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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Scottish Power Energy Retail Ltd v. Taskforce Contracts Ltd [2008] ScotCS CSOH_110 (05 August 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_110.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_110, [2008] CSOH 110, [2009] Eu LR 62, 2009 SCLR 137, 2008 GWD 30-454

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 110

 

CA22/08

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MENZIES

 

in the cause

 

SCOTTISH POWER ENERGY RETAIL LIMITED

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

TASKFORCE CONTRACTS LIMITED

 

Defenders:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

 

Pursuers; McIlvride; Anderson Fyfe, LLP

Defenders: Weir; McClure Naismith

5 August 2008

 

Introduction
[1] The pursuers carry on business as suppliers of mains natural gas and electricity. In 1999 they entered into an agreement with the defenders that, with effect from 22 March 1999, the defenders would act as agents for the pursuers in seeking out and obtaining domestic customers for the gas and electricity supplied by the pursuers. This relationship of principal and agent continued, with certain variations to the contract. In about February 2005, the pursuers appointed the defenders to represent them in attempting to secure customers for mains natural gas and electricity branded as "Sainsbury's Energy". In March and April 2006, the parties agreed to vary further the terms of the contract. The whole terms of the contract between the parties, as varied, were contained in a letter from the pursuers to the defenders dated 22 March 2006 with schedule annexed ("the letter of appointment") and the defenders' written acceptance thereof, which was signed on 21 and 26 April 2006.

[2] From 1999 the defenders provided services under the contract by carrying out doorstep canvassing of potential domestic customers and marketing the energy sold by the pursuers at exhibitions arranged by them. From about February 2005, after the defenders were appointed to represent the pursuers in attempting to secure customers for "Sainsbury's Energy", the defenders also visited stores operated by Sainsbury's supermarkets. In terms of an agreement entered into between Sainsbury's and the pursuers ("the Sainsbury's Energy Agreement"), the pursuers, or those acting on their behalf, were entitled to carry out canvassing and promotional activities in certain Sainsbury's supermarkets in order to seek domestic customers for mains natural gas and electricity branded "Sainsbury's Energy". On about 26 March 2006, Sainsbury's gave notice to the pursuers that the Sainsbury's Energy Agreement would terminate on 31 August 2006. On about 29 March 2006 the pursuers advised the defenders of the termination and gave notice to the defenders that their requirement to perform exhibition activities in relation to Sainsbury's Energy would terminate on 31 August 2006. Thereafter the pursuers advised the defenders that with effect from 1 September 2006 the defenders' sales agents were required to concentrate their activities on doorstep canvassing of potential domestic customers. The defenders indicated that they did not intend to continue fulfilling their obligations under the contract after 31 August 2006 unless the pursuers entered into an arrangement with another supermarket chain on similar terms to the Sainsbury's Energy Agreement. The defenders averred in their written pleadings that Sainsbury's Energy formed around 92% of the defenders' business. The pursuers repeatedly directed the defenders to put in hand arrangements for the proper fulfilment of their obligations under the contract from 1 September. On 30 August 2006, the defenders wrote to the pursuers confirming that their contract would be coming to an end on 31 August. On 4 September 2006 the pursuers wrote to the defenders requiring them to remedy their breach of contract by recommencing the performance of their duties within 14 days. The defenders failed to do so, and by letter dated 26 September, the pursuers wrote to the defenders rescinding the contract.

[3] In this action, the pursuers seek declarator that (i) the defenders are in material breach of the contract and (ii) the pursuers have validly rescinded the contract, and for damages for breach of contract. The defenders have counterclaimed seeking declarator inter alia that Regulation 17 of the Commercial Agents (Council Directive) Regulations 1993 ("the Regulations") et separatim Clause 3.8.1 of the Agency Contract apply where a principal terminates any element of a commercial agency contract, such as the Agency Contract. They also seek declarator that the pursuers' purported rescission on 26 September 2006, even if effective, had no extinguishing effect upon any entitlement on the part of the defenders to an indemnity under Regulation 17 of the Regulations et separatim Clause 3.8.1 of the Agency Contract which had, on 31 August 2006, accrued to the defenders in respect of the in-store element of the Agency Contract.

[4] The dispute between the parties therefore relates to the proper construction of the terms of the contract, and of Regulation 17 of the Regulations. The matter came before me for debate on the pursuers' fourth plea-in-law in the principal action and their first plea-in-law in answer to the counterclaim, and on the defenders' first pleas-in-law in both the principal action and the counterclaim.

