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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Aer Rianta Cpt v. Ryanair Ltd. [2001] IESC 94; [2002] 1 ILRM 381 (13 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2001/94.html Cite as: [2001] IESC 94, [2001] 4 IR 606, [2001] 4 IR 607, [2002] 1 ILRM 381 |
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1. This
is an appeal against the order of Kelly J. made in the High Court on 5th
December 2000 whereby he granted summary judgment in favour of the
Plaintiff/Respondent Aer Rianta CPT. The proceedings arose out of a disputed
claim for the balance allegedly due by the Defendant/Appellant
(“Ryanair”) to the Plaintiff/Respondent (“Aer Rianta”)
in respect of landing charges and passenger load charges at Dublin Airport.
The proceedings were heard by way of notice of motion grounded on the
affidavits of the parties on 28th and 29th November 2000. The learned judge,
having reserved his judgment, gave judgment on the 5th December 2000 and made
an order that the Plaintiff should recover from the Defendant the sum of
£356,777.00 together with interest in the sum of £76,963.00, making
in total the sum of £433,740.00. The Plaintiff was also granted the costs
of the proceedings.
2. Landing
charges and passenger load fees are payable by airlines using the facilities of
airports, including Dublin Airport, operated by the Plaintiff, Aer Rianta.
Pursuant to the provisions of Section 39 of the Air Navigation and Transport
(Amendment) Act, 1998, Aer Rianta is entitled to recover these charges as a
simple contract debt.
3. The
factual background to the proceedings is set out in summary by the learned
trial judge in his judgment as follows:-
4. The
proceedings were commenced by Aer Rianta in July 1999 to recover sums which
they claimed were due by Ryanair in respect of landing charges and passenger
load fees in respect of three routes operated by Ryanair during 1997 and 1998
namely:
5. In
November 1999 Ryanair paid an agreed sum in respect of the landing charges and
passenger load fees for the Dublin-Bristol-London route, with the result that
in the proceedings before the High Court and in the present appeal only the
charges for the Paris and Brussels routes were in question.
6. In
his judgment the learned trial judge referred to the matters set out in the
affidavits of the Defendant’s chief executive Mr O’Leary. He then
analysed a number of items of correspondence between Mr O’Leary and Mr
Byrne of Aer Rianta exchanged during the period February to March 1997. I
shall refer to this correspondence later. The learned trial judge concluded,
in the main on the basis of the exhibited documents, that the Defendant had not
satisfied him that there was a fair or reasonable probability of it having a
real or
bona
fide
defence and he therefore held that the Plaintiff was entitled to summary
judgment.
7. The
Defendant/Appellant has appealed against this decision. In the
Defendant/Appellant’s notice of appeal it seeks that in lieu of the
judgment and order of the High Court, this Court should make an order granting
to the Defendant/Appellant leave to defend the Plaintiff/Respondent’s
summary proceedings and that those proceedings should be remitted for plenary
hearing before the High Court as if the proceedings has been originated by
plenary summons.
8. Ten
grounds of appeal are set out in the Notice. Of these, the most relevant to
the written and oral submissions made by counsel to this Court are as follows:-
9. In
order to appreciate fully the submissions made by Counsel it is necessary to
refer briefly to the terms of the discount scheme operated by Aer Rianta and to
the history of the routes in question.
10. The
text of the scheme itself, as published to the relevant airlines on the 16th
January 1997, is exhibited in the affidavit of Brian Hampson sworn the 21st
September 1999 which grounds the Plaintiff’s original motion. The
discount scheme applied both to passenger load fees (based on the number of
embarking passengers) and to landing charges (based on the maximum permissible
loaded weight of the landing aircraft).
11. The
aim of the scheme was to provide an incentive for the growth of traffic into
and out of Dublin Airport and,
inter
alia
,
to encourage airlines to operate new routes. The extent of the discount,
therefore, was related to the overall increase in traffic on a particular route
as compared with the traffic on that route in the previous year. Where more
than one airline operated on a particular route, the discount allowable was
divided among the operating airlines in accordance with their contribution to
the increased traffic. It was essential to the scheme that new overall traffic
on the route had to be generated; an airline could not get credit for discount
purposes simply by
“poaching”
traffic
from an airline already operating on the route.
