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An Post/ Standard Postal Franking Machine Licence Agreement [2001] IECA 585 (20th March, 2001)
COMPETITION
AUTHORITY
Competition
Authority Decision of 20 March 2001 relating to a proceeding under
Section
4 of the Competition Act, 1991.
Notification
No CA/10/00 - An Post/Standard Postal Franking Machine Licence
Agreement
Decision
No. 585
Price
£0.50, ( €0.63 )
£0.90,
( €1.14 ) including postage.Competition Authority decision of 20 March,
2001 relating to a proceeding under Section
Notification
No. CA/10/00 - An Post/Standard Postal Franking Machine Licence
Agreement
Decision
No. 585
Introduction
1.
This decision concerns a standard licence agreement issued by An Post to
businesses and
institutions
for the use of a postal franking machine. The licence agreement was notified to
the
Competition
Authority on 30 November 2000 with a request for a certificate under
Section 4(4)
CA/15/95
which was issued a certificate by the Competition Authority in 1995 (Decision No.
450).
The
Facts
(a)
The Subject of the Notification
2.
The notification concerns a ´Licence for the use of a Postal Franking
Machine for
denoting
Prepayment of Postage'. Under the terms of the agreement, An Post authorises
large
numbers
of business customers to use postal franking machines as a means of payment for
postage
services. There are approximately 12,500 holders of such licences in Ireland at
present.
(b)
The Parties
3.
An Post is the State owned national postal authority and has a statutory
monopoly in
respect
of the provision of postal services for items weighing not more than 350 grams
and
costing
not more than five times the basic letter rate of 30p. It also operates money
transmission
services
and provides agency services for Government Departments, An Post National Lottery
Company,
Eircom and other bodies. The company's turnover in 1999 was £424m and it
recorded
a profit of £101.1m. Most of the approximately 12,500 postal franking
licence holders
would
be industrial and commercial companies engaged in various types of business.
(c)
The Product and the Market
4.
Under the terms of the licence, An Post grants the licensee the right to use a
postal
franking
machine. The machine is then used to affix postage marks on envelopes, parcels
and
packages
denoting payment of postage. An Post is the major provider of national and
international
postal services in the State. Parties wishing to use such services pay for them
by
purchasing
postage stamps to the necessary value and fixing them to the letter or package
to be
posted.
Alternatively, they may post bulk amounts of post under the Ceadunas system -
which
allows
for postings of up to 2,000 letters, 500 letter packets or 100 parcels at a
time, chargeable
at
a uniform rate – or they may use postal franking machines. Postal
franking machines print
franking
impressions on envelopes and labels which can be used instead of postage
stamps. The
machines
have meters and users pay An Post for postal services in advance at a specified
post
office,
where the meter is then set so as to allow the user to produce postage labels
on the
machine
up to the pre-paid amount. An Post is the only body in Ireland which can issue
licences.to use postal franking machines, since such machines are used as a
means of paying for postal
services
over which it has a statutory monopoly (as well as larger items).
5.
The market concerned is that for postal services. Postal franking machines
allow firms
which
send large volumes of material through the post to pay for such services in a
convenient
manner.
An Post has a statutory monopoly in respect of postal services for items
weighing not
more
than 350 grams and costing not more than five times the basic rate of 30p. For
larger items
there
are a number of private firms who provide delivery services on a local,
national and
international
basis in competition with An Post.
6.
Postal franking machines are supplied by a number of companies authorised by An
Post.
At
present there are three authorised suppliers and the agreements under which
they are licensed
by
An Post to supply franking machines have been notified to the Competition
Authority and
have
been issued certificates (Decision No. 451, 452 and 453). Under the terms of the
agreements
between An Post and the suppliers, the supplier of franking machines is
required to
ensure
that every customer obtains a licence from An Post to use their franking
machine. The
postal
franking machine is of no value to the customer without the licence because the
customer
cannot
obtain an initial or new supply of postage from the post office for the
franking machine
without
being licensed. Postal franking machine users are charged at the standard
postage rates.
(d)
The Arrangements
7.
The notified arrangements concern a standard licence agreement between An Post
and
its
customers for the use of postal franking machines for affixing postage marks on
envelopes,
parcels
and packages denoting prepayment of postage. The licence sets out the terms and
conditions
which apply to the licence and use of such postal franking machines.
