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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Verizon UK Ltd v Swiftnet Ltd [2008] EWHC 551 (Comm) (19 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/551.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 551 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Verizon UK Limited (Formerly MCI WorldCom Limited) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Swiftnet Limited |
Defendants |
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Mr. Graeme Kirk (instructed by Preiskel & Co. LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th January and 15th February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Gavin Kealey Q.C.:
INTRODUCTION AND ISSUES
a. Account no. 979185 which the parties have described as the Indirect Account, so called because it relates to services where Swiftnet's customers connected to MCI's switch and not Swiftnet's switch. Swiftnet originally alleged that MCI had failed to give it credit for £164,309.22 and £20,018.23 in respect respectively of paid and unpaid invoices, making a total credit allegedly owed in respect of this account of £184,327.45. A schedule produced by Swiftnet shows that it disputes the invoices in respect of traffic in March 2003 and in the period from December 2003 to July 2005. MCI has now revised its claim on this account by giving credit to Swiftnet in respect of paid invoices for traffic for April 2003 and January to June 2004 in a total amount of £55,617. This has had the effect of correspondingly reducing MCI's claim in these proceedings. The amount of credit alleged by Swiftnet to be due on this account has also been correspondingly reduced and now stands at £128,709.95.
b. Account nos. 980657 and 100349 which the parties have described as the Direct Accounts, so called because they relate to services where Swiftnet's customers connected to MCI's network via Swiftnet's own switch. Swiftnet alleges that MCI has failed to give it credit for £115,551.91 and £81,663.68 in respect respectively of paid and unpaid invoices on Direct 657, making a total credit allegedly owed in respect of this account of £197,215.59. Swiftnet's schedule shows that it disputes the invoices on this account in respect of traffic between July 2003 and July 2005. In respect of Direct 349, Swiftnet alleges that MCI failed to give Swiftnet credit for £378,720.56 and £149,942.16 in respect respectively of paid and unpaid invoices, making a total credit allegedly owed in respect of this account of £528,662.72. Swiftnet's schedule shows that it disputes the invoices on this account in respect of traffic between February 2003 and July 2005.
c. Account no. GBT0849302 which the parties have described as the Global Inbound Service ("GIS") Account. This relates to a service by which Swiftnet's customers could call abroad on a toll free basis. Swiftnet alleges that MCI has failed to give it credit for £7,802.13 and £28,682.88 in respect respectively of paid and unpaid invoices making a total credit allegedly owed in respect of this account of £36,485.01. Swiftnet's schedule shows that it disputes the invoices on this account in respect of traffic in and between July 2004 and August 2005.
d. Account no. GBT0014562 which the parties have described as the Internet Account, relating as it does to internet services. Swiftnet claimed a total credit of £36,485.01 in respect of this account which MCI has now agreed to give. There is, therefore, no longer any dispute in relation to this account.
e. Accounts nos. UK0100467 and UK0100660 which the parties have described as 0800 or Freefone accounts. MCI's claim, which is for £3,388.76, is undisputed by Swiftnet.
a. In relation to the GIS account during the period in dispute (July 2004 to August 2005), were the contractual rates those contended for by MCI or by Swiftnet?
b. In relation to the Indirect Account and the two Direct Accounts, were "specials" agreed orally as alleged by Swiftnet between Mr. Roberts and Mr. Torode for MCI and Mr. Abraham Keinan, Mr. Iddo Keinan and Mr. Nissenson for Swiftnet?
c. If specials were agreed, were they binding in so far as they were not confirmed by Swiftnet in writing?
d. Was there an implied term of the Wholesale Master Services Agreement that MCI would render to Swiftnet invoices which accurately reflected an application of agreed rates for services rendered by MCI to Swiftnet for the usage by Swiftnet of MCI's services?
e. Has Swiftnet shown that the breach (if any) of the implied term caused significant disruption to its business?
f. Is Swiftnet estopped from pursuing its counterclaims based on incorrect invoices?
g. Are Swiftnet's counterclaims for damages in relation to accountancy costs and its credit rating too remote?
