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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Bord NA Mona Horticulture Ltd & Anor v British Polythene Industries Plc & Ors [2012] EWHC 3346 (Comm) (28 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/3346.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3346 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) BORD NA MONA HORTICULTURE LIMITED (2) BORD NA MONA PLC |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BRITISH POLYTHENE INDUSTRIES PLC (2) COMBIPAC BV (3) BISCHOF + KLEIN GmbH & CO KG (4) FLS PLAST A/S |
Defendants |
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Paul Lasok QC and Ben Rayment (instructed by Maclay, Murray & Spens LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendants.
Hearing dates: 24 and 25 September 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction and background
"The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the internal market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the internal market, and in particular those which:
(a) directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions;
(b) limit or control production, markets, technical development, or investment;..."
"Uniform application of Community competition law
1. When national courts rule on agreements, decisions or practices under Article 81 or Article 82 of the Treaty which are already the subject of a Commission decision, they cannot take decisions running counter to the decision adopted by the Commission. They must also avoid giving decisions which would conflict with a decision contemplated by the Commission in proceedings it has initiated. To that effect, the national court may assess whether it is necessary to stay its proceedings. This obligation is without prejudice to the rights and obligations under Article 234 of the Treaty."
The Decision of the European Commission
"The following undertakings have infringed Article 81 of the Treaty by participating, during the periods indicated, in a complex of agreements and concerted practices in the plastic industrial bags sector in Belgium, Germany, Spain, France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, consisting in the fixing of prices and the establishment of common price calculation models, the sharing of markets and the allocation of sales quotas, the assignment of customers, deals and orders, the submission of concerted bids in response to certain invitations to tender and the exchange of individualised information:
(a) Combipac B.V., from 6 January 1982 until 9 November 2001, and British Polythene Industries PLC, from 25 April 1997 until 9 November 2001;"
"The evidence in the Commission's file demonstrates that the industrial bag producers concerned together adopted anticompetitive practices affecting the German, French, Spanish and Benelux markets. Although some evidence appears to show that arrangements occasionally concerned other countries, the Commission does not have any evidence in its possession suggesting that these were anything but isolated instances. On the basis of the evidence in the file, the Germany, French, Spanish and Benelux markets constitute the relevant territory for the purposes of this Decision."
"(80) The ultimate parent company of the BPI group, British Polythene Industries PLC, based in the United Kingdom, took its current name in 1990 (it was previously called Scott & Robertson Plc). It began developing its industrial bags business in 1983 when it acquired Anaplast Limited.
(81) The industrial bags business is divided between the British part and the continental part. The business in the United Kingdom and Ireland are the responsibility of the subsidiary British Polythene Limited. That company developed through the acquisition of several other firms (Anaplast in 1983, Visqueen in 1988, Flexer Sacks in 1993 and CVP in Ireland in 1993).
(82) As far as continental operations are concerned, British Polythene Industries PLC acquired Wavin PFP BV on 25 April 1997 via Combipac BV, a subsidiary of BPI Europe BV, itself a joint subsidiary of British Polythene International Limited and British Polythene International (No 2) Limited, both subsidiaries of British Polythene Industries PLC. Combipac BV controls operations at the Hardenberg and Roeselare sites under the business name ''bpi.indupac''. Combipac BV also controls the operations of Formipac (''bpi.belgium'') at Zele, which were bought in November 1997 from Bonar Phormium.
(83) On 25 April 1997 British Polythene Industries PLC also bought, via its subsidiary Francepac, the business of Wavin Emballage SA, a subsidiary of the Wavin group. Francepac SA is a direct subsidiary of British Polythene Industries PLC and markets output from the Hardenberg plant in France.
(84) Since 1990, the group's operations have been organised along functional division lines. The industrial bags business initially formed part of larger divisions and then gradually developed into an independent unit ("Heavy duty sacks and Ireland" in 1996, "Industrial products" in 1998, "bpi.industrial" and "bpi.belgium" in 2000). The operations of bpi.indupac (Hardenberg plant) and Francepac then came under the bpi.industrial division while Formipac (Zele plant) came under bpi.belgium. In April 2004, bpi.indupac and Francepac were transferred to the bpi.europe division.
