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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ryanair Ltd v Esso Italiana Srl [2013] EWCA Civ 1450 (19 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1450.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1450 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Eder
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
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Ryanair Limited |
Respondent / Claimant |
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- and - |
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Esso Italiana Srl |
Appellant / Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Daniel Beard QC (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Appellant
Hearing date : 22 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
"This Agreement contains the entire agreement of the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof and there are no other promises, representations or warranties affecting it. This Agreement cannot be modified in any way except in writing signed by the parties. No claims shall be made hereunder for prospective profits or for indirect or consequential damages except as otherwise provided in the footnotes attached to the schedule. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of England excluding its conflict of law rules and the United Nations Convention on the International Sale of Goods Act shall not apply. For the purposes of the resolution of disputes under this Agreement, each party expressly submits itself to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the Courts of England."
"220. As seen earlier in the section dedicated to the description of the market, the price that the airlines pay for the supplying of jet fuel is a result of the aggregation of different components. Some of these components are not subject to the contracting between oil company and airline: the value of the product on the international market (Platts quotes), the airport tariffs, the tariffs for the utilization of fixed systems such as hydrant systems, piers, etc. Then there exists a further component (cad [sc, perhaps called] "differential"), that is established in the contract between the airline and the oil company, and it is on this component that the effects of competition between suppliers can mainly be exercised."
"228. The table clearly shows that the differentials charged for deliveries in the three main Italian airports are significantly higher (at a rate of 50% or more) than those airports of comparable size, if not of a smaller size (such as Paris Orly and Brussels) or significantly smaller (such as Cologne). Moreover, an Italian airline would enjoy more favourable conditions in domestic airports than in foreign airports.
The different conditions applied, however, are not justified by reasons such as high airport fees which at Fiumicino and Malpensa airports are charged on the price of fuel: these charges, in fact, amounted in 2004 to €7-8 per 1,000 litres of fuel sold, while the differences at issue here are about €10-20 per 1,000 litres. For deliveries to medium-sized airports (Nice, Linate, Bordeaux, Lyons and Ciampino), prices are more similar and in any case are based according to airport size."
"ARTICLE IV - PRICES
4.1 If at any time a price or fee provided in this Agreement shall not conform to the applicable laws, regulations or orders of a government or other competent authority, appropriate price or fee adjustments will be made; provided, however, that in the event Seller is at any time prevented from collecting, or Buyer is required to pay more than, the full price or fee provided for in this Agreement, including changes in said price or fee pursuant to other provisions hereof, the party adversely affected shall have the option at any time thereafter while such condition exists to cancel this Agreement as to any affected delivery location upon fifteen (15) days prior written notice to the other."
The judgment below
"6…In essence, what is said is that Esso Italiana participated in infringing behaviour in breach of Article 101…Therefore, the prices charged for the fuel supplied by Esso Italiana to Ryanair in Italy were not in conformity with the applicable law and Esso Italiana is in breach of clause 4…that is what is referred to as the "contract claim".
