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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 >> Punch Partnerships (PTL) Ltd & Anor v Jonalt Ltd [2020] EWHC 1376 (Ch) (01 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1376.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1376 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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PUNCH PARTNERSHIPS (PTL) LIMITED STAR PUBS & BARS LIMITED |
First Claimant Second Claimant |
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- and - |
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JONALT LIMITED |
Defendant |
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The Defendant was not represented and did not appear
Hearing date: 20 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Kelyn Bacon QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court):
Introduction
i) In relation to the finding of unreasonableness, the arbitrator proceeded on the basis that it was for Star to prove the reasonableness of the keg stocking requirement, rather than it being for the tenant (the claimant in the arbitration) to establish the unreasonableness of the disputed requirement. The reversal of the normal burden of proof had not, however, been proposed by either party, nor had the arbitrator invited submissions on the point.ii) The order that Star offer an MRO lease with a 20% keg stocking requirement was in any event outside the arbitrator's powers under the 2015 Act and/or the Pubs Code.
The statutory framework
"The contractual obligation is a stocking requirement if
(a) it relates only to beer or cider (or both) produced by the landlord or by a person who is a group undertaking in relation to the landlord,
(b) it does not require the tied pub tenant to procure the beer or cider from any particular supplier, and
(c) it does not prevent the tied pub tenant from selling at the premises beer or cider produced by a person not mentioned in paragraph (a) (whether or not it restricts such sales)."
The reference to arbitration in this case
"The Tenant may in its absolute discretion stock and offer for sale at the Property any Keg Brands which it deems appropriate from time to time throughout the Term provided that the Tenant shall ensure that as soon as reasonably practicable from the date of this lease (and in any case from and including [one year from the start of the Term]) until the end of the Term, at least sixty per cent (60%) of the Keg taps or other items of equipment from which Keg Brands are dispensed from time to time shall dispense Landlord Keg Brands."
"Each alleged breach of the Pubs Code, with reasons. In respect of each alleged breach of regulation 29, setting out each term of the MRO response which the Claimant alleges to be unreasonable with reasons You may not succeed in your challenge if you do not provide proper reasons."
"The Arbitrator will reach a decision on consideration of the documents only and without an oral hearing. The parties may request an oral hearing. This request must be made to the Arbitrator in writing, giving reasons."
"We do not believe the requirement to stock all Heineken brands is reasonable, and therefore contrary to regulation 43(4)(a)(iii) SBEEA.
Currently the site offers for sale only 2 Heineken branded products.
The site recently transferred from Punch Taverns ownership and therefore has no historical tie whatsoever to the Heineken product portfolio.
Remedy sought: reduce the proposed keg stocking requirement to 20% of products."
The arbitrator's Award
"33. The short point is therefore that there is no evidence factual or expert to support the Respondent's 60% keg stocking requirement. And, whilst there is no evidence factual or expert submitted by the Claimant in rebuttal of the 60% requirement, yet nevertheless the Claimant must be taken to have accepted that a 20% requirement is 'reasonable' for the purposes of section 43(4)(a)(iii).
34. In all the circumstances the Arbitrator is satisfied that a 20% keg stocking requirement is reasonable for the purposes of section 43(4)(a)(iii) of the [2015] Act."
"1. The Arbitrator declares that the 60% keg stocking requirement proposed by the Respondent is unreasonable for the purposes of 43(4)(a)(iii) of the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015.
2. The Arbitrator declares that the 20% reduction of the keg stocking requirement proposed by the Claimant is reasonable for the purposes of 43(4)(a)(iii) of the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015.
3. The Respondent is ordered to provide the Claimant with a revised response which includes a proposed tenancy which is MRO compliant and which therefore must contain a provision for a 20% keg stocking requirement, such revised response to be served within 21 days of the date of this Award or within such further period as is agreed by the Arbitrator in consultation with the Claimant."
"12. The Respondent cannot blow hot and cold. The Respondent cannot reject the opportunity to provide an arbitral tribunal with evidence (factual and or expert) and additionally reject the opportunity to make submissions to the tribunal, and then complain that the reasons relied upon by the tribunal in its award do not include evidence and submissions which the Respondent has chosen not to provide to the tribunal.
Or, to put the matter another way: a party cannot rely upon its own wrong: ex turpi causa non oritur actio."
"18. In this case, the Respondent chose not to avail itself of the opportunity to provide the Tribunal with factual or expert evidence and rejected the opportunity to make submissions to the Tribunal at a hearing. Instead the Respondent relied on the reasons set out in its Defence Those are the reasons set out in the Scott Schedule
19. How is the 60% arrived at? Or to be precise, "at least 60%" Whatever its basis, it is a figure rejected by the Claimant, who conceded a stocking requirement of 20%. The Tribunal accepted that concession as the basis of its award, there being no specific evidence or submissions advanced by the Respondent to support the 60% requirement or to challenge the Claimant's concession of 20%.
