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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 >> Grow With Us Ltd. v Green Thumb (UK) Ltd. [2006] EWCA Civ 1201 (27 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1201.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1201 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE SEYMOUR QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
____________________
GROW WITH US LTD | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
- v - | ||
GREEN THUMB (UK) LTD | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR N JONES QC & MR G CUNNINGHAM (instructed by Messrs Hamilton Pratt, 120 Edmund Street, BIRMINGHAM B3 2ES) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
CROWN COPYRIGHT©
Crown Copyright ©
"The business of the franchisor consists in large measure in the granting of permission by the mechanism of franchises to those desirous of obtaining them for the undertaking by the franchisees of the business of treating lawns in accordance with the method advised by the franchisor utilising the intellectual property of the franchisor and being permitted to use as business names Green Thumb Lawn Service and Green Thumb Lawn Treatment Service."
The judge added that the franchisor also operates itself direct in some areas, providing the services to the public which otherwise franchisees provide.
"In consideration of the payment of the Initial Fee, the Marketing Promotion Contribution and the Continuing Fees by the Franchisee for the Franchisor on the Payment Dates and of and subject to the agreements on the part of the Franchisee and the Principal …"
I interpose that the "principal" is three gentlemen responsible for the management and indeed the ownership of the franchisee. The clause continues:
"… in this Agreement the Franchisor hereby grants to the Franchisee during the Term sole and exclusive right and licence to carry on the Business under the Permitted Name in the Territory using the Intellectual Property in accordance with the Method and the Manual."
"14 January, 2006 or such later date as shall result from any extension of the Term under clause 4.1.20."
"To extend the Term at the option of the Franchisee for further periods of seven years commencing on the day following the Expiry Date PROVIDED THAT the Franchisee:
"4.1.20.1 has achieved the Minimum Performance Requirements throughout the Term as required by this Agreement.
"4.1.20.2 has properly observed and performed his obligations under this Agreement throughout the Term;
"4.1.20.3 pays to the Franchisor a renewal fee of 1% (one per cent) of the Gross Turnover for the calendar year prior to the Expiry Date;
"4.1.20.4 serves a notice on the Franchisor requiring such extension no more than six calendar months and not less than 90 days before the Expiry Date;
"4.1.20.5 accepts that the terms of this Agreement shall apply to any extension of the Term under this clause 4.1.20 with uplifted Minimum Performance Requirements or executes a new agreement on the Franchisor's standard terms current at the Expiry Date which agreement (save for variation to Minimum Performance Requirements) shall not be substantially more onerous to any of the parties than the terms of this agreement."
"To supply to the Franchisor by electronic means (if required by the Franchisor) monthly sales reports and other information in the form stipulated by the Franchisor in the Manual concerning the Business."
By clause 5.1.34 the franchisee was to keep a list of actual and potential customers of the business and supply a copy of it to the franchisor on request.
"Conditional upon your confirmation of acceptance of this notice without material dispute, our client admits that appropriate 'uplifted minimum performance requirements' during the extended Term are …"
It then set out figures for the period from January 2007 to January 2013, providing in each year for an accumulative increase of the number of customers of 450. It is not necessary to set out the actual figures. The letter then continued:
"On the above figures, we would in passing observe that MPRs have a fundamental effect as giving a right to terminate the Agreement (rather then just leading to incidental financial adjustments) and accordingly should allow considerable headroom - they should not be commercial targets, but a safety net."
"All current franchise renewals will be required to meet an MPR of 8.5% penetration following twelve years of trade i.e. at the end of your 7 year renewal. Our highest current penetration in a franchise territory is in excess of 8.00%."
"The Learned Judge should have held that on the proper construction of the Agreement the Respondent was free to require the MPRs of its choice to be inserted in any extended or renewed agreement while recognising that the Appellant was not then bound to commit itself to the extended agreement if it did not wish to be bound by such MPRs."
"60. In the absence of any express provision as to how, on the exercise of the option which clause 4.1.20 provided, the uplifted minimum performance requirements were to be determined, the conclusion that that was to be done by the franchisor alone at his whim would only be justified as a matter of contract if it could be said that there was an implied term of the agreement to that effect.
"61. I see no justification in law for the implication of any such term. Such a term would not satisfy the test often applied in relation to the implication of terms in a contract of representing the actual but unexpressed agreement of the parties, not least because it would be commercially highly unwise for a party with an option to renew an agreement to entrust his fate as to whether the renewal was advantageous to him or not entirely to the other party, whose commercial interests might lie in engineering a failure of the adventure.
"62. However, although not as a matter of law, as a matter of practical reality it was the case that the fixing of the uplifted minimum performance requirements was a matter concerning which the franchisor was in a position to dictate his will because in order to bring about an enforceable agreement for an extended term it was necessary for the parties to agree what the uplifted minimum performance requirements were to be. The franchisor had an unfettered choice as to that to which he would agree and in that sense it was entirely up to him to fix the uplifted minimum performance requirements.
