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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Gallaher Group Ltd & Ors, R (on the application of) v The Competition and Markets Authority [2018] UKSC 25 (16 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2018/25.html Cite as: [2019] AC 96, [2018] 4 All ER 183, [2018] 5 CMLR 2, [2018] 2 WLR 1583, [2018] UKSC 25, [2018] WLR(D) 300, [2018] Bus LR 1313 |
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[2018] UKSC 25
On appeal from: [2016] EWCA Civ 719
JUDGMENT
R (on the application of Gallaher Group Ltd and others) (Respondents) v The Competition and Markets Authority (Appellant)
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before
Lord Mance, Deputy President Lord Sumption Lord Carnwath Lord Hodge Lord Briggs
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JUDGMENT GIVEN ON |
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16 May 2018 |
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Heard on 13 and 14 March 2018 |
Appellant |
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1st Respondent (Gallaher) |
Daniel Beard QC |
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Lord Pannick QC |
Andrew Henshaw QC |
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Hanif Mussa |
Brendan McGurk |
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(Instructed by CMA Legal) |
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(Instructed by Slaughter and May) |
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2nd Respondent (Co-operative Group Ltd) |
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Jessica Boyd |
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(Instructed by Burges Salmon LLP) |
LORD CARNWATH: (with whom Lord Mance, Lord Sumption, Lord Hodge and Lord Briggs agree)
The facts
The investigation
The ER process
“16. The overriding principles of fairness, transparency and consistency must always be taken into account. When engaged in settlement discussions, for example, it is important to ensure that the process is consensual and as transparent as possible throughout, in order to avoid any subsequent allegations of undue pressure having been applied to force parties to ‘sign up’ to settlement.
17. Consistency is a particularly key consideration, given parties’ sensitivity to equality of treatment issues. Whether or not the details of an individual case have been made public, particular approaches in one case will inevitably ‘leak out’ during the settlement process (and be set out in the infringement decision) and inform parties’ strategies in others. Consistency of approach (or, alternatively, the formulation of strong arguments to justify taking a different approach in similar circumstances) is therefore vital …”
“Once first party signed up, the OFT will inform other parties of the terms agreed in terms of the Step 1 to 5 penalty calculation - these terms will be the benchmark for dealing with other parties (as the OFT will observe equal treatment principles).”
TMR
“Should another manufacturer or retailer appeal any OFT decision against that manufacturer or retailer to the CAT (or subsequently appeal to a higher court) and overturn, on appeal, part or all of the OFT’s decision against that manufacturer or retailer in relation to either liability or fines, then, to the extent the principles determined in the appeal decision are contrary to or otherwise undermine the OFT's decision against [TMR], the OFT will apply the same principles to [TMR] (and therefore presumably withdraw or vary its decision against [TMR] as required).” (Emphasis added)
In the course of 2009 and 2010, and before the expiry of the time for appealing the OFT decision, two other parties (“Party A” and Asda) made similar inquiries about the effect of a successful appeal by other parties, but received non-committal answers.
The Tribunal’s decision and its aftermath
10. On 12 December 2011 the Tribunal gave judgment allowing all six appeals: [2011] CAT 41. Following the Tribunal’s judgment, TMR wrote to the OFT inviting it to withdraw the OFT’s decision as against it, and threatening legal action if it failed to do so. In the course of further discussions TMR relied on the OFT’s earlier assurances about its position in the event of a successful appeal by another party, stating that this had been “a key factor” in its own decision-making. As to what followed I take the following from the agreed statement of facts (para 50):
“The OFT considered that the statements which it had made to TMR in 2008 might have given rise to an understanding on the part of TMR that the OFT would withdraw or vary its decision against TMR in the event of a successful third party appeal. In light of this, the OFT considered that there was a real risk that TMR would, as a result of this reliance on those statements, be permitted to appeal out of time to the Tribunal and would succeed in that appeal. The OFT reached a settlement agreement with TMR, by which the OFT agreed to pay to TMR an amount equal to the penalty TMR had paid together with a contribution to interest and legal costs. The Tobacco Decision was not withdrawn against TMR. The agreed terms were set out in a settlement agreement dated 9 August 2012.”
The OFT then published a statement about the TMR settlement on its website, in which it said that “in the light of the particular assurances provided to TM Retail” it had agreed to pay the amount of its penalty (£2,668,991) and a contribution to costs.