Conclusions on Reasons
20. The Tribunal therefore rejects the Respondent's invitation to provide reasons by way of a clarification of the Award pursuant to the provisions of sections 52 and 57 of the Arbitration Act 1996 "
"All awards shall be made in writing and shall be final and binding on the parties. The parties shall carry out all awards without delay. By adopting these Rules, the parties waive their right to any form of appeal or recourse to a court or other judicial authority insofar as such waiver is valid under the applicable law."
The present claim
i) Whether the arbitrator's finding that the 60% keg stocking requirement was unreasonable was affected by a serious irregularity within the meaning of s. 68 of the 1996 Act, by reversing the normal burden of proof without inviting submissions on the point from the parties. This is referred to as the "burden of proof challenge".ii) Whether the order that Star offer an MRO lease with a 20% stocking requirement was likewise affected by a serious irregularity, on the grounds that it was outside the arbitrator's powers under the 2015 Act and/or the Pubs Code. This is referred to as the "excess of powers challenge".
The burden of proof challenge
"Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
(b) the tribunal exceeding its powers (otherwise than by exceeding its substantive jurisdiction: see section 67);
"
"(1) The tribunal shall
(a) act fairly and impartially as between the parties, giving each party a reasonable opportunity of putting his case and dealing with that of his opponent, and
(b) adopt procedures suitable to the circumstances of the particular case, avoiding unnecessary delay or expense, so as to provide a fair means for the resolution of the matters falling to be determined.
(2) The tribunal shall comply with that general duty in conducting the arbitral proceedings, in its decisions on matters of procedure and evidence and in the exercise of all other powers conferred on it."
"Onus is always on a person who asserts a proposition or fact which is not self-evident. Now, in conducting any inquiry, the determining tribunal, be it judge or jury, will often find that the onus is sometimes on the side of one contending party, sometimes on the side of the other, or as it is so often expressed, that in certain circumstances the onus shifts. But onus as a determining factor of the whole case can only arise if the tribunal finds the evidence pro and con so evenly balanced that it can come to no such conclusion. Then the onus will determine the matter."
"the rules of natural justice do require, even in an arbitration conducted by an expert, that matters which are likely to form the subject of decision, in so far as they are specific matters, should be exposed for the comments and submissions of the parties. If an arbitrator is impressed by a point that has never been raised by either side then it is his duty to put it to them so that they have an opportunity to comment. If he feels that the proper approach is one that has not been explored or advanced in evidence or submission then again it is his duty to give the parties a chance to comment. It is not right that a decision should be based on specific matters which the parties have never had the chance to deal with, nor is it right that a party should first learn of adverse points in the decision against him. That is contrary both to the substance of justice and to its appearance "
"If the result would most likely have been the same despite the irregularity there is no basis for overturning an award. However, in determining whether there has been substantial injustice, the court is not required to attempt to determine for itself exactly what result the arbitrator would have come to but for the alleged irregularity, as this process would in effect amount to a rehearing of the arbitration. Instead, if the court is satisfied that the applicant had not been deprived of his opportunity to present his case properly, and that he would have acted in the same way with or without the alleged irregularity, then the award will be upheld. By contrast, if it is realistically possible that the arbitrator could have reached the opposite conclusion had he acted properly in that the argument was better than hopeless, there is potentially substantial injustice. The accepted test now seems to be that there is substantial injustice if it can be shown that the irregularity in the procedure cause the arbitrators to reach a conclusion which, but for the irregularity, they might not have reached, as long as the alternative was reasonably arguable."
The excess of powers challenge
i) Clear language is required to displace the presumption against state interference with a person's property rights or other economic interests (§85).ii) S. 3 of the Human Rights Act 1998 also requires that, in so far as possible to do so, primary and subordinate legislation should be interpreted in a way that is compatible with Convention rights, including the right under Article 1 of the First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights, to the peaceful enjoyment of possessions. Any derogation from those rights requires clear statutory language (§§8687).
iii) There is no clear language in either the 2015 Act or the Pubs Code permitting the arbitrator to interfere in the commercial negotiations between the tenant and the landlord by requiring the landlord to offer specific terms in its revised response. General permissive language is not sufficient to empower the arbitrator to interfere with the economic and property interests of the parties unless clearly expressed and applicable to that end (§§8893, 99 and 102).
iv) It could not have been intended in the statutory framework, without clear and express wording, that the arbitrator would have the power unilaterally to change one term in the MRO offer, given that any MRO offer represents a commercially balanced package of terms that are inter-dependent (§101).
v) The arbitrator's award therefore exercised a power that she did not have under the relevant legislation, which was a serious irregularity under s. 68(2)(b) of the 1996 Act, which met the test of substantial injustice since on a correct reading of the arbitrator's powers the disputed requirement could not have been ordered in the award (§§108111).
Conclusion: remedy