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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 Communications T-Mobile (UK) Ltd v Floe Telecom Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 47 (10 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/47.html Cite as: [2009] UKCLR 659, [2009] Eu LR 709, [2009] EWCA Civ 47, [2009] Bus LR 1116 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE COMPETITION APPEAL TRIBUNAL
MARION SIMMONS QC (Chairman)
Mr Michael Davey & Mrs Sheila Hewitt
Case No: 1024/2/3/04
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
and
SIR JOHN CHADWICK
____________________
OFFICE OF COMMUNICATIONS T-MOBILE (UK) LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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FLOE TELECOM LIMITED (in liquidation) |
Respondent |
____________________
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)
MR MEREDITH PICKFORD (instructed by Robyn Durie, Regulatory Counsel, T-Mobile) for the Appellant T-Mobile (UK) Limited
MS MONICA CARSS-FRISK QC MR BRIAN KENNELLY and MR TRISTAN JONES (instructed by Taylor Wessing for the Respondent)
Hearing dates: 4th , 5th & 6th March 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery:
An extraordinary appeal
"Subject as otherwise provided by this or any other Act….the Court of Appeal shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine appeals from any judgment or order of the High Court."
"Appeals are against orders, not reasoned judgments…..Accordingly appeal lies against the order made by the lower court, not against the reasons which that court gave for its decision or the findings which it made along the way. Thus a party who has been wholly successful in obtaining or (as the case may be) resisting the relief sought cannot appeal against the judgment, in order to challenge the findings made: Lake v. Lake [1955] P 336….If the court wishes to enable a party to appeal against a particular finding contained in the judgment, it may make a declaration embodying that finding. See Compagnie Noga D'Importation Et D'Exportation SA v. Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 1142; [2003] 1 WLR 307 "
"2. …that Vodafone had not abused a dominant position when disconnecting Floe's SIM cards is confirmed."
"3. In so far as the Respondent's reasoning and conclusions in the Decision differ from the reasons set out in the Judgment the Decision is set aside
a. as being misconceived as is set out under the Summary of the Tribunal's Judgment at paragraphs 12(1) and 12(5) and (6) which paragraphs cross refer to the relevant parts in the Decision and in the main body of the Judgment:
b. as being inadequately reasoned as is set out under the Summary of the Tribunal's Judgment at paragraphs 12(3) and 12(4) which paragraphs cross refer to the relevant paragraphs in the Decision and in the main body of the Judgment."
The parties
GSM gateways: factual background
"3. GSM gateways are devices containing one or more SIMs [described below] for one or more mobile networks, which enable calls from fixed phones to mobile networks to be routed directly via a GSM link into the relevant mobile phone network.
4. A call made via a GSM gateway appears to the mobile phone network to have originated from a mobile registered to that network and so attracts a cheaper call rate.
5. A purpose of the GSM gateway is to take advantage of the lower tariff of on-net calls on a mobile network compared to fixed-to-mobile calls. "
a. is the owner of that GSM gateway;
b. has the GSM gateway installed in his own premises or at premises which it otherwise has the right to control and, if it has switching equipment, has the GSM gateway connected to its own switching equipment;
c. subscribes for the SIMs to be placed into the GSM gateway, and places them into the GSM gateway;
d. enters into contracts with corporate and/or individual customers to supply them with fixed-to-mobile calls at on-net prices below those charged by mobile operators for fixed-to-mobile calls; and
e. installs or procures the installation of connectivity and operates the GSM gateway so that it can supply those customers [this was not agreed by Floe which does not accept that a public GSM gateway is 'operated' by a public GSM gateway operator] ;
f. operates the GSM gateway in order to provide services to a number of corporate customers."
