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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 >> Tele2 International Card Company SA & Ors v Post Office Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 9 (21 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/9.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 9 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
HHJ SEYMOUR QC
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
HQ06X00067
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
____________________
(1) TELE2 INTERNATIONAL CARD COMPANY SA (2) KUB 2 TECHNOLOGY LIMITED (formerly known as C3 CALLING CARD COMPANY (IRELAND) LIMITED) (3) KUB 7 TECHNOLOGY LIMITED (formerly known as CALLING CARD COMPANY (UK) LIMITED) |
Appellants/ Claimants |
|
- and - |
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POST OFFICE LIMITED |
Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Jeffery Onions QC and Mr Ben Strong (instructed by Lovells, LLP, London) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th December 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aikens :
A. The Background to the Appeal
B. The terms of the Agreement
"Waiver
In no event shall any delay, neglect or forbearance on the part of any party in enforcing (in whole or in part) any provision of this Agreement be or be deemed to be a waiver thereof or a waiver of any other provision or shall in any way prejudice any right of that party under this Agreement".
C. The Relevant Facts
D. The Proceedings
E. The conclusions of the judge.
F. The issues raised on appeal by Tele2 and the arguments of the parties in outline.
G. The Issues for Decision on the appeal.
i) Was the judge correct to conclude that there was an affirmation of the Agreement by POL during the period between the occurrence of the breach of clause 10.3.1 (ie. 25 December 2003) and when POL purported to terminate the Agreement under clause 11.4, (with effect from 1 April 2005), by the termination letters dated 1 December 2004?ii) If so, does clause 16 of the Agreement make any difference? If the answer is "yes", as the judge concluded, then Tele2's appeal on its principal claim fails.
iii) Assuming that the Agreement was affirmed and that clause 16 does not avoid that conclusion, then it is conceded by POL that the letters of 1 December 2004 would be an anticipatory renunciation of the contract, which Tele2 has accepted at some stage. Therefore, the next issue is whether, on the facts, Tele2 Ireland has proved that it has suffered substantial damages as a result of POL's repudiation of the Agreement? If the answer is "no", then Tele2's appeal on its principal claim fails.
iv) If the answer is "yes", then the next question is whether it is open to Tele2 Ireland to claim damages on the basis of Appendix 3 to the written Outline Argument of Tele2 Ireland presented in the Court of Appeal? Or is that a "new" basis on which Tele2 Ireland is attempting to claim damages, which is impermissible in the Court of Appeal?
v) If this way of putting the damages claim is new or otherwise cannot be advanced in the Court of Appeal, then it appears that Tele2 Ireland accepts that it has no other basis to advance and that is the end of its appeal on its principal claim. If it is not new, or it is otherwise permissible to advance the claim on this basis, then the following issues on quantum arise:
a) should the matter be remitted to the judge to make further findings of fact? If not,b) should damages be assessed on the basis that Tele2 Ireland would have been the sole supplier of phonecards to POL, or, either (i) on the facts, or (ii) as a matter of legal assumption, should damages be assessed on the basis that both Tele2 Ireland and Nomi Call would both have provided phonecards to POL?c) If the latter, in what proportions? Tele2 submits it should be 75/25 in Tele2 Ireland's favour. POL says it should be 50/50.d) Over what period can damages be claimed? Tele2 submits it should be until 1 April 2007. POL says that the court must, as a matter of law, take account of the fact that Tele2 was in breach of the provisions about notification/agreement of price increases, so that POL could have given notification of termination on 12 months notice as at 31 March 2005, so that damages can only be recovered for a period of 12 months.e) How is the quantum claim to be calculated if Tele2 is allowed to advance its present case and this court is to determine the matter? This involves the further issues of:(1) what would Tele2's gross margin have been?(2) what would its marketing expenses have been?(3) what commission would it have paid to POL – 21%, or 35% as POL submits?(4) what commission would it have paid to Mr Scot Young?(5) what other expenses would Tele2 have incurred, such as the costs of production of the cards and other administrative expenses?vi) Expiry Revenues: On the correct construction of Schedule 4, Part III paragraph 1 of the contract, what sum is due to POL by way of "expiry revenue" in respect of phonecards whose life has expired but whose value was not exhausted during their period of validity?