"63. I reject the submissions of Mr. Coppel that any term can or should be implied into the agreement to the effect that the uplifted minimum performance requirement should be reasonable. There was in fact no indication in the agreement, as was accepted, as to how they should be set. I also reject the submission of Mr. Coppel that it was an implied term of the agreement that the parties should cooperate to fix the uplifted minimum performance requirements. On analysis all Mr. Coppel was contending for was the implication of a term that the parties would make an agreement about the uplifted minimum performance requirements. There certainly seems to be no warrant for implying into the agreement some procedure for the resolution of disputes which the parties had not expressly agreed."
"In the result, therefore, in my judgment the attempt to extend the term of the agreement failed in any event for want of certainty as to the important term as to uplifted minimum performance requirements. It was plain that each party was not prepared to agree to the provision as to uplifted minimum performance requirements in an agreement for an extended term which the other wanted, and neither was prepared to enter into such an agreement unless a term as to uplifted minimum performance requirements satisfactory to it had been agreed. Without certainty as to what the term as to uplifted minimum performance requirements was to be there was no agreement into which the court could require the franchisor to enter or in respect of which specific performance could be granted. Effectively the option provision in the agreement was not in enforceable as such, it was simply, on analysis, an agreement to agree."
"There is to be implied in this contract a term that the petrol shall be supplied at a reasonable price and shall be of reasonable quality."
And a passage of Greer LJ:
"I think the words of Bowen LJ in The Moorcock are clearly applicable to a case of this kind, and that in order to give effect to what both parties intended the Court is justified in implying that in the absence of agreement as to price a reasonable price must be paid, and if the parties cannot agree as to what is a reasonable price the arbitration must take place."
"The implication which the law draws from what must obviously have been the intention of the parties, the law draws with the object of giving efficacy to the transaction and preventing such a failure of consideration as cannot have been within the contemplation of either side; and I believe if one were to take all the cases, and they are many, of implied warranties or covenants in law, it will be found that in all of them the law is raising an implication from the presumed intention of the parties with the object of giving to the transaction such efficacy as both parties must have intended that at all events it should have."
"On this point we have once more gone through all the cases from May and Butcher, Ltd v The King, [1934] 2 KB 17n; Hillas & Co, Ltd v Arcos, Ltd, (1932) 38 Com. Cas. 23; (1932) 43 LL Rep. 359; Foley v Classique Coaches, Ltd, [1934] 2 KB 1: British Bank for Foreign Trade, Ltd v Novinex, Ltd [1949] 1 KB 623; and others. I would just say this. In a commercial agreement the further the parties have gone on with their contract, the more ready are the Courts to imply any reasonable term so as to give effect to their intentions. When much has been done, the Courts will do their best not to destroy the bargain. When nothing has been done, it is easier to say there is no agreement between the parties because the essential terms have not been agreed. But when an agreement has been acted upon and the parties, as here, have been put to great expense in implementing it, we ought to imply all reasonable terms so as to avoid any uncertainties. In this case there is less difficulty than in others because there is an arbitration clause which, liberally construed, is to sufficient to revolve any uncertainties which the parties have left."
(1) In Sykes there was an extant ongoing agreement which the parties had to be taken to want to make work;
(2) There was a specific provision in that case that the figures were to be agreed, but not in our case;
(3) The refusal to agree constituted a repudiation of an existing obligation, again nothing like our case;
(4) There was an arbitration clause which, as we have seen, Lord Denning thought to be of particular significance, and in the course of argument we identified that at least three of the four very distinguished commercial judges who were concerned in the case thought that point important;
(5) As to Lord Denning's remark that there would be in the course of the arbitration "less difficulty than in others" in finding the right terms, there were in that case guides as to the pattern of trading between the parties which could be followed in deciding what was reasonable.
"The ventilation of the Data Protection Act 1998 issues which I have considered was solely in witness statements and in the course of the trial by argument. The point taken by Mr. Coppel in paragraphs 25 and 26 of his written outline closing submissions [I interpose, a matter to which I shall come] was not taken until then. In those circumstances it is perhaps unsurprising that the franchisor had not produced its certificate of registration under the Data Protection Act 1998. [I interpose again that is something else which we will have to look at in a minute. HHJ Seymour continued] Until the very end of the trial nothing had seemed to turn upon it. However, in my judgment the implicit suggestion that it was for the franchisor to prove that disclosure of the names, addresses and telephone numbers of the current customers of the franchisee was lawful, rather than for the franchisee to prove that it was unlawful, was misplaced."
"Once it was accepted that the franchisee had failed to provide to the franchisor information which it was contractually bound to provide, the evidential burden of proving that there was an excuse for that failure passed to the franchisee. In fact the franchisor ignored the incidence of the burden of proof in relation to this issue at the first level and produced evidence to show that in fact provision of information would not have contravened the 1998 Act. If the franchisee wished to counter that counter, as it were, it was for it to prove the counter."
