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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Office of Fair Trading v Miller [2009] EWCA Civ 34 (03 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/34.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 34 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HOLMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
OFFICE OF FAIR TRADING |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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VANCE MILLER |
Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Paul Chaisty QC & Mark Harper (instructed by Office of Fair Trading) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 16 October 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
Background
i) As to the scope of the 2002 order: whether either conduct of DKD in which Mr Miller does not personally participate, or conduct falling short of a course of conduct, falls within paragraph 1 of the 2002 order;
ii) As to the judge's finding of a course of conduct: whether, to the extent that a course of conduct was required, the judge was entitled to find that there had been a course of conduct; and
iii) As to the penalties: whether the penalties imposed for breach were excessive.
The structure of the 2002 order
"1. That pursuant to paragraph 11 and paragraph 13 of Schedule 2 of the [Stop Now regulations] and section 39 of the [1973 Act] [Mr Miller and the third fourth and sixth defendants shall]:
Refrain from consenting to or conniving at the conduct outlined at paragraph 4 of the Particulars of Claim namely the failure to fulfil obligations imposed by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 and the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 and in particular:
(a) The failure to ensure that goods supplied to consumers comply with the description given to such goods by the supplier contrary to section 13 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979.
(b) The failure to supply goods which are of satisfactory quality in accordance with the requirements of section 14 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979.
1.2 Refrain from engaging in any similar conduct in the course of any business which may at any time be carried out by any of them.
…
2. That pursuant to section 39 of the 1973 Act [Mr Miller and the third fourth and sixth defendants] shall:
2.1 Refrain from consenting to or conniving at the course of conduct outlined at paragraphs 5 and 7 of the Particulars of Claim in particular:
(a) The failure to deliver goods in accordance with consumer contracts contrary to the requirements of section 27 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979.
(b) The failure to deliver goods within a reasonable time contrary to the requirements of section 29(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979.
(c) The failure to satisfy outstanding county court judgments.
2.2 Refrain from carrying on any similar course of conduct in the course of any business which may at any time be carried out by any of them.
…"
The enabling provisions
"persisted in a course of conduct which-
(a) is detrimental to the interests of consumers in the United Kingdom, whether those interests are economic interests or interests in respect of health, safety or other matters, and
(b) in accordance with the following provisions of this section is to be regarded as unfair to consumers… "
"37. — (1) Where in any proceedings before a relevant Court under section 35 of this Act—
(a) the Court finds that the person against whom the proceedings are brought (in this section referred to as "the respondent") has in the course of a business carried on by him persisted in such a course of conduct as is mentioned in section 34(1) of this Act, and
(b) the respondent does not give an undertaking to the Court under subsection (3) of this section which is accepted by the Court, and
(c) it appears to the Court that, unless an order is made against the respondent under this section, he is likely to continue that course of conduct or to carry on a similar course of conduct,
the Court may make an order against the respondent under this section.
(2) An order of the Court under this section shall (with such degree of particularity as appears to the Court to be sufficient for the purposes of the order) indicate the nature of the course of conduct to which the finding of the Court under subsection (1)(a) of this section relates, and shall direct the respondent—
(a) to refrain from continuing that course of conduct, and
(b) to refrain from carrying on any similar course of conduct in the course of his business."
"The assurance referred to in subsection (3) of this section is a satisfactory written assurance given by the accessory that he will refrain—
(a) from continuing to consent to or connive at the course of conduct in question;
(b) from carrying on any similar course of conduct in the course of any business which may at any time be carried on by him; and
(c) from consenting to or conniving at the carrying on of any such course of conduct by any other body corporate in relation to which, at any time when that course of conduct is carried on, he fulfils the relevant conditions."
"An order of the Court under this section shall (with such degree of particularity as appears to the Court to be sufficient for the purposes of the order) indicate the nature of the course of conduct to which the finding of the Court under subsection (1)(a) of this section relates, and shall direct the accessory, in relation to the course of conduct so indicated, to refrain from acting in any of the ways mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (c) of subsection (4) of section 38 of this Act."
"any act contrary to the Directives as transposed into the internal legal order of a member state and which harms the collective interests of consumers included in the Directives".
"has engaged in conduct which constitutes a Community infringement or is likely to do so".
"6. The relevant court may make an order under section 37 of the Act where it finds that the respondent has engaged in conduct which constitutes a Community infringement or is likely to do so."