vii) If, upon the correct construction of Schedule 4, Part III, paragraph 1 of the Agreement, POL and the Tele2 parties were each entitled to 50% of the unused face value of the pre – paid phonecards, was there a subsequent variation of the Agreement between the parties to the effect that POL was only entitled to 25% of the unused face value of phonecards that had expired without customers using the full available credit?
viii) Was the judge wrong to refuse to entertain POL's application to amend its defence, after the end of the trial, so as to allege that POL would have been entitled to terminate the Agreement as of 31 March 2005 because of the failure of the Tele2 parties to provide Parent Company letters of guarantee for 2005 on or before 23 December 2004?
H. Affirmation of the Agreement and the effect of clause 16.
I. Has Tele2 Ireland proved it has suffered substantial loss as a result of the repudiation of the Agreement by POL?
(1) When the VAT rules changed as from 1 April 2004, the provision of services by Tele2 Ireland under the contract with POL was "transferred" to Tele2 UK.[40](2) The case of Tele2 was that, in fact, the provision of the services was transferred to C3 (UK), the Third Claimant, and that the contract with POL was novated to that company. The judge held that there was no novation of the contract to substitute C3 (UK) for Tele2 Ireland as a party to the Agreement.[41]
(3) It is not alleged that the First Claimant suffered any direct loss as a result of the renunciation/repudiation of the Agreement by POL.[42]
(4) On the two types of phonecard in use after 1 April 2004 (the "generic card" and the "holiday card"), there were different statements as to which company provided the "service" of the phonecard. On the "generic card" it said that the card and services were provided by Tele2 UK; on the "holiday card" it said that the phonecard was provided by C3 (UK).[43]
(5) The evidence of Mr Hashmi, the former chief executive of each of the three claimants, was that the air time for the generic card had always been provided by Tele2 UK, which was not a party to the action, because it did not supply phonecards. The judge said that this evidence "if anything…seemed to make the situation even more obscure". But he added that it "did not, as it seemed to me, impact either on the issue of title to sue or on the quantum of damages."[44] But he thought that the withdrawal of C3 (UK) (third claimant) from the UK market from June 2005[45], was potentially more material. After that date, the phonecards for POL were provided by Tele2 Spain.[46]
(6) Inferentially, therefore, the judge seems to have accepted that the cards and services were provided by Tele2 UK and C3 (UK) until the end of March 2005 – depending on which type of phonecard was being considered. He appears to accept that, had the contract continued, the phonecards would have been supplied by Tele2 Spain.[47]
"Prima facie any damages to which Tele2 Ireland was entitled fell to be assessed as the amount which, but for the termination of the Agreement, would have been payable to it under the agreement until it could lawfully have been terminated, less the amount saved by not having to perform its own contractual obligations. If it sought to sub – contract the contractual obligations in question, one would suppose that the sum which would have been saved by not having to perform those obligations would have been whatever amount did not have to be paid to the sub – contractor".[51]
"However, once it was accepted, as it had to be, that costs saved needed to be deducted from the amounts which would have been payable to Tele2 Ireland under the Agreement but for the termination, the assessment of damages just could not be undertaken without evidence of what the costs to Tele2 Ireland would have been. Thus the conclusion has to be that Tele2 Ireland had not proved that it had suffered any loss because it had not put before the court the evidence necessary to show loss".
"If it can be shown that those events were, at the date of acceptance of the repudiation, predestined to happen, then….the damages which [the claimant] can recover are not more than the true value, if any, of the rights which he has lost, having regard to those predestined events".
"there is no evidence that Tele2[66] would have made any profit at all and certainly insufficient evidence to enable the court to quantify Tele2's claim: see Senate Electrical.[67] Accordingly, if the court finds that POL was in breach of contract, POL submits that any award of damages should be no more than nominal".