"… in the case of data obtained from the data subject, the data controller ensures so far as practicable that the data subject has, is provided with, or has made readily available to him, the information specified in sub-paragraph (3)".
When we go to sub-paragraph 3, the information required is:
"(a) the identity of the data controller,
"(b) if he has nominated a representative for the purposes of this Act, the identify of that representative,
"(c) [and this is the passage that we would be particularly concerned with]
the purpose or purposes for which the data are intended to be processed."
"Mr Coppel objected that it was not relevant that in the circumstances of the present case the consent of the data subject might have been obtained [I interpose that that is a reference to one of the schedule 2 conditions to which I shall have to come] because even if that had been so the requirements of paragraph 2(1)(a) and 3(c) of part II of schedule 1 as to fair processing would not have been met. [I interpose those are the passages that I have just read. The judge continued] How he put the point in his written closing outline submissions was this:
'The defendant has not produced the certificate of its registration under the Data Protection Act 1998 which would have identified the purposes for which it was at all relevant times registered to process personal data. The defendant has produced no evidence that any data subject was ever advised that their personal data was to be used for the purpose of transmission by the franchisee to the franchisor or internal evaluation by the franchisor. Mr Williams [I interpose, a representative of the franchisor] in his witness statement said that the purpose of the defendant requiring the data was to enable a franchisor [and I think I have to interpose the words "to make"] a complete analysis of the business carried out by the franchisee. The defendant gave as the purposes for which it required the franchisee to be registered advertising, marketing and public relations. The significance of this mismatch lay in paragraph 2(1)(a) of part II of schedule 1 to the 1998 Act. Under paragraph 2(3)(c) the data subject must be told of the purpose for which the data is to be processed. The defendant's data protection policy, even if it were effective, which is not accepted as it did not seek consent from data subjects nor offer any opportunity to request non-processing, does not state these purposes."
"Green Thumb (UK) Ltd and its franchisees take the issue of protecting your Personal Information seriously and would be grateful if you would take the time to read the following information about our use of your Personal Information. We will use your Personal Information to provide and enhance our services to you; deal with enquiries, administration, security and market research."
Then there is the usual threat or promise that the customer may be contacted by post to be offered other benefits.
"However, assuming, as I was invited to by Mr. Coppel, that the franchisor's certificate of registration permitted it to receive information for advertising, marketing and public relations, it seemed to me that, broadly, the purposes for which Mr. Williams said that the franchisor wished to receive the names, addresses and telephone numbers of current customers of the franchisee fell under the heading 'marketing'.
"55. It does not seem to me that the registration requirements of the 1998 Act require the applicant for registration to set out exhaustively, as opposed to sufficiently to give an understanding of the general nature of the processing intended, what it proposes to do with the data obtained."
"6.(1) The processing is necessary for the purposes of legitimate interests pursued by the data controller or by the third party or parties to whom the data are disclosed, except where the processing is unwarranted in any particular case by reason of prejudice to the rights and freedoms or legitimate interests of the data subject."
"If required by the Franchisor to make contracts with customers for the Services and/or Business on the standard terms and conditions set out in the Manual and not to take orders from customers unless they have consented to such terms and conditions."
"44. However, condition 6 might be satisfied, for if the franchisor has a legitimate interest in receiving the information as to the names and addresses of the franchisee's customers, it is not obvious that passing on that information would cause prejudice to the rights and freedoms of the customers. It is the case of the franchisor in this action that in fact it did have a legitimate interest in the information as to the names and addresses of the customers of the franchisee. The evidence about it was contained in paragraph 29 of the first witness statement of Mr. Jeff Williams, the franchise director of the franchisor. He said:
"'The provision of customer information pursuant to clause 5.1.34 is particularly important for Green Thumb for the following reasons:
"'We are unable to monitor the growth of a franchise and thus offer necessary and required assistance without access to the data.
"'We are unable to monitor customer churn' [that is turnover] 'accurately and provide necessary assistance and advice to the franchisee without access to the data.
"'We are not able to audit turnover and ensure correct returns without access to the data.
"'We are not able to monitor compliance with our pricing policies and thus ensure continued growth of the business, and protection of the bran and the interests of neighbouring franchises without access to the data.'
"45. Those considerations, which were not extensively investigated during the trial, may well amount to a legitimate interest for the purposes of condition 6 of Schedule 2 to the Data Protection Act 1998. When Mr. Agnew was asked about them in examination in chief he did not accept that the first two reasons advanced were valid, but he did seem to accept that reasons (3) and (4) were sound. However, even if, on a more detailed examination than has taken place during the trial, that did not prove to be the case, it is plain that it was not unlawful for the franchisee to supply the franchisor details of the names and addresses of its customers as long as it obtained the consent of the customers to the disclosure."
Order: Appeal dismissed.