newson group must show that, when IMI group agreed to act in the cartel, it did so with a relevant intent to injure. There is of course no issue about unlawful means in view of the infringement findings. There is considerable debate over the meaning of intent to injure in general, but I can pass over this as the dispute in this case falls within a narrow compass.
34 The parties disagree about what intent to injure relevantly involves. IMI group submit that there must be an agreement to cause harm by unlawful means with intent to injure Newson group. Newson group rely on the "obverse side of the coin" argument. They contend that intent to injure is satisfied by the findings in the Decision that IMI group intended to cause higher prices and obtain higher margins than would otherwise occur through free competition. Newson group argue that it matters not if IMI group were simply indifferent whether the victims were the direct or the indirect purchasers of tubes. On their submission it is sufficient that IMI group intended to make a profit at the expense of a class of persons to whom the wrongful acts were targeted.
35 In some circumstances the court will infer an intent to injure from acts which a conspirator does to promote his own objectives. In accepting the "obverse side of the coin argument", the judge relied on a passage from the speech of Lord Nicholls in OBG Ltd v Allan [2008] AC 1 at 57. In his speech Lord Nicholls held:
"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.'"
36 I shall consider the application of this passage to the present case under my third reason."
"3) The Commission's findings do not include a finding that IMI group had the requisite intent to injure
37 The Commission made no finding that IMI group had any intent to injure. Following Enron 1, it would be impermissible for the CAT to make any such finding. Mr Harris submits that intent to injure is not a relevant question for the Commission because a cartel under EU law does not require any subjective intent. This clearly makes it unlikely that the Commission will make the findings necessary to enable a conspiracy claim to be brought under section 47A, but does not rule out that as a possibility.
38 Essentially what the judge did was to infer intent to injure flowing from the fact that the cartelists intended to benefit their own businesses. He held
"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."
39 However, in my judgment, the court cannot draw that inference since it does not necessarily follow. IMI group may have absolutely no intent as regards Newson group. They may have expected Newson group to pass the price increase on. It may well be that all purchasers of copper tubes would have been in the same position, so that they were able to pass the extra prices on.
40 In my judgment, the passage which Lord Nicholls cites from Lord Sumner in Sorrell v Smith (see paragraph 35 above), and on which the judge must have relied, does not on analysis support the judge's approach. It uses the word "ensuing" in the sense of a transitive verb (meaning "following"), which is now obsolete. However the sense is clear. Lord Sumner is taking the situation where loss to the plaintiff must follow from the object of the conspiracy. He was taking the case where the proved facts exclude every other inference. As Lord Nicholls puts it, the gain and the loss are inseparably linked. But it does not follow in this case that Newson group would inevitably suffer loss. That would not be so if they were able to pass on the price increases to their customers. They might even have made a profit if they were able to raise their prices in advance of becoming liable to pay price increases to IMI group.
41 Mr de la Mare seeks to meet this difficulty by submitting that it matters not if IMI group were simply indifferent whether the victims were the direct or the indirect purchasers of pipes and that it is sufficient that IMI group intended to make a profit at the expense of a class of persons to whom the wrongful acts were targeted. I would reject this argument. It deprives the requirement of intent to injure of any substantial content. It is tantamount to saying that it is sufficient that the conspirators must have intended to injure anyone who might suffer loss from their agreement. If I might say so, the submission is reminiscent of the circularity of the words in The Gondoliers that "when everyone is somebody, then no-one's anybody".
42 As a further argument, Mr De la Mare submits that it was enough that Newson group paid the higher prices before they passed them on. But that is speculation: Newson group may have raised its prices enough to compensate for this. It does not follow from the fact that Newson group expended cash to pay IMI group's inflated prices that IMI group thereby intended them to make a loss.
43 IMI group submit that the Commission made no finding that the cartel involved an agreement or combination for conspiracy purposes as opposed to an arrangement or concerted practice for competition law purposes. I accept that a cartel need not involve an agreement. The parties, for example, may simply participate in a meeting at which anti-competitive arrangements are agreed without distancing themselves from them. In this case, however, the parties were found to have gone further than this and to have made arrangements, for example as to the allocation of market shares (see the Decision at paragraph 452 and recitals 335 to 340). The crucial point was that, even here, no intent to injure was found.
44 Accordingly, in disagreement with the judge, I would hold that the Commission's findings do not satisfy the requirement for Newson group's conspiracy claim of an intent to injure."
"it deprives the requirement of intent to injure of any substantial content. It is tantamount to saying it is sufficient that the conspirators must have intended to injure anyone who might suffer loss from their agreement. If I might say so, the submission is reminiscent of the circularity of words in the Gondoliers that "when everyone is somebody, then nobody is anybody"".
"336 It is apparent, I think, from the OBG and WH Newson cases that a relevant intention to injure will exist if a person desires to cause loss to a particular person or desires a result that he knows will cause that person loss. If the loss is, to a defendant's knowledge, inseparably linked to his own gain, a desire to achieve the gain will suffice. On the other hand, it is not enough for a claimant to show that loss to him was reasonably foreseeable or even that the defendant realised that there was a chance that such loss would be caused: "a defendant's foresight that his unlawful conduct may or will probably damage the claimant cannot be equated with intention for this purpose". Nor will it do merely to demonstrate that a defendant must have appreciated that someone (whether or not the claimant or members of a specific class including the claimant) would suffer loss. The law demands that a claimant must be able to say more than that "the conspirators must have intended to injure anyone who might suffer loss from their agreement"."
I do not necessarily accept, for the reasons I have already set out above, that that is the correct conclusion to draw from the Newson decision when compared with OBG. I cannot see why if a Defendant intended to harm people in a particular class those who suffer loss should lose a claim because in fact the Defendant was unsuccessful in his intention to injure other members of the same class. However, for the reasons I have set out above, I am not deciding that issue either.
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
THE CLAIMANTS' APPLICATION
"151 The Conspiracy Claim is presently pleaded simply as an English conspiracy. No element of Danish law is pleaded. As an English conspiracy it must fail because of the decision of the Court of Appeal in Marrinan v. Vibart.
152 The suggested amendment does not cure the deficiency. It was proposed only to plead that there was no witness immunity rule in Danish law. That plea is simply immaterial. As it seems to me, a viable conspiracy claim could only be pleaded on the basis that Danish law applied to all elements. That is to say, it would have to plead whatever is the Danish law of conspiracy, assuming that there is such a civil wrong recognised in Danish law, and then the facts relied upon as making out each necessary element. If that were done, technically there would be a viable claim, based on Danish law. Such claim would be vulnerable to the objection that it was a collateral attack on the Danish Judgment, but at least, apart from that, it would disclose a cause of action.
153 What Miss Brown seems to have been trying to do is to produce a hybrid Anglo-Danish cause of action, in which English law supplied the conspiracy and Danish law supplied the crime. The simple answer to that hybrid tort is that it is not a crime in England to commit an offence in Denmark."
CONCLUSION