BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
|
[Home]
[Databases]
[World Law]
[Multidatabase Search]
[Help]
[Feedback]
|
Irish Competition Authority Decisions
|
You are here:
BAILII >>
Databases >>
Irish Competition Authority Decisions >>
Gill & Macmillan/Attic Press; Gill & Macmillan/Brandon Book Publishers; Gill & Macmillan/Liliput Press; Gill & Macmillan/Irish Academic Press; Gill & Macmillan/Four Courts Press; Gill & Macmillan/Roundhall Press; Gill & Macmillan/O'Brien Press; Gill & Macmillan/Wolfhound Press; Gill & Macmillan/Townhouse Countryhouse Publishers Ltd. [1994] IECA 366 (28th October, 1994)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECompA/1994/366.html
Cite as:
[1994] IECA 366
|
[New search]
[Printable RTF version]
[Help]
Gill & Macmillan/Attic Press; Gill & Macmillan/Brandon Book Publishers; Gill & Macmillan/Liliput Press; Gill & Macmillan/Irish Academic Press; Gill & Macmillan/Four Courts Press; Gill & Macmillan/Roundhall Press; Gill & Macmillan/O'Brien Press; Gill & Macmillan/Wolfhound Press; Gill & Macmillan/Townhouse Countryhouse Publishers Ltd. [1994] IECA 366 (28th October, 1994)
Competition
Authority Decision of 28 October 1994 relating to a proceeding under Section 4
of the Competition Act, 1991.
Notification
Nos:
(a)
CA/804/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Attic Press
(b)
CA/805/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Brandon Book Publishers
(c)
CA/806/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Lilliput Press
(d)
CA/807/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Irish Academic Press
(e)
CA/808/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Four Courts Press
(f)
CA/809/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Round Hall Press
(g)
CA/810/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/O'Brien Press
(h)
CA/811/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Wolfhound Press
(i)
CA/812/92E -
Gill
& Macmillan Ltd/Townhouse and Countryhouse Publishers Ltd
Decision
No. 366
Introduction
1. Notification
was made on 30 September 1992 by Gill and Macmillan Ltd of nine agreements with
various Irish publishers. The notification requested certificates under
Section 4(4) of the
Competition Act, 1991 or, in the event of a refusal by the
Competition Authority to issue certificates, licences under
Section 4(2).
Notice of intention to issue a certificate was published in the Irish Times on
16 September 1994. No submissions were received from interested parties.
The
Facts
(a)
The subject of the notification
2. The
decision concerns agreements whereby Gill and Macmillan agrees to act as sole
distributor for books produced by nine other Irish publishers. The terms and
conditions under which Gill and Macmillan supplies booksellers were notified
separately, and are the subject of another decision.
(b)
The parties involved
3. Gill
and Macmillan is an Irish based firm which is engaged
inter
alia
in the publication of books including general, academic, professional and
educational books for second and third level students. It is associated
through the Macmillan publishers group, which owns 49.9% of the issued share
capital, with publishers throughout the world. It is, according to the
notification, one of the largest Irish book publishers. Gill and Macmillan
also distributes books produced by a number of other Irish publishers. These
publishers are the other parties to the agreements, namely Attic Press, Brandon
Book Publishers, Lilliput Press, Irish Academic Press, Four Courts Press, Round
Hall Press, O'Brien Press, Wolfhound Press, and Townhouse and Countryhouse
Publishers Ltd. They are mainly small-scale, specialist publishers.
(c)
The product and the market
4. The
product concerned in the notification is books, specifically those books
produced by those publishers whose books Gill and Macmillan distributes. The
service concerned is the distribution of books produced by Irish publishers to
booksellers throughout the State. This involves, besides the physical
distribution of the books, the provision of storage, stock control, invoicing,
credit control and debt recovery, calculation of royalties and financial
information. According to the 1988 Census of Services, there were 370 retail
outlets involved in the sale of books and stationery. The market is the
service of distributing Irish-published books to booksellers. The market for
books was described at length in the decision in the Net Book Agreement case
(Decision No. 336 of 10 June 1994).
