Er Travel Ltd v Dublin Airport Authority AKA DAA Plc [2020] IEHC 62 (18 February 2020)


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High Court of Ireland Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Er Travel Ltd v Dublin Airport Authority AKA DAA Plc [2020] IEHC 62 (18 February 2020)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2020/2020IEHC62.html
Cite as: [2020] IEHC 62

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THE HIGH COURT
[2020] IEHC 62
[2019 No. 2944 P]
BETWEEN
ER TRAVEL LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
– AND –
DUBLIN AIRPORT AUTHORITY AKA DAA PLC
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Max Barrett delivered on 18th February 2020.
1.       ER Travel Ltd. (“ER”), an Irish-registered company, provides car rental services in
Ireland. Car rental services at Dublin Airport typically operate as an on-Airport concession
which is allocated by way of a competitive tendering process that is run by the DAA. ER’s
business model is different: it offers internet booking facilities to customers who are
transferred, following their arrival at Dublin Airport, to an off-Airport parking area,
culminating, ER claims, in a better-value car rental service.
2.       Issues arose between ER and the DAA in 2015/2016, after it came to the attention of the
DAA that ER was sending shuttle buses to the airport to collect ER’s customers and
transfer them to ER’s off-Airport car park. The DAA considered that this constituted a
breach of its bye-laws which provide that permission is required from the DAA to conduct
business activities at Dublin Airport. There was an ongoing dispute between the parties
between March 2016 and April 2019. In April 2019, ER issued proceedings seeking, inter
alia, declarations that: -
(1) the DAA has acted ultra vires and in breach of the airport bye-laws;
(2) the DAA has acted ultra vires and/or deliberately and consciously in its own self-
interest, contrary to law and/or disproportionately in making bye-laws which
prohibit the use of Dublin Airport for, inter alia, business purposes;
(3) the DAA is seeking to prevent, restrict or distort competition contrary to the
Competition Act 2002, through its agreement/s with such car rental companies as
are licensed to operate from Dublin Airport’s premises;
(4) the DAA, in restricting or otherwise interfering with ER in seeking to enter, park on,
and collect members of the public from Dublin Airport, is unlawfully abusing a
dominant position in breach of the Competition Act 2002; and
(5) the DAA is infringing the rights of passengers by restricting their use of Dublin
Airport facilities, including the facility of being collected by third parties with whom
such passengers wish to transact business other than on Dublin Airport lands.
3.       This judgment is concerned with an application for security for costs brought by the DAA
pursuant to s.52 of the Companies Act 2014 seeking that ER provide security for the costs
of the DAA in relation to its defence of the within proceedings. It is accepted by ER that
the DAA meets the well-established test for the granting of security for costs (see, e.g.,
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Usk District Residents Association Ltd. v. The Environmental Protection Agency [2006] 1
ILRM 363 in this regard). Thus, the DAA has established a prima facie defence and ER
acknowledges that it will be unable to discharge the DAA’s costs if these proceedings are
unsuccessful. However, ER claims that there are, to borrow from the judgment of Morris
P. in Interfinance Group Ltd. v. KPMG (Unreported, High Court, 29 June 1998), as
referenced in Usk (at p. 368), “specific circumstances…which ought to cause the court to
exercise its discretion not to make the order sought”.
4.       ER maintains that, if it is successful in these proceedings, this will rebound to the benefit
of consumers who will then be able to avail freely of cheaper online/off-Airport car rental
facilities. In essence, what is being claimed in this regard is not so much, to borrow from
the wording of Charleton J. in Oltech (Systems) Ltd. v. Olivetti UK Ltd. [2012] 3 1R 396,
at p. 409, that “a point of law [arises for decision in these proceedings that is]…so
important that the process of the case should not be interrupted”, but more, to borrow
from the same judgment, at p. 412, that “[a] point of fact of national importance [has
arisen in these proceedings]…that is inescapably central to [this]…case and…will settle a
concern of great public moment”. The court accepts that a positive decision for ER
following the trial of action (if such were to be the ultimate thrust of that eventual