J. Expiry Revenues: construction of Schedule 4, Part III, paragraph 1 and the issue of the alleged variation.
"If a Phonecard…account expires without its full face value or the amount credited having been spent, the Relevant contractor and Post Office Limited will share the remaining value equally. The Relevant Contractor will account for such monies to Post Office Limited on a monthly basis for all amounts so accrued in the previous month, notwithstanding termination of this Agreement".
"The high point of the Claimants' case….was really the letter of 29 November 2002 written by Mr England [of Tele2] to Mr Gilbert, and the enclosure thereto, coupled with the rendering on the part of the Post office of an invoice in the sum which Mr England had contended was due. In the light of my acceptance of the evidence of Mr Gilbert to which I have referred, it follows that I am not satisfied that the agreement contended for was ever made. All that happened, as it seems to me, was that the Post Office was presented from time to time with a calculation of what the Tele2 parties, which alone had the means of knowing what the amount of the Expiry Revenue was, said was due, and invoiced the amounts so stated. The representatives of the Post Office merely failed to notice that what was alleged to be due had been calculated on the basis that the Post Office was entitled to 25% of Expiry Revenue, rather than 50%".
K. POL's application to amend the Defence.
L. Conclusions
i) POL was not entitled to terminate the Agreement by the notices sent to the Tele2 parties on 1 December 2004. POL had elected to affirm the Agreement by continuing to perform it and permitting the Tele2 parties to perform it during the period 25 December 2003 to 1 December 2004, when POL knew of Tele2's breach of clause 3.10.2 from 25 December 2003 and it knew of its right to terminate the Agreement for that breach.ii) Clause 16 of the Agreement does not prevent the Tele2 parties from relying on the doctrine of affirmation of the contract by election and it does not prevent POL from affirming the Agreement by election. As a matter of fact it did so.
iii) POL's wrongful termination on 1 December 2004 was an anticipatory renunciation of the Agreement. POL's refusal to perform the Agreement after 31 March 2005 constituted an actual repudiation of the Agreement. At some time after 1 April 2005 the Tele2 parties accepted this. Therefore POL was in repudiatory breach of the Agreement for which Tele2 Ireland was, in principle, entitled to sue POL for damages.
iv) However, Tele2 Ireland, which was the only Tele2 party entitled to sue for substantial damages, did not suffer any loss as a result of the repudiatory breach of the Agreement by POL. Therefore it is entitled to nominal damages only.
v) The judge's conclusion on the construction of Schedule 4, Part III, paragraph 1 on the division of "Expiry Revenues" was correct. POL and the Tele2 parties are entitled to 50% each of the remaining, unused, face value of expired pre – paid phonecards.
vi) The judge was correct to refuse POL permission to amend its Defence to allege a failure by Tele2, on or before 23 December 2004, to provide POL with Parent Company Letters for the calendar year 2005.
vii) Accordingly, I would dismiss the appeal of Tele2 and POL's cross – appeal on the issue of the proposed amendment.
Lord Justice Richards :
Lord Justice Ward :
"…….
1. Interpretation
………
Agreement means the agreement made between Post Office Limited and each of Tele2 Ireland, Tele2 International and Tele2 UK, as appropriate, including these terms and conditions, the attached Schedules and any other documentation specifically identified or referred to in this Agreement.
……….
Change Control means the agreed process and procedures for making changes to this Agreement using the forms and procedure set out in Schedule 7.
Change of Control means, if "control", (as defined in the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, Section 416 (2) –(6)) of either party is acquired by any person or company or group of connected persons (as defined in the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, Section 839), not having control of that party at the Commencement Date.
………
Tele2 International means Tele2 International Card Company SA (formerly Ccube Luxembourg SA) ) registered in Luxembourg under registered number 8544-08 whose registered office is at 75 Route de Longwy L8080, Bertrange, Luxembourg.