ISSUE 1: GIS ACCOUNT
a. In the first place, he pointed to the errors that had given rise to the substantial credit of £519,000. However, it is not suggested that those errors, which related to Spanish traffic, had any bearing on the present issue of applicable rates – other than the fact that the credit given in rectification of those errors was based on the December 2003 rates and not the February 2004 rates.
b. Secondly, he argued that, since the rates applied by MCI in order to resolve the dispute that had arisen over the Spanish traffic were those in the December 2003 Schedule, MCI had presumably accepted those rates to be the applicable rates even in respect of traffic after February 2004. However, this does not explain the exchange of emails in February 2005 and it is perhaps not insignificant that, in his Closing Submissions, Mr. Kirk did not touch on that exchange.
c. Thirdly, Mr. Kirk suggested that MCI was now seeking to apply a variety of rate cards and that, when he checked whether or not the correct rates had been applied, Mr. Roempke of MCI also used a variety of rate cards. In fact MCI is seeking only to apply the rates in the February 2004 Schedule and Mr. Roempke only applied that Schedule in his spot check of the GIS Account.
d. Fourthly, Mr. Kirk pointed out that Mr. Roempke had accepted in his oral evidence that, in his experience, agreed rates were sometimes not implemented. However, Mr. Kirk did not mention Mr. Roempke's evidence that this was not a problem in relation to the GIS Account.
e. Fifthly, Mr. Kirk drew my attention to the fact that Mr. Roempke's analysis was limited to July 2004 and April 2005. But this is because Mr. Roempke was conducting a spot check. He did not attempt to check the rates for each and every piece of traffic. It is not insignificant perhaps that Swiftnet cannot show that the rates in the February 2004 Schedule were not applied by MCI in its detailed invoices for which it now claims despite having the material against which to check the application of rates.
f. Sixthly, Mr. Kirk refers to the fact that Mr. Roempke had identified some small discrepancies in his checking of the rates. Mr. Kirk did not refer, however, to the fact that these discrepancies were all in Swiftnet's favour.
g. Lastly, Mr. Kirk referred me to Swiftnet's own set of rates that are identical to those found in the Payment Plan Agreement. However, that does not appear to me to advance the matter any further.
ISSUE 2: INDIRECT AND DIRECT ACCOUNTS
"The offer would normally be made in writing over an email generally. In fact, very rarely in any other way. [Day 2 transcript page 116] … I think the process was fairly obvious, in the sense that, again, we would issue a rate card, we would discuss the rate card, we would come up with specials on the rate card. I would offer those in the email and then a conversation would be taken ahead as to whether they wanted those applied or not [Day 2 transcript page 123] … "
"Email again. You would then take that, send that email to the customer. You might not send the actual one from Pricing, but your own email. Send that to the customer, then phone up or have a meeting with the customer to discuss certainly if you had achieved their target rate as it was called. You would then discuss how many minutes you were going to win. If you hadn't achieved their target rate but you had got very close, same conversation. If you were miles away, you just sent back the offer saying: I am sorry, we are not going to get any minutes. …… But I would say that nearly every instance, it would be an email offer from myself to a member of Swiftnet's team to say: these are the offers that we can make."
Mr. Kirk: "There are one or two examples that you refer to in your evidence, literally one or two examples, in your 15 or 18 months of those sorts of negotiations by email. Are there others which you think may be missing?"
A. "I .. I have to say that it is possible, but highly unlikely."
Mr. Torode also confirmed, like Mr. Roberts before him, that any offers that he would have made would have been "probably almost certainly .. by email".
a. The rate card that was issued by MCI for June 2005 traffic included among many destinations a number in Poland. Taking only the rates applicable to Poland land line calls and Poland mobile calls (as opposed to calls made to specific Polish cities) the MCI standard rate was 0.0092 GBP per minute and the MCI economy rate was 0.0087 GBP per minute for Poland land line calls, and the MCI standard rate was 0.1020 GBP per minute and the MCI economy rate was 0.0892 GBP per minute for Poland mobile calls.
b. By email dated 6th June 2005, Mr. Iddo Keinan asked Mr. Torode whether MCI would lower the Poland land line and mobile rates. In reply by email on the same day, Mr. Torode sent to Mr. Iddo Keinan a table of rates that MCI could offer. MCI could offer specials in relation to Poland-Gdansk, Poland-Krakow, Poland-Katwice and Poland-Warsaw but could not offer any decrease in or special in relation to Poland mobile rates, nor any decrease in or special in relation to its standard rate for Poland land lines. However, it did offer a slight decrease in respect of its economy rate for Poland land lines: 0.0069 GBP as compared with 0.0087 GBP.