5. Gill
and Macmillan stated that it effectively entered the market in 1984 at the
request of existing publishers who were clients of Irish Book Handling, which
had become insolvent. They were not in a position to handle their own needs,
because of the economics of the book trade. It believed itself to be the only
firm offering a full book distribution service for all titles of a publisher,
although certain other distributors, such as Eason and Newspread, did
occasionally distribute whole editions of a given work. Of the larger Irish
publishers, only Poolbeg Press and Mercier Press were not clients of their
distribution service.
(d)
The notified agreements
6. In
all cases, Gill and Macmillan has been appointed sole distributor in Ireland
for the publisher, and also for other territories. It charges a standard
service charge, which is reduced, it was stated, for clients with higher sales.
7. The
distribution agreement is virtually a standard agreement, as epitomised by the
agreement between Gill and Macmillan, the distributor, and Attic Press, the
publisher. Under the agreement, the distributor undertakes:
(a)
to store the publisher's book stocks for two years (after which additional
charges are made);
(b)
to provide proper stock control;
(c)
to provide a complete invoicing and debt collection service. The distributor
informs the publisher of any accounts on stop, and undertakes
liability for bad debts. A dispatch service is provided for
titles supplied on a consignment basis, which is charged separately;
(d)
to pack and dispatch books, including normal carriage charges;
(e)
to provide a service which will calculate the royalties due on each title;
(f)
to provide monthly sales reports by title and territory;
and
(g)
to record orders for titles which are temporarily unavailable.
8. The
publisher undertakes to accept the distributor's decision whether an account is
to be opened or stopped; not to supply stock to any stopped accounts; to
appoint the distributor as its sole distributor within Ireland to the wholesale
and retail book trade and to all book trade accounts regularly supplied by the
distributor; to accept the distributor's decision as to means of delivering
books (and the distributor shall treat publisher's books no differently from
their own books); and to be responsible for the authorisation of returns and
overstocks.
9. The
agreement makes provision for payments by the distributor to the publisher. In
the case of the Attic Books agreements, it is clear that Gill and Macmillan
acts as distributor for the State, the UK and the rest of the world. The
publisher is charged for the services provided at a percentage of invoice
value, excluding postage, service and VAT charges. It is stated that the
ownership of the book stock and other goods shall remain with the publisher who
shall be responsible for insurance of the books and goods held on the
distributor's premises. The agreement was to operate for a period of 18 months
from 1 July 1992. It was to be renewed automatically thereafter unless
otherwise agreed in writing. Six months' notice of termination was required.
The agreement is still in existence.
10. The
agreement states that the word "seller" printed on the conditions of sale on
the distributor's invoices shall mean the publisher and not Gill and Macmillan,
particularly in relation to clauses 4, 13 and 14. By implication, therefore,
the publishers have accepted the conditions of sale of Gill and Macmillan,
including clause 16, which states:
Books
supplied by the seller are supplied on condition that they are to be offered
for sale and sold at retail level in Ireland at not less than the unit price
indicated on the invoice by the seller without the Sellers' specific
consent.......'.
11. The
other eight notified agreements are virtually the same as that described above.
The only differences are:
(a)
in one case, the publisher has existing distribution arrangements in the UK
and US. In all others, the agreement covers distribution throughout
the world;
(b)
the service charge differed somewhat between publishers;
(c)
in four cases, the initial period of the agreement was 18 months, in three
cases it was 12 months, and in one case it was 21 months;
and
(d)
the agreements commenced at different dates from 1 July 1987 to 1 January 1991.
12. The
initial period of each agreement has now expired, and so they are all for an
indefinite term, subject to six months' notice of termination. All the
agreements appoint Gill and Macmillan as their sole distributor in the State.
(e)
Submissions by Gill and Macmillan
13. In
its initial submission, Gill and Macmillan stated that it was one of the
largest Irish publishers and had invested considerable resources in developing
a state of the art distribution service. Having extra capacity, it acceded to
the requests of the clients to provide distribution services for them. It was
not aware of any other similar network in Ireland. It treated its client's
books and its own equally in all respects.