Tele2 UK means Tele2 UK Communications Limited registered in England and Wales under registered number 3565220 whose registered office is situated at Kingston House, 15 Coombe Road, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT2 7AD
……..
Contractors means, together, Tele2 Ireland, Tele2 International and Tele2 UK, and, as appropriate, their respective employees, agents, assignees, and sub-contractors and Relevant Contractor means the Contractor supplying the relevant Phonecards and/or Services, as appropriate.
………….
Parent Company Letter means a letter from Tele2AB to each of the Contractors materially in the form set out in Schedule 6.
Pre-paid Phonecards means the POL branded pre-paid phonecards to be supplied by Tele2 Ireland to POL.
………..
2. Obligations of Post Office Limited
2.1 Post Office Limited agrees to promote the Phonecards and Services to no lesser extent than it promotes similar products and services from time to time through the POL Outlets, in its internal marketing publications and through other suitable communication channels. The nature, method and extent of such communications shall be discussed and agreed by the Client Relationship Team or their duly authorised representatives. The Relevant Contractor recognises that Post Office Limited's support for the Phonecards and Services will be subject to the Marketing Guidelines, permissions and media availability.
2.2 If the parties wish to vary, change, add to, or delete particular Phonecards and/or Services, as appropriate, this shall be carried out using Change Control.
……..
3. Obligations of the Contractors
3.1 Tele2 Ireland shall provide the Pre-Paid Phonecards and PTS, Tele2 International shall provide the International Phonecards and ITS, and Tele2 UK shall provide the FTS, in accordance in all material respects with the relevant Schedules and as otherwise provided for in this Agreement.
…….
3.10.1 Within 20 days of the execution of this Agreement, each of the Relevant Contractors shall forward to POL a certified copy of the relevant Parent Company Letter for the calendar year commencing 1 January 2001.
3.10.2 7 days prior to the commencement of each subsequent calendar year, each of the Relevant Contractors shall forward to POL a certified copy of the relevant Parent Company Letter for such subsequent calendar year.
……..
4. Price and Payment
4.1 In consideration of the parties performing their respective obligations under this Agreement each shall be entitled to invoice the other and to be paid its respective Fees as provided by this Agreement. All Fees shall be exclusive of VAT, unless otherwise specified. Furthermore, any Additional Fees will be invoiced and paid as set out in Part III of Schedule 4. VAT shall be added where appropriate.
4.2 If requested to do so by any of the other parties, each party shall accept payment under this Clause by electronic funds transfer through BACS Limited or such other electronic payment system as Post Office Limited reasonably deems appropriate in the circumstances.
………
6. Variations
All variations to this Agreement shall only be made using Change Control.
………
11. Duration and Termination
11.1 This Agreement shall commence on the Commencement Date and shall continue in force until the expiry of the Initial Term and thereafter until terminated by either POL or any of the Contractors giving not less than 24 months' written notice to the other parties, as the case may be, unless terminated earlier in accordance with the provisions set out below.
11.2 Each Contractor or POL may terminate this Agreement by giving POL or each Contractor, as the case may be, not less than 12 months' notice in writing to that effect if any of the Type 1 KPIs have not been met to a material extent. Provided that no party shall be entitled to give notice as above on the basis the party giving notice has itself failed to meet such KPIs to a material extent and further that no Contractor shall be entitled to give notice as above on the basis that another Contractor has failed to meet such KPIs to material extent.
POL may terminate this Agreement by giving each Contractor not less than 12 months' notice in writing to that effect if any of the Type 2 KPIs have not been met to a material extent.
…….
11.4 Each Contractor or POL may terminate this Agreement at any time by giving notice in writing to POL or each of the Contractors, as the case may be, if:-
11.4.1 any of the other parties, unless such other party is another Contractor in the case of a Contractor giving notice, is in material breach of any of its obligations under this Agreement, including without limitation if any Contractor is in breach of any of Clauses 3.10.1, 3.10.2 and 3.10.3 (and in the case of a breach capable of remedy fails to remedy the breach within three months of receipt of a written notice requiring it to do so, the parties acknowledging that a breach of any of Clauses 3.10.1, 3.10.2 and 3.10.3 is a breach incapable of remedy therefore entitling POL to terminate this Agreement); or
...........