c. Mr. Iddo Keinan responded by email to ask whether the rates that MCI could offer were valid as from 6th June 2005 and Mr. Torode replied – also by email – to ask Mr. Iddo Keinan, if Swiftnet wanted them to be, to confirm that by email.
d. Neither MCI nor Swiftnet has produced on disclosure in this action any email or other written communication from Swiftnet in response to Mr. Torode's last email. I infer, therefore, that none was sent.
e. Swiftnet has, however, produced on disclosure its own version of MCI's rate card for June 2005 on which the word "SPECIAL" appears against the rates in respect of which Swiftnet contends in this action that special discounted rates were agreed. According to Swiftnet's version of the rate card, specials were agreed for calls to Poland land lines and mobiles which are very different from those set out in the emails and attachments referred to above. Thus, the standard rate for Poland land lines is said to be a special rate of 0.0069 (c.f. 0.0092) per minute, the economy rate for Poland land lines is said to be 0.0065 (c.f. 0.0087 and 0.0069) per minute, the standard rate for Poland mobiles is said to be 0.0765 (c.f. 0.1020) per minute and the economy rate for Poland mobiles is said to be 0.0669 (c.f. 0.0892) per minute.
f. There is no good evidence that these specials in Swiftnet's version of MCI's rate cards were ever offered, let alone agreed. On the contrary, they are far lower than those set out in the contemporaneous written material referred to above.
"..just looking at this and trying to help out a little, in the two prices I see it is a more or less 20 per cent discount from our standard rate to India, and that leads me to believe that we would not give a special at 20 per cent under the standard rate. So therefore I don't think that I would have offered this to Swiftnet. … I can't see MCI Worldcom giving them a 20 per cent discount on a destination like India. So I certainly would not have given it to them."
a. Each of them was sent between 1700 hours and 1800 hours (London time) on the last day of each month (apart from March 2004 in respect of which there is no email). Mr. A. Keinan explained that he had the habit to come into the office and do it during that hour or, if out of the office, to do it using remote access facilities because, according to him, it had to be done at a precise time in order to set off a sequence of events leading to the loading of Swiftnet's switch by 2400 hours on the last day of the month. Mr. A. Keinan provided no good explanation, in my view, as to why the email had to be sent during that particular hour on that particular day (whether a weekday or a weekend day, and whether he was in London or travelling to parts of the world in different time zones), and why it could not have been sent earlier or as soon as the rates and specials had been agreed with instructions to the Operations Department to load the applicable rates by 2400 on the last day of the month. I have to say also that I found Mr. A. Keinan's explanation that he was a creature of such habit to be unconvincing.
b. None of the 24 emails was sent at the same minute which, as Mr. Lazarus demonstrated, is, at least, statistically improbable. If 24 emails are sent randomly during a period range of 57 minutes (as these 24 purport to have been sent), the probability that none of them will have been sent in the same minute is 0.34%.
c. 10 of the 24 emails fall into a pattern of 5 pairs. Each of these pairs comprises an email sent at a particular time on a particular date with the other email of the pair sent one minute later but on the same day of the following year. Thus, the 30 April 2004 email was sent at 1753 and the 30 April 2005 email was sent at 1754. There are four other similar pairs. When asked about this and whether it was coincidence, Mr. A. Keinan looked positively embarrassed and answered that he did not know what to say about it (Day 4 transcript page 158).
d. There are only three emails out of the 24 that relate to the Indirect Account. They were apparently sent in three successive minutes in different months, respectively 1741, 1742 and 1743 hours.
e. Mr. A. Keinan was unable to identify any of the recipients of the 24 emails, and Swiftnet has not adduced any evidence from anyone in its Operations Department.
a. According to Mr. A. Keinan, he recorded the agreements on special rates on a computer as and when they were agreed by him or communicated to him and there were never any written notes of this process. Those rates were apparently incorporated into the Excel spreadsheet that MCI had sent to Swiftnet in respect of the subsequent month's traffic. Mr. A. Keinan acknowledged in his evidence that he was aware by latest December 2004 that there were problems between Swiftnet and MCI on all the accounts, specifically problems about the correct rates to be applied and the application of specials. In fact, according to his first Witness Statement, he anticipated as early as July 2004 that Swiftnet would encounter billing problems with MCI because Mr. Gilmour had ceased to be responsible for checking invoices against claimed specials and all credit issues were being removed within MCI to Sweden. Against that background, it is in my judgment extraordinary that Swiftnet never troubled itself, once it had agreed a special with MCI, to confirm that agreement in writing with MCI.