The out-of-time appeals
12. The claims were initially stayed by consent to allow the respondents to pursue applications, made in July 2012, for permission to appeal the Tobacco Decision out of time. By rule 8(2) of the Competition Appeal Tribunal Rules 2003 (SI 1372/2003), the Tribunal may not extend the time limit for appeal unless satisfied that “the circumstances are exceptional”. The applications succeeded before the Tribunal, but its decision was reversed by the Court of Appeal on 7 April 2014: Office of Fair Trading v Somerfield Stores Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 400. The court held that there were no exceptional circumstances.
13. In the leading judgment Vos LJ referred (paras 35-36) to the principle of finality, exemplified by the CJEU’s decision in Commission of the European Communities v AssiDoman Kraft Products AB (Case C-310/97P) [1999] All ER (EC) 737 (the “Wood Pulp II” case). That principle was said to be based on the consideration that the purpose of such time-limits is “to ensure legal certainty by preventing Community measures which produce legal effects from being called in question indefinitely”. Although the Wood Pulp II decision was “no more than analogous”, it pointed the way to “the need for finality in competition cases”. In the present case, in Vos LJ’s view, the respondents had entered the ERAs with their eyes open and made a deliberate decision not to appeal. He added:
“It is true that the OFT has the role of a prosecutor and has wide powers to impose penalties, and that those powers must be exercised on a proper basis, but that does not stop commercial parties from taking a commercial view as to whether or not to sign up to an ERA after a long investigatory process and the publication of a lengthy Statement of Objections. The addressee knows precisely the terms that are being offered. It knows what it has done in relation to the alleged infringements, and what it is being asked to admit, and the terms requiring its co-operation and the fetters on its rights of defence to which it is being asked to agree. It can take it or leave it …” (para 45)
The courts below
14. In a judgment dated 26 January 2015, Collins J rejected the claims: [2015] EWHC 84 (Admin). He started from the proposition that the OFT’s powers in relation to infringement of the 1998 Act were “subject to public law requirements of fairness and equal treatment”, so that it was “essential that in negotiations in relation to ERAs one party is not given an advantage denied to another” (para 38). However, the assurance given to TMR had been given in error, without regard to the finality principle. Citing Customs and Excise Comrs v National Westminster Bank plc [2003] STC 1072 para 66, he agreed with Jacob J that “as a general rule a mistake should not be replicated where public funds are concerned”. That consideration provided “an objective justification” for the refusal by the OFT to make payment to the claimants (para 50).
15. The Court of Appeal took a different view [2016] EWCA Civ 719; [2016] Bus LR 1200. In the leading judgment, Lord Dyson MR (para 34) noted it as common ground that (in the words of Cranston J, Crest Nicholson plc v Office of Fair Trading [2009] EWHC 1875 (Admin)) “the OFT must comply with the principle of equal treatment in all steps leading up to the imposition of a penalty”. He agreed that the assurance given to TMR was a mistake: “a decision which no-one who had the finality and legal certainty principles in mind could reasonably have taken” (para 58). The failure to offer a similar assurance to the claimants or others in the same position, or even to inform them, involved unequal treatment which was “stark and manifest” (para 59). Under the heading “Objective justification” (paras 53-54), he agreed with counsel for the OFT that a mistake was not “a trump card which will always carry the day …” The question as he saw it was -
“… whether there has been unfairness on the part of the authority having regard to all the circumstances. The fact that there has been a mistake may be an important circumstance. It may be decisive. It all depends.”
16. He found assistance in the law relating to legitimate expectation, citing R v Secretary of State for Education and Employment, Ex p Begbie [2000] 1 WLR 1115, 1127B-D, per Peter Gibson LJ, to the effect that whether an authority should be permitted to resile from a mistaken statement “depends on whether that would give rise to unfairness amounting to an abuse of power”. In the same way, as he saw it, the question in the present case was “whether the OFT should be permitted to resile from a mistake where to do so results in unfair and unequal treatment of the claimants”. He concluded that it should not.