12. Two
intercity routes are in question in these proceedings - the Dublin-Brussels
route and the Dublin-Paris route. Their history during the 1997 to 1999 period
is as follows. Up to January 1997 two airlines operated on the Dublin-Brussels
route - Aer Lingus/Sabena as a shared operation, and Cityjet. Cityjet withdrew
from the route on the 5th January 1997. It
13. On
the Dublin-Paris route there were originally two airlines operating - Aer
Lingus and Air Inter/Air France. In or about 1997 Air France had taken over
Air Inter and no longer itself wished to operate the Dublin-Paris route. Air
France then contracted with Cityjet to operate the Dublin-Paris route as a
carrier for it. For the purposes of the discount scheme this raised the
question as to whether Cityjet was a new carrier on the route or not.
14. On
the 7th February 1997 Ryanair announced plans to operate on the Dublin-Brussels
route, flying into Charleroi, and on the Dublin-Paris route flying into
Beauvais. In his affidavit setting out Ryanair’s defence to the motion
Mr O’Leary states that Ryanair was willing to embark on these new routes
(which created new business for Dublin Airport) solely on the basis that Aer
Rianta had agreed to a variation of the discount scheme in respect of both
routes. This is categorically denied by Aer Rianta.
15. Senior
Counsel for the Appellant, Mr Shipsey, set out the framework of the discount
scheme. He referred to the history of the Dublin-Brussels route and submitted
that, after the withdrawal of Cityjet from the route at the beginning of 1997,
a specific variation of the discount scheme as it applied to that route was
required in order to induce Ryanair to enter on to that route in 1997. The
strict application of the scheme militated against any new airline from
entering the route in that year because they would have to carry more than the
17,500 passengers that were carried in the previous year by Cityjet before they
became entitled to any discount. Accordingly any new carrier on that route
proposing to take the place of Cityjet would in effect be penalised by the
17,500 passengers Cityjet had carried in the previous year before obtaining the
benefit of any growth discounts in relation to its own passengers. Ryanair was
not prepared to commence its service on that route in 1997 unless it was
specifically agreed that it would enjoy the full benefit of the growth discount
in respect of all passengers carried on the route. Ryanair maintained that a
specific oral variation was agreed between the chief executive of Ryanair,
Michael O’Leary, and Aer Rianta’s assistant chief executive of
operations, Brian J. Byrne.
16. On
the Dublin-Paris route Mr Shipsey argued that if Aer Rianta treated Cityjet as
a new carrier rather than as a
“sub-contractor
to Air France”
it would thereby dilute the discount available to other carriers including
Ryanair. Ryanair maintained that this route was also discussed between Michael
O’Leary and Brian J. Byrne in January and February of 1997, and that it
was expressly agreed that Cityjet would not be treated as a new carrier on that
route.
17. Mr
Shipsey also submitted that the documents exhibited by Mr O’Leary in his
affidavit of 18th November 1999 bore out Ryanair’s contention that
variations had been agreed. These letters and a memorandum written by Mr
O’Leary to one of his executives are dated between 14th February 1997 and
11th March 1997 and are quoted in full in the judgment of the learned High
Court judge.
18. Counsel
for the Appellant accepts that there is no specific mention of a variation of
the discount scheme in any of these documents. However, he points out that in
his affidavit Mr O’Leary claims that it was a customary practice for oral
agreements to be made with Aer Rianta providing for variations in the discount
schemes operated by them. As an example Mr Shipsey submitted that it was
accepted that a variation was agreed in respect of Ryanair’s commencement
of the Dublin-Birmingham route. Such variations, on the affidavit evidence of
Mr O’Leary, were always agreed orally and it was open to the Court to
interpret the correspondence as being based on an orally agreed variation the
details of which were being discussed and confirmed. He submitted that the
learned trial judge had erred in his interpretation of the correspondence.
19. Mr
Shipsey stressed that it would not have been in the interest of Ryanair to
embark on the Brussels route in particular in the absence of the alleged
variation of the scheme. If there was no variation Ryanair could without
difficulty have postponed its entry onto this route until 1998, thus ensuring
discount benefits in respect of virtually all its traffic.
20. Senior
Counsel for the Plaintiff/Respondent, Mr McDonald, emphasised the lack of
factual detail of the alleged variation agreement in Mr O’Leary’s
affidavits. Had such an agreement existed Mr O’Leary would surely have
averred to the date, location, terms, and other details of the conversations
between himself and Mr Byrne during which such a variation was discussed and
agreed. The averments in Mr O’Leary’s affidavits were quite
remarkably vague. In addition it should be noted that the correspondence and
memorandum on which the Defendant relied as establishing the agreement were all
dated subsequent to Ryanair’s announcement launching their Brussels and
Paris routes.