"11. Sections 38 and 39 of the Act shall apply in relation to any person consenting to or conniving at a Community infringement who at a material time fulfilled the relevant conditions in relation to a body corporate which has engaged in conduct which constitutes a Community infringement or is likely to do so ("an accessory") as they apply to the conduct there mentioned and to consent to or connivance at it.
12. …
13. An order made by virtue of paragraph 11 above shall direct the accessory to refrain from consenting to or conniving at the Community infringement, or engaging in conduct which constitutes the infringement in the course of any business which may at any time be carried on by him, and from consenting to or conniving at the engaging in any such conduct by any other body corporate in relation to which, when the conduct is engaged in, he fulfils the relevant conditions."
Factual background
Material parts of the judgments of the judge on liability
"9. In June 2004 [the first complainant] ordered a kitchen and equipment from DKD. On delivery it did not have the promised pre-drilled the holes. The units do not correspond with the sample he had been shown. There were 15 defects (either damage or items missing). Five wall units and their end panels were the wrong size. An oven housing was supplied, instead of a base unit. There were delays both in the original delivery and in delivery of replacements. He was unable to obtain any satisfactory response, but he decided not to sue, preferring to dispose of the units and buy a kitchen elsewhere.
10. Also in June 2004 [the second complainant] ordered a kitchen and equipment from DKD. He had responded to an advertisement stating that the kitchens were solid wood and the chipboard was not used. He was shown a sample by the sales representative. The units did not conform to the sample. They did not fit into the designed kitchen. The appliances were manufactured by CDA rather than Necht. He encountered great difficulty in getting satisfactory response from DKD and the independent fitter he engaged had to undertake a lot of work to address the faults."
"33. … Mr Turner contended that the requisite course of conduct had not been established to the criminal standard. He referred to part of the Stop Now Orders Guidance. This reads: "The Stop Now regulations are not a means of pursuing individual redress. They apply only to an infringement, which 'harms the collective interests of consumers included in the Directives'. It follows that the breach must affect, or have the potential to affect, consumers generally or a group of consumers. This must be established by the evidence. The evidence must demonstrate how a particular infringement has, or may in the future have, an adverse effect on consumers. It may include an assessment of the importance of the practice or provision in question or of the prevalence and likely impact of the infringement. Some isolated breaches may not be harmful to the collective interest of consumers. However, examples of individual consumer harm may be used as evidence, and there is no obligation to establish a specific number of individual consumer complaints or incidents of infringement."
34. He did not challenge the approach of recorder Christopher Purchas QC in Director General of Fair Trading v Ashby to which Mr Chaisty had referred, but it was a question of context, and he described as "amazing" the omission by the Claimant to adduce any sort of evidence to demonstrate the relative culpability of the Defendant's organisation. The nine complainants were, he suggested, atypical. The Defendant's evidence was that 400 kitchens were produced each week. How this compared with other operators in the industry was unclear, but on any view it was a very high number. The purpose of the legislation should not be forgotten.
35. Recorder Purchas QC said this: "A course of conduct requires there to be a common number of connected acts or omissions which occur pursuant to a common purpose or objective. One or more isolated and unconnected incidents is not sufficient, but a sequence of events may establish a course of conduct even when they result in a single complaint
36. Mr Chaisty split his submissions into two parts. First, the Claimant is not required to establish a course of conduct in relation to paragraphs 1.1 and 1.2 of the Order. It only comes into play under paragraph 2.1 and 2.2. Secondly, in any event a course of conduct has plainly been established.
37. It is appropriate to look at the underlying principles. It is not a defence to say that there was no direct intention to disobey the order – see Stancomb v Trowbridge UDC. This approach has been confirmed in subsequent cases both in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords. Rimer J observed in Miller v Scorey: "The question of whether or not contempt in the nature of a breach of undertaking to the court has been committed involves an essentially objective test requiring the determination of whether or not the alleged contemnor has acted in a manner constituting a breach of his undertaking. If he has, then a contempt will ordinarily be established, regardless of whether or not he acted contumaciously or with the direct intention of breaking his promise, although I accept that whether any, and if so what, punishment or other consequences ought to be imposed on him will, or may be, materially dependent on considerations of this sort.