 

The Relevant Contractual Terms

[5] The letter of appointment (No. 6/1 of process) dated 22 March 2006 provided inter alia as follows:

"2.1 Your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter shall commence on the Commencement Date" (which was defined as 22 March 1999) "and, unless that appointment is terminated by us in accordance with Clause 7, shall continue in force until terminated by either party giving to the other not less than six months' prior written notice to that effect (as they shall be entitled to do). ...

2.2 Termination of your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter will be without prejudice to the rights of the parties accrued at the date of such termination.

3.1 During the continuance of your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter you shall:

3.1.1(a) use all reasonable endeavours to obtain prospective domestic customers for mains natural gas and/or electricity ...

        (b) devote such time as is necessary or appropriate in order to properly fulfil your obligations as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter, and

        (c) achieve the Minimum Performance Targets and the Sainsbury's Minimum Performance Targets ...

3.1.10 act in accordance with, fulfil and comply with all the provisions of the SLS applicable to you and observe all other directions and instructions (including any instruction to commence or cease (i) making unsolicited visits to domestic customers or potential domestic customers or (ii) performing exhibition activities) given to you by us in relation to the marketing, promotion and sale of mains natural gas and/or electricity ...

3.8 Upon termination of your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter for any reason, if and to the extent that the Commercial Agents Regulations apply to that appointment, you shall:

3.8.1 subject to Clauses 3.9 and 3.10, have the right to be indemnified by us as provided in Regulation 17 of the Commercial Agents Regulations in respect of such termination, provided that none of the grounds for excluding payment of indemnity or compensation under Regulation 17 of the Commercial Agents Regulations contained in Regulation 18 of the Commercial Agents Regulations apply; and

3.8.2 have no right to any compensation as provided in Regulation 17 of the Commercial Agents Regulations in respect of such termination ...

7.1 Notwithstanding the provisions of Clause 2 we shall be entitled to terminate your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter immediately at any time by giving notice in writing to you to that effect upon the occurrence of any of the following events:

7.1.1 without prejudice to the provisions of Clauses 7.1.2, 7.1.3 and 7.3.2, if you commit any material breach of any of the terms of this letter (including any breach of the whole or part of the provisions of Clauses 3.1.1 to 3.1.3 (inclusive), 3.1.5 to 3.1.14 (inclusive), 3.3, 3.4 and/or 3.6) ...

7.1.3 without prejudice to the provisions of Clauses 7.1.1, 7.1.2 and 7.3.2, if you commit any breach of any of the terms of this letter, provided that where in our view such breach is capable of being remedied the breach is not remedied to our satisfaction within 14 days after service of written notice by us on you requiring the same to be remedied ...

7.3 Notwithstanding the provisions of Clause 2 we shall be entitled to terminate your appointment in respect of the performance of exhibition activities in Sainsbury's Stores in relation to "Sainsbury's Energy" branded mains natural gas and electricity immediately at any time by giving notice in writing to you to that effect if:

7.3.1 our agreement with Sainsbury's relative to our marketing, promotion and sale of "Sainsbury's Energy" branded mains natural gas and/or electricity in Sainsbury's Stores terminates or if notice of termination thereof is given; and/or

7.3.2 without prejudice to the provisions of Clauses 7.1.1 and 7.1.3, in our view you do not at any time achieve any or all of the Sainsbury's Minimum Performance Targets."

 

The Commercial Agents (Council Directive) Regulations 1993

[6] The 1993 Regulations reflect the Council Directive EU: Directive 86/653/EEC of 18 December 1986 on the co-ordination of the laws of the Member States relating to self-employed commercial agents. The relevant regulations (as amended) for present purposes are as follows:

"4.― Duties of a principal to his commercial agent

(1) In his relations with his commercial agent a principal must act dutifully and in good faith.

(2) In particular, a principal must―

(a) provide his commercial agent with the necessary documentation relating to the goods concerned;

(b) obtain for his commercial agent the information necessary for the performance of the agency contract, and in particular notify his commercial agent within a reasonable period once he anticipates that the volume of commercial transactions will be significantly lower than that which the commercial agent could normally have expected.

(3) A principal shall, in addition, inform his commercial agent within a reasonable period of his acceptance or refusal of, and of any non-execution by him of, a commercial transaction which the commercial agent has procured for him.

17.― Entitlement of commercial agent to indemnity or compensation on termination of agency contract

(1) This regulation has effect for the purpose of ensuring that the commercial agent is, after termination of the agency contract, indemnified in accordance with paragraphs (3) to (5) below or compensated for damage in accordance with paragraphs (6) and (7) below.

(2) Except where the agency contract otherwise provides, the commercial agent shall be entitled to be compensated rather than indemnified.