11.6 Any termination of this Agreement will not prejudice the accrued rights and remedies of any of the other parties, and shall not affect the coming into force or the continuance in force of any provision of this Agreement which is expressly or by implication intended to come into or continue in force on or after termination.
……...
13. Limitation of Liability
13.4 Without prejudice to the provisions of Clause 12, no party shall bring an action against any of the others in relation to loss of profits, loss of business, loss of revenue or anticipated savings suffered by third parties whatsoever and howsoever arising whether from contract, tort, breach of statutory duty or otherwise.
………
16. Waiver
In no event shall any delay, neglect or forbearance on the part of any party in enforcing (in whole or in part) any provision of this Agreement be or be deemed to be a waiver thereof or a waiver of any other provision or shall in any way prejudice any right of that party under this Agreement.
26. Entire Agreement and Conflict
26.1 This Agreement sets out the entire agreement and understanding between the parties relating to this Agreement.
26.3 The Schedules to this Agreement form part of it and to the extent that there is any conflict between the Clauses of this Agreement and the provisions of any Schedule, the Clauses of this Agreement shall prevail.
27. Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
The parties acknowledge and agree that nothing in this Agreement shall confer on any third party any benefit, nor the right to enforce any of its provisions.
……….
30. Governing Law
……..
30.3 This Agreement shall be governed by English law and the parties submit to non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English Courts."
"Section 5 – In POL Outlet Purchase
In accordance with POL's normal commercial practice, Post Office Limited will ensure that the Phonecards and Services will be available through all POL Outlets, providing suitable quantities of Phonecards and/or Services have been made available by the Relevant Contractor as appropriate. Sales statements of Phonecards will be provided to the Relevant Contractor as detailed in Schedule 4. On a daily basis, details of new Customers registering for FTS will be forwarded to Tele2 UK. Tele2 UK will fulfil these registrations within seven days. ……….
SCHEDULE 4
………
PART II – TRANSACTIONAL PAYMENTS
1. Phonecards
The purchase price of a Phonecard sold to POL by the Relevant Contractor is 79% of the face value of the Phonecard.
Post Office Limited will account to the Contractor for Phonecards it has purchased and appropriated to Customers, within 30 days after the end of the Post Office Limited monthly accounting period during which the sale to the Customer was made. Post Office Limited does not have to pay for any Phonecards that are not purchased by Customers.
……..
PART III – ADDITIONAL FEES
1. Expiry
If a Phonecard or FTS account expires without its full face value or the amount credited having been spent, the Relevant Contractor and Post Office Limited will share the remaining value equally. The Relevant Contractor will account for such monies to Post Office Limited on a monthly basis for all amounts so accrued in the previous month, notwithstanding termination of this Agreement.
……..
SCHEDULE 7
Change Control
..........
Tariff change control process
If any change request will impact on tariffs, the following additional processes shall apply. In respect of Phonecards, it should be noted that the processes below only apply to complete batches of Phonecards, for which there are no active Customers. Any batches, of which one or more Phonecard has been used by a Customer, price increases shall not be effected.
……..
SCHEDULE 9
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
Type 1
……...