14. In
support of its request for a certificate, Gill and Macmillan argued that the
present arrangements were not designed to exclude new competitors from the
market, whether a distributor or publisher. On the contrary, they had been
established to promote the more effective distribution of books and maintain a
greater diversity of titles available. The existence of the distribution
system offered by the Company acted, if anything, as an incentive to new
publishers to publish new and more specialised titles, who were assured of an
effective distribution outlet, without the necessity of investing scarce
resources in distributing their products. The territorial exclusivity and
other ancillary restrictions contained in the distribution agreements were
necessary for the Company to protect its investment, which to-date had been
considerable. On the one hand, it was agreed that the company did not put the
distribution system in place in order to keep competitors out of the market and
take advantage of other operators in the market place, but acted in response to
the clients' request. Shared distribution was a universal practice among the
international book trade and unilateral abandonment of this practice would
simply enable the company's competitors to make use of its capital investment
to their own benefit. For these reasons, the arrangements had an objective
commercial justification.
15. Gill
and Macmillan further submitted that competition was not actually or
potentially restricted as the clients would not have been able to penetrate the
market in the absence of the present agreements. This was corroborated by the
fact that the clients approached the company to establish the distribution
system. The clients did not have nor presently had the necessary financial and
technical resources to set up their own distribution systems and a centralised
network such as the distribution network operated by the company permitted the
clients to concentrate on their publishing activities, without having to set
aside valuable financial and other facilities for the purposes of distributing
their products. The books market in Ireland was small as was each of the
client's share of the overall market in terms of the number of titles
published, and a nationwide distribution system was the only way for each of
them to ensure effective and efficient distribution of their products, at more
competitive prices.
16. Gill
and Macmillan also claimed that the restrictive clauses were ancillary
restraints of a nature, duration and scope which were reasonable in all the
circumstances to protect the value of the company's investment in setting up
the distribution network. The clauses were of a type not uncommon in the book
trade worldwide. The duration of the restrictions was limited to six months.
The restrictive clauses were a legitimate means of ensuring the full commercial
value of the company's investment, and in return, passing on the envisaged
benefits to the clients and the booksellers and consumers. The territorial
exclusivity granted to the company was a necessary inducement to the company to
enter into the distribution agreements as without this protection the company
would not have been prepared to make the investment. Furthermore, absence of
territorial exclusivity would have prohibited the clients from achieving the
market penetration presently enjoyed under existing arrangements. Gill and
Macmillan also presented arguments in support of its request for a licence,
which are not relevant to this decision.
(f)
Subsequent developments
17. In
a further submission on 7 June 1994 in response to questions from the
Authority, Gill and Macmillan submitted, contrary to its earlier submissions,
that the service provided should be viewed in competition law terms as
essentially a storage and order fulfilling service rather than a distribution
or commercial agency service. Gill and Macmillan at no stage purchased the
books or acquired title to them, so there was no question of resale as
envisaged in the category licence for exclusive distribution agreements.
Neither did it act as an intermediary between the publishers and retail outlets
or have any authority from the publishers to negotiate or conclude sale
agreements akin to those undertaken by commercial agents. The service provided
to the publishers was limited to that of storage, stock control, stockholding,
delivery to retail outlets, invoicing and debt collection, for which it was
remunerated by way of a service charge calculated as a fixed percentage of
invoice value. It had no function in influencing or concluding sales to retail
outlets. The individual publishers exercised complete autonomy as regards
marketing, price setting, negotiating with retail outlets on volume of sales,
etc.
18. Gill
and Macmillan also submitted that the object of the arrangement was solely to
ensure an efficient storage, distribution and payment system on behalf of
publishers who, because of their scale of operation and the particular features
of the Irish book publishing market, were simply not in a position to provide
these services economically for themselves. The trade was also very seasonal,
due to the influence of school book sales. Some pooling of storage facilities,
therefore, made sound economic sense, without giving rise to any coordination
of competitive behaviour between publishers. The service was strictly a
commercial one which allowed Gill and Macmillan to make efficient use of spare
capacity which it enjoyed when the arrangements were established at the
suggestion of the other publishers. There was no pressure on publishers to
take up this service, and the publishers were completely free to seek out
alternative storage and order fulfilling services at relatively short notice.
On these grounds, it was submitted that the agreements merited a certificate.