21. It
would, he submitted, be quite extraordinary for a public body managing an
airport to publish a well defined discount scheme to airlines in general and
then proceed more or less in secret to vary such a scheme in favour of one
particular airline. Such a procedure would cause chaos.
22. Ryanair
had engaged in a number of disputes over the years in respect of earlier
discount schemes and this was just such another dispute. The documentary
evidence before the Court showed no basis for a real or
bona
fide
defence by Ryanair - on the contrary the correspondence was consistent with the
terms of the general scheme and inconsistent with the terms of the variation
alleged by Ryanair.
23. It
is accepted by both parties that the correct test to be applied in deciding
whether to grant summary judgment in this case is that established by this
Court in
First
National Commercial Bank Plc v Anglin [1996] 1 IR 75.
In that case Murphy J. speaking for the Court said:-
24. Thus
it is for this Court to decide whether in the instant case the defence set out
in the affidavits of Mr O’Leary, together with the documents exhibited
therewith, is credible, or in other words, whether there is a fair or
reasonable probability of the Defendant having a real or
bona
fide
defence. Since there had been no oral hearing and neither deponent has been
cross-examined on his affidavit, it was not for the learned High Court judge to
weigh the affidavit evidence of Mr O’Leary and Mr Byrne or to attempt to
resolve the factual contradictions contained in it. Still less is it for this
Court to attempt any such task. In
25. In
applying the test set out in
First
National Commercial Bank v Anglin
,
it may be of assistance to consider the facts of that case. As set out in the
headnote, the Plaintiff issued a summary summons claiming payment on foot of a
personal guarantee by the Defendant. The Defendant gave the guarantee as part
of the security for a loan made by the Plaintiff to a company of which the
Defendant was managing director. The guarantee was dated the 1st February 1989,
which was the completion date of the loan transaction, and the date on which
the first part of the loan was drawn down. The High Court held that the
Defendant had failed to prove that what he said was credible to show that he
had a real or bona fide defence. In his judgment in this Court (at page 78 of
the report) Murphy J. refers to the nature of the defence put forward by the
Defendant in the High Court and in this Court as follows:
26. Murphy
J. went on to analyse the course of events as they occurred and concluded that
there was
“no
question whatever”
of the document having been executed subsequent to the 1st February 1989. The
situation as regards the incredible nature of a defence put forward by the
Defendant was very clear.
27. A
similar situation applied in the
Banque de Paris case [1984] 1 Lloyd's Law Rep 21
which also concerned the enforcement of a guarantee. Lord Justice Ackner (at
page 23 ) summarises the facts as follows:-
28. The
businessmen involved put forward a number of defences described by Lord Justice
Ackner as
“now
accepted not to be worth the paper they are written on”
.
They then claimed that they had been assured by the bank that the guarantees
were sought for cosmetic purposes only and would never be enforced. There was
no evidence whatever to support this assertion. One of the businessmen went so
far as to say that he did not read the terms of the guarantee before signing
it. The Court of Appeal also had before it evidence which had not been before
the High Court at first instance and which threw a most unfavourable light on
the credibility of the Defendants. As in the
Anglin
case, the position was clear; there could be no credible defence.
29. A
number of other cases from this jurisdiction were provided to the Court by way
of authorities on which the Appellant relied. In
ACC
Bank Plc v Elio Malocco (High Court unreported Laffoy J. 7th February 2000)
.
Laffoy J. referred (at page 17 of her judgment) to the
Anglin
test, stating:
30. Having
regard to the totality of the evidence the learned trial judge was not
satisfied that she could exclude a fair or reasonable probability of the
Defendant having a real or bona fide defence. While a certain amount of
documentary evidence had been produced to the Court, the learned judge was not
satisfied that it clarified the intention of the settlement agreement which was
in question in the proceedings; she accordingly was unwilling to draw any
inference from that evidence and refused to grant summary judgment.
31. In
his judgment in that case Murphy J. (at page 231 ) referred to
Crawford
v Gillmor (1891) 30 L.R. Ir. 238
where at page 245 Barry L.J. observed:-
32. This
observation, in my view, might well also be applied to the present case, in
which both Mr Shipsey and Mr McDonald have provided the Court with the most
careful analysis of the affidavit evidence, the disputed facts and the
applicable law.