(3) Subject to paragraph (9) and to regulation 18 below, the commercial agent shall be entitled to an indemnity if and to the extent that―

(a) he has brought the principal new customers or has significantly increased the volume of business with existing customers and the principal continues to derive substantial benefits from the business with such customers; and

(b) the payment of this indemnity is equitable having regard to all the circumstances and, in particular, the commission lost by the commercial agent on the business transacted with such customers.

(4) The amount of the indemnity shall not exceed a figure equivalent to an indemnity for one year calculated from the commercial agent's average annual remuneration over the preceding five years and if the contract goes back less than five years the indemnity shall be calculated on the average for the period in question.

(5) The grant of an indemnity as mentioned above shall not prevent the commercial agent from seeking damages.

(6) Subject to paragraph (9) and to regulation 18 below, the commercial agent shall be entitled to compensation of the damage he suffers as a result of the termination of his relations with his principal.

(7) For the purpose of these Regulations such damage shall be deemed to occur particularly when the termination takes place in either or both of the following circumstances, namely circumstances which―

(a) deprive the commercial agent of the commission which proper performance of the agency contract would have procured for him whilst providing his principal with substantial benefits linked to the activities of the commercial agent; or

(b) have not enabled the commercial agent to amortize the costs and expenses that he had incurred in the performance of the agency contract on the advice of his principal.

(8) Entitlement to the indemnity or compensation for damage as provided for under paragraphs (2) to (7) above shall also arise where the agency contract is terminated as a result of the death of the commercial agent.

(9) The commercial agent shall lose his entitlement to the indemnity or compensation for damage in the instances provided for in paragraphs (2) to (8) above if within one year following termination of his agency contract he has not notified his principal that he intends pursuing his entitlement.

18. Ground for excluding payment of indemnity or compensation under regulation 17

The indemnity or compensation referred to in regulation 17 above shall not be payable to the commercial agent where―

(a) the principal has terminated the agency contract because of default attributable to the commercial agent which would justify immediate termination of the agency contract pursuant to regulation 16 above; or

(b) the commercial agent has himself terminated the agency contract, unless such termination is justified―

(i) by circumstances attributable to the principal, or

(ii) on grounds of the age, infirmity or illness of the commercial agent in consequence of which he cannot reasonably be required to continue his activities; or

(c) the commercial agent, with the agreement of his principal, assigns his rights and duties under the agency contract to another person."

 

Submissions for the Pursuers
[7]
Counsel for the pursuers submitted that the fact of the pursuers having instructed the defenders to cease exhibition activities at Sainsbury's stores was not an event capable of giving rise by itself to an entitlement on the part of the defenders to an indemnity in terms of Regulation 17 or Clause 3.8.1 of the parties' contract. In giving notice to the defenders on about 29 March 2006 that their requirement to perform exhibition activities in relation to "Sainsbury's Energy" would terminate on 31 August 2006 the pursuers were acting within the framework of Clause 3.1.10 of the contract. The defenders were not contending that their agency was terminated on 31 August 2006, nor did they contend that the pursuers' instruction to cease Sainsbury's activities amounted to a repudiation which was accepted by the defenders, thereby bringing the contract of agency to an end. What the defenders were contending was that even if the contract was validly rescinded by the pursuers on 26 September 2006, the defenders nonetheless had a right to an indemnity, which right had accrued to them before 31 August 2006. However, it was clear from the terms of Clause 3.1.10 that the parties had always contemplated that the activities which the defenders might require to carry out as agents for the pursuers might be varied substantially from time to time during the currency of the agreement. Such variation does not give rise to an entitlement to indemnity; in terms of Clause 3.8, the defenders' right to be indemnified by the pursuers as provided in Regulation 17 arose only upon termination of their appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter.

[8] The provisions for termination of the defenders' appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter were contained in Clause 7. However, it would be wrong to place too much emphasis on the use of the word "terminate" in clause 7.3; properly construed, this clause merely emphasised that the pursuers were entitled to instruct the defenders to cease carrying out their exhibition activities in Sainsbury's Stores. This merely spelt out in greater detail the parties' rights and obligations regarding one aspect of the agents' activities - it would be wrong to construe this as a separate, severable termination which created a right in the defenders to indemnity when they ceased their exhibition activities in Sainsbury's Stores.

[9] Counsel for the pursuers advanced five propositions in law in support of his position, as follows:

(i) He conceded that domestic legislation such as the Regulations which implemented an EU Directive required to be given a purposive interpretation, and that the Directive to which these Regulations sought to give effect was designed to protect commercial agents.