“60. But the real focus must be on the question whether the 2012 Decision was objectively justified. That is when the OFT decided that it would act on the 2008 decision in relation to TMR and honour the assurances that it had mistakenly given at that time, and to treat the claimants differently. The result was that it agreed with TMR to repay the whole of its penalty plus a contribution of £250,000 in relation to costs and interest. But it refused to pay anything to the claimants. The only difference between the positions of TMR on the one hand and that of the claimants on the other hand was that the OFT had given the assurances to TMR in 2008, but not to the claimants. The effect of that manifestly unfair and unequal treatment in 2008 could have been reversed after the issue had been raised by Asda and party A and the OFT’s eyes had been opened to the significance of its earlier mistake in giving the assurances to TMR. That would have put all the companies which had been the subject of the Tobacco Decision and to which the [Statement of Objections] has been addressed on an equal footing. The OFT could have withdrawn the assurances. It would not have been too late for TMR to appeal at that time. Even if TMR had been out of time, it would have had a very powerful case for arguing that the withdrawal of the assurances was an exceptional circumstance which justified an extension of time for appealing. Instead, the OFT acted on the assurances it had given to TMR, made the 2012 decision and repaid the penalty previously levied and made further payments too. In all the circumstances, this was a plain breach of the principle of equal treatment and unfair.”
18. The Court of Appeal’s order declared that the OFT had acted unlawfully by -
“(a) not offering the appellants in 2008 the assurance given to [TMR] that in the event of a successful appeal by other parties, it would benefit from that appeal decision even if it did not appeal; and
(b) refusing in 2012 to make payment to the appellants of the amount of the penalty imposed on them even though it had made such a payment to TMR.”
It ordered that the respondents should each be entitled to payment of a sum equal to the penalties they had paid to the OFT, together with an amount in interest and costs.
Equal treatment and fairness
The submissions
19. It was central to the reasoning of both courts below that the OFT was subject (as Collins J put it) to “public law requirements of fairness and equal treatment”. That analysis was not seriously challenged by counsel for the appellant in this court. They accepted that “the principle of equal treatment” applied to the OFT, but submitted that it did not require it to replicate a mistake, at least in the absence of “conspicuous unfairness”. They rely on the approach of Lord Bingham in R (O’Brien) v Independent Assessor [2007] 2 AC 312, para 30:
“It is generally desirable that decision-makers, whether administrative or judicial, should act in a broadly consistent manner. If they do, reasonable hopes will not be disappointed. But the assessor’s task in this case was to assess fair compensation for each of the appellants. He was not entitled to award more or less than, in his considered judgment, they deserved. He was not bound, and in my opinion was not entitled, to follow a previous decision which he considered erroneous and which would yield what he judged to be an excessive award.”
“The issue before the Court is whether it was conspicuously unfair and/or a breach of the principle of equal treatment, amounting to a breach of public law, for the OFT, on the successful appeal of its decision in the Tobacco Decision, to repay one non-appellant addressee of that decision (namely, TM Retail) the penalty it had paid pursuant to that decision, while refusing to do the same for the respondents.”
The “equal treatment principle” was said to be well-established in domestic law, by reference for example to R (Middlebrook Mushrooms Ltd) v Agricultural Wages Board of England and Wales [2004] EWHC 1447 (Admin) at para 74. The expression “conspicuous unfairness” was derived from the judgment of Simon Brown LJ in R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p Unilever plc [1996] STC 681, as applied by Richards J in R v National Lottery Commission, Ex p Camelot Group plc [2001] EMLR 3, para 72.
21. To those authorities Lord Pannick QC for the first respondent added Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No 2) [2014] AC 700, 773 para 25 per Lord Sumption; and Paponette v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago [2012] 1 AC 1, 12 paras 28 and 30 per Lord Dyson. He relied also on the formulation of the “principle of equal treatment” in European Union law:
“The principle of equal treatment, as a general principle of EU law, requires that comparable situations must not be treated differently and that different situations must not be treated in the same way, unless such treatment is objectively justified.” (Case C-510/11, Kone OYJ and others v European Commission (Elevators and Escalators Cartel Appeal) [2014] 4 CMLR 10, para 97).