(85) As far as internal organisation and the reporting chain are concerned, each division is run by a director, assisted by a board composed of the division's executive directors and representatives of the board of directors of British Polythene Industries PLC. Division boards meet quarterly.
(86) Within the divisions, each operation or site is under the responsibility of a managing director who takes charge of operational and commercial aspects and reports quarterly to the division director. According to the explanations given by BPI, decisions on prices and customers are taken by the managing directors and their commercial managers. BPI points out that these decisions are in principle taken at the local level by the commercial managers, who report monthly to the managing directors, except in the case of key accounts and large contracts, which are dealt with directly by the managing directors."
"(686) As regards the liability of the ultimate parent company, British Polythene Industries PLC, BPI Indupac (formerly Wavin PFP) and BPI Belgium (Formipac) do not have legal personality and are directly controlled by Combipac BV, a wholly owned subsidiary of the intermediate holding company, BPI Europe BV, which is itself jointly owned by two companies in the group, BPI International Limited and BPI International (No 2) Limited, both in turn wholly controlled by the ultimate parent company, British Polythene Industries PLC.
(687) Francepac SA is directly controlled by British Polythene Industries PLC.
(688) Francepac SA perpetuated the infringement that had been begun by Wavin Emballage SA, in particular through its [Position] […Y], who continued to take part in the collusive arrangements that went on in the France group, which he had previously attended as an employee of Wavin.
(689) Moreover, the industrial bags business as a whole is directly controlled at parent company level, since the group is organised by sectoral divisions, each division being represented by a board which includes members of BPI plc's board of directors and meets quarterly.
(690) In its reply to the Statement of Objections BPI does not contest this fact. However, it says that the operational structure of the group is quite different from its legal structure. In 1998 a group Management Board was set up, consisting of the managing directors of each division and the group's main executive directors. The Management Board is the real management body running the BPI group.
(691) According to BPI, the Management Board does not concern itself with day-to-day operational management or with questions of pricing, which are a matter for the commercial and sales managers.
(692) However, BPI also indicates that its commercial managers send a monthly report to the managing director they work under, who then sends a quarterly report to the Management Board and to the CEO. The detailed explanation given in the reply to the request for information shows without any doubt that the upward movement of information in the group is highly structured and effective, and that the organisation of operations in large divisions has enabled the Management Board constantly to channel and guide the activities of the group's subsidiaries.
(693) Several senior officers of the group, who were [Position] of the parent company British Polythene Industries PLC, were also operational managers of subsidiaries directly involved in the cartel. […]
(694) Lastly, several managing directors of the group have personally played varying parts in the meetings of the cartel […].
(695) In those circumstances, British Polythene Industries PLC should therefore be held responsible for the infringement from 25 April 1997, jointly and severally with Combipac BV.
(696) This Decision should accordingly be addressed to Combipac BV and British Polythene Industries PLC."
"The jurisprudence on this aspect is, in my view, plain and settled. Article 101 is concerned with agreements, decisions and concerted practices by and between undertakings. An undertaking for this purpose is any entity engaged in economic activity, regardless of its legal status and the way in which it is financed. Furthermore, in this context the concept of an undertaking includes an economic unit which may consist of more than one legal or natural person, such as a group of companies. Where, for example, a company does not decide independently on its own conduct on the market, but in all material respects carries out the instructions given to it by its parent company, having regard to the economic, organisational and legal links between them, the unlawful conduct of the subsidiary will be imputed to the parent company. In such a situation, in the language of EU jurisprudence, the parent exercises a "decisive influence" over its subsidiary. The subsidiary is not absolved from its own personal responsibility, but its parent company is liable because in that situation they form a single economic entity for the purposes of Article 101. In EU jurisprudence, the (rebuttable) presumption is that a parent company exercises a decisive influence over the market conduct of a wholly owned subsidiary and that they therefore constitute a single undertaking within Article 101: Case C-97/08P Akzo Nobel NV & Os v Commission [2009] ECR 1-8247 (Advocate General Kokott at paras. 39-44, ECJ paras. 54-61 and 77); T-25/06 Alliance One International Inc v Commission 9 September 2011 (paras 80-85); Case T-43/02 Jungbunzlauer AG v Commission [2006] ECR II-3435 (para. 129)."