(ii) However, the purpose of Articles 17-19 of the Directive (which are effectively replicated in Regulations 17-19) was to protect a commercial agent after termination of the contract of agency - that is to say, after termination of the agent's relationship with his principal. This falls to be contrasted with other provisions of the Directive which are designed to protect the agent during the currency of the agency relationship; Articles 17-19 of the Directive are designed to protect the agent after termination of that relationship.

(iii) The rights and remedies of parties under a commercial agency contract continue to be regulated by existing domestic law, in so far as that law is not displaced by the Regulations. In other words, the Directive and the Regulations have not effected a wholesale substitution of EU law for domestic law.

(iv) The pursuers' instructions to the defenders to cease or terminate their Sainsbury's activities amounted to a contractually valid variation of the defenders' duties under the contract, and did not terminate the contract.

(v) The terms of the parties' contract entitling the pursuers to vary the defenders' activities in this way do not derogate from the provisions of the Regulations or the Directive.

[10] It was clear from Regulation 4(2)(b) of the Regulations (and Article 4(2)(b) of the Directive) that it was anticipated that there might be fluctuations in the volume of commercial transactions, but a significant reduction in the volume of transactions would not give rise to a right to indemnity, nor would the loss of an individual client or one of several areas of activity. A right to indemnity or compensation under Regulation 17 only arose on termination of the agent's relationship with his principal; this was clear from the terms of Regulation 17(6). The Regulations do not recognise the concept of "partial termination" of a contract - the right to indemnity arises only on termination of the relationship between agent and principal. In support of this proposition, counsel referred me to Ingmar GB Ltd v Eaton Leonard Technologies Inc (Case C-381/98) in which the court observed (at paragraph 21) that

"The purpose of Articles 17-19 of the Directive, in particular, is to protect the commercial agent after termination of the contract. ... Article 17 requires Member States to put in place a mechanism for providing reparation to the commercial agent after termination of the contract ..."

Counsel also referred me to Roy v MR Pearlman Ltd 1999 S.C. 459 as support for the proposition that Regulations made in furtherance of a Directive do not, at least in ordinary circumstances, wholly displace the rules of domestic law in the relative field. In the present case, the Regulations and Directive provide for indemnity on termination of the relationship of principal and agent, but they do not provide for regulation of variation of terms under a contract - that is a matter for the parties themselves to regulate. There was no inconsistency between Clause 3 of the present contract and the provisions of the Directive. I was also referred to Bell Electric Ltd v Aweco Appliance Systems GmbH & Co [2002] EWHC 872 (Q.B.), [2002] EuLR 443, particularly at paragraphs 50-53, from which counsel concluded that one could not divide up a commercial agency contract into sections, each of which might result in compensation or indemnity when varied or brought to an end.

[11] I was also referred to Tony Vick v Vogle-Gapes Ltd [2006] EWHC 1579 (QB), and particularly the reasoning at paragraph [95] thereof, which counsel submitted was well founded and supported his position. Neither the Regulations nor the Directive prohibit parties from entering into contractual provisions such as those in Vick or those contained in Clause 3.1.10 of the present contract.

[12] Applying these principles to the facts which the defenders offer to prove in their defences to the principal action and in their counterclaim, counsel submitted that the defenders' contention that an accrued right of indemnity has resulted without there having been a determination of their relationship with their principal is misconceived. The defenders' contention was that, as a result of the pursuers' direction or instruction which took effect on 31 August 2006 the defenders required to cease their Sainsbury's Stores exhibition activity, which they aver provided 92% of their turnover at that time. They maintain that this is detrimental to them as commercial agents, and the Regulations were designed to protect them as commercial agents. Their argument is that in order to protect them, the provisions in the Regulations must be construed in such a way as to include a situation which does not involve termination of the agency relationship. Counsel for the pursuers submitted that even if the cessation of the defenders' Sainsbury's activities was detrimental to the defenders, this was something within the parties' contemplation when they entered into the contract, and they made provision for it; the Regulations do not prevent parties from contracting on this basis. Moreover, the other provisions of the Regulations provide adequate protection for commercial agents without the need to distort the meaning of the word "termination". Any contractual claim available to the defenders under Clause 3.8.1 stands or falls with their entitlement under Regulation 17. I was finally referred to Lonsdale v Howard & Hallam Ltd [2007] UKHL 32, [2007] 1 W.L.R. 2055.