b. This curiosity is made even more extraordinary if it be the case (which I have to say, I do not believe) that Mr. A. Keinan recorded all the agreed specials on a computer as and when they were agreed by him or communicated within Swiftnet to him for inputting onto the Swiftnet switch. It would have been a simple thing for him to send to MCI the exact same document that he had completed on his computer and that was available via the Swiftnet server to his Operations Department. To have done that would have eliminated or, at least reduced the risk of, any subsequent disputes or problems over agreed specials and the proper application of credits. Mr. A. Keinan was unable to provide any satisfactory explanation as to why he did not do so.
(i) I have already touched on the fact that there is a significant discrepancy between the specials that Mr. Iddo Keinan agreed in June 2005 for traffic to Poland and the specials that Swiftnet claims were agreed. Mr. A. Keinan suggested in the course of his oral evidence that this is to be explained on the basis that Mr. Iddo Keinan was simply not aware of what he or Mr. Nissenson had separately agreed with Mr. Torode. I do not accept this evidence. Even if Mr. Iddo Keinan did not know, and there was no good reason put forward by Mr. A. Keinan to explain why he would not know, Mr. Torode would obviously have been aware about the specials that he had separately agreed. It would, in those circumstances, have been extraordinary for Mr. Torode to come to another agreement with Mr. Iddo Keinan which offered Swiftnet far worse rates than those which he had already agreed. It was not suggested to Mr. Torode on behalf of Swiftnet in cross examination that he had come to two separate, inconsistent agreements in relation to specials for Poland in June 2005 with different Swiftnet personnel; or that he failed, when coming to an agreement with Mr. Iddo Keinan, to alert him to the fact that he had previously reached an agreement on rates that were more favourable to Swiftnet than those which he was now prepared to offer.
(ii) Mr. A. Keinan was adamant that Swiftnet had spent an average of 15 hours of management time reconciling each of MCI's invoices. On the basis of 500 invoices, as claimed in Swiftnet's pleadings, this represents about 4 man years in total. That, in my judgment, is a quite extravagant suggestion which I find totally implausible. No complaint along these lines was made by Swiftnet before it came to serve its Defence and Counterclaim in this action. I cannot overlook the fact that, with the 15 hour figure at the rate of reimbursement for which Swiftnet contends in respect of each of those hours, Swiftnet's counterclaim manages just to exceed MCI's claim. I infer that this was designed to ensure that result. The fact that Mr. A. Keinan was prepared to lend support to this allegation when he gave his evidence, in my view, does him no credit.
a. In relation to the Indirect Account, it recorded (among other things) that Swiftnet believed a credit was due because of specials that had been agreed by Mr. Roberts that had never been implemented.
b. In relation to the GIS Account, it recorded (among other things) that Swiftnet was agreeable to being given a credit of £519,000.
c. In relation to the Direct Accounts, it recorded that there was no dispute and that the invoices on those Accounts were to be paid in full.
(i) First, although in his oral evidence Mr. Nissenson claimed that he had disputed the accuracy of the email, there is no contemporaneous evidence that he did so. There is no evidence that he did not receive the email – in fact, Mr. Nissenson's suggestion that he challenged it implies that he must have received it - and, given the importance of the subject-matter, it would be surprising to find that any dispute that he wanted to raise would have been confined to some oral transmission.
(ii) Secondly, by email dated 11 November 2004, Mr. Torode asked Mr. Nissenson for confirmation as to what Swiftnet was paying and when it would be making payment in respect of the "agreed non-disputed amounts on [the Direct and Indirect Accounts]". Mr. Nissenson's response on 12 November 2004 in relation to the Direct Accounts was that they seemed "fine", and that Swiftnet would be checking them and would inform MCI that Swiftnet "have no further dispute on them (if that is the case). The last bill I checked was ok". It would seem that, rather than MCI having told Mr. Nissenson that the Direct Accounts were fine, it was in fact the other way round.