33. The
motion before the Court is to be considered in the light both of
First National Commercial Bank v Anglin
and of the later cases in which the
Anglin
test was applied. It is clear that there are considerable weaknesses in the
defence proffered by Mr O’Leary in his affidavits. As pointed out by Mr
McDonald no detail whatever is provided as to the date, time, location or
circumstances of the alleged agreement to vary the discount scheme. The
correspondence exhibited, is to say the least, lacking in clarity, and may be
open to the interpretation placed on it by the learned High Court judge.
Nevertheless in my view the probability remains open, on the affidavit
evidence now before the Court, that the Defendant has a real or bona fide
defence, or that what is put forward by the Defendant is credible. In my view
the matters which are so acutely at issue between the parties require to be
resolved in a full hearing.
34. On
that basis, therefore, I would allow the appeal and remit the proceedings for
plenary hearing.
35. This
is the Defendant’s appeal against the judgment and order of the High
Court (Mr. Justice Kelly) made the 5th December, 2000. By this order the
learned trial judge acceded to
the
Plaintiff’s motion for liberty to enter final judgment against the
Defendant in the sum of £356,777.00 with interest in the sum of
£76,963.00, making a total of £433,740.00.
36. The
proceedings were initiated by summary summons dated the 28th July, 1999 which
claimed monies allegedly due for
landing
charges and passenger 1load fees in respect of the Defendant’s aircraft
on the Dublin/Paris/Dublin and Dublin/Brussels/Dublin routes. A further claim
incorporated in the proceedings, in respect of the Bristol
route,
was settled between the parties and was not the subject of argument in the High
Court or in this Court.
37. The
proceedings came before the Court by way of motion for summary judgment,
pursuant to order 37 of the Rules of the Superior Courts. This is amongst the
best known of legal procedures and the criteria
to
be applied on such an application have been the subject of a number of much
cited judgments in the Superior Courts here and in the neighbouring
jurisdiction. Indeed, at the start of the hearing of the present
appeal
Counsel assured us that there was agreement between them that the test set out
in the judgment of this Court in
First
National Commercial Bank plc v. Anglin
[1996] 1 IR
95
was the correct test to apply. However, it transpired in the course of the
argument that Counsel were no means agreed on what this test meant: each
advanced an interpretation of it which, if accepted, would dictate a
resolution of the present appeal in favour of his own client.
38. Order
37 of the Rules of the Superior Courts deals with the hearing of proceedings
commenced by summary summons. Each relevant summary summons to which an
appearance has been entered is to be set down before the Master, by the
Plaintiff, on motion for liberty to enter final judgment for the amount claimed
plus interest. Thereafter, by Order 37 Rule 6:-
40. Rule
7 sets out the essence of the procedure. The last phrase expresses the
overall principle: the Court must arrange for the determination of the issues
in such manner as seems just. The Plaintiff, on a motion for summary
judgment, may obtain liberty to enter final judgment but only for such sum or
other relief as he, at this first stage, appears entitled to. Since it has
earlier been provided (Order 37 Rule 3) that the Defendant may oppose the
motion by affidavit, the Plaintiff’s apparent entitlement must subsist
despite what the Defendant has deposed to. Since the order provides for
alternative, more searching and elaborate, methods of resolving the issues, the
Plaintiff’s entitlement must appear clearly enough to render these
unnecessary.
41. All
the cases to which we have been referred feature formulations, in the context
of particular facts, of the degree to which the Plaintiff’s entitlement
must be established and of the nature of averment by the Defendant which will
preclude summary judgment.
42. Although
some form of summary procedure seems to have existed from a remote time, the
procedure in its recognisably modern form seems to date from the time of
Judicature Acts. The criteria for its exercise appear to me to have been most
clearly expressed in certain of the older cases. In
Sheppards
and Co. v. Wilkinson and Jarvis
6 TLR 13, Lord Esher said:-
43. The
Order 14 referred to in this extract was introduced in the United Kingdom
subsequent to the passing of the Judicature Acts. An order in identical form
existed in Ireland up to 1926. In
Patrick
J. Prendergast v. Ann Bullitt Biddle
(Supreme Court unreported 31st July, 1957), Lavery J. surveyed the history of
the summary judgment procedure said:-
44. This
observation is perfectly consistent with that in
Sheppards
case, quoted above. In an Irish case almost contemporaneous with
Sheppards,
Crawford
v. Gilmore
[1891] IR 238, Sir Peter O’Brien C.J. said:-
45. In
the same case, two of the judges in the Irish Court of Appeal made observations
which have often been the subject of approving comment. O’Brien CJ said:-
46. This
is an aspect of the test to which further reference will be made when
considering the facts of the present case, below.