Equal treatment
25. The need for clear dividing lines in this context has been highlighted in the Privy Council’s consideration of various forms of equal treatment clauses in common law constitutions. Thus for example in Webster v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago [2015] UKPC 10; [2015] ICR 1048 the Board was concerned with section 4(d) of the Constitution of that country, which recognises “the right of the individual to equality of treatment from any public authority in the exercise of any functions”. Lady Hale commented (para 14) that “open-ended constitutional guarantees of equal treatment by public authorities, such as that in section 4(d), are few and far between”. She contrasted such provisions with the Constitution of Mauritius, section 16 of which “prohibits discrimination both by the laws and by public authorities, but only on defined grounds”, and under which, as the Board had held in Matadeen v Pointu [1999] 1 AC 98 “there was no general constitutional right to equal treatment by the law or by the executive”.
26. In the latter case, in an important passage under the heading “Democracy and Equality” ([1999] AC 98, para 9), Lord Hoffmann had emphasised the need to distinguish between equal treatment as a democratic principle and as a justiciable rule of law:
“9. … Their Lordships do not doubt that such a principle is one of the building blocks of democracy and necessarily permeates any democratic constitution. Indeed, their Lordships would go further and say that treating like cases alike and unlike cases differently is a general axiom of rational behaviour. It is, for example, frequently invoked by the courts in proceedings for judicial review as a ground for holding some administrative act to have been irrational: see Professor Jeffrey Jowell QC, Is Equality a Constitutional Principle? (1994) 7 CLP 1, 12-14 and de Smith, Woolf and Jowell, Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 5th ed (1995), pp 576-582, paras 13-036 to 13-045.
… Of course persons should be uniformly treated, unless there is some valid reason to treat them differently. But what counts as a valid reason for treating them differently? And, perhaps more important, who is to decide whether the reason is valid or not? Must it always be the courts? The reasons for not treating people uniformly often involve, as they do in this case, questions of social policy on which views may differ. These are questions which the elected representatives of the people have some claim to decide for themselves. The fact that equality of treatment is a general principle of rational behaviour does not entail that it should necessarily be a justiciable principle - that it should always be the judges who have the last word on whether the principle has been observed. In this, as in other areas of constitutional law, sonorous judicial statements of uncontroversial principle often conceal the real problem, which is to mark out the boundary between the powers of the judiciary, the legislature and the executive in deciding how that principle is to be applied.” (see now the current edition of De Smith’s Judicial Review 8th ed (2018) paras 11.061ff)
As that passage makes clear, in domestic administrative law issues of consistency may arise, but generally as aspects of rationality, under Lord Diplock’s familiar tripartite categorisation.
27. The authorities cited by the respondents provide illustrations. The passage cited by Lord Pannick from Lord Sumption’s judgment in Bank Mellat (No 2) (above) at para 25 was concerned directly with the question of proportionality under the European Convention on Human Rights, but it was expressed in terms which could be applied equally to common law rationality. Lord Sumption spoke of a measure which, while responding to a real problem, may nevertheless be “irrational or disproportionate by reason of its being discriminatory in some respect that is incapable of objective justification”. He gave as the “classic” illustration A v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] 2 AC 68, in which it was held by the House of Lords that a derogation from the Human Rights Convention permitting the detention of non-nationals considered a risk to national security, was neither a proportionate nor a rational response to the terrorist threat, because it applied only to foreign nationals; it was not explained why, if the threat from UK nationals could be adequately addressed without depriving them of their liberty, the same should not be true of foreign nationals. He quoted Lord Hope (para 132): “the distinction … raises an issue of discrimination. ... But, as the distinction is irrational, it goes to the heart of the issue about proportionality also.”
28. At a more mundane level, R (Middlebrook Mushrooms Ltd) v Agricultural Wages Board of England and Wales [2004] EWHC 1447 (Admin) (cited by Miss Boyd) concerned a statutory order under the Agricultural Wages Act 1948, which established a new category of worker, the Manual Harvest Worker (MHW), whose minimum wage was lower than that of a Standard Worker, but the order uniquely excluded mushrooms from the definition of produce the harvesters of which might be paid at the lower rate. This was challenged successfully by the mushroom growers. Having rejected as baseless the various reasons put forward for the distinction, the judge (Stanley Burnton J) concluded that there was no lawful justification for the exclusion of mushroom pickers from the lower rate. He cited inter alia Lord Donaldson’s reference to the “cardinal principle of public administration that all persons in a similar position should be treated similarly” (para 74) (R (Cheung) v Hertfordshire County Council, The Times, 4 April 1986). He concluded that the exclusion of manual harvesters of mushrooms from the MHW category was “Wednesbury unreasonable and unlawful”, or in other words irrational.
