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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ingmar GB Ltd v. Eaton Leonard Inc [2001] EWHC QB 3 (31st July, 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2001/3.html Cite as: [2001] EWHC QB 3 |
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Case No: HQ0101282
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date: 31st July 2001 (Handed Down)
B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MORLAND
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Ingmar GB Limited |
Claimant |
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Eaton Leonard Inc (formerly named Eaton Leonard Technologies Inc) |
Defendant |
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Miss J. Stratford (instructed by Fladgate Fielder for the Claimant)
Mr P. Moser (instructed by Clifford Chance for the Defendant)
I direct pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1. no official shorthand note shall be taken of this judgment and that copies of this version as handed down (subject to correction) may be treated as authentic
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The Hon. Mr Justice Morland.
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JUDGMENT: APPROVED BY THE COURT FOR HANDING DOWN (SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTIONS)
Mr Justice Morland :
Judgment
The Factual Background
"We have made a decision to re-evaluate our coverage of the UK market and will be interviewing both potential agents and potential direct employees.
We will interview and consider Ingmar, GB Ltd, but feel at this time we need to look at all of our options and make a decision on which alternative is best for Eaton Leonard.
While this process is going on we will continue to pay a commission on all orders where Ingmar has objective evidence of being instrumental in Eaton Leonard receiving the order"
"Inge, we have had a long association and have very much enjoyed working with you. We appreciate the professional way in which you have conducted business. We hope you feel the same about us. Although our formal relationship is ending, we would hope to maintain the friendship we feel we have developed"
"20. In that respect, it should be borne in mind, first, that the Directive is designed to protect commercial agents, as defined in the Directive (Case C-215/97 Bellone v Yokohama [1998] ECR I-2191, paragraph 13).
21. The purpose of Articles 17 to 19 of the Directive, in particular, is to protect the commercial agent after termination of the contract. The regime established by the Directive for that purpose is mandatory in nature, Article 17 requires Member States to put in place a mechanism for providing reparation to the commercial agent after termination of the contract. Admittedly, that article allows the Member States to choose between indemnification and compensation for damage. However, Articles 17 and 18 prescribe a precise framework within which the Member States may exercise their discretion as to the choice of methods for calculating the indemnity or compensation to be granted.
22. The mandatory nature of those articles is confirmed by the fact that, under Article 19 of the Directive, the parties may not derogate from them to the detriment of the commercial agent before the contract expires. It is also borne out by the fact that, with regard to the United Kingdom, Article 22 of the Directive provides for the immediate application of the national provisions implementing the Directive to contracts in operation.
23. Second, it should be borne in mind that, as is apparent from the second recital in the preamble to the Directive, the harmonising measures laid down by the Directive are intended, inter alia, to eliminate restrictions on the carrying-on of the activities of commercial agents, to make the conditions of competition within the Community uniform and to increase the security of commercial transactions (see, to that effect, Bellone, paragraph 17).
24. The purpose of the regime established in Articles 17 to 19 of the Directive is thus to protect, for all commercial agents, freedom of establishment and the operation of undistorted competition in the internal market. Those provisions must therefore be observed throughout the Community if those Treaty objectives are to be attained.
25. It must therefore be held that it is essential for the Community legal order that a principal established in a non-member country, whose commercial agent carries on his activity within the Community, cannot evade those provisions by the simple expedient of a choice-of-law clause. The purpose served by the provisions in question requires that they be applied where the situation is closely connected with the Community, in particular where the commercial agent carries on his activity in the territory of a Member State, irrespective of the law by which the parties intended the contract to be governed
26. In the light of those considerations, the answer to the question must be that Articles 17 and 18 of the Directive, which guarantee certain rights to commercial agents after termination of agency contracts, must be applied where the commercial agent carried on his activity in a Member State although the principal is established in a non-member country and a clause of the contract stipulates that the contract is to be governed by the law of that country."
The Factual Dispute
The Claimant's Contractual Entitlement Under The New or Varied Agreement
Pre - Termination Commission
In my judgment it must follow that the claimant is entitled to commission
(a) on sales of spares and tooling amounting to £1,952.36 which was agreed as a figure
(b) on sales of second- hand machines amounting to £12,500 which was not agreed as a figure. I accept the evidence of Mr Craig that £12,500 was a conservative figure.
Post - Termination Commission.
In my judgment it must follow that the claimants are is entitled to commission.
(a) on sales of spares and tooling amounting to £11,301.53. which was agreed as a figure.