 

Submissions for the Defenders
[13]
Counsel for the defenders submitted that in order to answer the questions raised in paragraphs 2 and 5 of the pursuers' further note of argument (No. 24 of process) and the defenders' note of argument (No. 18 of process), it was necessary to look to the Regulations, the Directive and the parties' contract, all against a background of facts averred and admitted. The pursuers have admitted (in Answer 2 to the counterclaim) that by letter dated 29 March 2006, they gave notice to the defenders of the termination of the in-store sales element (as defined in the counterclaim) of the defenders' duties under the Agency Contract, and that on 31 August 2006 the in-store element of the Agency Contract was terminated by reason of the pursuers' termination thereof. The pursuers have also admitted that they have continued to derive a substantial benefit from the contracts with Sainsbury's energy customers entered into on their behalf by the defenders, and that the termination of the defenders' exhibition activities at Sainsbury's Stores has deprived them of the opportunity to generate further commission from such activities. There was therefore an admitted termination by the pursuers, after they had given notice to the defenders, in circumstances in which they continued to derive benefit from the defenders' work on their behalf.

[14] Looking to the terms of the contract, there were passages in which the language of variation was used (eg the definition of "Sainsbury's Energy Services Territory" and "Sainsbury's Minimum Performance Targets" at page 4 of the letter of appointment) and other passages in which the language of termination was used (eg Clauses 3.8 and 7.3). It was important to note that Clause 7.3 fell into the latter category, and related to termination of the defenders' appointment in respect of the performance of exhibition activities in Sainsbury's Stores. This language was used advisedly - this was clearly a commercial agency agreement between two commercial entities who were aware of the Regulations and the Directive. The result is that a portion of this contract is capable of being terminated, and on this being done, the defenders' right to indemnity in respect of that portion arises. This must have been within the contemplation of the parties, as this is what they agreed. There is no dispute between the parties that there was a termination, and the only way in which this could be effected was by the contractual mechanism of Clause 7.3.

[15] Nothing in the Directive or the Regulations prohibited a partial termination of an Agency Contract. This is what Clause 7.3 of the present contract contemplated, and in that respect, it was not contrary to the Regulations or the Directive. Some light is shed on the purpose of the Directive by the explanatory memorandum to the proposal for a Council Directive presented to the council by the commission on 17 December 1976 (Bull EC Supp 1/77); the Opinion of the Economic and Social Committee (OJEC No. C59, 8.3.78 at page 32, paragraph 1.2); the resolution of the European Parliament of 9 October 1978 at paragraph 17 (OJEC No. C239/20); the Department of Trade and Industry guidance notes on the Regulations; and the report on the application of Article 17 of the Directive presented by the commission to the council on 23 July 1996.

[16] Neither the Directive nor the Regulations provide any definition of what constitutes termination in order to create a right to indemnity. In this situation, the Court must adopt a purposive construction, by implying the words necessary to achieve the result intended by the Directive and the Regulations (Litster v Forth Dry Dock and Engineering Co 1989 SC (HL) 96, and particularly the speeches of Lord Keith of Kinkell at page 101 and Lord Templeton at pages 104/5). This was the approach adopted by Lord McEwan when construing the Directive and Regulations in Frape v Emreco International Ltd 2002 SLT 371 in which, having reviewed the authorities, he concluded that he had to give a wide purposive meaning to the word "termination". I was also referred to the observations of Staughton LJ in Page v Combined Shipping and Trading Co Ltd [1997] 3 All ER 656 at 660, in which he observed that the preamble to the Directive indicated at least two purposes -

"the first is harmonisation of the law of Member States of the community so that people compete - in the popular cliché of today - on a level playing field ... the second objective is one which appears to be a motive of social policy, that commercial agents are a down-trodden race, and need and should be afforded protection against their principals."

[17] I was also referred to Centrosteel Srl v Adipol GmbH [2000] 3 CMLR 711, particularly at paragraphs 35 and 38 of the Advocate General's opinion and paragraphs [16] and [17] of the judgment of the European Court of Justice.

[18] Counsel for the defenders summarised his position as follows:

(i) One of the purposes of the letter of appointment was to create an agency relationship between the parties whereby the defenders solicited customers for the pursuers by in-store activities in Sainsbury's Stores.

(ii) The language of the letter of appointment indicates that parties had agreed that the defenders' appointment in respect of in-store activities in Sainsbury's was capable of being terminated separately from the other elements of the overall agency relationship (see Clause 7.3).

(iii) The pursuers have admitted that on 31 August 2006 the Sainsbury's in-store sales element of the relationship was terminated by reason of the pursuers' termination thereof.

(iv) Consequent upon that termination was the loss of a significant and defined element of the defenders' business in terms of the letter of appointment.

(v) Leaving aside any complications about partial termination, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that indemnity would be payable to the defenders on termination of their contract.

(vi) The purpose of the indemnity is to award to the agents a share in the goodwill built up by their efforts on the termination of the agency relationship - otherwise, the whole goodwill would remain with the principal and the agent would receive nothing. (Any concerns about the fact that the Sainsbury's contribution of about 92% to the defenders' turnover was of relatively recent and short lived duration are met by the method of calculation of indemnity set out in Regulations 17(4)).