47. More
recent Irish authority, in my view, supports the impression gleaned from
authorities from the early days of the summary judgment jurisdiction, that the
Defendant’s hurdle on a motion such as this is a low one and that the
jurisdiction is one to be used with great care. In
Bank
of Ireland v. Educational Building Society
[1999] 1 IR 220 Keane J. (as he then was) said:-
48. In
light of these authorities, I believe that the test for obtaining summary
judgment has not changed since the early days of the procedure in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The formulation used in
Anglin
and the cases cited in that judgment are useful and enlightening expressions of
the test, but I do not believe that this formulation expresses an altered
criterion which is more favourable to a Plaintiff than that derived from the
other cases cited. The
“fair
and reasonable probability of the Defendants having a real or bona fide
defence”
,
is not the same thing as a defence which will probably succeed, or even a
defence whose success is not improbable.
49. On
the hearing of this appeal, Counsel on both sides emphasised the formulation of
the criteria for summary judgment contained in the
First
National Commercial Bank v. Anglin
,
cited above. This formulation was in turn derived from
Banque
de Paris v. de Naray
[1984] 1 Lloyds Law Rep.21, which decision was itself reaffirmed in
National
Westminster Bank v. Daniel
[1993] 1WLR 1453. It is in the following terms:-
51. Considerable
differences of emphasis, at least, arose on the hearing of this appeal as to
the meaning of the tests formulated above. Counsel on behalf of Aer Rianta
emphasised the word
“probability”.
He resiled from the position that the Defendant had to show probability of
successfully defending the action, and was surely quite correct to do so. He
urged however
“a
fair and reasonable probability”
obviously meant something more than a bare possibility and he urged that the
adjective in the phrase
“real
defence”
should be interpreted in a similar fashion. He urged that the overall test,
accordingly, should be read as meaning that the Defendant had to show a
probability that he had a defence which was not only
bona
fide
but
had a chance of success which was not improbable.
52. Equally,
Counsel for Aer Rianta urged the question
“Is
what the Defendant says credible?”
does not involve giving the word
“credible”
its literal meaning. He conceded that this literal meaning meant no more than
capable of rational belief, or not incredible. In its context, and in view of
the previous formulation, however, Counsel submitted that the word
“credible”
should
be given what he said is its more usual contemporary meaning of
“not
improbable”
or at least not
“seriously
improbable”.
He contrasted these shades of meaning with what he conceded to be the words
proper or original connotation of
“not
incapable of rational belief”
.
53. In
my view, the fundamental question be posed on an application such as this
remains: is it
“very
clear”
that the Defendant has no case?; is there either no issue to be tried or only
issues which are simple and easily determined?; do the Defendant’s
affidavits fail to disclose even an arguable defence?
54. In
all of these cases, however, the issue of credibility arose rather starkly. In
Daniels
the defence affidavits were mutually contradictory. In
de
Naray
the Defendant’s averments were flatly contradicted by those of the
Plaintiff’s private detective which were accepted to be accurate. In
Anglin,
the indisputable documentation of a commercial transaction rendered the
alternatively chronology proposed by the Defendant quite untenable.
55. I
consider that the references in these cases to credibility and to fair and
reasonable probability may be misleading if read without reference to their own
unique facts. Read in context, I do not consider that the passages quoted
either alter the well established criteria for the granting of summary
judgment.
56. Counsel
for the Plaintiff conceded that the Defendant’s factual contentions were
neither logically impossible nor capable of outright contradiction by evidence
which was itself unimpeachable. He submitted, however, that the
Defendant’s contentions were utterly improbable at least when viewed in
their commercial context. This may be summarised as follows:-
57. The
Plaintiff set up a scheme of charges and discounts which it says was unaltered
and on the basis of which, applied to undisputed traffic figures, its claim can
be readily computed in the amount stated. The defence is that the scheme was
varied in discussions between the Defendant’s Chief Executive Mr.