"193. The conception on which the Polypropylene Decision is founded is expressed particularly clearly in the same point 83, when the Commission indicates that 'The essence of the present case is the combination over a long period of the producers towards a common end', and that 'each participant must take responsibility not only for its own direct role but also for the operation of the agreement as a whole. The degree of involvement of each producer is not therefore fixed according to the period for which its pricing instructions happened to be available but for the whole of the period during which it adhered to the common enterprise'.
…
198. It follows from those paragraphs of the contested judgment that Anic, in the same way as the other undertakings involved, had to be considered a co-perpetrator of a single infringement which manifested itself in a pattern of unlawful conduct forming an integrated set of schemes, not several forms of conduct to be considered in isolation."
"The mere fact that each of the participants in a cartel may have played a specific part in it adapted to its situation does not rule out that it can be liable for the infringement as a whole, including the acts of other members, since those acts have the same unlawful object and the same anticompetitive effect. An undertaking that has participated in such a joint infringement through conduct contributing to attaining the common object is also liable, throughout the entire period of its participation therein, for the conduct of other undertakings in the context of the same infringement. That is the case where it is established that the undertaking in question was aware of the offending conduct of the other participants or that it could reasonably have foreseen it and that it was prepared to take the risk."
"It is settled case law that, for the purpose of the application of Article 81 of the Treaty, there is no need to take account of the actual effects of an agreement when it has as its object the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the common market. Consequently it is unnecessary to demonstrate the actual anticompetitive effects since the anticompetitive object of the behaviour at issue has been established."
The relevant test on strike out and summary judgment applications
"The general principles to be applied on an application under CPR Rule 3.4 are well known and not in doubt. They are summarised in the judgment of Lewison J in The Federal Republic of Nigeria v Santolina Investment Corporation and others [2007] EWHC 437 (Ch) para 4. Their application to competition claims or defences was amplified in the judgment of Roth J in Sel-Imperial Ltd v The British Standards Institution [2010] EWHC 854 (Ch) paras 17 and 18 in these terms:
"17. Moreover, it is important that competition claims are pleaded properly. To contend that a party has infringed competition law involves a serious allegation of breach of a quasi-public law, which can indeed lead to the imposition of financial penalties as well as civil liability. A defendant faced with such a claim is entitled to know what specific conduct or agreement is complained of and how that is alleged to violate the law. As Laddie J observed in BHB Enterprises Plc v Victor Chandler (International) Ltd [2005] EWHC 1074 (Ch), [2005] EuLR 924, at [43]:
"These are notoriously burdensome allegations, frequently leading to extensive evidence, including expert reports from economists and accountants. The recent history of cases in which such allegations have been raised illustrate that they can lead to lengthy and expensive trials."
Subsequent experience only reinforces the accuracy of that observation.
18. This is not to adopt an over-technical approach to pleadings. It is consistent with the overriding objective to enable the case to be dealt with expeditiously and fairly. It is only through the clear articulation of each party's position in its statement of case, with appropriate factual detail, that the other side can know what case it has to meet and what issues any experts have to address, and that the court can effectively exercise its case management powers.""