(vii) The court should interpret the Regulations in line with the purpose and intent of the Directive, ie putting the protection of the agent at the forefront of the purpose.

[19] With all of these factors in mind, and in light of the authorities cited, counsel submitted that the proper construction of the word "termination" where it occurs in Regulation 17 is habile to include the termination of a separable part of an agency relationship which the parties have agreed may be brought to an end by the principal on the occurrence of certain events.

[20] Finally, counsel for the defenders addressed the question of what it was that the Directive and the Regulations envisaged being terminated before a right to indemnity was created. Regulation 17(1) referred to indemnification "after termination of the Agency Contract", but he suggested that the concept of indemnity in these circumstances has historical links to the German commercial code (amongst others). In this regard I was referred to the English translation in Pelzer & Voigt "The German Commercial Code" (5th edition) at paragraph 89, which refers not to an "Agency Contract" but to "the contractual relationship". This was consistent with the approach of John Mitting QC sitting as a deputy judge in Moore v Piretta PTA Ltd [1999] 1 All ER 174 in which he observed (at page 180b) that "the phrase 'The Agency Contract' means simply "The Agency". The word 'contract' after "Agency" adds nothing. Regulation 17(1) thus construed therefore reads as follows:

'This Regulation has effect for the purpose of ensuring that the commercial agent is, after termination of the agency, indemnified,' etc."

[21] In light of all of the above, Mr Weir invited me to repel the pursuers' first plea-in-law in their answers to the counterclaim, and thereafter to put the case out By Order to consider further procedure.

 

Response for the Pursuers
[22]
In response to the defenders' submissions, Mr McIlvride made two points with regard to Regulation 17:

(i) It was not a legitimate approach to the purposive interpretation of Regulations 17-19 to identify a broad social context and to write into the Regulations rights and remedies not provided by the Directive. The European Court of Justice made it clear in Ingmar GB Ltd (supra) that the purpose of the Directive was to protect commercial agents on termination of the Agency Contract - ie the termination of the Agency relationship between principal and agent. It was necessary to identify the specific purpose which Article 17 was intended to achieve; the European Court of Justice has explained what Articles 17-19 (and Regulations 17-19) are intended to achieve. It was not legitimate to regard the broad purpose of the Directive as being the protection of commercial agents, and so to read into the Regulations anything which might be favourable to commercial agents. As the European Court of Justice said in Centrosteel (supra), the court must look to the wording and purpose of the Directive. To give effect to the defenders' submissions would be to look beyond the purpose and wording of the Directive.

(ii) In any event, if there is not a termination of the agent/principal relationship, a partial termination does not give rise to a right of indemnity. Moreover, the defenders' submissions do not match what they seek in conclusion 1(e) of the counterclaim and the supporting averments in statement 6. The defenders' position on averment is as follows:

"Properly construed, Regulation 17 does not just apply to termination of the whole of a commercial agency contract. It applies to the termination, by a principal, of any element of a commercial agency contract such as the Agency Contract."

[23] With regard to the defenders' contractual claim, Clause 3.8 (and particularly 3.8.1) of the letter of appointment makes it clear that the defenders have a contractual entitlement to an indemnity where the agency relationship is terminated, but only to the extent that the right of indemnity arises from (and is in the same terms as) Regulation 17. Clause 7.3 does not amend or alter this right. Although the word "termination" is used in Clause 7.3, its meaning depends on its context. It refers to termination of certain activities - it does not repeat the language used earlier regarding termination of the agents' appointment for the purposes set out in the agreement. In particular it does not suggest that the Sainsbury's activities amount to a separate purpose for which the agents have been appointed. Properly construed, Clause 7.3 does not indicate that the parties intended that any right to indemnity would arise under Clause 3.8 on the termination of the Sainsbury's activities.

 

Discussion
[24]
There is no dispute that the Directive and the Regulations require to be given a purposive interpretation. There is also no dispute that the general purposes of the Directive and the Regulations include (first) harmonisation of the laws of Member States of the community with regard to commercial agency, and (second) the redressing of a perceived imbalance between the bargaining positions and interests of principals and commercial agents in favour of commercial agents. However, the extent to which an interpretation based on the second of these general purposes can be taken must surely depend on the wording of the Directive and the Regulations, and any relevant authorities which shed light on this matter. It would be wrong to regard the Directive and the Regulations as a carte blanche in favour of anything which commercial agents might seek to argue or from which they might benefit. The Directive and the Regulations must be construed in light of commercial reality, and (of course) having regard to their framework and the words used in them. It is not enough simply to assert that their purpose is to favour commercial agents, because this does not address the questions of how far and in what circumstances do they favour the commercial agent. In seeking to answer these question, I consider that all the material placed before me is relevant.

[25] Some parts of the Directive and Regulations are clearly directed at the rights and duties of the parties to a commercial agency contract during the subsistence of that contract. For example, Regulations 3-7 and 10-14 clearly fall within that category. Other parts of the Directive and Regulations are directed towards termination and to the rights of the commercial agent after the Agency Contract has been terminated; Regulations 8 and 15-19 appear to me to fall into this category. The purposes of these two categories are not necessarily identical. The Regulations governing the rights and obligations of the parties during the subsistence of the Agency Contract envisage the situation in which the volume of commercial transactions will be significantly lower than that which the commercial agent could normally have expected (see Regulation 4(2)(b)), and make provision for an obligation on the principal to give notice to the agent of his anticipation of this trend. In such a situation, there is no obligation on the principal to provide the agent with indemnity or compensation. The entitlement of the commercial agent to indemnity or compensation arises only on termination of the Agency Contract.

[26] The defenders argue that there may be a partial termination of the Agency Contract which would give rise to a right to indemnity or compensation in terms of the Directive and Regulations. They submit that the word "termination" where it occurs in Regulation 17 is habile to include termination of a separable part of an agency relationship which the parties have agreed may be brought to an end by the principal on the occurrence of certain events.

[27] Leaving aside at present the point that this is not consistent with the terms of the declarator which the defenders seek, I cannot find anything in the Directive or the Regulations, or any of the authorities placed before me, which supports this proposition. The point which the defenders make is that, if this construction is not adopted, it would be open to the principal to instruct the commercial agent to cease the great majority of his activities on behalf of the principal (in the present case it is averred that the Sainsbury's activities make up around 92% of the defenders' turnover) yet keep the Agency Contract alive for the remaining minor balance, thereby postponing indefinitely the obligation to pay indemnity or compensation. There is perhaps some force in this argument, but it is a situation which the commercial agent can avoid by an appropriately designed contractual framework. For example, in the present situation, if the defenders wished to obtain a right to indemnity on the termination of their Sainsbury's activities, it would have been open to them to require the Sainsbury's activities to be the subject of a separate commercial Agency Contract. In that situation, in the event that their Sainsbury's activities were terminated by the principal, their right to indemnity would arise consequent upon the termination of the Agency Contract (or agency relationship).

[28] That is not the situation in the present case. Although the pursuers have instructed the defenders to cease their Sainsbury's activities, and although those activities may have been lucrative to the defenders and latterly comprised a large part of their turnover, the Agency Contract was not terminated by the pursuers' letter to the defenders dated 29 March 2006, nor by the requirement which took effect on 31 August 2006 that the defenders should cease their Sainsbury's activities. On the contrary, the remainder of the Agency Contract still subsisted, and the defenders do not aver that the letter of 29 March 2006 or the cessation of Sainsbury's activities on 31 August 2006 amounted to a repudiation of the contract by the pursuers. The defenders were simply put back into the position that they were in before the Sainsbury's activities began in about early 2005. (I pause to observe that the letter dated 29 March 2006 was not a production nor was it referred to brevitatis causa in either party's pleadings, and neither party was able to provide it to me at the debate. Neither party suggested that its terms were material to the present decision.)

[29] The declarator which the defenders seek in conclusion 1(e) of their counterclaim goes beyond the submissions made on their behalf at debate. This branch of their conclusion seeks declarator that:

"properly construed, Regulation 17 of ... the Regulations et separatim Clause 3.8.1 of the Agency Contract apply where a principal terminates any element of a commercial agency contract, such as the Agency Contract".

It seems to me that this goes well beyond what may be properly construed as "termination" in terms of Regulation 17. If this construction was indeed proper, it would mean that a commercial agent who had many hundreds of customers or activities which he pursued on behalf of his principal could seek indemnity from the principal in the event that any one of these customers or activities ceased on the principal's instructions. I do not find any support for such a result in the Directive, the Regulations or any of the authorities. Indeed, it seems to me to fly in the face of commercial reality.

[30] I consider that the right of a commercial agent to indemnity or compensation under Regulation 17 arises only after termination of the Agency Contract. It does not appear to me that there is a significant distinction between the termination of an Agency Contract and the termination of an agency relationship, at least in the circumstances of the present case. The relationship between principal and agent is one based on contract. If the contract is terminated, the relationship (at least in terms of that contract) will be terminated. It might be thought that there is an element of indulgence in semantics in this respect. In the present case, it appears to me that the letter from the pursuers to the defenders dated 29 March 2006, and the cessation of Sainsbury's activities which took place on 31 August 2006, did not result in the termination of the Agency Contract, nor did it result in the termination of the relationship of principal and agent as between the pursuers and the defenders. The contract, and the relationship, still subsisted with regard to the defenders' non Sainsbury's activities. For the purposes of Article 17 of the Directive and Regulation 17 of the Regulations, I do not consider that there has been any termination which gives rise to a right to indemnity in favour of the defenders.