decision) could conceivably result in a financial benefit to people seeking in the future to
avail of cheaper car rental facilities following their arrival at Dublin Airport, the principal
airport of our island nation. Nonetheless, (a) these are proceedings brought by ER at its
election and for its private benefit, (b) many cases brought out of self-interest can yield a
more general benefit depending on how they are decided but not all (in truth, few) such
cases thereby come within the categories of case contemplated by Charleton J., and (c)
the court respectfully does not see that the potential provision of cheaper car rental
facilities to those travelling to Dublin Airport could at this time be described properly as
involving a “point of fact of national importance” or a “concern of great public moment”.
In passing, the court notes too that, as was noted in Dublin Waterworld Ltd. v. National
Sports Campus Development Authority [2014] IEHC 518, at para. 34, although all
proceedings brought against public and semi-state bodies “are likely to be of interest to
the public…that does not make their resolution a matter of public interest [of the type
contemplated by case-law applicable to applications for security for costs]”.
5.       A second specific circumstance raised by ER concerns the conduct of the DAA, though not,
as one might instinctively expect, in the conduct of the within proceedings. Two points
were made in this regard, viz:
(A) the DAA initially sought, and could now continue to seek, to prosecute ER for
breach of its bye-laws; its ‘failure’ to pursue this prosecution means that issues
which ER has sought to agitate in the within proceedings could have been agitated
at a much lower cost in the District Court;
(B) a third-party licensed bus provider has been found to transfer ER customers from
the airport, ER has sought confirmation from the DAA that the DAA considers this to
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be compliant with Dublin Airport bye-laws and, as yet, no confirmation has been
forthcoming.
6.       As to (A), this is a novel contention and presents with numerous difficulties, viz. (a) ER
has freely elected to bring these proceedings and to make what are serious allegations,
(b) there is no sense in which ER has been ‘forced’ to bring the within proceedings, e.g.,
the imposition of any fixed penalty notices could be challenged in the District Court,
actions of the airport police are open to judicial review, (c) the District Court has no
power to decide whether the impugned bye-laws are ultra vires or not, and (d) the
competition law dimension of these proceedings (which is being assiduously pursued by
ER) could not be determined by the District Court.
7.       As to (B): whether ER considers that its current arrangement with the licensed bus
provider works for ER and is compliant with applicable law is a matter for ER to decide for
itself in the first instance, the making of such decision is not something that can be
outsourced to, or offloaded upon, a State or semi-State body; whether any illegality
arises can be tested in a suitable forum when and if alleged.
8.       It should be clear from the above that the court considers that this is a case in which
security for costs should be ordered. As to the quantum of security to be ordered, the
court:
(I) notes the binding judgment of Costello J. for the Court of Appeal in Hedgecroft Ltd.
T/A Beary Capital Partners v. Htremfta Ltd. [2018] IECA 364, especially the
observations at paras. 62-68 of that judgment;
(II) is mindful of the need touched upon, by reference to earlier case-law, in Thalle v.
Soares [1957] IR 182, at p. 194, that an order for security for costs should not be
an indemnity against all costs nor (an observation which, in truth, would seem to
cut both ways) an encouragement to luxurious litigation; and
(III) has been furnished with unchallenged affidavit evidence from a legal costs
accountant that seeks to estimate the DAA’s costs if the within proceedings go to
full hearing, which estimate comes to the striking sum of €507,400, allowing for a
circa. seven-day trial, a significant level of discovery, and an estimated €300,000
for solicitor fees, €99,500 for senior counsel fees, €68,650 for junior counsel fees,
and a comparatively smaller €20,000 sum for the advisory work, reporting and
court attendance expected of the intended expert economist-witness.
9.       Having regard to the foregoing, the court will order security for costs in the amount of
€170,000, being roughly one-third of €507,400.


Result:     Judgment in favour of the defendant.




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