1 / 30

Up in Smoke: Lessons from Tobacco and BA/Virgin Ken Macdonald QC Rhodri Thompson QC, Christopher Brown and Alex Bailin

Up in Smoke: Lessons from Tobacco and BA/Virgin Ken Macdonald QC Rhodri Thompson QC, Christopher Brown and Alex Bailin QC. Chair Lord Ken Macdonald QC. What went wrong in Tobacco? Rhodri Thompson QC. What happened?. Investigation from 2003 SO in 2008 (object and effect)

jamil
Download Presentation

Up in Smoke: Lessons from Tobacco and BA/Virgin Ken Macdonald QC Rhodri Thompson QC, Christopher Brown and Alex Bailin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Up in Smoke:Lessons from Tobacco and BA/Virgin Ken Macdonald QC Rhodri Thompson QC, Christopher Brown and Alex Bailin QC

  2. Chair Lord Ken Macdonald QC

  3. What went wrong in Tobacco? Rhodri Thompson QC

  4. What happened? • Investigation from 2003 • SO in 2008 (object and effect) • 6 early resolution cases • Decision in April 2010 (object only) • Case against Tesco abandoned • Some of the largest fines ever imposed by OFT • ITL and 4/5 retailers appeal (including Asda) • Case collapses in November/December 2011 • OFT fails in attempt to run a new case at 11th hour

  5. Why did it happen? • Collapse of OFT’s case on evidence • Difficulties in the use of leniency/ERA • Weakness of OFT’s theoretical case

  6. The evidence (1) • Not a single factual witness supported the OFT’s theoretical case • No witness statements prepared by OFT for the appeal • Only witness called by OFT called for XEX by appellants on basis of 2005 statement • Not a new problem: Premier League, Racecourse Association, MasterCard, Construction

  7. Evidence (2) • How could this happen: • Lack of independent scrutiny of factual case? • Undue reliance on fact of leniency/ERA applications? • Focus on “theory of harm”/economic analysis?

  8. Leniency/ERA (1) • Uncertain nature of OFT case • Was it a “hub and spoke” case (retailers providing information to suppliers)? • Was it a “vertical” or a “horizontal” case? • Uncertain nature of basis on which leniency had been sought • Ambivalent role of Tesco/Asda

  9. Leniency/ERA (2) • Again, not a new problem: e.g. Scottish Milk, Construction • Inherent difficulty of mixed motives of leniency/ERA applicants • Lack of credibility of the OFT on appeal shifts the balance for would be applicants • Tesco appeal in Dairy will be another tough test for the OFT • Criminal evidence issues further complicate matters

  10. Economic theory (1) • OFT ultimately opted for “object” case • Appears to have thought that lowered the evidential burden • Risky strategy in novel legal/economic area • No external economist publicly supported OFT Decision

  11. Economic theory (2) • Inability to establish economic effects after 7 year investigation should have caused alarm bells to ring • Factual premises for theory of case were intuitively improbable and unsupported by documents or witnesses • Lack of external ratification pre-Decision another warning sign

  12. What can be done? • Caution in treatment of leniency evidence, “confessions” under pressure from OFT/for a quiet life • Witness statements at administrative stage • External ratification of economic theory • External scrutiny of evidential case • “Do not believe your own rhetoric”

  13. Lessons for private parties • Leniency/ERA: • Major strategic decision – need to front load analysis of documentary and witness evidence/theory of harm • Risk benefit analysis complicated by criminal exposure of employees • Need to consider likely responses of other parties • SO/Appeal • Forensic/analytical approach to evidence and law • Need to deconstruct OFT case and maintain pressure • Further strategic decision whether or not to appeal where situation changes post-ERA/decision: Construction/Tobacco • Importance of “traditional” advocacy skills of XEX/handling of witnesses where documentary trail is ambiguous

  14. Tobacco and the CAT’s Jurisdiction: Lessons for Practitioners Christopher Brown

  15. CAT’s jurisdiction: the basics • Sch 8 CA98 • Para 2(1) – contents of NoA (also r 8 of CAT rules) • Para 3(1) – CAT “must determine the appeal on the merits by reference to the grounds of appeal” • Para 3(2) – CAT may confirm or set aside (part of) the decision and may “(a) remit the matter to the OFT, ...(d) give such directions, or take such other steps, as the OFT could itself have given or taken, or (e) make any other decision which the OFT could itself have made.”