[31] This construction of "termination" in Regulation 17 appears to me to be consistent with the authorities to which I was referred. In Ingmar GB Ltd the European Court of Justice (5th chamber) observed (at paragraph 21 of its judgment) that:

"the purpose of Articles 17-19 of the Directive, in particular, is to protect the commercial agent after termination of the contract. The regime established by the Directive for that purpose is mandatory in nature. Article 17 requires Member States to put in place a mechanism for providing reparation to the commercial agent after termination of the contract."

There is no suggestion of protection for the commercial agent or reparation during the subsistence of the contract. It is consistent with the reasoning in Bell Electric Ltd (particularly at paragraph 53) and it is also consistent with the reasoning in Tony Vick (particularly at paragraphs 94 and 95).

[32] Lord McEwan was dealing with a very different situations in Frape v Emreco International Ltd, in which there was no suggestion that a contract still subsisted to any extent. That case involved a commercial agency contract which provided that the agent's engagement ended when the agent was 65, or on 31 May 1997, whichever was earlier. The agent turned 65 on 13 April 1997 and the principal ended his contract. The principal argued that the Directive did not define "termination", but it meant being deprived of the proper performance of a contractual obligation: the agent's contract had expired through time and there was not "termination". Lord McEwan held that "termination" had to be interpreted in a purposive way and was habile to cover contracts expiring through the effluxion of time. I agree with his reasoning in the circumstances of that case, in which there was no suggestion of a "partial" termination or of the Agency Contract subsisting to any extent.

[33] The defenders were unable to provide any authority for the proposition that the words "after termination of the Agency Contract" actually meant after termination or cessation of part of the Agency Contract, while the balance of the contract still subsisted and the relationship of agent and principal also continued. Even applying a purposive interpretation of the Regulations and the Directive, I do not consider that the interpretation urged on me by the defenders is sound. I am satisfied that the present case does not fall within the terms of Regulation 17 or Article 17 of the Directive, and that the defenders do not have a right to indemnity or compensation under those provisions.

[34] There remains the question of the proper construction of the contract itself. To a large extent, I agree with counsel for the pursuers that this is academic, because it is clear from the terms of Clause 3.8 that the contractual right to indemnity depends on a right to indemnity in terms of Regulation 17 of the Regulations. There is no separate contractual right to indemnity in the event (as I have held) that Regulation 17 does not apply. Moreover, Clause 3.8 only applies "upon termination of your appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in this letter". There is no suggestion that the defenders' appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter of appointment was terminated. In order to terminate the defenders' appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter, the pursuers would have required to use the mechanisms provided by Clause 7.1 of the Contract. It does not appear that this is what they did. They appear to have used the mechanism provided in Clause 7.3, which does not enable them to terminate the defenders' appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter, but only entitles them to terminate the defenders' appointment in respect of the performance of exhibition activities in Sainsbury's Stores in relation to "Sainsbury's Energy" branded mains natural gas and electricity. The use of the word "terminate" in this context might give rise to some confusion at first reading, and is perhaps unfortunate. However, I agree with counsel for the pursuers that when the whole letter of appointment is read, the use of the word "terminate" in Clause 7.3 in the context of the whole letter must be read as spelling out in greater detail than is provided in Clause 3.1.10 that the pursuers are entitled to instruct the defenders to cease entirely their Sainsbury's activities. I do not consider that Clause 7.3 can properly be construed as constituting a separate and severable Agency Contract or relationship which, if brought to an end, would give rise to a right to indemnity or compensation. In any event, it does not amount to termination of the defenders' appointment as an agent for the purposes set out in the letter, and so it does not give rise to a contractual right to indemnity in terms of Clause 3.8.

[35] In these circumstances, I consider that the arguments advanced in paragraphs 2 and 5 of the further note of arguments for the pursuers (No. 24 of process) are well founded, and that the defenders are not entitled to indemnity in terms of Regulation 17 of the Regulations. Both parties made detailed motions as to the consequences in the event that they were successful, but I understood that both parties were agreed that this matter should be put out By Order to enable the detailed consequences to be discussed shortly after the issuing of this Opinion. Accordingly, this case will be put out By Order as soon as reasonably practicable after the issuing of this Opinion.


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