7. It is an essential part of that contract claim that Esso Italiana participated in infringing behaviour in breach of Article 101…
25. On the basis of Fiona Trust, Mr Auld QC, acting on behalf of Ryanair, submitted that it was authority for the following propositions: (1) It is to be presumed that rational businessmen who are parties to the contract intend all questions arising out of their legal relationship to be determined in the same forum. (2) This presumption is a strong one and requires clear words to the contrary to be displaced…
38…Mr Beard QC submitted that it is at least odd that, in the context of a jurisdiction clause which expressly states that the agreement is governed by the laws of England, the parties might have contemplated that the jurisdiction clause extends to a potential claim for breach of statutory duty under Italian law. Mr Auld QC accepts for present purposes only that the claim for breach of statutory duty is one which would be governed by Italian Law, although his case is, or at least might be (and he reserves his position) to say in due course that the claim for breach of statutory duty is in fact one of English law…
39. I am bound to say that I was initially impressed by this particular argument of Mr Beard QC. However, it seems to me that Mr Auld QC's answer is correct and that, although it might seem odd that such a claim might fall within the jurisdiction clause, the fact of the matter is that the contract claim itself will necessarily involve, or at least arguably necessarily involve, a consideration of the position under Italian Law because of the terms of article 4.1 and its reference to "the applicable laws, regulations and orders of a government or other competent authority". I do not have to decide that at this stage…
42…I have to consider that the rational or reasonable business man would have contemplated that there would, or at least might be, a contractual claim…
43. It seems to me incontrovertible that the reasonable and rational businessman would also have contemplated that the claims against Esso Italiana in respect of breach of statutory duty in relation to the fuel supplied under this particular contract could equally be advanced in England. In my opinion, those two claims are beyond any doubt whatsoever claims which are "so closely knitted together", using the words of Leggatt LJ in The Angelic Grace. Also, looking at the speeches in the House of Lords in Fiona Trust, I am of the view that a reasonable and rational businessman would be taken to have agreed that a single tribunal would resolve both those disputes. It seems to me that there is an almost complete overlap between those two claims…
44. Mr Beard QC has a much more forceful case with regard to the wider claims that Ryanair seek to advance against Esso Italiana i.e., the claims for losses based upon breach of statutory duty in relation to fuel supplied under contracts with other third party cartel members. Mr Beard QC is right in particular that the nature of the losses in relation to such other claims is potentially wider and much larger. He submitted that it is not conceivable that a rational business person would agree to such potentially wider and larger claims being dealt with in one jurisdiction.
45. As I have said, I have found this part of the case much more difficult. However, it seems to me that Mr Auld QC is right that, in considering a claim against Esso Italiana for breach of statutory duty in respect of losses allegedly suffered arising out of the other contracts with other cartel members, it would be a "forensic nightmare" that the contract and the more limited claim for breach of statutory duty would be pursued in England; whereas the claim in relation to the second limb for breach of statutory duty would be pursued in some other jurisdiction…"
The issue as to the validity of the Article IV claim
"There is a governing law and non-exclusive jurisdiction clause in the Contract in favour of the English courts (Section 12.1). Esso Italiana accepts that that Section 12.1 means that the Contract Claim can be heard in the English courts. . . . It does, however, strenuously resist the Contract Claim as having no foundation and has reserved its position as to whether any further legal steps should be taken in relation to it…The present application concerns only the Breach of Statutory Duty Claim."
The adjourned hearing
The width of article IV
"If at any time a price or fee provided in this Agreement shall not conform to the applicable laws, regulations or orders of a government or other competent authority, appropriate price or fee adjustments will be made; provided, however, that in the event the Seller is at any time prevented from collecting, or Buyer is required to pay more than, the full price or fee provided for in this Agreement, including changes in said price or fee pursuant to other provisions hereof, the party adversely affected shall have the option at any time thereafter while such condition exists to cancel this Agreement as to any affected delivery location upon fifteen (15) days prior written notice to the other."
The scope of the jurisdiction clause
"In order that there should be a sufficiently close connection, as the Judge said, the claimant must show that the resolution of the contractual issue is necessary for a decision on the tortious claim, or, that the contractual and tortious disputes are so closely knitted together on the facts that an agreement to arbitrate on one can properly be construed as covering the other."
Ultimately therefore it is a question of construction of the jurisdiction clause (there the arbitration clause) in circumstances where there are parallel or closely analogous claims in both contract and tort. Without a contractual claim, however, this authority is of no assistance to Ryanair.
"13. In my opinion the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered or purported to enter to be decided by the same tribunal. The clause should be construed in accordance with this presumption unless the language makes it clear that certain questions were intended to be excluded from the arbitrator's jurisdiction. As Longmore LJ remarked, at para 17: "if any businessman did not want to exclude disputes about the validity of a contract, it would be comparatively easy to say so."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Patten :
Lord Justice Tomlinson :