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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Nokia Corporation v AU Optronics Corporation & Ors [2012] EWHC 731 (Ch) (23 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/731.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 731 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Nokia Corporation |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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AU Optronics Corporation AU Optronics (Czech) S.R.O. AU Optronics Europe B.V. Tatung Company Chungwha Picture Tubes Ltd LG Display Co Ltd LG Display Germany GmbH Samsung Electronics Co Ltd Samsung SDI Co Limited Samsung SDI Germany GmbH Samsung Semiconductor Europe GmbH Samsung Semiconductor Europe Limited Sharp Corporation Sharp Electronics (Europe) GmbH Toshiba Corporation Toshiba Electronics Europe GmbH Seiko Epson Corporation Epson Imaging Devices Corporation Epson Europe Electronics GmbH Hitachi Limited Hitachi Displays Limited Hitachi Europe Limited Royal Philips Electronics B.V. Philips Components B.V. Philips Components International B.V. |
Defendants |
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Aidan Robertson QC (instructed by Osborne Clarke) for the 1-3 Defendants
James Flynn QC & Robert O'Donoghue (instructed by Covington & Burling) for the 8, 11, 12 Defendants
Paul Lasok QC & Alistair Lindsay (instructed by Allen & Overy) for the 9-10 Defendants
Daniel Jowell QC & Sarah Love (instructed by Simmons & Simmons) for the 13-14 Defendants
Thomas de la Mare (instructed by White & Case) for the 15-16 Defendants
Nicholas Green QC & Tony Singla (instructed by Allen & Overy) for the 20-22 Defendants
Hearing dates: 8-12/3/2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Sales :
"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;
(c) share markets or sources of supply;
(d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;
(e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts."
i) An application notice dated 19 October 2011 issued by the Samsung defendants (D8, D11 and D12) claiming that the P/C fail to disclose reasonable grounds for bringing a claim against D11 and D12, and that the claims against them in the P/C should be struck out pursuant to CPR Part 3.4(2)(a); that the claims against D22 in the P/C should be struck out on the same basis; and that (since if that is right there would be no anchor defendant) the court should set aside the order dated 15 December 2009 permitting service outside the jurisdiction on various defendants (including D8) and should declare that it has no jurisdiction in relation to the claim pleaded against D8;ii) An application notice dated 24 October 2011 issued by the Hitachi defendants (D20, D21 and D22) claiming that the claim in the P/C against D22 should be struck out pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) as disclosing no reasonable cause of action and/or that summary judgment should be given for D22 against Nokia under CPR Part 24.2(a)(i) in relation to that claim because Nokia has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim; and that the court should set aside the order dated 15 December 2009 permitting service outside the jurisdiction on D20 and D21 on the footing that (assuming the claims against the anchor defendants, D12 and D22, are struck out) there is no proper basis for the court to assume jurisdiction over them;
iii) An application notice dated 9 January 2012 issued by Nokia, to the extent that it included applications asking for permission to amend the P/C in the form of the Amended P/C and for an order that any non-party to the proceedings may not obtain a copy of the redacted portions of that pleading; and
iv) An application notice dated 27 February 2012 issued by Nokia asking the court to issue a formal request for information from the European Commission relating to an investigation it is currently undertaking into the arrangements for the manufacture and supply of small sized LCDs for incorporation into mobile telephones. The basis for this application is explained in paras. [31]-[32] below. Whether such a request should or should not be made turns on whether the defendants are successful in striking out relevant claims resisting the amendments in the Amended P/C and in having the order for service of the proceedings on them out of the jurisdiction set aside. Since I have come to the conclusion that the defendants do not succeed, I consider that an appropriate request for information should be made. The parties should seek to agree the terms of the request in the light of this judgment; if they cannot be agreed, there will have to be further argument about the form of that request.
The relevant factual and legal background
"Antitrust: Commission confirms sending Statement of Objections to alleged participants in LCD panels cartel
The European Commission can confirm that in May 2009 it sent a Statement of Objections under EU antitrust rules to a number of companies active in the supply of liquid crystal display (LCD) panels, concerning their alleged participation in a cartel in violation of EC Treaty rules on restrictive business practices (Article 81 of the EC Treaty and Article 53 of the Agreement on the European Economic Area). The product under investigation is the main component of thin, flat monitors used for example in mobile phones, televisions, computers, digital watches and pocket calculators. …"
The Claim Form
"The Claimant claims damages for losses in connection with purchases of Liquid Crystal Displays between January 1996 and December 2006 incurred as a result of the Defendants' infringement of Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement."