5. Conformance to agreed Change Control process as per Schedule 7.
………"
Note 1 Tele2 UK provided fixed line services only, not pre – paid phonecards. It was sold by the Tele2 group to the Carphone Warehouse Group plc on 16 December 2005 and renamed Old TalkTalk UK Communications Services Ltd: see judgment para 31. [Back] Note 2 See para 41 of the judgment. [Back] Note 3 See para 89 of the judgment. [Back] Note 4 See paras 300 and 301 of the judgment. [Back] Note 5 See para 191 of the judgment. [Back] Note 6 See paras 207 – 208 of the judgment. [Back] Note 7 By clause 3.2, Tele2 UK agreed to provide fixed line services to customers in the UK. No issue arises in these proceedings concerning those services. [Back] Note 8 See paras 75 – 76 of the judgment. [Back] Note 9 See para 77 of the judgment. [Back] Note 10 See para 89 of the judgment. [Back] Note 11 See paras 47 and 48 of the judgment, although the judge stated that the evidence of Mr Nouman Hashmi, the former chief executive of each of the Claimants, had the effect, if anything, of making “the situation even more obscure”: para 48. [Back] Note 12 See para 274 of the judgment. [Back] Note 13 See paras 278 and 290 of the judgment. [Back] Note 14 See para 270 of the judgment. [Back] Note 15 At para 61 of his judgment, the judge records that two POL witnesses frankly admitted in evidence that the commercial reasons for POL wishing to terminate the Agreement with effect from 31 March 2005 had nothing to do with the failure to provide the Parent Company Letters. But, as the judge also pointed out, the motive for terminating the Agreement is immaterial to the question of whether POL was entitled to terminate or not. [Back] Note 16 Mr James Riddiough was Tele2’s expert accountant at the trial. POL’s expert accountant was Mr Philip Haberman. [Back] Note 17 POL relied on the principle that if a party terminates a contract for a bad reason but he subsequently discovers facts which would have constituted a good reason for terminating the contract, he is entitled to rely on those facts: Boston Deep Sea and Ice Company v Ansell (1888) 39 Ch D 339; British and Benningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd [1923] AC 48, particularly at 72 per Lord Sumner. As to how the allegation works on the contractual clauses, see footnote 26 below. [Back] Note 18 See para 278 of the judgment. [Back] Note 19 See para 167 of the judgment. [Back] Note 20 See paras 79 – 80 of the judgment. [Back] Note 21 See paras 88 – 89 of the judgment for both these conclusions. [Back] Note 22 See paras 89 and 344 of the judgment. Tele2 had an alternative claim for wrongful termination based on events in December 2004 to February 2005, but that is not the subject of appeal. [Back] Note 23 See paras 42 – 43 of the judgment. [Back] Note 24 See para 300 of the judgment. [Back] Note 25 See para 301 of the judgment. [Back] Note 26 By Schedule 7, any change request relating to Tariffs had to follow a “Change Control” process. By Schedule 9, the “Conformance (sic) to agreed Change Control” processes in accordance with Sch. 7 was stated to be a “Key Performance Indicator” (“KPI”) Type 1. Clause 11.2 permitted either side to give not less than 12 months notice in writing to terminate the Agreement if a Type 1 KPI had not been met “to a material extent”. [Back] Note 27 See para 293 of the judgment. [Back] Note 28 See para 340 of the judgment. [Back] Note 29 See paras 319 – 320 of the judgment. [Back] Note 30 See paras 326 – 327 of the judgment. [Back] Note 31 See para 341 of the judgment. [Back] Note 32 See para 191 of the judgment. [Back] Note 33 See para 208 of the judgment. [Back] Note 34 Mr Haberman’s calculation of “Tele2’s lost profit” was set out in a Table at para 4.38 of his Amended Expert Report: Appeal Bundle 11/page 3324. [Back] Note 35 Mr McCaughran had a fall – back case of “two suppliers” as well. [Back] Note 36 See paras 81 and 89 of the judgment. [Back] Note 37 [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 391 at 397 – 399. [Back] Note 38 See page 398 left hand side of the