Fairness
32. Simple unfairness as such is not a ground for judicial review. This was made clear by Lord Diplock in R v Inland Revenue Comrs, Ex p National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd [1982] AC 617, 637:
“judicial review is available only as a remedy for conduct of a public officer or authority which is ultra vires or unlawful, but not for acts done lawfully in the exercise of an administrative discretion which are complained of only as being unfair or unwise, …” (Emphasis added)
33. Procedural fairness or propriety is of course well-established within Lord Diplock’s trilogy. R v National Lottery Commission, Ex p Camelot Group plc [2001] EMLR 3, relied on by the respondents, is a good example. It concerned unequal treatment between two rival bidders for the lottery, one of whom was given an unfair procedural advantage over the other. That was rightly seen by Richards J as amounting to a breach of procedural fairness (see paras 69-70). Although he used the judgment to discuss principles of fairness in a wider context, that was not essential to his decision, which ultimately turned on the proposition that the Commission had “decided on a procedure that results in conspicuous unfairness to Camelot - such unfairness as to render the decision unlawful” (para 84, emphasis added).
34. A broader concept of “unfairness amounting to excess or abuse of power” emerged in a series of cases in the 1980s, under the influence principally of Lord Scarman. In the National Federation case (above at p 652) he had been alone in holding that “a legal duty of fairness (was) owed by the revenue to the general body of taxpayers”. However, in R v Inland Revenue Commission, Ex p Preston [1985] AC 835, in which he presided, he was able with the support of Lord Templeman (who gave the leading speech) to develop the same idea in terms of a duty of fairness to an individual taxpayer, arising from a written assurance given by the Revenue as to his tax treatment.
“‘the unfairness’ of which the applicant complains renders the insistence by the commissioners on performing their duties or exercise of powers an abuse of power by the commissioners.” (p 864G)
36. There followed a passage citing various authorities, in which judicial review was said to have been granted on the grounds of “‘unfairness’ amounting to abuse of power”, either due to “some proven element of improper motive” (p 864H, citing Padfield v Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [1968] AC 997), or due to “an error of law whereby the Price Commission misconstrued the code they were intending to enforce” (p 866F, citing HTV Ltd v Price Commission [1976] ICR 170). These authorities, he thought, supported the suggestion that the commissioners would be guilty of “‘unfairness’ amounting to an abuse of power” if their conduct would in a private context entitle the appellant to “an injunction or damages based on breach of contract or estoppel by representation” (p 866H-867C).
37. This part of Lord Templeman’s speech was obiter, since the claim of abuse of power failed on the facts. It is not without difficulty. It seems that in all the examples given by Lord Templeman there was a conventional ground of review, such as improper motive or illegality. It is not clear what he saw the word “unfairness” (always in inverted commas) as adding to the legal reasoning. With hindsight the case is best understood by reference to principles of legitimate expectation derived from an express or implied promise (see de Smith op cit para 12-019; R v North and East Devon Health Authority, Ex p Coughlan [2001] QB 213, paras 61ff)). It had not been argued on that basis, perhaps because of the uncertain application at that time of legitimate expectation to substantive rather than procedural benefits (see United Policyholders Group v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago [2016] 1 WLR 3383 at paras 83ff). The authority is not relied on directly in the present appeal, but is of some relevance as providing the background to the references to “unfairness” or “conspicuous unfairness” in the judgments in the Unilever case, on which the respondents rely, and to which I now turn.
“‘Unfairness amounting to an abuse of power’ as envisaged in Preston and the other Revenue cases is unlawful not because it involves conduct such as would offend some equivalent private law principle, not principally indeed because it breaches a legitimate expectation that some different substantive decision will be taken, but rather because either it is illogical or immoral or both for a public authority to act with conspicuous unfairness and in that sense abuse its power.”