19. On
22 June 1994, the Authority issued a Statement of Objections in respect of the
Gill and Macmillan Standard Terms and Conditions of Sale. The Authority
considered that clause 16 represented resale price maintenance, and it
indicated that it intended to refuse a certificate or a licence to the
agreement. On 7 July 1994, Gill and Macmillan wrote that they intended to
delete clause 16 from the Standard Terms. Accordingly, on 28 October 1994, the
Authority granted a certificate to the amended agreement. Reference to the
conditions of sale of Gill and Macmillan in the agreements which are the
subject of this decision therefore now relates to the conditions of sale as
amended by the deletion of clause 16.
20. On
21 June 1994, the Authority wrote questioning the differential service charges.
Gill and Macmillan, in its reply, stated that commission rates were assessed
and charged in accordance with turnover, and the rate reflected the cost of
handling each list. The rates were negotiable annually at the initiative of
clients. It said that it should be noted that there was a considerable
variance in the average price per unit of books sold between client companies.
The cost of provision of an identical service was the same for a book with an
average price of £12.96 as that with an average price of £2.83, but
the net commission was considerably less. It maintained that it had to be
emphasised that there was no question whatever of discrimination between client
companies. The varying commission rates reflected only the economy of scale
which could be gained by increased turnover.
Assessment
Applicability
of Section 4(1)
21.
Section
4(1) of the
Competition Act, 1991 prohibits and renders void all agreements
between undertakings which have as their object or effect the prevention,
restriction or distortion of competition in trade in any goods or services in
the State or in any part of the State.
The
Undertakings
22.
Section
3(1) of the
Competition Act defines an undertaking as "a person being an
individual, a body corporate or an unincorporated body of persons engaged for
gain in the production, supply or distribution of goods or the provision of a
service". Gill and Macmillan is engaged in the production and distribution of
books for gain, and the other publishers are engaged in the production of books
for gain. All the parties involved are therefore undertakings, and the
agreements are agreements between undertakings. The agreements have effect
within the State.
The
agreements
23. Under
the notified agreements, Gill and Macmillan is appointed sole distributor in
the State of books produced by each of the nine publishers. This operation was
undertaken, according to Gill and Macmillan, at the request of the publishers
some years ago when the handling firm which distributed their books became
insolvent. The services provided are book storage, physical distribution,
invoicing, credit control, debt recovery, calculation of royalties, provision
of financial information, and the handling of returns and overstocks. In
return, Gill and Macmillan imposes a service charge related to sales. While
the agreements were for an initial period of 18 months, they are now for an
indefinite period subject to six months' notice of termination. Ownership of
the books remains with the publisher, who is responsible for insurance while
they are on the distributor's premises. The agreements involve acceptance of
Gill and Macmillan's conditions of sale. The distributor may decide whether to
open or stop a bookseller's account, and undertakes liability for bad debts.
It is required to treat the publisher's books no differently from its own
books. The publishers determine the prices at which the books are sold to
resellers.
24. Contrary
to the initial submission by Gill and Macmillan, the agreements do not involve
the purchase and resale of books by the distributor, and ownership remains with
the publisher and not the distributor, and they are therefore not exclusive
distribution agreements. They do not come within the scope of the category
licence for exclusive distribution agreements (Decision No. 144 of 5 November
1993).
25. Subsequently,
Gill and Macmillan claimed that the arrangements amounted to a storage and
order fulfilling service, rather than to a commercial agency service. Unlike
commercial agents, it did not negotiate or conclude sale agreements on behalf
of the publishers. The Authority considers that the essential feature of the
arrangements is that Gill and Macmillan supplies the service of storage and
physical distribution of books on behalf of the publishers. It considers that
this amounts to something more than the provision of a delivery service,
however, because Gill and Macmillan provides additional related services, such
as credit control and debt collection, and because it can determine whether an
account is to be opened or closed, none of which are normally undertaken by
suppliers of delivery services. At the same time, the Authority does not
consider that the arrangements amount to commercial agency agreements (as
described in Decision No. 286 - Conoco Consignee agreement - of 25 February
1994), since Gill and Macmillan does not conclude the sale or purchase of goods
or services on behalf of a principal, which is the fundamental feature of a
commercial agency agreement. In the opinion of the Authority, the notified
arrangements fall somewhere between a simple delivery agreement and a
commercial agency agreement.