The Particulars of Claim
"43. The Defendants are all members of undertakings that have been parties to secretive anti-competitive agreements, or to concerted practices, in respect of the supply of LCDs throughout the world, including the European Union, during the Cartel Period ("the Arrangements"). The Defendants either participated in and/or implemented the Arrangements either because they were parties to the Arrangements or because they manufactured, marketed, sold and/or distributed LCDs that were the subject of the Arrangements.
44. The secret nature of the Arrangements was such that Nokia is currently unable to specify exactly when they began or the names of all the undertakings who were parties to them. The best particulars that Nokia can presently give are that the Arrangements began no later than 1 January 1996 and continued to around December 2006 ("the Cartel Period"), the latter date being the date on which the Commission of the European Communities ("the Commission") commenced investigation of manufacturers of LCDs under Article 81(1) of the EC Treaty ("Article 81 EC") and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement ("Article 53 EEA").
45. The secret and complex nature of the Arrangements was also such that Nokia is presently unable to specify precisely their nature and content. The best particulars of the Arrangements that Nokia can presently give are that they involved:
(a) bilateral and group meetings and conversations between the Defendants or undertakings of which they formed part, including certain meetings held in Taiwan known as "Crystal Meetings," to discuss the prices and supply of LCDs in the global market, including the United Kingdom and European Union;
(b) agreements and/or concerted practices between the Defendants or undertakings of which they formed part to fix the prices and limit the supply of LCDs sold in the global market, including the United Kingdom and European Union;
(c) the issuing by the Defendants or undertakings of which they formed part of price announcements and quotations in accordance with the aforesaid agreements and/or concerted practices.
46. The Arrangements form part of a wider complex of international agreements and concerted practices to fix the prices of LCDs which wider complex is under investigation in the United States by the Department of Justice ("DOJ") Antitrust Division (as an illegal "conspiracy" contrary to § 1 of the Sherman Act), by the Commission of the European Union and elsewhere. One or more companies from each of the undertakings party to the Arrangements have during the Cartel Period either pleaded guilty in the United States to participating in agreements/concerted practices to fix the prices of LCDs, are under investigation in the United States for such agreements/concerted practices, or are under investigation by the Commission in the European Union for price-fixing, sharing markets or exchanging market information in relation to the supply of LCDs contrary to Article 81(1) EC.
47. On 13th July 2009 the Commission confirmed that, in May 2009, it had sent a Statement of Objections to a number of suppliers of LCDs. AU Optronics, Philips and LG Display have admitted to receiving the Statement of Objections. In addition, the remaining Defendants (Chunghwa, Hitachi, Seiko Epson, Samsung, Sharp and Toshiba) have admitted to being under investigation by the Commission. Other national competition authorities in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Canada are also investigating manufacturers of LCDs in respect of price fixing agreements/concerted practices. AU Optronics, Chunghwa, Hitachi, LG Display, Seiko Epson and Sharp have admitted to being under investigation by one or more of these authorities, while Samsung and Toshiba have admitted to being investigated by unspecified "other" authorities besides the DOJ and the Commission. Additionally, the Japan Fair Trade Commission has issued "cease and desist" orders to Sharp and Hitachi, and a surcharge payment order to Sharp.
…
62. The Arrangements infringed Article 81(1) EC and Article 53 EEA in that they:
(a) prevented, restricted and distorted competition between the undertakings of which the Defendants formed part in respect of the supply of LCDs throughout the world, including in the European Union and EEA;
(b) were capable of affecting trade between Member States of the European Union and EEA."
"63. The overall effect of the Arrangements was unlawfully to inflate the prices at which Nokia purchased LCDs above those which would have prevailed had there been no such Arrangements (the difference being "the Overcharge").
