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United Kingdom Competition Appeals Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Competition Appeals Tribunal >> Poter v Glynn [2014] CAT 13 (30 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/CAT/2014/13.html Cite as: [2014] CAT 13 |
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APPEAL TRIBUNAL
B e f o r e :
(Chairman)
CLARE POTTER
DERMOT GLYNN
Sitting as a Tribunal in England and Wales
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THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SALES (Chairman) |
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CLARE POTTER |
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DERMOT GLYNN |
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Crown Copyright ©
COSTS
The parties' submissions
(a) Nielsen applies for its costs of Grounds 1 4 from either the CMA or IRi.(b) The CMA contends that there should be no order as to costs (beyond those arising from Ground 5). In the event that the Tribunal agrees that Nielsen should be awarded its costs, the CMA advances the alternative position that IRi should pay both Nielsen's and the CMA's costs of Grounds 1 - 4.
(c) IRi contends that there should be no order as to costs (beyond those arising from Ground 5). It opposes Nielsen's application for costs, as well as the CMA's alternative position in which it seeks its costs from IRi.
(a) Nielsen obtained the entirety of the relief it sought in these proceedings. That is, the setting aside of the Decision and the remission of the matter to the CMA. It was, therefore, the successful party. The successful party in a judicial review would usually be entitled to its costs of the claim as a whole.(b) The fact that the CMA's concession is arguably attributable to IRi does not mean Nielsen must bear its own costs. The CMA had a responsibility to investigate properly and Nielsen should not be penalised for bringing an action it was right to bring.
(c) The disclosure of the new information which led to Ground 5 also undermined the CMA's position in relation to Grounds 1 3. If Nielsen had not brought the action, the new information which led to Ground 5 would never have come to light.
(a) In inviting the Tribunal to quash and remit the matter to the CMA, the CMA acted as a responsible regulator. It should not be penalised for acting in such a manner.(b) Nielsen did not succeed in full. It did not obtain the relief it sought, other than in an over-simplistic sense. Nielsen sought the quashing of the decision on Grounds 1 4 and reconsideration compatibly with the Tribunal's judgment on those grounds. The concession under Ground 5 does not entail any acceptance of Grounds 1 4.
(c) The CMA's concession flows from the discovery that the Decision was based on materially inaccurate information supplied by the merger parties. In the circumstances, there is no good reason why the public purse should bear Nielsen's costs.
(a) There is no general costs rule that means Nielsen is entitled to all its costs.(b) It would be disproportionate and exceptional to make an order against IRi, as an intervener, in respect of the entirety of the costs of the main parties.
(c) Grounds 1 4 do not raise issues between IRi and any party to proceedings. It would therefore be inappropriate to make IRi liable for those costs.
(d) Nielsen has not succeeded on Grounds 1 4 as those grounds have not been determined. Ground 5 is unrelated to those grounds.
(e) Ground 1 4 may yet come to be contested, should Nielsen challenge any subsequent decision of the CMA following remittal.
The Tribunal's analysis and conclusions
(a) No party has won or lost in relation to Grounds 1 4. We have not considered those grounds. Therefore, we are unable to say that Nielsen was successful in relation to all its grounds of challenge such that it should be entitled to its costs in respect of those Grounds. Where the complaints made against the CMA have not been determined, it would be unfair to order it to pay Nielsen's costs.(b) As between Nielsen and the CMA, the provision of new information by IRi is an extraneous event unrelated to Grounds 1 4 which has allowed Nielsen to plead a distinct ground, Ground 5. In the context of the case as originally pleaded and in relation to the relief which has been granted, the matters giving rise to Ground 5 have rendered Grounds 1 4 academic at this stage. If Ground 5 had not emerged, Nielsen might have been successful on some or all of its original grounds of challenge. Equally, however, the CMA might have successfully defended itself, in which case it might have been awarded its costs of Grounds 1 4. The Tribunal could not reach a view on the merits under Grounds 1 - 4 without the expense and time required for argument and determination on those Grounds, which would be out of all proportion to the costs matters to be determined. The just course, therefore, is to let the costs in relation to Grounds 1 4 lie where they fall, and make no order in relation to them as between Nielsen and the CMA.
(c) As to the fairness of ordering IRi to pay these costs, we note IRi's point that none of the four original grounds of review relate to the conduct of IRi. Although IRi's provision of new information to the CMA effectively rendered the determination of Grounds 1 4 academic at this stage, in the context of the present claim, justice would not be best served by ordering IRi to pay the costs of an application for review in which no complaint is made about its conduct. It would be exceptional, even in an unusual case such as this, for the Tribunal to order an intervener to pay the entirety of the main parties' costs.
(d) In our assessment, the fair outcome, where Grounds 1 4 have been rendered academic in the present claim in this way, the merits under Grounds 1 4 remain undecided and there is no relevant winner, is for the costs in relation to those Grounds to lie where they fall.
USE OF DISCLOSED DOCUMENTS
(a) 'these proceedings' came to an end when the Tribunal determined the application by remitting the Decision to the CMA; and(b) all non-public documents disclosed by one party to another for the purposes of these proceedings should be treated in accordance with the provisions of Part 31.22 of the Civil Procedure Rules ("CPR").
CONCLUSION
(a) IRi bear the costs of both Nielsen and the CMA that arise directly in relation to Ground 5, as submitted in Nielsen's Annex to its Notice of Application of 27 May 2014. Such costs be determined as those arising from consideration of IRi's letter to the CMA sent on 20 May 2014 and from the aforementioned amendment to Nielsen's Notice of Application on 27 May 2014.(b) Save for the above, there is no order as to costs.
(c) All documents disclosed as between Nielsen, the CMA or IRi for the purposes of this application for review be treated in accordance with the provisions of CPR 31.22 (Subsequent use of disclosed documents and completed Electronic Documents Questionnaires), which shall be treated as applicable, mutatis mutandis, to this application for review.
(d) For the purposes of the Confidentiality Ring and this Ruling, the "proceedings" referred to are the proceedings in Case No. 1227/4/12/14 and do not include any subsequent review of the completed acquisition by IRi of Aztec Group by the CMA.
The Honourable Mr Justice Sales (Chairman) |
Dermot Glynn | Clare Potter |
Charles Dhanowa O.B.E., Q.C. (Hon) Registrar |
Date: 30 July 2014 | Date: 30 July 2014 |