"62. In a case involving an allegation that a secret cartel has operated in breach of Article 101 there is an inevitable tension in domestic procedural law between the impulse to ensure that claims are fully and clearly pleaded so that a defendant can know with some exactitude what case he has to meet (and also so that disclosure obligations can be fully understood, expert witnesses given clear instructions and so on), on the one hand, and on the other the impulse to ensure that justice is done and a claimant is not prevented by overly strict and demanding rules of pleading from introducing a claim which may prove to be properly made out at trial, but which will be shut out by the law of limitation if the claimant is to be forced to wait until he has full particulars before launching a claim. In working out how that tension is to be resolved, it is important to bear in mind the general and long established approach referred to above and the existence of other protections for defendants within the procedural regime, including the following. [He then identifies procedural protections such as requests for further information and summary judgment applications where appropriate, together with the professional obligations of counsel in relation to pleadings]
67. In my judgment, the availability of such procedural protections for a defendant to ensure that a claim is fully and properly explained in good time before trial (as against the possible loss to a claimant of an entire, potentially meritorious claim), indicates that in resolving the tension referred to above and determining whether a cause of action has been sufficiently pleaded in a statement of case (particularly in the claim form and/or the particulars of claim when an action is commenced), the balance is to be struck by allowing a measure of generosity in favour of a claimant. Such an approach is appropriate and in the overall interests of justice and the overriding objective set out in CPR Part 1.1. It is an approach supported by the authorities cited above."
"As was stated by the Court of Appeal in Cooper Tire & Rubber Company Europe Ltd v Dow Deutschland Inc [2010] EWCA Civ 864 at paragraph [43], however, it is in the nature of anti-competitive arrangements that they are shrouded in secrecy and so it is difficult until after disclosure of documents fairly to assess the strength or otherwise of an allegation that a defendant was a party to, or aware of, the proven anti-competitive conduct of members of the same group of companies. That same generous approach was for the same reason taken by Sales J in Nokia Corporation v AU Optronics Corporation [2012] EWHC 731 in dismissing an application to strike out or to grant summary judgment against the claimant in proceedings for damages for infringement of Article 101. That approach is appropriate in the present case prior to disclosure of documents."
"5. Although the test [whether the claim has a real prospect of success] can be stated simply, its application in practice can be difficult. In my experience there can be more difficulties in applying the "no real prospect of success" test on an application for summary judgment (or on an application for permission to appeal, where a similar test is applicable) than in trying the case in its entirety (or, in the case of an appeal, hearing the substantive appeal). The decision-maker at trial will usually have a better grasp of the case as a whole, because of the added benefits of hearing the evidence tested, of receiving more developed submissions and of having more time in which to digest and reflect on the materials.
…
18. In my judgment, the court should also hesitate about making a final decision without a trial where, even though there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case."
"Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case."
Summary of claims
(1) A claim in respect of purchases of industrial bags direct from members of the cartel in the relevant markets (Germany, France, Benelux and Spain), specifically from the third defendants in Germany and Combipac in the Netherlands. Mr Beal describes this as a "follow on" claim.
(2) A claim which relies on the findings by the Commission of infringements in the relevant markets and seeks to supplement that by factual and expert evidence to demonstrate the effect of the cartel activity on neighbouring markets, specifically the market in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Mr Beal describes this as a hybrid claim.
(3) A claim which relies upon the findings of the Commission in conjunction with evidence from a tendering exercise conducted by the claimants in 1999 to support the inference that anti-competitive activity such as price fixing took place in relation to the claimants' purchases in the United Kingdom and Ireland and/or a claim that the infringements identified by the Commission caused the claimants to pay a higher price for those purchases. This is described by Mr Beal as a "stand alone" claim.
Significance if any of the distinction between follow on and stand alone claims
"The right to bring a follow-on claim before the Tribunal does not affect the right of a party to bring the sort of proceedings in court that were already possible, so a party which considers itself to have been the victim of anti-competitive behaviour, and to have suffered loss as a result, has a choice: it may bring ordinary proceedings in the High Court (I speak only of England, even though the 1998 Act applies throughout the UK), or, if a relevant regulator has held there to have been an infringement, it may bring proceedings in the Tribunal. If it proceeds in court, it can allege, and must prove, whatever infringements it wishes to rely on as having caused loss. If a regulator has found there to have been an infringement, before or during the course of the proceedings, it will have the benefit of section 58 under which it can rely on the regulator's findings of fact. On the other hand, it may proceed in the Tribunal, in which case it is limited to the infringements found by the regulator, but the question of infringement is concluded by the regulator's decision, leaving only the issues of causation and quantification of loss to be decided by the Tribunal."