Abuse of dominant position: the facts
Regulatory law background
A. Domestic law
The 1949 Act
"19.(1) ….the emitting or receiving, over paths which are not provided by any material substance constructed or arranged for that purpose, of electromagnetic energy of a frequency not exceeding three million megacycles a second, being energy which either-
(a) serves for the conveying of messages, sound or visual images (whether the messages, sound or images are actually received by any person or not), or for the actuation or control of machinery or apparatus;
(b) ……
and references to stations for wireless telegraphy and apparatus for wireless telegraphy shall be construed as references to stations and apparatus for the emitting or receiving as aforesaid of such electro-magnetic energy as aforesaid:"
Exemption Regulations
"(1) Subject to regulation 5, the establishment, installation and use of the relevant apparatus are hereby exempted from the provisions of section 1(1) of the 1949 Act.
(2) With the exception of relevant apparatus operating in the frequency bands specified in paragraph (3), the exemption shall not apply to relevant apparatus which is established, installed or used to provide or to be capable of providing a wireless telegraphy link between telecommunication apparatus or a telecommunication system and other such apparatus or system, by means of which a telecommunication service is provided by way of business to another person."
"a mobile station for wireless telegraphy designed or adapted-
(a) to be connected by wireless telegraphy to one or more relevant networks; and
(b) to be used solely for the purpose of sending and receiving messages conveyed by a relevant network by means of wireless telegraphy."
"a telecommunication system consisting exclusively of stations established and used under and in accordance with a licence, which has been granted under section 1(1) of the 1949 Act by the Secretary of State and is of a type specified in Part III of this Schedule."
B. EC Law
(1) The Licensing Directive-97/13/EC
(2) The Authorisation Directive-2002/20/EC
(3) The RTTE Directive-99/5/EC
"1. Member States shall allow the putting into service of apparatus for its intended purpose where it complies with the appropriate essential requirements identified in Article 3 and the other relevant provisions of this Directive.
2. Notwithstanding paragraph 1, and without prejudice to conditions attached to authorisations for the provision of the service concerned in conformity with Community law, Member States may restrict the putting into service of radio equipment only for reasons related to the effective and appropriate use of the radio spectrum, avoidance of harmful interference or matters relating to public health.
3. Without prejudice to paragraph 4, Member States shall ensure that operations of public telecommunications do not refuse to connect telecommunications terminal equipment to appropriate interfaces on technical grounds where that equipment complies with the applicable requirements of Article 3
4. Where a Member State considers that apparatus declared to be compliant with the provisions of this Directive causes serious damage to a network or harmful radio interference or harm to the network or its functioning, the operator may be authorised to refuse connection, to disconnect such apparatus or to withdraw it from service. The Member States shall notify each such authorisation to the Commission, which shall convene a meeting of the committee for the purpose of giving its opinion on the matter. After the committee has been consulted, the Commission may initiate the procedures referred to in Article 5(2) and (3). The Commission and the Member States may also take other appropriate measures.
5. In case of emergency, an operator may disconnect apparatus if the protection of the network requires the equipment to be disconnected without delay and if the user can be offered, without delay and without costs for him, an alternative solution. The operator shall immediately inform the national authority responsible for the implementation of paragraph 4 and Article 9. "
The Vodafone licence
"1. This licence authorises [Vodafone-The Licensee] to establish, install and use radio transmitting and receiving stations and/or radio apparatus as described in the schedule(s) (hereinafter together called "the Radio Equipment") subject to the terms set out below."
"1. Description of Radio Equipment Licensed
In this Licence, the Radio Equipment means the base transceiver stations or repeater stations forming part of the Network (as defined in paragraph 2 below)
2. Purpose of the Radio Equipment
The Radio Equipment shall form part of a radio telecommunications network ("the Network"), in which User Stations which meet the appropriate technical performance requirements as set out in the relevant Wireless Telegraphy (Exemption) Regulations made by the Secretary of State communicate by radio with the Radio Equipment to provide a telecommunications service."