64. The secret nature of the Arrangements was such that Nokia was not informed of the amount of the Overcharge and cannot currently provide particulars of that amount. …
67. Nokia also made purchases of LCDs from companies who, so far as Nokia is currently aware, were not parties to and or did not implement the Arrangements. Particulars of these purchases that Nokia can presently give are set out at Annex 2 hereto. However, the effect of the Arrangements, and in particular the Overcharge, was also to inflate the prices at which the Claimants made such other purchases above those prices which would have prevailed in the absence of the Arrangements. This effect is referred to as the 'Umbrella Effect' and the inflation of the price is referred to as the 'Umbrella Overcharge'.
68. Nokia has not been informed of the Overcharge and is therefore also unable to provide particulars of the amount of the Umbrella Overcharge. …
70. As participants in the Arrangements (whether as parties to the Arrangements or implementing those Arrangements) and to the said infringement, and hence as joint tortfeasors, each Defendant is jointly and severally liable with each other Defendant for the entire amount of the loss and damage suffered by Nokia.
71. Further or in the alternative, the Arrangements have been made and/or carried out in the knowledge of and in wilful disregard of Nokia's rights, in a calculating fashion and/or with the expectation of profiting therefrom by amounts exceeding the amounts of any compensation payable by them to Nokia as a result of such wrongful actions. Such wrongful actions are properly such as to evoke a sense of outrage. In such circumstances, Nokia claims exemplary damages from the Defendants and each of them. …"
The Amended Particulars of Claim
"80. The Defendants are all members of undertakings ("Defendant Undertaking") that have been parties to secretive agreements, and/or to concerted practices, whose overall object and effect was to prevent, restrict or distort competition in the EEA and elsewhere in the market for LCDs throughout the world, including the EEA, during the Cartel Period ("the Arrangements"). The Arrangements infringed Article 101 TFEU for the reasons set out below.
81. The best particulars of the Arrangements that Nokia can presently give are that they comprised an overall continuous agreement and/or concerted practice, which involved regular direct and indirect exchanges of confidential and/or commercially sensitive information ("Information") between competitors via meetings, conversations or other communications between the Defendants or undertakings of which they formed part regarding LCDs for supply to customers including Nokia in the global market, including in the EEA and the United Kingdom. Such exchanges of Information had the object or effect of preventing, restricting and/or distorting competition between the Defendants in the supply of LCDs.
82. The Information regularly exchanged between the parties to the Arrangements, whether directly or indirectly, included detailed information on past, present and future prices and/or price parameters and volumes future capacity investments and strategies on product innovation in relation to the supply of LCDs. This included Information on LCDs for customers for whom Defendants did not actually produce or supply LCDs themselves. This was because of the interrelationship between the prices of different LCD technologies particularised at paragraphs 62 and 63 above.
83. The Information was used by the Defendant Undertakings to prevent, restrict or distort price competition in supplies to Nokia and other customers. …
106. The Arrangements comprised a single and continuous infringement of Article 101 TFEU between the Defendant Undertakings and other Relevant Entities which lasted from at least 1999 to at least 2006.
107. The Defendants and other Relevant Entities either participated in and/or implemented the Arrangements either because they were parties to the Arrangements or because they were involved in the manufacture, pricing, sale and/or distribution of LCDs that were the subject of the Arrangements.
108. Further, to the extent that the Defendant Undertakings or other Relevant Entities in engaging in the activities particularised herein were not all parties to the single and continuous infringement that pursued the common objective particularised at paragraph 100 above, they were, in the alternative, parties to individual agreements and/or concerted practices with other Defendant Undertakings in relation to the LCDs supplied to customers, which had as their object and effect maintaining the price of those LCDs above the competitive level. Those individual agreements and/or concerted practices also infringed Article 101 TFEU. Particulars of each of these individual agreements and/or concerted practices are as follows:
a) Epson and Sharp were parties to an agreement and/or concerted practice to exchange Information on a regular basis in relation to the supply of LCDs to customers including Nokia from at least 1999 until 2006.
b) Epson and Samsung SDI were parties to an agreement and/or concerted practice to exchange Information on a regular basis in relation to the supply of LCDs to customers including Nokia from at least 2003 until 2006.
c) Sharp had a market-sharing arrangement with Samsung during the Cartel Period on an ongoing basis from at least 2003 by which they agreed not to compete for certain types of TFT-LCDs. Through this arrangement, Sharp would manufacture, market, sell and/or distribute transflective TFT-LCDs while Samsung agreed to manufacture, market, sell and/or distribute transmissive TFT-LCDs.