Are the claims contrary to the Decision of the Commission?
"The evidence in the Commission's file demonstrates that the industrial bag producers concerned together adopted anticompetitive practices affecting the German, French, Spanish and Benelux markets. Although some evidence appears to show that arrangements occasionally concerned other countries, the Commission does not have any evidence in its possession suggesting that these were anything but isolated instances. On the basis of the evidence in the file, the Germany, French, Spanish and Benelux markets constitute the relevant territory for the purposes of this Decision." (my emphasis)
The follow on claim
The hybrid and stand alone claims
"28. As regards the distinction to be drawn between concerted practices having an anti-competitive object and those with anti-competitive effects, it must be borne in mind that an anti-competitive object and anti-competitive effects constitute not cumulative but alternative conditions in determining whether a practice falls within the prohibition in Article 81(1) EC. It has, since the judgment in Case 56/65 LTM [1966] ECR 235, 249, been settled case-law that the alternative nature of that requirement, indicated by the conjunction 'or', means that it is necessary, first, to consider the precise purpose of the concerted practice, in the economic context in which it is to be pursued. Where, however, an analysis of the terms of the concerted practice does not reveal the effect on competition to be sufficiently deleterious, its consequences should then be considered and, for it to be caught by the prohibition, it is necessary to find that those factors are present which establish that competition has in fact been prevented or restricted or distorted to an appreciable extent (see, to that effect, Beef Industry Development Society and Barry Brothers, paragraph 15).
29. Moreover, in deciding whether a concerted practice is prohibited by Article 81(1) EC, there is no need to take account of its actual effects once it is apparent that its object is to prevent, restrict or distort competition within the common market (see, to that effect, Joined Cases 56/64 and 58/64 Consten and Grundig v Commission [1966] ECR 299, 342; Case C-05/04 P Nederlandse Federatieve Vereniging voor de Groothandel op Elektrotechnisch Gebied v Commission [2006] ECR I-8725, paragraph 125; and Beef Industry Development Society and Barry Brothers, paragraph 16). The distinction between 'infringements by object' and 'infringements by effect' arises from the fact that certain forms of collusion between undertakings can be regarded, by their very nature, as being injurious to the proper functioning of normal competition (Beef Industry Development Society and Barry Brothers, paragraph 17).
30. Accordingly, contrary to what the referring court claims, there is no need to consider the effects of a concerted practice where its anti-competitive object is established."
"What is also clear, contrary to the appellants' case, is that acts of implementation alone are capable of amounting to concerted practices where they are carried out pursuant to an anti-competitive agreement made between others and with knowledge of that agreement. That is apparent not only from the passages in Anic Partecipazioni just cited but also from the following earlier passages in the judgment in that case:
"79 Secondly, the agreements and concerted practices referred to in Article 85(1) of the Treaty necessarily result from collaboration by several undertakings, who are all co-perpetrators of the infringement but whose participation can take different forms according, in particular, to the characteristics of the market concerned and the position of each undertaking on that market, the aims pursued and the means of implementation chosen or envisaged.
80 However, the mere fact that each undertaking takes part in the infringement in ways particular to it does not suffice to exclude its responsibility for the entire infringement, including conduct put into effect by other participating undertakings but sharing the same anti-competitive object or effect.
81 Thirdly, it must be remembered that Article 85 of the Treaty prohibits agreements between undertakings and decisions by associations of undertakings, including conduct which constitutes the implementation of those agreements or decisions, and concerted practices when they may affect intra-Community trade and have an anti-competitive object or effect. It follows that infringement of that article may result not only from an isolated act but also from a series of acts or from continuous conduct. That interpretation cannot be challenged on the ground that one or several elements of that series of acts or continuous conduct could also constitute in themselves an infringement of Article 85 of the Treaty.
…
87 When, as in the present case, the infringement involves anti-competitive agreements and concerted practices, the Commission must, in particular, show that the undertaking intended to contribute by its own conduct to the common objectives pursued by all the participants and that it was aware of the actual conduct planned or put into effect by other undertakings in pursuit of the same objectives or that it could reasonably have foreseen it and that it was prepared to take the risk.""