report. [Back] Note 39 See page 398 right hand side of the report. [Back] Note 40 See Note 16 to the Directors’ Report and Financial Statements of Tele2 Ireland, referred to at para 30 of the judgment. [Back] Note 41 See para 41 of judgment. [Back] Note 42 See para 43 of the judgment. [Back] Note 43 See para 47 of the judgment. [Back] Note 44 See para 48 of the judgment. [Back] Note 45 See Directors’ Report for year ended 31 Dec 2004 , referred to in para 46 of the judgment. [Back] Note 46 See para 48 of the judgment. [Back] Note 48 Dealt with from para 220 of the judgment onwards. [Back] Note 49 See para 258 of the judgment. The judge had quoted extensively from and relied on the House of Lords’ decision in Golden Strait Corporation v Nippon Yusen Kubishaka Kaisha (The “Golden Victory”) [2007] 2 AC 353. [Back] Note 50 See para 295 of the judgment. [Back] Note 51 See para 296 of the judgment. [Back] Note 52 See para 299 of the judgment. [Back] Note 53 See para 300 of the judgment. [Back] Note 54 (1848) 1 Exch 850 at 855. See also, eg: Livingstone v Rawyards Coal Co (1880) 5 App Cas 25 at 39 per Lord Blackburn; McAlpine Construction Ltd v Panatown Ltd [2001] 1 AC 518 at 581 per Lord Millett; Golden Strait Corporation v Nippon Yusen Kubisha Kaisha: (The “Golden Victory”) [2007] 2 AC353 at para 29 per Lord Scott of Foscote. [Back] Note 55 [1912] AC 673 at 688. [Back] Note 56 [1926] AC 655 at 662 per Viscount Dunedin. [Back] Note 57 [1926] AC 637 at 643 – 4, per Lord Sumner. [Back] Note 58 [1977] 1 WLR 1262 at 1270. [Back] Note 59 [2007] 2 AC 353, in particular at paras 35 – 36 per Lord Scott of Foscote, paras 65 – 66 per Lord Carswell and para 83 per Lord Brown of Eaton – under – Heywood. [Back] Note 60 [1971] 1 QB 164 at 210. [Back] Note 61 See The “Golden Victory” case, in particular at para 78 per Lord Brown of Eaton – under – Heywood, with whom Lords Scott and Carswell agreed. [Back] Note 62 Bundle 11/page 3324. [Back] Note 63 Bundle 12/page 3822. [Back] Note 64 Bundle 2/Tab 28/para 208 onwards on “the Issues”. [Back] Note 65 Bundle 2/page 726 – 7. This is in the section under Issue 5: Quantum of Damages. There are two lines in the oral closing argument of Mr Onions QC (17 Dec 2007/page 61, lines 11 – 13 (Bundle 8/Tab 41/page 2622) which glances the issue, but only just. [Back] Note 66 My emphasis – ie. the Tele2 group as a whole, rather than Tele2 Ireland specifically. [Back] Note 67 This is a reference to the Court of Appeal decision of Senate Electrical Wholesalers Ltd v Alcatel Submarine Networks Ltd [1999] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 423, particularly paras 50 – 54 in the judgment of Stuart – Smith LJ, where he emphasised the need of a claimant to plead and prove the particular basis on which it claims damages. [Back] Note 68 Paragraph 300 of the judgment, last sentence. [Back] Note 69 The term was used by Steyn LJ in Darlington BC v Wiltshier Northern Ltd [1995] 68 at 79, to describe the argument of a defendant construction company, which had successfully resisted a claim for substantial damages by an assignee of a building contract. The CA reversed the Official Referee, although not the laws of physics, under which matter cannot escape the pull of a “Black Hole” once past its “event horizon”. [Back] Note 70 Such as Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] AC 85 and Alfred McAlpine Construction Ltd v Panatown Ltd [2001] 1 AC 518 at 529. [Back] Note 71 See Arbuthnot v Fagan [1996] Lloyd’s Reinsurance LR 135, particularly at 140 per Steyn LJ. [Back] Note 72 See FL Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tools Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235 at 241 per Lord Reid; Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB (The “Antaios”) [1985] AC 191 at 201 per Lord Diplock. [Back] Note 73 Noted by the judge at para 193 of the judgment. [Back] Note 74 See para 153 of the judgment. [Back] Note 75 POL intended to rely again on the principles set out in the Boston Deep Sea case and the British and Benningtons case; see footnote 17 above. [Back]