(b) on the sale of four machines amounting to £44,044.60. which was agreed as a figure. It should be noted in relation to machine 154 in respect of which commission is due of £15,702.60. the order was not given until April 1998 after the issue of the Writ and 21 Months after termination; I shall reflect this in my order in relation to interest.
Under Regulation 7 and 8.
The Council Directive and the Regulations.
"It is of some significance to look at the directive which gave rise to the regulations and in particular to its preamble, which tells us the purposes of the directive and the regulations: Council Directive (EEC) 86/653. In the preamble there is this passage:
Whereas the differences in national laws concerning commercial representation substantially affect the conditions of competition and the carrying-on of that activity within the Community and are detrimental both to the protection available to commercial agents vis-a-vis their principals and the security of commercial transactions..."
"Now: that indicates to my mind at least two purposes. The first is harmonisation of the law of member states of the Community so that people compete-in the popular cliché of today-on a level playing field. It should not make any significant difference whether one employs a commercial agent in country "A" or country "B", they will compete on equal terms. The second objective is one which appears to be a motive of social policy, that commercial agents are a down-trodden race, and need and should be afforded protection against their principals"
"this idea results from a perception that an agent may establish a market and goodwill for a principal, and then be deprived of the benefit of his investment, both in money and in labour, by termination of his authority by a principal who may then seek to deal direct with customers, or perhaps use the services of another agent at a cheaper rate of commission. The agent is therefore in effect to be "bought out" as is sometimes the case in employment law."
"10. The Directive has as an essential function the co-ordination of laws relating to self-employed commercial agents. The rights of nationals from one member state to set up agencies, branches or subsidiaries in another member state (the right of establishment) lies at the heart of the Community. The Directive was made partly so as to give effect to the right of establishment and to the correlative obligation upon the Council and the Commission to effect, progressively, the abolition of restrictions on freedom of establishment (EC Treaty, Arts 43 and 44). It was also made pursuant to EC Treaty, Art 47 "to make it easier for persons to take up and pursue activities as self-employed persons" and to harmonise laws so as to enhance fundamental social rights including the promotion of employment and working conditions (EC Treaty, Art 136)."
"(1) When construing a legislative instrument which purports to give effect to a directive, the court will, if it is possible to do so, interpret it so as to accord with the purpose and intention of the directive and with its interpretation by the ECJ (see, for example: Marleasing SA v La Comercial Internaci¢ nal de Alimentaci¢ n SA, Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd).
(2) Much of the Directive was based upon the German Commercial Code which provided protection to an identifiable social group. However, the United Kingdom was not alone amongst other member states in not having that social class or group. It is not helpful, therefore, to seek to identify the mischief which the Directive was designed to achieve merely by reference to the need to protect agents of a particular class or type. Further, times have moved on since the Law Commission Report. The perception at that time that the Directive was an unwarranted interference with freedom of contract would or might have been different today, in the light of other directives since that date, particularly in the employment field. As the travaux preparatoires show, whatever its origins in principle the Directive is intended to provide minimum standards of protection for self-employed commercial agents who were, rightly or wrongly, perceived by the Council of the European Communities to be deserving of protection.
(3) Article 2(2) permits member states to derogate from the protection which the Directive is intended to confer on commercial agents. Such a derogation must not "substantially frustrate the purpose of the Directive itself and thus in practice remove the protection that the provisions of the Directive are intended to guarantee" (see Bellone v Yokohama SpA and in particular the Advocate-General's Opinion, para. 30)"
"33. In our view there can be little doubt as to the objectives of the 1986 Directive. The preamble to the Directive states its objectives very plainly. It is quite clear that the Directive is aimed at removing restrictions on the activities of commercial agents caused by the differing laws of the member states. The aspiration is to harmonise the laws so that conditions for commercial agents throughout the European Community are equivalent to those of a single market. A major aim is to remove inconsistencies in the laws of member states as they relate to commercial agents. Moreover, the differences in the national laws are said to be detrimental to the protection available to commercial agents vis-a-vis their principals, particularly where principal and agent are established in different member states. It must be noted that the requirement of protection is focused on the position of the agent and not on that of the principal who, presumably, will normally be in a stronger position and thus able to look after himself. The aspect of a Directive in protecting the agent is reinforced by a reference in the preamble to Art. 117 of the EC Treaty. This narrates that member states agree upon the need to promote improved working conditions and an improved standard of living for workers.