Conclusion on BPI's application
The Combipac application
"may also be sued where he is one of a number of defendants in the courts for the place where any one of them is domiciled, provided the claims are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings."
"28 …..the question referred seeks to determine whether a national rule introducing an objection of lack of jurisdiction may stand in the way of the application of Article 6(1) of Regulation No 44/2001.
29 It is settled case-law that the provisions of the regulation must be interpreted independently, by reference to its scheme and purpose (see, in relation to the Brussels Convention, Case C-433/01 Blijdenstein [2004] ECR I-981, paragraph 24 and the case-law cited).
30 Consequently, since it is not one of the provisions, such as Article 59 of Regulation No 44/2001, for example, which provide expressly for the application of domestic rules and thus serve as a legal basis therefor, Article 6(1) of the Regulation cannot be interpreted in such a way as to make its application dependent on the effects of domestic rules.
31 In those circumstances, Article 6(1) of Regulation No 44/2001 may be relied on in the context of an action brought in a Member State against a defendant domiciled in that State and a co-defendant domiciled in another Member State even when that action is regarded under a national provision as inadmissible from the time it is brought in relation to the first defendant."
"First [Mr Samek] says that a claim for the purposes of Article 6(1) must be one which can properly be brought in the domestic court. As a general proposition, I would accept this, although Mr Samek referred us to a recent decision of the ECJ in Reisch Montage AG v Kiesel Baumaschinen Handels GMbH (Case C-103/05), which casts some doubt upon this proposition. In that case proceedings had been brought by the creditor of a bankrupt in the court of his domicile and, relying on Article 6(1), his guarantor domiciled in another member state. The claim against the bankrupt was time-barred but the ECJ held that nevertheless the claim against the guarantor could proceed under Article 6 (1) which was not affected by a procedural bar contained in a national provision."
"[A] person domiciled in a Member State may, in another Member State, be sued in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur."
"The Dow Defendants also relied upon Article 5(3) of the Judgments Regulation to establish jurisdiction. In view of my decision on Article 6(1) it is strictly unnecessary to lengthen this judgment yet further with a discussion of all the arguments. I will simply express my conclusions as shortly as possible. Article 5(3) provides for special jurisdiction "in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred." That expression means "both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it, so that the defendant may be sued, at the option of the plaintiff, in the courts for either of those places"; see Reunion Europeenne SA v Spliethoff's Bevrachtingskantoor BV Case C-51/97 [1998] ECR I-6511 at paragraph 28. However, where the place where the event giving rise to the damage occurred is difficult or indeed impossible to determine the plaintiff must sue in the place where the damage occurred; see paragraph 33. In the present case the act complained of is a "complex single and continuous infringement" of Article 81 of the Treaty by agreeing price targets, sharing customers by non-aggression agreements and exchanging sensitive commercial information relating to prices, competitors and customers. The meetings which gave rise to it took place in a number of locations including Milan, Vienna, Amsterdam, Brussels, Richmond-on-Thames, Frankfurt, Grosse Leder, and Prague. The cartel was ended at a meeting in London. I consider that this is a case where it is, at the very least, difficult to say where the event which gave rise to the damage occurred. It was suggested that the cartel was set in motion in England over the period 28-30 August 1995 and that that is sufficient to show that the place where the harmful event occurred was in England; see Sandisk Corporation v Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV [2007] EWHC 332 (Ch) at paragraphs 25 and 41. I have, I confess, a sense of unease, in concluding, in the context of a Europe-wide cartel orchestrated at meetings in several countries, that the place where the harmful event occurred is England because that is where the first meeting took place. That seems to me to be unrealistic. In truth the harmful events occurred in several countries. In these circumstances I consider that the Claimants can only rely on the place where the damage occurred. It is common ground that some damage occurred in England because some BR and ESBR was sold here. However, it is also common ground that if jurisdiction is established on that basis it is only established in respect of the damage which occurred in England. That is, I understand, a very small part of the whole."