8.
The customer is obliged to have the machine inspected and maintained once every
six
months
by the supplier or their authorised agent, or a maintainer approved by An Post.
According
to An Post, only the manufacturer's authorised agent/engineers would have the
detailed
knowledge of the particular machines which is required to detect the more
technical
faults
which might not be apparent to post office staff. In effect this obliges the
customer to
enter
into a maintenance agreement with the supplier of the machine.
9.
The notified arrangements include the following conditions, which do not appear
in the
certified
1995 agreement. The postal franking machine must only be used by the agreed
“User”,
and
only for the purposes of the business at the premises specified in the
agreement. The
customer
may not permit anyone other than the supplier or their authorised agent to
remove the
postal
franking machine, with the postage printing mechanism intact, from their
premises.
When
the machine is withdrawn for repairs it must be presented to the appropriate
post office so
that
the register readings may be recorded by An Post. The supplier of the postal
franking
machine
retains legal ownership of the franking dies, date stamping dies and postage
printing
mechanisms.
The licence may be revoked (a) if the machine is not in active use and has not
been
recredited for a period of three months or (b) if there has been a breach of
the conditions of
the
licence. The customer is obliged to notify An Post of any fault in the machine
or if the
machine
is lost or stolen. The customer must also notify An Post in the event of
bankruptcy,
liquidation
or receivership. An Post may refuse to post any item if there has been a breach
of the
conditions
of the licence, if the postal franking machine is mechanically or functionally
unsatisfactory
or if the machine has been used in such a manner as to cause embarrassment to
An
Post.
(e)
Submissions of the Parties
10.
An Post submitted that it placed no restrictions on the number of customers who
may
have
postal franking machines. The customer has the alternative of purchasing
postage stamps
and
affixing them to his letters and parcels or using the Ceadunas system at no
additional cost.
Assessment
(a)
Section 4(1)
decisions
by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which have as their
object or
effect
the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition in trade in any goods
or services in
the
State or in any part of the State are prohibited and void.'
(b)
The Undertakings and the Agreement
individual,
a body corporate or an unincorporated body of persons engaged for gain in the
production,
supply or distribution of goods or the provision of a service'. The parties to
the
present
arrangement are An Post and its customers who obtain licences from it in order
to use
postal
franking machines. An Post is a body corporate which is engaged for gain in the
provision
of postal and other services to the public and is an undertaking. The majority
of the
licensees
are engaged for gain in various businesses involved in the provision of goods and
services
and are undertakings. Therefore the standard licence agreement constitutes an
agreement
between undertakings.
(c)
Applicability of Section 4(1)
13.
Under the terms of the licence agreement An Post authorises the use of postal
franking
machines
by various businesses and institutions who apply to it for such a licence.
Essentially
this
is an agreement to use the postal franking machine as a means of paying An Post
for using
its
postal services and clearly is not in itself anti-competitive. An Post does not
restrict the
number
of users who may obtain licences and the only criterion necessary to obtain a
licence is
compliance
with the terms and conditions of the licence. The licence does not prevent the
user
from
using the postal services of An Post’s competitors for larger items, over
which An Post
does
not have a statutory monopoly. Postal franking machines are a convenient and
efficient
method
of paying for postage, especially for large businesses, government departments
and
other
institutions where a high volume of post is processed each day.
14.
The licence contains certain restrictions relating to the inspection,
maintenance and
removal
of machines. The Authority considers that these conditions are essential for the
efficient
operation of the system and the prevention of fraud. Consequently, in the
Authority's
opinion
the licence does not contravene
Section 4(1).
The
Decision
15.
In the Authority's opinion, An Post and its customers are undertakings within the
agreements
between undertakings. In the Authority's opinion the arrangements concerning
the.Licence agreement for the use of postal franking machines for denoting
prepayment of postage
do
not have as their object or effect, the prevention, restriction or distortion
of competition and
The
Certificate
The
Competition Authority has issued the following certificate:
The
Competition Authority certifies that in its opinion, on the basis of the facts
in its possession,
the
standard agreement between An Post and its customers relating to the licence by
An Post of
postal
franking machines for denoting prepayment of postage (notification no. CA/10/00),
For
the Competition Authority
Declan
Purcell
Member
20
March 2001
© 2001 Irish Competition Authority
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECompA/2001/585.html