d) Samsung had a market-sharing arrangement with Samsung SDI during the Cartel Period by which they agreed that Samsung would manufacture, market, sell and/or distribute TFT-LCDs while Samsung SDI would manufacture, market, sell and/or distribute non-TFT-LCDs. Subsequently, in or around 2004 after Samsung SDI began selling TFT Modules incorporating TFT Panels produced by Samsung and others, Samsung agreed with Samsung SDI that it would not offer certain TFT-LCD Modules to Nokia.
e) Sharp and Samsung SDI were parties to an agreement and/or concerted practice to exchange Information on a regular basis in relation to the supply of LCDs to customers, including Nokia from at least 2004 until 2006.
f) Epson and Samsung were also parties to an agreement and/or concerted practice in relation to the regular exchange of Information, in relation to the supply of LCDs to customers, including Nokia from at least 2004 to 2006.
g) Samsung and AU Optronics were parties to an agreement and/or concerted practice in relation to the regular exchange of Information, in relation to the supply of LCDs to customers, including Nokia from at least 2005 to 2006.
h) Hitachi was party to an agreement and/or concerted practice in relation to the regular exchange of Information (from at least 2004) with Toshiba (and from at least 2005) with Samsung in relation to the supply of LCD Panels to Samsung SDI and Philips that were incorporated into LCD Modules sold to Nokia by Samsung SDI and Philips.
…
114. Although employees within an individual Defendant company within a Defendant Undertaking were either specifically designated or acted as principal contact points with competitors for the purposes of implementing the Arrangements this did not prevent other employees within that Defendant Undertaking from exchanging Information with competitors pursuant to the Arrangements.
115. These competitor contact points knew who the contact points were at the other Defendants and contacted each other freely whenever they wished or needed to exchange Information. If a competitor contact point left the company or changed their role he would introduce his successor to his contacts.
116. The Information exchanged between Defendants pursuant to the Arrangements was disseminated within the Defendant Undertakings and used by their employees with responsibility for setting their company's strategy in the market and setting prices, including giving instructions regarding pricing to sales staff involved in negotiating prices with customers.
117. Employees within each Defendant Undertaking knew that their competitors' prices were being taken into account in formulating their own prices for LCDs to customers. Further, or alternatively, even if employees within a particular company within a Defendant Undertaking did not know this they nevertheless implemented the Arrangements because they charged customers prices for LCDs that were so formulated.
118. Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing in Section D above, particulars of the way in which the Defendants and the individual employees within the Defendants implemented the Arrangements that Nokia can presently provide are set out in sections E and Annex 1 below.
Samsung
153. Beginning in at least 2002, Samsung exchanged Information with competitors, including AU Optronics, Epson, LG Display, Hitachi, Sharp and Toshiba about LCDs marketed, sold and/or distributed to Nokia and other customers. These communications and meetings involved exchanges of Information about current and future prices, production, and capacity in relation to the supply of LCDs.
154. A competitor contact at Samsung was H.B. Suh who met and discussed LCD prices with representatives of, among others, Hitachi, Toshiba, Sharp, Epson, and LG Display. Mr. Suh supported Samsung's sales to Motorola and helped support Samsung's sales efforts to Nokia and communicated with employees of Sharp and Epson regarding LCD pricing and supply to Nokia on multiple occasions. These meetings and communications also included understandings about prices and supply of LCDs to customers, including Motorola.
155. In addition to Mr. Suh, competitor contacts at Samsung included Seisyu Arai in the marketing department and Patrick Han in charge of technology who worked with Arai. Mr Jin-Hyuk Yun a senior executive in Samsung's LCD business was also in contact with competitors (e.g. Sharp).
156. Beginning in at least 2003, Samsung manufactured, marketed, sold and/or distributed non TFT LCDs to manufacturers of mobile wireless handheld devices and other small electronic devices, including Nokia, Motorola, Sony Ericsson, and Apple, in the EEA and elsewhere.
157. Samsung began competing with other suppliers for sales of TFT-LCDs directly to Nokia and other customers in or around 2005.
158. The exchanges of Information in which Samsung engaged also included exchanges in relation to the supply of LCD Panels to Samsung SDI and Philips for Nokia projects Amazon and Suez pursuant to the Arrangements.
159. During the Cartel Period Samsung and Samsung SDI were also parties to the market sharing agreement/concerted practice referred to at paragraph 108(d) pursuant to which Samsung would manufacture TFT-LCDs while Samsung SDI would manufacture Non-TFT-LCDs.
160. Samsung and Samsung SDI thereby effectively agreed not to compete with each other for these two types of business from customers. Moreover, in or around 2004, after Samsung SDI began selling TFT Modules incorporating TFT Panels produced by Samsung and others, Samsung agreed with Samsung SDI that it would not offer certain TFT-LCD Modules to Nokia.
161. During the Cartel Period, Samsung was also a party to the agreement or concerted practice with Sharp to allocate the market for certain types of TFT-LCDs as particularised above at paragraph 145.
162. The Samsung employees referred to above reported the Information they received to other employees within Samsung working on particular customer accounts (including Nokia and Motorola), who would consult them in relation to competitor pricing because they were known to be the main contacts with competitors. They also reported the Information they received to their superiors with general responsibility for the sale and/or marketing of LCDs who included JW Kim. They were also provided with Information by other Samsung employees who had obtained Information through exchanges with competitors.
163. In or around 2003 Mr. Suh introduced Mr. Arai to Mr. Kitayama of Sharp. Employees of Sharp that Messrs Suh, Arai and Jun knew included Messrs Kitayama and Iida of Sharp from the information exchanges they engaged in. Employees of competitors that Mr. Suh also knew from information exchanges with other undertakings included Messrs. Watanabe, Wakabayashi and Kumazawa of Hitachi and Messrs Chiba and Amano of Toshiba.
164. During the Cartel Period, Samsung also had sales or marketing representatives employed by or seconded to SSEL in the United Kingdom. During the Cartel Period individuals from other companies in the Samsung group, including Samsung Electronics, involved in the manufacturing, sale and/or distribution of LCDs visited, or were either employed at, seconded to, or otherwise worked at, SSEL. These employees either knew or should have known that Information they received in relation to the supply of LCDs to mobile wireless handset manufacturers was obtained from competitors pursuant to the Arrangements as such information was confidential or not in the public domain. Further these employees either knew or should have known that sales of LCDs were made pursuant to the agreements and/or concerted practices referred to at paragraph 108(c), (d) and (h) above."
The issues
Analysis
"A new claim, according to s. 35(2) of the 1980 Act is a claim involving the addition or substitution of a new cause of action. A cause of action is that combination of facts which gives rise to a legal right. A cause of action in tort has, as its essential ingredients, a plea of duty, breach of duty and consequent damage to the claimant. If it happens to be the case that an element of one of those essential ingredients is misstated, misdescribed or omitted, it does not mean that a correct statement, description or inclusion is a new cause of action; even if the formal result of such a statement misdescription or omission might technically be that an unaltered claim would have to be dismissed, that still does not mean that a corrective alteration involves or constitutes a new cause of action."
"38. The judge may have been correct to say (para 39) that it is not clear whether it is being alleged that the Anchor Defendants were party to the alleged agreements or were aware of them when they made their sales. On the other hand, it would also be correct to say that it is not clear whether it is being alleged that, even if the Anchor Defendants were neither a party to the alleged agreements nor aware of them, they are nevertheless still liable for infringement of Article 81.
39. But once it is alleged that representatives of (inter alia) Shell, Bayer and indeed Dow and others had discussions to co-ordinate their anti-competitive behaviour (para 41) and that those discussions led to "each of the Defendants" co-ordinating their anti-competitive behaviour (para 44) and that the arrangements were implemented by "each of the Defendants" with specific attention being drawn to sales by the First and Seventh Defendants (para 46), that to our mind constitutes a general plea of involvement in the arrangements rather than a narrower assertion of liability in the absence of knowledge or awareness of them. It would not in our view have been open to either of the Anchor Defendants to strike out the plea on the basis that knowledge or awareness was required and had not been pleaded. To the extent that the lack of clarity was embarrassing, it would always have been possible for any Defendant to enquire whether knowledge was being alleged and, if so, what facts and matters were relied on to establish such knowledge. To give an answer to that request would not be to plead a new cause of action. …
41. We cannot agree with Mr Sanders that the claims were inadequately pleaded or that it was necessary at that stage that the Claimants should identify the claim which each individual claimant had against the UK domiciled subsidiaries beyond that which had already been identified in para 41-46 of the pleading. Enthusiastic litigants sometimes forget that jurisdiction applications are supposed to be dealt with swiftly and economically at the beginning of the case. It is quite wrong for unnecessary costs to be incurred in England when it is not even clear that the case will proceed in England at all (and when indeed the defendants are vigorously asserting that it should not).
42. Be that as it may, Mr Rabinowitz then sought to rely on the response to Mr Sanders' witness statement filed by the Claimant's solicitor Ms Farrell on 1st August 2008. Her witness statement contained 101 paragraphs in which she (to our mind unnecessarily) gave many of the particulars demanded by Mr Sanders and then in paragraph 45, before she even came to explain the basis on which the English court had jurisdiction, said this:—
"It is the Claimants' case, as pleaded in the Particulars of Claim, that the various Defendants, and also the groups of which they form part, are "economic undertakings" in the sense in which that term is used in EU competition law. More particularly, those companies which are subsidiaries of, or in the same corporate group as, the various addressees of the Commission Decision, including those that are English companies, were used by the various "undertakings" to implement the cartel arrangements agreed on by those different undertakings. That implementation included the implementation of those arrangements in the United Kingdom."
This, said Mr Rabinowitz, contained no allegation that anyone other than the Addressees of the Commission Decision was involved in any cartel. But it does not, to our mind, purport to narrow the particulars of claim in any way. It is still an open question whether it is going to be alleged that the subsidiaries domiciled in the United Kingdom were or were not parties to, or aware of, the cartel.
43. In these circumstances it seems to us that the particulars of claim encompass both the possibility that the Anchor Defendants were parties to or aware of the anti-competitive conduct of their parent company and the other Addressees and the possibility that they were not. It is only if they were not that what we have called the Provimi point will arise. But it is unnecessary to decide it on this application because it is open to the claimants on the pleadings to prove that the Anchor Defendants were parties to (or aware of) the Addressees' anti-competitive conduct. The strength (or otherwise) of any such case cannot be assessed (or indeed usefully particularised) until after disclosure of documents because it is in the nature of anti-competitive arrangements that they are shrouded in secrecy. But the case that the Anchor Defendants were parties to the cartel arrangements or were aware of them when they sold BR and ESBR to the Claimants is not a case that is susceptible to being struck out at the present stage. …"
i) The erroneous inclusion of D9 and D10 in the Samsung undertaking as set out in the P/C meant that a new cause of action was being pleaded against them in the Amended P/C when they were alleged to be part of a distinct Samsung SDI undertaking. However, the relevant causes of action against D9 and D10 were properly set out in the claim form, and this criticism relates simply to the mode in which Nokia would seek to make good that claim at trial. The criticism of the P/C is also misplaced. In the P/C D9 and D10 are alleged to be individual participants in the anti-competitive Arrangements (see in particular the second sentence of paragraph 43 and paragraph 70), and in my view a correction in the way in which they are grouped in the Amended P/C in an undertaking (Samsung SDI rather than Samsung) does not materially change the nature of the case against them as individual legal persons who participated in the anti-competitive Arrangements, which still remains essentially the same (see, in particular, paragraphs 80 and 107 of the Amended P/C);ii) A new allegation is made in paragraph 106 of the Amended P/C that "the Arrangements" comprised "a single and continuous infringement" of Article 101. However, in my view, that is just to plead out what was already implicit in the claim set out in the claim form and in the description of the Arrangements in the P/C. In particular, by defining the anti-competitive practices of which complaint was made in the P/C as "the Arrangements" operating within a defined "Cartel period" and pleading that the defendants each participated in the Arrangements, a tolerably clear indication is given that the case against the defendants and each of them is one of involvement in "a single and continuous infringement" of Article 101 (that simply being the relevant label to be attached, as a matter of law, to the underlying facts which are pleaded);
iii) The nature of the case has changed between the P/C and the Amended P/C, in that the P/C pleaded only a case of actual price-fixing whereas the whole thrust of the Amended P/C is to allege exchange of information rather than the making of price-fixing agreements. Again, however, the relevant causes of action were properly set out in the claim form, and this criticism relates simply to the mode in which Nokia would seek to make good that claim at trial. Moreover, this submission simply mischaracterises what is pleaded in the P/C: see para. [61] above;
iv) The nature of the case has changed between the P/C and the Amended P/C, in that the P/C plead only a case based on the anti-competitive effect of the Arrangements whereas the Amended P/C plead that they also have an anti-competitive object (i.e. relies on a distinct limb of Article 101(1)). Again, I consider that this criticism relates simply to the mode in which Nokia would seek to make good the claim in the claim form at trial. I also consider that this submission mischaracterises what is pleaded in the P/C. The P/C alleges active participation by each defendant in Arrangements which are alleged to be anti-competitive (paragraphs 43 and 70), including by involvement in the specific practices set out in paragraph 45. That gives a tolerably clear indication that a case is being maintained against the defendants based both on the object and the effect of the Arrangements. That impression is also reinforced by paragraph 62 of the P/C, which does not limit the Article 101 claim to either object or effect, and therefore further indicates that both the object and effect limbs of Article 101 are being relied upon;
v) In relation to the Amended P/C, Mr Flynn submitted that the particulars of involvement of the Samsung defendants are inadequate. I have set out above relevant parts of the Amended P/C in relation to the Samsung defendants. The particulars in the Amended P/C are a lot more detailed than in the P/C. Mr Flynn's point seemed to be that still more detailed particulars were given in relation to other defendants. I do not think he has raised a valid objection to these parts of the Amended P/C. There is nothing to suggest that Nokia and its counsel have done anything other than plead the most fully particularised case they can against the Samsung defendants at this stage. Even if still more specific details are pleaded against other defendants, that does not show that improperly detailed particulars are set out against the Samsung defendants;
vi) Mr de la Mare for Toshiba objected to the introduction of TMD into the Amended P/C at paragraph 27. He suggested that it had in effect been made a new party to the claim in a way that was illegitimate and/or that claims by reference to it involved new causes of action. I do not agree with this. TMD is plainly not itself joined as a defendant. Nokia has already pleaded a participation case against D15 in the claim form and the P/C, and in paragraph 27 of the Amended P/C particulars are given of one of the ways in which it is said D15 participated in the relevant LCD market and hence in the Arrangements, which include doing so "via its subsidiaries throughout the EEA", which are said to include TMD. In my view that is a proper particularisation of the claim already made against D15, and does not involve the addition of a new cause of action;
vii) Mr de la Mare also submitted that paragraph 203 of the Amended P/C involved pleading a new cause of action. I do not accept this. In my view, it particularises one possible mode in which the cause of action set out in the claim form and in the P/C may have arisen. It is a case which does not go beyond the causes of action already asserted against each defendant.
The Provimi point: the implementation case against the defendants
"31. It seems to me to be arguable that where two corporate entities are part of an "undertaking" (call it "Undertaking A") and one of those entities has entered into an infringing agreement with other, independent, "undertakings", then if another corporate entity which is part of Undertaking A then implements that infringing agreement, it is also infringing Article 81 . In my view it is arguable that it is not necessary to plead or prove any particular "concurrence of wills" between the two legal entities within Undertaking A. The EU competition law concept of an "undertaking" is that it is one economic unit. The legal entities that are a part of the one undertaking, by definition of the concept, have no independence of mind or action or will. They are to be regarded as all one. Therefore, so it seems to me, the mind and will of one legal entity is, for the purposes of Article 81, to be treated as the mind and will of the other entity. There is no question of having to "impute" the knowledge or will of one entity to another, because they are one and the same.
32. In my view the fact that, in the Decision, the Commission identifies only one particular legal entity as the "infringing undertaking" does not detract from my conclusion. EU competition law has to bow to the practical fact that in national laws it is legal entities that exist; and it is legal entities that own the funds from which fines are paid. So particular entities need to be identified in order to enforce the Decision. But those practical considerations cannot determine a prior question which is whether, if one entity of an undertaking is an infringer by agreeing to fix prices, another entity that has implemented the same infringing agreement, is also an infringer."
Conclusion