![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Varano v Air Canada [2021] EWHC 1336 (QB) (17 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/1336.html Cite as: [2021] 2 Lloyd's Rep 372, [2021] EWHC 1336 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
MARJOLYN VARANO |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
AIR CANADA |
Defendant |
____________________
Tom Stewart Coats (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 3 March 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Geraint Webb QC:
(1) Introduction
The parties
Agreed facts
a. For the purposes of Regulation 261, Air Canada is not a "Community carrier", meaning that it is not an air carrier with an operating licence granted by a Member State.
b. In 2016 the Claimant made a single booking with the Defendant to fly from London Heathrow to Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, Texas, USA, via Toronto Pearson International Airport, Canada, by means of two directly connecting flights.
c. There was no delay to the first flight from London Heathrow to Toronto Pearson International; it landed at Toronto slightly ahead of schedule at 14:53 UTC on 10 April 2016.
d. The second flight, from Toronto to Austin, was scheduled to depart at 18.25 UTC, over three and a half hours later.
e. The aircraft allocated to operate the second flight was due to fly into Toronto from J.A. Douglas McCurdy Airport, Nova Scotia, but that incoming flight was cancelled as a result of a technical issue raising safety concerns. An alternative aircraft was therefore allocated for the flight from Nova Scotia to Toronto and then from Toronto to Austin. That alternative flight arrived into Toronto at 22.44 UTC and departed Toronto at 23.42 UTC, over five and a quarter hours late.
f. As a result, the Claimant's flight arrived in Austin five hours and forty-nine minutes after the originally scheduled arrival time.
g. The Claimant is domiciled in the USA and is not a citizen of any Member State.
h. If the Claimant does have a right to compensation under the Regulation, contrary to the Defendant's position, then the appropriate compensation in this case would be €600 having regard to the length of the flight and the length of the delay.
The Issues
Procedural history
(2) Regulation 261
"(1) Action by the Community in the field of air transport should aim, among other things, at ensuring a high level of protection for passengers. Moreover, full account should be taken of the requirements of consumer protection in general.
(2) Denied boarding and cancellation or long delay of flights cause serious trouble and inconvenience to passengers.
(3) While Council Regulation (EEC) No 295/91 of 4 February 1991 establishing common rules for a denied boarding compensation system in scheduled air transport created basic protection for passengers, the number of passengers denied boarding against their will remains too high, as does that affected by cancellations without prior warning and that affected by long delays.
(4) The Community should therefore raise the standards of protection set by that Regulation both to strengthen the rights of passengers and to ensure that air carriers operate under harmonised conditions in a liberalised market…"
"This Regulation establishes, under the conditions specified herein, minimum rights for passengers when:
(a) they are denied boarding against their will;
(b) their flight is cancelled;
(c) their flight is delayed."
"(b) 'operating air carrier' means an air carrier that performs or intends to perform a flight under a contract with a passenger or on behalf of another person, legal or natural, having a contract with that passenger
(c) 'Community carrier' means an air carrier with a valid operating licence granted by a Member State …
…
(h)'final destination' means the destination on the ticket presented at the check-in counter or, in the case of directly connecting flights, the destination of the last flight; alternative connecting flights available shall not be taken into account if the original planned arrival time is respected;"
"This Regulation shall apply:
(a) to passengers departing from an airport located in the territory of a Member State to which the Treaty applies;
(b) to passengers departing from an airport located in a third country to an airport situated in the territory of a Member State to which the Treaty applies, unless they received benefits or compensation and were given assistance in that third country, if the operating air carrier of the flight concerned is a Community carrier"
"(a) EUR 250 for all flights under 1,500 kilometres
(b) EUR 400 for all intra-Community flights of more than 1,500 kilometres, and for all other flights between 1,500 and 3.500 kilometres
(c) EUR 600 for all flights not falling under (a) or (b).
In determining the distance, the basis shall be the last destination at which the denial of boarding or cancellation will delay the passenger's arrival after the scheduled time".
(3) Judicial consideration of Regulation 261
CJEU decisions prior to the Court of Appeal's decision in Gahan
The Court of Appeal's judgment in Gahan
Decisions of the CJEU since Gahan – Wegener and České aerolinie
(4) Submissions of the parties
Submission on behalf of the Defendant
Submissions on behalf of the Claimant
(5) The approach to be adopted following exit from the EU
"Article AIRTRN.22: Consumer protection
1. The Parties share the objective of achieving a high level of consumer protection and shall cooperate to that effect.
2. The Parties shall ensure that effective and non-discriminatory measures are taken to protect the interests of consumers in air transport. Such measures shall include the appropriate access to information, assistance including for persons with disabilities and reduced mobility, reimbursement and, if applicable, compensation in case of denied boarding, cancellation or delays, and efficient complaint handling procedures.
3. The Parties shall consult each other on any matter related to consumer protection, including their planned measures in that regard."
(6) Analysis
"Regulation 261 applies to flights by non-Community carriers out of EU airspace even if flight 1 or flight 2 lands outside the EU. The necessary starting point here is that there is no requirement in Regulation 261 that they should land in the EU. Regulation 261 takes effect when the carrier is present in the EU and it imposes a contingent liability on the carrier at that point. The liability may never crystallise but if it does do so, it will crystallise outside the jurisdiction."
a. The first, at [78], was that "… this is a case where the measure uses an activity outside the jurisdiction not to claim jurisdiction but to quantify a sanction imposed within the jurisdiction…". She noted that in ETS the CJEU had rejected the argument that the EU emissions trading scheme involved a breach of the extraterritoriality principle in circumstances in which the scheme required an operator using an EU airport to surrender emissions allowances calculated on the basis of the whole flight and that"[s]o too in the present case, Regulation 261 applies to a non-Community carrier because they use EU airports. It is rational for the EU legislature to measure delay by reference to the final destination where there are two or more flights which are directly connecting as that is likely to be the best measure of the inconvenience to the passenger."
b. The second point, at [79], was that this conclusion "is supported by the decision of the House of Lords in Holmes [1989] AC 1112… "category (2) cases" as defined by Lord Bridge of Harwich were held not to offend against the extraterritoriality principle, and they are more closely analogous to Regulation 261 since they concerned "carriage involving a place of departure or destination or an agreed stopping place in a foreign state and a place of departure or destination or an agreed stopping place in the United Kingdom or other British territory"…"
(7) Conclusion