34 No matter what objectives underlie the legislation there can never be a guarantee that it will deliver the required results. However, in the present case if the national courts treating their country's application of the Directive under their own national regulations continue to produce divergent results then the whole objective of the Directive has failed.
at page 547:-
45. In respect of the report of the European Commission dated 23 July 1996 we find acknowledgement that the compensation system was based on French law, and that judgments of the French court have justified payment of compensation on the ground that it represents the cost of purchasing the agency to the agent's successor or the time it takes to reconstitute the client base of which the agent has forcibly been deprived. The report also confirms what the other authorities set forth, namely that compensation in France is customarily paid on the basis of two years' purchase of gross commission, although the court always has an ultimate discretion to deviate from the standard.
at page 548:-
48. It is obvious in our view, that on the basis of its own terms reg. 17(6) and (7) provides for a different basis of making compensation than our traditional common law approach. However, as stated, the regulation does fit in well with the French approach to such compensation. The legislation provides for valuation at the date of termination rather than requiring an explanation of the future prospects for the agency. During the currency of the agency the agent has owned a valuable asset and what he chooses or omits to do after he has lost that asset has no bearing on the value of what he has lost. If he had assigned the agency he would normally have received some compensation for that assignation, observing that he could do so only with the principal's agreement and been free thereafter to do as he chose. Thus the French conclusion that mitigation of loss by the agent is not a factor when compensation is approached as we have described, is, in our view, persuasive. The implication would be (and in our view we consider this to be inevitable) that in the present case the post-termination activities of the pursuer and any sums of sickness benefit he received have no application to the measure of his loss. The Directive and Regulations, as presented, seem to harmonise with the French approach and, given their terms, and the general objective of achieving harmonisation, we see no justification for construing the Regulations as being radically different from the French approach."
"49. The matter of fixing an appropriate level of compensation remains. It seems that even in France the two-year-rule is only a benchmark and can be varied at the discretion of the judge. However, this does not mean that we are precluded from considering what will happen in France, for the rulings of a judicial system applying the same legislation (intended, indeed, to operate in the same way between the relevant systems) must be entitled to some respect. There are also practical considerations. The French law obviously considers that there is some merit in finding a clear and practical basis for determining a fair level of loss. We equally consider that given the particular type of loss we are dealing with, a broad approach is both inevitable and a practical requirement of the law. This approach is emphasised when we consider that they are seeking an overview of the commercial situation where one of the dominant aims is to protect the agent.
50. In the present case the sum of two years' gross past commission was found by the sheriff to amount to £27,144."
"There is no maximum level of compensation
The compensation system was based on French law, which dated from 1958 and whose aim was to compensate the agent for the loss he suffered as a result of the termination of the agency contract. As for the indemnity system in Germany, a body of case-law has developed in France concerning the right and level of compensation. Various judgments of the French courts have justified the payment of compensation on the ground that it represents the cost of purchasing the agency to the agent's successor or on the ground that it represents the time it takes for the agent to re-constitute the client base which he has been forcefully deprived of.
By judicial custom the level of compensation is fixed as the global sum of the last two years commission or the sum of 2 years commission calculated over the average of last three years of the agency contract which conforms with commercial practice. However, the courts retain a discretion to award a different level of compensation where the principal brings evidence that the agent's loss was in fact less, for example, because of the short duration of the contract or where, for example, the agents loss is greater because of the agent's age or his length of service."
"The amount of compensation, because it represents the counterpart of the loss suffered by the agent, must be evaluated solely by the judges.
In calculating the level of compensation, the judges usually fix the level of compensation to two years of gross, i.e. without deduction for the expenses to the agent of making the sales, commissions calculated on the basis of an average of the three previous year.
This calculation is considered to be simply a practice and not a custom.
The courts are very careful to exclude any notion of tariff when calculating the level of compensation."
"...the regulation is after all framed so as to provide compensation and not to provide a windfall. It is one thing to disregard what the agent was able to do or in fact did upon and in consequence of termination; it is quite another artificially to inflate what would have been the true benefit to the agent had the agency continued."
Calculation.
Year |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
Salary |
£26,000 |
£34,000 |
£24,000 |
Pension |
£7,800 |
£4,800 |
£1,800 |
Management Charge |
£24,000 |
£24,000 |
£37,000 |
£57,800 |
£62,800 |
£62,800 |
|
£61,200 |
Average Multiplicand | ||
3 |
Years multiplier | ||
£183,600 |
56. I therefore award compensation under Regulation 17 of £183,600.