26. The
Authority considers that undertakings are entitled to decide how their products
shall be distributed, that is whether they distribute the goods themselves, or
make use of firms providing delivery services, or whether they operate through
commercial agents or exclusive distributors. In all except the last case, the
Authority considers that distribution arrangements do not, in principle, offend
against
Section 4(1) of the
Competition Act. The publishers are fairly small
in size and, while it is essential that their books are distributed to
booksellers through the State, they would find it difficult and probably most
uneconomic to deliver the books themselves. In the past, they had used a
specialist book handling firm, and, when this firm became insolvent, they
decided to utilise the spare capacity available from Gill and Macmillan, which
distributed its own titles.
27. The
situation in this case is not altered by the fact that Gill and Macmillan is a
competing publisher of books. It provides what is little more than a delivery
service, and it does not sell the books on behalf of the other publishers, nor
does it determine the resale price of the books. In addition, under the
agreements, Gill and Macmillan is obliged to treat their books no differently
from its own books, and it may not discriminate in favour of its own books.
Admittedly, provision of this service means that Gill and Macmillan has access
to information about deliveries of its competitor's books to booksellers, and
possibly also some information about sales to consumers. There is no evidence,
however, that this confers a competitive advantage upon Gill and Macmillan.
28. Even
though the basic distribution arrangement might not offend against
Section
4(1), certain clauses in the agreement might do so. In the Authority's
opinion, the clauses relating to storage, invoicing, credit control, debt
recovery, royalties, financial information, returns and overstocks, form a
necessary part of the overall service provided, and they do not offend against
Section 4(1). The distributor undertakes liability for bad debts, so that
allowing the distributor to determine whether an account should be opened or
closed, when it may not discriminate in favour of its own books, does not
offend against
Section 4(1).
29.
The
notified agreements imply acceptance of the conditions of sale of Gill and
Macmillan. These included, as clause 16, a resale price maintenance
requirement. For the reasons stated in the Authority's decision in the case of
those conditions of sale (Decision No. 365, of 28 October 1994), the Authority
would not have issued a certificate or granted a licence to an agreement which
contained such an obligation. The same situation would have prevailed in
respect of the agreements which are the subject of this present decision.
Since clause 16 has been removed from the conditions of sale of Gill and
Macmillan, it no longer presents any impediment to issuing certificates for
these delivery agreements.
30. The
Authority was initially concerned that the different rates of service charge
might amount to unfair discrimination between publishers, contrary to Article
4(1)(d) of
the Act. Having examined the figures supplied by Gill and
Macmillan, and having considered the explanation given, the Authority has no
grounds for believing that differences in service charges are not objectively
justified, and so they do not offend against
Section 4(1) of
the Act.
The
Decision
31. In
the Authority's opinion, Gill and Macmillan and the other publishers who are
parties to the agreements are undertakings. The notified agreements are
agreements between undertakings. The Authority considers that the sole
distribution agreements do not have, as their object or effect, the prevention,
restriction or distortion of competition. They do not, in the Authority's
opinion, offend against
Section 4(1) of the
Competition Act, 1991.
The
Certificate
32. The
Competition Authority has issued the following certificate:
The
Competition Authority certifies that in its opinion, on the basis of the facts
in its possession, the following sole distribution agreements between Gill and
Macmillan and various publishers, notified on 30 September 1992, do not offend
against
Section 4(1) of the
Competition Act, 1991:
(a)
Attic Press
CA/804/92E
(b)
Brandon Book Publishers Ltd
CA/805/92E
(c)
The Lilliput Press
CA/806/92E
(d)
Irish Academic Press
CA/807/92E
(e)
Four Courts Press
CA/808/92E
(f)
The Roundhall Press
CA/809/92E
(g)
The O'Brien Press
CA/810/92E
(h)
Wolfhound Press
CA/811/92E
(i)
Townhouse & Countryhouse Publishers Ltd
CA/812/92E
For
the Competition Authority
Patrick
M. Lyons
Chairman
28
October 1994.
© 1994 Irish Competition Authority
BAILII:
Copyright Policy |
Disclaimers |
Privacy Policy |
Feedback |
Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECompA/1994/366.html