38. Although I express no final opinion, I am inclined to the view that it is necessary to demonstrate a course of conduct even under paragraphs 1.1 and 1.2. The avowed purpose of the legislation is to protect the collective interests of consumers, and, while I do not say that it is impossible, it is difficult to think of situations where the Claimant might consider it appropriate to act on the basis of a single incident, particularly given that litigation is clearly the last resort. The whole tenor of the Guidance is directed towards what might be termed "repeat offenders". However, looking at the totality of the evidence, I am abundantly satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that a course of conduct has been established and it matters not that the Claimant has not provided comparable information about competitors. I am concerned with this Defendant and this Order. Even in the light of the number of kitchens produced each year, the evidence from the nine complainants cannot sensibly be regarded as isolated and unconnected incidents. They establish a consistent patter of failure to comply with contractual obligations."
"By no stretch of the imagination can the breaches be described as casual or accidental. They may not have been intentional, but they were most certainly reckless, as Mr Chaisty's probing cross-examination served to establish."
"As I said in 2003, sentencing for contempt has two purposes: punishment for breaching the order is one because court orders are not to be flouted. The second, equally important, is securing compliance in the future. In that latter context there are other matters, which I must take into account. First, the last complaint, on which evidence was produced, occurred over two years ago. I bear in mind that it took time for the OFT to establish your involvement in Discount Kitchens Direct and in Kitchens, and I entirely accept that you cannot take advantage of this delay. However it remains a fact that the last proven breach occurred in early 2006. The committal application was launched in May 2007. The delay to trial cannot be laid at your door. If the OFT believed that the breaches were continuing, it could have sought to amend the application and to place evidence before the court to that effect. It has not done so. You are therefore entitled to be sentenced on the basis that there has been no proven breach for over two years. That is an important consideration.
Secondly, although statistics do need to be approached with some caution, there is evidence of a significant and continuing reduction in complaints to the authorities since the summer of 2007. Thirdly, I pay some regard to the recent report from the management consultants, although I have to bear in mind that the author did not give evidence.
Fourthly I noted your apology in evidence to the complainants and also the spontaneous concessions you made at certain points.
There is evidence that you are making efforts to comply with your obligations, but many of those efforts appear misguided. Your Rule Book is but one example: it is shambolic, as is the idea of getting drivers to video deliveries. You are an energetic entrepreneur and have rightly been described by your counsel as unorthodox. The problem you face is that an unorthodox approach may work perfectly well in a small organisation, but it courts disaster in a company which has the avowed intention of being the largest independent kitchen retailer in the world. Whether you like it or not, we live in a highly regulated environment so far as consumer protection is concerned. You need to devote less time to expanding your operations, and more to getting the basics right. It is you who has the contractual obligations under the Sale of Goods Act, and it matters not a jot that you are operating at the lower end of the market. Your customers are still entitled to the benefit of fair dealing and it is your responsibility to ensure that they do.
I am wholly unpersuaded that the appropriate course is to impose no penalty or to postpone sentence for six months or any other period or to seek further undertakings from you. These solutions do not properly reflect the seriousness of this case.
The aggravating features which I have mentioned make a custodial sentence appropriate, but the counter balancing considerations in the context of securing compliance with the Order enable me to suspend it. Looking at the gravity of the situation overall, this is in my view an unusual case where it is appropriate also, in the context of the element of punishment, to impose a financial penalty.
I reject as implausible your professional lack of knowledge of the profitability of the operations. I propose to work on the figure which, before back-tracking, you initially gave in cross-examination of an annual profit of £200,000. I treat each complainant as a single breach, although strictly each case involved several breaches. On each of the nine complaints, I impose a fine of £10,000 making a total of £90,000. This is to be paid by 31 July 2008.
In addition you must pay a contribution towards the OFT's costs of £30,000 to be paid by 31 August 2008.
Having regard to the financial penalty and costs liability which I have imposed, the sentence of imprisonment I pass is lower than would otherwise have been the case. It is 6 months concurrent on each breach, suspended in each case for 2 years. The burden is now entirely on you to comply with the Order. If further breaches are established within this period, then the court will be entitled to deal with you not only for those breaches, but also to activate this sentence."
Discussion
Issue (1): As to the scope of the 2002 order
"A respondent is an individual who is ordered not to do something must not do it himself or in any other way. He must not do it the others acting on his behalf or on his instructions or with his encouragement.
A respondent which is not an individual which is ordered not to do something must not do it itself or by its directors, officers, partners, employees or agents or in any other way."
"such degree of particularity as appears to the Court to be sufficient for the purposes of the order"
Issue (2): As to the judge's finding of a course of conduct
Issue (3): As to the penalties
Disposition
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
Lord Justice Sedley: