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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 >> Sagal (t/a Bunz UK) v Atelier Bunz GmbH [2008] EWHC 789 (Comm) (17 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/789.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 789 (Comm), [2008] 2 CLC 850, [2008] Eu LR 717, [2008] 2 Lloyd's Rep 158 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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RAOUL SAGAL (Trading as Bunz UK) |
Claimant |
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- and- |
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ATELIER BUNZ GMBH |
Defendant |
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Mr John Kimbell (instructed by Pritchard Englefield) appeared for the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
The litigation
Legal definition of Commercial Agent
'…"commercial agent" means a self-employed intermediary who has continuing authority to negotiate the sale or purchase of goods on behalf of another person (the "principal"), or to negotiate and conclude the sale or purchase of goods on behalf of and in the name of that principal."
"If a person buys or sells himself as principal he is outside the ambit of the regulations. This is so because in negotiating that sale or purchase he is acting on his own behalf and not on behalf of another. All the regulations point in the direction of the words 'on behalf of' meaning what an English Court would naturally construe them as meaning. The other person on whose behalf the intermediary has authority to negotiate the sale or purchase of goods is called the 'principal'; the duties are consistent with true agency and not with buying and reselling; 'remuneration' is quite inconsistent with 'mark up', particularly 'mark-up' within the total discretion of the re-seller". (Per Waller LJ at 252 g-j.
In the second Court of Appeal decision Mercantile International Group Plc v Chuan Soon Huat Industrial Group Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 288 ("MIG"), the reasoning in Pacflex was approved, particularly the above passage - see Lord Justice Rix at para 27.
Rix LJ cites Bowstead and Reynolds on Agency -
"The distinction between agent and buyer for resale normally turns on whether the person concerned acts for himself to make such profit as he can or is remunerated by pre-arranged commission. A supplier who himself fixes the resale price is likely to be a buyer for resale ..Exceptionally.. an agent may be remunerated by being allowed to keep the excess over and above a stipulated price … Each transaction must be examined on its facts, considering the extent to which an agent's duties are appropriate …" – para 21.
He then goes on to analyse the reasoning of the decision in Ex parte White, re Nevill (1871) LR 6 Ch App 397 where the court had concluded that the relationship was not one of agency largely because:
"It does not appear that he ever was expected to return any particular contract, or the names of the persons with whom he had dealt. He pursued his own course of dealing with the goods, and frequently before sale he manipulated them to a very great extent by pressing, dyeing, and otherwise altering their character, changing them as much as what terms he pleased as to price and to length of credit …"."But if the consignee is at liberty, according to the contract between him and his consignor, to sell at any prices he likes, and receive payment at any time he likes, but is to be bound, if he sells the goods, to pay the consignor for them at a fixed price and a fixed time – in my opinion whatever the parties may think their relationship is not that of principal and agent". – paras 22 and 23.
Facts agreed or not much in dispute
The evidence
Submissions of the Claimant
Submissions of the Defendant
Is the Claimant a Commercial Agent?
Conclusion