(iii) Thirdly, by email dated 17 January 2005, on the subject of "Indirect Account Issues", Mr. Nissenson told Kristy Perez that, in looking into the question of specials, he "couldn't find all of George [Roberts'] emails to [Swiftnet] with the specials". It is not insignificant that this echoes that part of the summary of the meeting of 9 November 2004 which referred to specials agreed by Mr. Roberts alone – and, incidentally, not to any specials agreed by Mr. Torode.
a. If specials had been offered by MCI to, or agreed by, Swiftnet, these would almost invariably have been recorded in emails sent by Mr. Roberts or Mr. Torode to Swiftnet. There are no emails in this case that support Swiftnet's allegations as to the special rates that it claims were agreed and it is to be inferred therefore that those special rates were not offered or ever agreed.
b. Mr. Torode very seldom agreed any specials with Swiftnet. He was rarely in a position where he could do so and such rare material as exists that evidences rates to which he did agree or which he did offer mentions special rates far in excess of those for which Swiftnet contends.
c. While Mr. Roberts probably offered specials to Swiftnet or agreed them from time to time, and Mr.Torode also – albeit rarely – did likewise, Swiftnet has failed to satisfy me what they might have been. I reject any attempt by Swiftnet to rely on Mr. Keinan's 24 emails to his Operations Department or on the material said to have been covered by those emails. Applying the high standard of proof in relation to serious allegations of dishonesty and fraud, I am persuaded that those emails were not created when they purport to have been created. I reject Mr. Keinan's evidence in relation to them and the special rates purportedly set out in the material covered by them.
d. Swiftnet's case in relation to the special rates for which it contends is further undermined by the fact that, in respect of at least two months, it is contending for rates that would have been loss making for MCI. I do not accept that Mr. Torode would ever have agreed – or been permitted by the Pricing Department to agree – such rates.
e. I conclude for the reasons set out above that Swiftnet has failed to make out its case that any of the special rates for which it contends in respect of the Direct and Indirect Accounts were agreed.
ISSUE 3: EFFECT OF ORAL AGREEMENTS
ISSUE 4: IMPLIED TERM
ISSUE 5: SIGNIFICANT DISRUPTION
ISSUE 6: ESTOPPEL
ISSUE 7: REMOTENESS
a. There is no evidence and no reason to suppose that damage of the kind for which Swiftnet contends under these heads was reasonably within the contemplation of the parties either when the Agreement was entered into in 1998 (or, for that matter, at any other time).
b. There is no evidence and no reason to suppose either that such damage arises in the ordinary course of things or that Swiftnet drew any relevant facts to MCI's attention at any material time so as to bring its claims within the second limb of Hadley v Baxendale.
c. Swiftnet's claim appears in any event to be based on the premise that it floated in the United States and was subject to SEC Regulations. In fact, it is apparent from Mr. A. Keinan's evidence that it was Swiftnet's parent company, Xfone Inc., which was registered in the United States and which floated on AMEX in 2005. Most, if not all, of the alleged losses must have been sustained by Xfone and not by Swiftnet. This was a point raised by MCI in opening, and was not dealt with either in evidence or indeed in argument by or on behalf of Swiftnet.
d. Xfone was not a party to this action, and there has been no suggestion by or on behalf of Swiftnet that Xfone's circumstances were within the reasonable contemplation of the parties in 1998 or at any other time.
"n. Provision was necessarily made in the Defendant's published accounts in relation to the value of the invoices rendered by the Claimant notwithstanding that the said amount was as a matter of fact disputed. The Defendant's liabilities consequently appeared to be higher, and the profitability lower, than they in fact were;
o. This arose at a time when the Defendant was seeking to attract investment and make acquisitions, which it is widely known to do on an ongoing basis;
p. As a consequence, the Defendant appeared to be of a lower value and higher risk that it would have been had the agreed rates been applied to the invoices and/or credit given to the extent that it had fallen due;
q. It was an inevitable consequence that as a perceived higher risk investment, the cost of raising capital was higher than it would otherwise have been;
r. Any attempt at quantification is inevitably imprecise since the extent to which the Defendant was of perceived higher risk was specific and personal to those who did invest, or might have done so but elected not to do so;
s. However for present purposes only, the implication of a 1% additional cost in relation to the capital or acquisitions achieved in the material time (though, again, such percentage is necessarily uncertain) is estimated to be $500,000."
CONCLUSION