O’Leary and the Plaintiff’s representative Mr. Byrne, or
alternatively that the said discussions constitute an estoppel against the
Plaintiff. The terms of these discussions are set out in considerable detail
in the Defendant’s affidavits and are rejected in very strong terms in a
replying affidavit on behalf of the Plaintiff. The radical degree of factual
dispute between the parties can be gathered from the terms of the
Defendant’s affidavit of the 2nd December, 1999 where at paragraph 18 it
is said:-
59. It
thus appears that there is conflict of evidence of a much more radical and
downright sort than is usual in commercial actions. But the Plaintiff contends
that this conflict must be considered in the context of what it says is the
commercial impossibility of a variation of terms such as that claimed by the
Defendant: such an arrangement would have to be reduced to writing and
approved by the Plaintiff’s board. Still more importantly, the
Plaintiff contends that what Mr. O’Leary says is not credible: in the
words of the learned trial judge
“.....
his credibility is undermined by the very documents he exhibits, his assertion
of an agreement when the exact opposite is indicated by those exhibits and the
inconsistencies both as to the form of the agreement and when it was allegedly
entered into”.
60. It
is undisputed that the scheme as it existed in January 1997 allowed discount
only on new traffic, not on that which a carrier merely took from a competitor
or former carrier. The Defendant says that this was a critical commercial
disincentive to its entry to either of the two relevant routes. Another
carrier had withdrawn from the Brussels route in January 1997. In the
previous year this carrier had flown 17,500 passengers on the route. If the
scheme were unaltered, Ryanair would attract no discount in respect of the
first 17,500 passengers. The commercial impossibility of entering the route on
this basis, combined with Aer Rianta’s need to entice a new carrier on to
the route, claims Ryanair, led to the alteration of the scheme.
61. The
nub of the Defendant’s contentions in relation to the Paris route relates
to the treatment of City Jet. The Defendant says that this carrier had
previously acted as a sub-contractor on the route to Air France/Air Inter. It
was now to carry its own right. The Defendant contends that it was agreed that
City Jet would participate in the discount scheme only when its passenger
numbers exceeded those carried by Air France/Air Inter in 1996. In other
words, City Jet was to be identified with those carriers under whose umbrella
it had previously flown on this route. Aer Lingus was the only other relevant
carrier.
62. In
my view, it is clear that there is a very substantial conflict of fact in the
averments of the respective parties. Their versions are set out in five
affidavits sworn between the 21st September, 1999 and the 13th January, 2000.
These affidavits and their associated exhibits amount to 181 pages in the Books
of Appeal before us. Both parties claim that the commercial realities of
their relations, properly understood, makes the other’s contentions
implausible to the point of near impossibility. The affidavits deal with this
aspect at great length and it was fully explored in argument before us.
63. On
the face of it, this case turns on a stark conflict of factual evidence. The
alleged crippling implausibility which each side says afflicts the others
account depends on the view taken of extremely complex dealings and background
facts, some of which are themselves in dispute.
64. The
length, complexity, and subtlety of the competing arguments, factual and legal,
on affidavit and in court, recall all the observations of O’Brien C.J.
and his colleague in
Crawford
v. Gilmore
,
quoted above. The length of time and volume of paper required by the
Plaintiff to seek to demonstrate that the case is a clear one in itself
suggests that it is not sufficiently clear for summary judgment. Reading the
affidavits and listening to the case argued with considerable intensity on both
sides
has
led me to the view that one cannot be confident where the justice of the case
lies without hearing oral evidence and cross-examination. To me, at least, it
is not
“very
clear indeed”
that the Defendant has no case. It
is
clear in my view, that the issues are not
“simple
and capable of being easily determined”.
65. In
light of that view, and since it follows that the case should go to plenary
hearing, it is not desirable for this Court to enter further into the merits.
However, since the Plaintiff greatly emphasised its view that the
correspondence and an internal memorandum quoted was quite inconsistent with
the Defendant’s case, and were successful in this before the learned
trial judge, I will make one observation. The correspondence is brief,
consisting of a letter of the 14th February, 1997, the Defendant’s
internal memorandum of the 17th February, the Defendant’s letter of the
same date to the Plaintiff, the Plaintiff’s reply of the 11th March, the
Defendant’s further reply of the same date. The second sentence of the
Memorandum read:-
“He
(Mr. Byrne) also confirmed to me that to the extent that Aer Lingus’s
passenger carryings do not decline on either the Paris or Brussels route, then
most or all of Ryanair’s traffic will qualify for the growth
rebates”.
The purport of the third paragraph of the Defendant’s letter of the same
date is similar, though not identical.
66. In
argument on the hearing of the appeal it was conceded, as it may not have been
in the High Court, that the sentence quoted is consistent only with the view
that there was some variation of the scheme. This is of course the
Defendant’s view only, and the point may not be significant upon full
hearing. But it seems to me to negative the Plaintiffs contention that the
Defendants correspondence is actually inconsistent with the scheme having been
varied, on which a significant part of its argument centered.