  16. “Merits” appeals: the case law • Napp – CAT stressing importance of the decision itself: appellants should not be faced with “moving target”. BUT “virtually inevitable that certain aspects of the decision are explored in more detail” before CAT • Albion – importance of the grounds of appeal

  17. Tobacco –CAT’s judgment • Two issues: • Was the OFT’s “refined case” part of the Decision? • If not, should the appeals nonetheless proceed? • CAT’s answers: • Refined case very different from restraints identified in the Decision • No jurisdiction to continue hearing the appeals; and in any event CAT would not have exercised discretion in favour (applying Burgess criteria)

  18. Tobacco – CAT’s judgment (2) • Key messages: • There must be a “link or bridge” in the reasoning set out in decision between the findings of fact and the conclusion as to infringement (¶ 46) • Napp “not authority for the proposition that wherever evidence emerges during the trial that indicates that an infringement of the competition rules has been committed, the [CAT] is entitled to make a finding to that effect” (¶ 67) • The CAT’s powers under Sch 8, para 3(2) do not extend the scope of CAT’s jurisdiction under para 3(1) (¶ 75) – i.e. powers are wider in an appeal under s 47 CA98

  19. “Merits”: lessons for practitioners • Tight drafting of notice of appeal • Getting a grip of the facts – and their relationship to the theory of harm • Examining witnesses • Rebutting inferences drawn by OFT

  20. Tobacco and the reform agenda • Advert for a prosecutorial system? • Structure of CMA – “fresh look” at the evidence at SO stage? • Importance of CAT’s independent, merits-based jurisdiction

  21. Criminal Cartels: The Burning Issues Alex Bailin QC

  22. Introduction • OFT has not successfully prosecuted any contested criminal trial in 9y • Marine Hose is only conviction (disguised prisoner transfer arrangement) • OFT currently has no public criminal cartel investigations • OFT gained last-minute reprieve from ECA

  23. Doing away with dishonesty • “Criminal prosecution will be reserved for really hardcore cartels with evidence of deep dishonesty” • Consultation paper has resulted in: • removal of dishonesty from s188 offence • carve out for cartel arrangements which are published in advance • Offence reformed even though no prosecution failed on dishonesty grounds • Previously unilateral dishonesty was required (BA in CA)

  24. Leniency problems • Consultation paper seeks greater clarity and predictability • Helpful but key areas left unclear: • confession of dishonesty required from immunised/leniency individual? • waiver of LPP required by immunised individual? • Disclosure addressed but no clear acceptance that what happened in BA was fundamentally wrong

  25. Waiver of LPP • Not required by civil leniency applicants • All criminal leniency applicants must be prepared to waive LPP • Otherwise not complete and continuous co-operation • Waived material will be disclosable (BA 7.12.09 ruling, applied by CA in 2010) • If no pre-immunity evidence of cartel admission, possible to have fair trial without waiver?

  26. Consistency issue • Although not an element of the s188 offence, evidence of whether the alleged agreement could or did have an appreciable anti-competitive effect is relevant to dishonesty (BA 24.7.09 ruling) • i.e. competition law ‘defence’ to s188 criminal offence • Also relevant to disclosure

  27. Conclusion • OFT is an inexperienced prosecutor with no proven track record • Effective leniency/immunity depends on fear of prosecution • Need convictions without use of leniency • c.f. FSA use of co-operating accomplices, participating informants, insiders • Defendant may argue s/he is only member of cartel honest enough not to admit dishonesty

  28. Further Reading • Binning, ‘A lenient approach’ – Competition Law Insight (24 Jan 2012) • Bailin, Doing away with dishonesty [2011] 3 Comp Law J 169 (!)

  29. Please complete your Evaluation Form and hand it to a Matrix member of staff, along with your name badge, on your way out. Thank you.

  30. =

More Related