"7. Frequencies of Operation
The Radio Equipment is required to operate on any of the following frequency ranges:
GSM:
Base Transmits/ Base Receives/
Mobile Receives Mobile Transmits
935.1-939.5 MHz 890.1-894.5 MHz
947.3-955.1 MHz 902.3-909.9 MHz"
" ..any vehicle mounted or hands portable mobile station designed for mobile use and/or any static fixed station designed or adapted to be established and used from static locations which meet the appropriate technical performance requirements as set out in the Wireless Telegraphy (Exemption) Regulations and either complies with the appropriate Interface Regulation listed in paragraph 11 or for equipment placed on the market before 8 April 2000 is type approved in accordance with a recognised standard relating to the service provided."
"(a) the establishment, installation and use of the Radio Equipment shall be interpreted as establishment and use of stations and installations and use of apparatus for wireless telegraphy as specified in section 1 of the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949;
……..
(e) the Interpretation Act 1978 shall apply to the Licence as it applies to an Act of Parliament."
Tribunal Judgment/ Order
Vodafone licence and EC law
"8. …in applying national law, whether the provisions in question were adopted before or after the directive, the national court called upon to interpret it is required to do so, as far as possible, in the light of the wording and the purpose of the directive in order to achieve the result pursued by the latter and thereby comply with the third paragraph of Article 189 of the Treaty."
Discussion and conclusion
"89. The Licence and the Exemption Regulations must be construed together against the relevant European legislative background and in conformity with Community law, if possible. In that regard, what is relevant is the effect of the provisions of the Licence when read together with the Exemption Regulations.
90. When construing documents, such as the Exemption Regulations and the Licence, which, in part, give effect to European legislation our task is first to seek to construe those documents to give effect to the Directives. It is only if it is impossible to give effect to the Directives that we have to go on to consider whether the Exemption Regulations and/or the Licence are incompatible with Community law and, if so, what the consequences of such incompatibility may be for the purposes of this appeal."
"146. …For the Licence and the Exemption Regulations, taken together, to be compatible with the RTTE Directive (and, later, if relevant, the Authorisation Directive) the Licence must be interpreted in such a way that Vodafone is authorised to provide, for commercial purposes, telecommunications services (and later electronic communications services) using the radio frequencies set out in paragraph 7 of Schedule 1 of the Licence for the purpose set out in paragraph 2 of the Licence..
149. …For the reasons set out above, after the coming into force of the RTTE Directive in 1999, Floe's construction of the Licence is to be preferred. After that date, it is only if Vodafone is itself entitled to provide a telecommunications service to customers by way of business which includes the use of compliant equipment which has been approved for free circulation under the RTTE Directive (including GSM gateway equipment) that the statutory scheme (the Licence construed together with the Exemption Regulations) is compatible with the RTTE Directive."
" The present case does not involve legislation. Despite the contrary argument submitted to your Lordships, I do not see how the Marleasing principle, as such, can apply to the interpretation of the [Motor Insurers Bureau] agreement…The Marleasing principle cannot be stretched to the length of requiring contracts to be interpreted in a manner that would impose on one or other of the parties obligations which, Marleasing apart, the contract did not impose. This is so even in the case of a contract where one of the parties is an emanation of government, here, the Secretary of State. The citizens' obligations are those to which he agreed, as construed in accordance with normal principles of interpretation."
Community law incompatibility issues
Result
" IT IS DECLARED THAT:
1. On its proper construction, the Public Mobile Operator Licence issued to Vodafone on 28 January 2002 under section 1(1) of the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949 does not authorise the use of GSM Gateways (including commercial multi-use GSM Gateways ("COMUGs")) for providing a telecommunications service by way of business to another person.
2. In the absence of a licence or exemption granted or made under section 8 of the Wireless Telegraphy Act 2006, the use of GSM gateways (including COMUGs) for the purpose of providing a telecommunications service by way of business to another person is unlawful.
AND IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. Paragraph 3 of the order of the Competition Appeal Tribunal dated 18 January 2007 be set aside.
2. The Respondent's reasonable costs of the appeals are to be paid by the Office of Communications, such amounts to be subject to detailed assessment in the absence of agreement within 3 months."
Postscript
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins:
Sir John Chadwick: