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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Group M UK Ltd v Cabinet Office [2014] EWHC 3659 (TCC) (05 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/3659.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3659 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GROUP M UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CABINET OFFICE |
Defendant |
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Philip Moser QC, Ewan West and Daisy Mackersie (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Valentina Sloane (instructed by Slaughter and May) for an Interested Party (Carat)
Hearing date: 4 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
Background
The Pleadings
"3. The Claimants, in the course of its business, has to negotiate prices for the purchase of advertising space with media owners such as [BSkyB]… ordinarily the Claimant will negotiate an 'umbrella' arrangement that covers all clients, although on occasion an individual client contract may exist. In relation to both the 'umbrella' arrangements and individual client contract, the Claimant will offer a media owner either: (i) a specific volume of expenditure; or alternatively (ii) a share in its UK annual expenditure in relation to specific forms of advertising on a particular medium. For example, in relation to television, the Claimant will offer to guarantee to ITV a specific share of its total television spot expenditure (excluding sponsorship). In exchange the Claimant will require the media owner to agree a price that the advertising space it is purchasing. The Claimant will also have certain quality requirements which will need to be satisfied in relation to the advertising space it purchases from the media owner. For example, in relation to television the Claimant may require a certain percentage of the advertising space it purchases to be at peak viewing times. It is averred that other providers of media buying services ("Agencies"), including Carat…negotiate with media owners in the same or a similar way.
4. The rate media owners charge for their advertising space is known as the "Base Cost". The manner in which the Base Cost is expressed depends on the type of media in question. For example, the Base Cost in relation to television advertising can be the cost of reaching a thousand people ("CPT") and in relation to press it can be the cost of a single column centimetre. In the course of negotiations a media owner will usually agree to: (i) provide the advertising space required by the Agency at a specific negotiated Base Cost; and (ii) provide the Agency with a bonus of free advertising space or air time (a "Value Pot"). The more advertising that an agency seeks to place with the media owner the greater its ability to achieve a lower Base Cost and a larger Value Pot. However, most media owners will not allow the final price, consisting of the Base Cost and the Value Pot, to fall below a certain level (the "Freezing Point"). Media owners may sometimes retrospectively offer rebates in relation to certain contracts and the amount of those rebates will be based on factors relating to the preceding performance of the contract between the media owner and the Agency. These rebates do not form part of the Value Pots and are usually not guaranteed at the outset of the contract. As such they are not normally taken into account in assessing the price of the advertising space obtained from a particular media owner. For the avoidance of doubt Value Pots are not rebates as they are calculated prospectively at the start of the contract and not retrospectively.
5. The Claimant, and it is averred Carat, are able to choose how to allocate the free advertising space in Value Pots between their clients. This means that they are able to offer some clients lower prices than others by allocating more of the free advertising space from Value Pots to those clients."
"(ii) …the Defendant failed properly to validate the tender prices submitted by Carat in relation to the Contract;
(iii) Further…the Defendant failed to recognise that different tenderers were able to sustainably offer different levels of prices and allowed Ebiquity to evaluate the sustainability of prices submitted by tenderers without knowing which tenderer submitted which Media Pricing Grades and the spend by each tenderer at supplier level;
(iiia) Further…the Defendant allowed Ebiquity to evaluate the sustainability of prices submitted in relation to television without ensuring that prices submitted on the basis of different inflation assumptions were adjusted so that they could be assessed on a like-for-like basis;
(iiib) Further, there were manifest errors in the Defendant's validation of the sustainability of Carat's pricing submissions in relation to the Contract in that the Defendant allowed Ebiquity:
(a) to evaluate the pricing submissions on the basis of the incorrect assumption that the Media Pricing Grids submitted by Bidder 1 was submitted by the Claimant when they were submitted by Carat;
(b) to evaluate the sustainability of the pricing submissions on the incorrect assumption is that amendments could be made to the terms and conditions of the Contract;
(iv) Further…the Defendant failed properly to exclude the tender submitted by Carat in relation to the Contract on the basis that the prices submitted by Carat were abnormally low and/or the tender was in breach of the requirements of the ITT;
(v) Further and/or alternatively, there were manifest errors in Defendant's evaluation of pricing submissions in Carat's tender as Carat's Price Score was so low it is inferred that there must be an arithmetical error in the prices inputted into the Media Pricing Grid by Carat and/or in the calculation of Carat's Final Cost and/or in the calculation of Carat's Price Score;
(vi) Further…the Defendant amended the Original ITT in a manner which severed the functional link between the Contract being tendered and the assessment of prices for the provision of advertising space on International media without drawing this significant, irrational than internally inconsistent change the attention of the Claimant."
The Threshold Issue
"(2) when deciding whether to make an [interim] order…
(a) the Court must consider whether, if regulation 47G(1) were not applicable, it would be appropriate to make an interim order requiring the contracting authority to refrain from entering into the contract; and
(b) only if the Court considers that it would not be appropriate to make such an interim order may make an order under paragraph (1)(a) [bringing the suspension to an end]."
"Whereas the existing arrangements at both national and Community levels for ensuring their application are not always adequate to ensure compliance with the relevant Community provisions particularly at this stage when infringements can be corrected…"
Article 2 of the amended Remedies Directive states:
"1. Member States shall ensure that the measures taken concerning the review procedures specified in Article 1 include provision for powers to:
(a) take, at the earliest opportunity and by way of interlocutory procedures, interim measures with the aim of correcting the alleged infringement or preventing further damage to the interests concerned, including measures to suspend or to ensure the suspension of the procedure for the award of a public contract or the implementation of
any decision taken by the contracting authority;
(b) either set aside or ensure the setting aside of decisions taken unlawfully, including the removal of discriminatory technical, economic or financial specifications in the invitation to tender, the contract documents or in any other document relating to the contract award procedure…
3. When a body of first instance, which is independent of the contracting authority, reviews a contract award decision, Member States shall ensure that the contracting authority cannot conclude the contract before the review body has made a decision on the application either for interim measures or for review. The suspension shall end no earlier than the expiry of the standstill period referred to in Article 2a(2) and Article 2d(4) and (5).
4. Except where provided for in paragraph 3 and 1(5), review procedures need not necessarily have an automatic suspensive effect on the contract award procedures to which they relate.
5. Member States may provide that the body responsible for review procedures may take into account the probable consequences of interim measures for all interests likely to be harmed, as well as the public interest, and may decide not to grant such measures when their negative consequences could exceed their benefits."
Article 2a which is entitled "Standstill period" states:
"1. The Member States shall ensure that the persons referred to in Article 1(3) have sufficient time for effective review of the contract award decisions taken by contracting authorities, by adopting the necessary provisions respecting the minimum conditions set out in paragraph 2 of this Article and in Article 2c."
"29. On that basis and considering the purpose of the Directive and applying the principles of effectiveness and equivalence, I see no difficulty in the American Cyanamid principles being consistent with Article 2(4) of the Remedies Directive. The review procedures would take into account the probable consequences of interim measure for all interests likely to be harmed, looking first at the adequacy of damages as part of the balance of convenience. There is nothing in the Directive which seeks to limit or define the way in which the national courts exercise their discretion in balancing the interests of the parties."
The Court of Appeal in Letting International Ltd v London Borough of Newham [2007] Civ 1522 had decided that the American Cyanamid principles were applicable (see the judgement of Moore-Bick LJ at Paragraph 12, albeit that the amended Remedies Directive had not then been implemented.
(a) The adoption at an initial stage of the test of the need for it to be established that the proceedings raise relevant serious issues to be tried must be a sensible and pragmatic test. It can not have been intended that the Remedies Directive can or should be used to disrupt public procurements with clearly weak or unsustainable challenges. The serious issue test is a pragmatic approach to weed out weak cases whereby suspension of public procurements has been triggered. Mr Bowsher QC accepted (correctly) that at least as part of the overall exercise the Court must have a right to take into account the weakness of a claim in deciding whether to lift the suspension.
(b) The purpose of Article 2(1)(a) is primarily to ensure that there are procedures in place ("interlocutory procedures") which have as their aim the correction of "the alleged infringement" and the prevention of " further damage to the interests concerned". These procedures are to include measures to suspend or to ensure the suspension of the placing of the relevant contract pending the Court's "interlocutory" or indeed later decisions. Article 2(4) makes it clear that the review procedures do not have to be automatic. These procedures are encompassed within Paragraphs 47G and 47H of the Public Contracts Regulations. They obviously satisfy Article 2.
(c) Article 2(1)(b) provides for powers to set aside decisions unlawfully taken. Again, there are such powers in the Public Contract Regulations.
(d) It is a primarily in Article 2(5) that provision is made for the Court (in this country responsible for review procedures) in effect to lift or as the case may be continue the suspension. It is not unimportant to note that Article 2(5) is actually permissive, with the use of the word "may" three times in the wording. This demonstrates that the Court is clearly to have a discretion and that discretion is not in any way inconsistent with the American Cyanamid approach. The use of the expression "the probable consequences of interim measures for all interests likely to be harmed" as the factors which the Court may take into account points very strongly to the Court being entitled to have regard to the probabilities. It is not inconsistent and indeed it is wholly consistent with this wording that the Court conducts a review of the probable strength or corresponding weakness of the claim that there has been a material infringement of the Public Contract Regulations. That review is encompassed within the American Cyanamid approach both at the first stage (the consideration of whether there is a serious issue to be tried) and also at the balance of convenience stage in a consideration (amongst what may be many other factors) as to whether the claim is a weak one even where there has just about been established a serious issue to be tried.
(e) Article 2(5) identifies that the public interest can legitimately be taken into account and, indeed, it is well established in these Courts that the public interest is a factor, in appropriate cases, to be taken into account. It is indeed properly accepted that a part of the public interest is the securing of fair and transparent public procurement processes. National interests are also, in appropriate cases, an aspect of public contracts which can be taken into account.
(f) It must be legitimate, in considering "all interests likely to be harmed", to have regard to whether, if the lifting of the suspension is ordered, the complaining claimant tenderer is still left with a remedy and that must include an effective remedy. Article 2(1)(c) does require that review procedures provide a power to award damages. If there is no ready or easily proved entitlement to damages, that must be a factor which the Court should take into account. The reverse is also true in that, if damages would be an adequate remedy, that must be a factor which a court should take into account. The fact that English courts attach weight to the adequacy of damages does not make that practice incompatible with the Remedies Directive.
(g) Article 2(5) finally endorses as acceptable the deployment of the discretion not to grant suspension (or in the English context a discretion to lift the statutory suspension imposed following the issue of appropriate court proceedings). Overall, the taking into account of "all interests likely to be harmed" in this exercise is in reality the application of the "balance of convenience" test.
(h) Mr Bowsher QC relied upon the decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union in European Commission v Ireland (Case C -455/08) but this case does not obviously assist. There is nothing in the Court's reasoning which suggests that the analysis of the Remedies Directive set out above is wrong. Similarly, reliance was placed on a decision by the Irish High Court in OCS v Dublin Airport Authority [2014] IEHC 306 but it has been accepted that this has been overtaken by the decision of the Irish Supreme Court; this is not therefore a particularly helpful decision. Similarly reliance is placed on the German regime which is said to be different to the English regime; again, the German regime may or may not be consistent with the Remedies Directive and, I strongly suspect, there are likely to be differences in the approach of different countries within the European Union on dealing with public procurement challenges and it may well be that many such different approaches are all consistent or at least not inconsistent with the Remedies Directive. Within reason and of course having regard to the meaning of the wording in the Remedies Directive, it must be open to different countries to adopt somewhat different review and interim measures procedures with somewhat different emphases.
Serious Issue to be Tried
"11.6.1…this final stage of the Award Evaluation will be determined by the Media Pricing Grids…
11.6.2 The pricing comprises a spreadsheet containing a series of Media Pricing Grades which must be fully populated…
11.6.3 Ebiquity will run a 2 hour session for Potential Providers to enable full transparency of how these overall channel total is are calculated…
11.6.6 Pricing Guarantees are based on Gross Media Value…and when combined with the Supplier's Commission Rates…should be inclusive of all profit, overheads and agency fees and should factor in the likely resource costs…
11.6.8 Each item is weighted- as detailed in the Media Pricing Grids spreadsheet. This waiting is based on historical spend data. The weightings are for assessment purposes only and do not provide any guarantee of volumes for the framework.
11.6.9 Each weighted line item is added together to produce an overall channel total across each of the media grids…
11.6.10 Each channel total is then fed into the Master Spreadsheet An added together to generate a subtotal…
11.6.11…commission rates are applied to the indicative spend volumes…to give a second subtotal…
11.6.12 The overall Final Cost for comparison is generated by adding the buying subtotal…to the commission subtotal… giving a Final Cost for comparison…This Final Cost will be used for the Pricing Evaluation.
11.6.13 All prices submitted will be shared with Ebiquity…This will be under a full Non-Disclosure Agreement and for the sole purpose of validating each rate provided against Ebiquity's pool prices to ensure they are sustainable for the full four-year term. Any unsustainable rates identified by Ebiquity will be highlighted to the Authority and clarified with the Potential Provider and any unsustainable rates may be deemed to be non-compliant. Ebiquity will use their market knowledge and expertise to determine with the Authority if any rates are unsustainable. Any inflation/deflation indices were also be verified by Ebiquity to ensure they are aligned to market forecasts for the term of the Framework Agreement. The Authority retains the right to remove any non-compliant bids from the process.
11.6.14 Once the Authority is satisfied that all tenders are compliant, the Price Evaluation Process will be undertaken by different individual(s) evaluators to those individuals involved with the Quality Evaluation Process. Theseevaluators will be representatives from the Authority.
11.6.15 The Potential Provider with the lowest overall Final Cost…which has been deemed compliant by the Authority shall be awarded the Framework Agreement…
11.6.21 Potential Providers must commit to the Pricing Guarantees offered if awarded the Framework Agreement. Pricing Guarantees must be fixed (as per the respective indices) for the duration of term…The Pricing Guarantees that will be incorporated into Framework Schedule 3 (Charging Structure) are those on the following terms of the Media Pricing Grids spreadsheet:
- Radio
- Cinema
- OOH
- TV Specials
- TV late bookings
- TV CPTs
- TV Summary
- Press Summary
- Press
- Online – Display
- Online – VOD
- Online - ad serving and tech costs"
"Pricing Guarantees" were defined in the draft framework agreement as "the maximum price given to each of the Performance Guarantees as specified in Annex A to Schedule 3 (Charging Structure)"; this Schedule 3 seems to have been the one into which the accepted prices or rates would be transposed once the winning tender had been accepted. "Performance Guarantee" is defined as meaning "the minimum result (in terms of audience views, clicks or similar) the supplier agrees to deliver each Price Guarantee as set out to each media channel in Annex A of Schedule 3…" That Schedule provided for a "penalty" or liquidated damages provision in relation to under delivery against the Performance Guarantee by the Supplier from 1% for a 0% to 2.5% level of under-delivery to 20% for a 7.51% to 10% under-delivery; these penalties were to be applied to Commissions received by the Supplier.
"(6) If an offer for a contract is abnormally low the contracting authority may reject that offer but only if it has –
(a) requested in writing an explanation of the offer or of those parts which it considers contribute to the offer being abnormally low;
(b) taken an account of the evidence provided in response to a request in writing; and
(c) subsequently verified the offer or parts of the offer being abnormally low with the economic operator."
As a number of authorities have indicated, this does not obviously impose obligations on the contracting authority either to determine that an offer is "abnormally low" or to reject "abnormally low" offers. It seems relatively clear that these provisions are primarily concerned with giving a tenderer who is considered to have submitted and "abnormally low" tender an opportunity to respond. Cases such as Fratelli [1989] ECR 1-1839, Impresa Lombardini SpA [2001] ECR 1-9233, TQ3 Travel Solutions Belgium SA [2005] II-2627 and SAG ELV Slovensko [2012] 2 CMLR 36 are in point. Even if there was some sort of obligation to ascertain if there was an "abnormally low tender" from Carat, it would be unlikely that anything other than the sustainability exercise to be and actually apparently carried out by Ebiquity could reasonably be expected to have been done, which (it would be very strongly arguable) would lead in all probability to exactly the same result.
Balance of Convenience/Adequacy of Damages
(a) The current contract, as extended is due to expire in December 2014. That has already been extended.
(b) Although I do not have to decide the point, it is at least properly arguable that the extension of time which was agreed to as between the Cabinet Office and Group M in March 2014 was unlawful, in effect because it was not subject to a further public procurement exercise. In point are at least two authorities: Metropolitan Resources North West Ltd v Secretary of State for Home Department [2011] EWHC 1186 (Ch) and Indigo Services UK Ltd v Colchester Institute [2010] EWHC 3237 (QB). It is certainly arguable that any further extension would be unlawful and open to challenge, not least by Carat. I do not consider that it is appropriate to put the Cabinet Office to some sort of election when one of the two choices would involve them in pursuing an arguably unlawful course of action.
(c) Although the Court has not determined the substantive issues between the parties, if it turns out after a full trial that Group M's challenge was unjustified, it will have secured at its own prices a substantial amount of business to which it was not otherwise entitled. Given the views expressed above as to there being no serious issue to be tried, there is a not insignificant chance that such an unacceptable outcome would have been secured by the pursuance of an arguably unacceptable challenge.
Decision