“In short”, he regarded the “MFK category of legitimate expectation” as “essentially but a head of Wednesbury unreasonableness” (p 695a-b). On the facts of the case, he held that the test was satisfied, observing that he could think of “no surer guide than Macpherson of Cluny J” in determining -
“… the border between on the one hand mere unfairness -conduct which may be characterised as ‘a bit rich’ but nevertheless understandable - and on the other hand a decision so outrageously unfair that it should not be allowed to stand.” (p 697C)
The present case
45. For these reasons, I would allow the appeal and restore the order of Collins J.
LORD SUMPTION:
50. I agree with Lord Carnwath’s analysis of the relevant legal principles. In public law, as in most other areas of law, it is important not unnecessarily to multiply categories. It tends to undermine the coherence of the law by generating a mass of disparate special rules distinct from those applying in public law generally or those which apply to neighbouring categories. To say that a decision-maker must treat persons equally unless there is a reason for treating them differently begs the question what counts as a valid reason for treating them differently. Consistency of treatment is, as Lord Hoffmann observed in Matedeen v Pointu [1999] 1 AC 98, at para 9 “a general axiom of rational behaviour”. The common law principle of equality is usually no more than a particular application of the ordinary requirement of rationality imposed on public authorities. Likewise, to say that the result of the decision must be substantively fair, or at least not “conspicuously” unfair, begs the question by what legal standard the fairness of the decision is to be assessed. Absent a legitimate expectation of a different result arising from the decision-maker’s statements or conduct, a decision which is rationally based on relevant considerations is most unlikely to be unfair in any legally cognisable sense. In the present case nothing that the OFT said or did could have given rise to any other expectation than that it would act rationally. The questions which this appeal poses are (i) whether the OFT acted rationally in giving the assurance to TMR alone in 2008 and in repaying the penalty to TMR alone in 2012; and (ii) if not what are the consequences for Gallaher and Somerfield.
51. I start with the decision of 2008.
52. As a statement of the ordinary legal consequences of a successful appeal by other parties, the assurance given by Ms Branch was wrong. An appeal by one party from a decision of the OFT on a cartel investigation is a distinct legal proceeding whose outcome affects that party only: Deutsche Bahn AG v Morgan Advanced Materials plc (formerly Morgan Crucible Co plc) (European Commission intervening) [2014] 2 All ER 785, para 21, Commission of the European Communities v Assidomän Kraft Products AB (Case C-310/97P) at paras 2-14, [1999] 5 CMLR 1253 (“Wood Pulp II”), para 63. The assurance could therefore be relevant only as a collateral undertaking to TMR that they would be treated otherwise than in accordance with the general law. This was a mistake, as both courts below have recognised. It was a mistake not because Ms Branch did not intend to give the assurance or did not know what she was doing. It was a mistake because it was inconsistent with the OFT’s policy of non-discrimination, as well as with the terms of the Early Resolution Agreement under discussion, and more generally with the purpose of the early resolution procedure.
53. That, however, cannot affect the position of Gallaher or Somerfield, for substantially the reason given by the Court of Appeal when they held that Gallaher and Somerfield were not entitled to appeal the OFT’s decision out of time after the other appeals had succeeded. Save in “exceptional circumstances”, such an appeal must be brought within two months of the OFT’s final decision. The Court of Appeal held that there were no exceptional circumstances. This was because each of them had entered into a distinct agreement which was intended finally to resolve the issues the subject of the appeals, subject only to the right conferred by the agreement to terminate the agreement before a final decision or to appeal afterwards. They had invoked neither condition, thus accepting the risk that they would not benefit if the appeal succeeded but ensuring that they would retain the benefit of the discount if it failed. Finality and certainty required that they should live with the consequences: see Office of Fair Trading v Somerfield Stores Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 400, esp at paras 33, 38, 41 and 45.
54. The fact that no corresponding assurance was given to Gallaher or Somerfield makes no difference to this analysis. This was not a zero sum game, like the tender process considered in R v National Lottery Commission, Ex p Camelot Group Plc [2001] EMLR 3. The benefit to TMR was in no sense given at their expense. Nor does it make any difference that the oral assurance was not disclosed to them. If it had been, they might well have asked for a similar assurance for themselves. But they would have had no right to one. As a matter of principle, the OFT’s mistake was that they gave the assurance to TMR, not that they failed to give it to Gallaher and Somerfield. As a matter of fact, if Gallaher and Somerfield had asked for a similar assurance, there is no reason to suppose that the OFT would have made the same mistake again. It is at least as likely that such a request would have provoked a reassessment of the assurance given to TMR, followed by its withdrawal.
57. For these reasons, I would allow the appeal.
LORD BRIGGS:
(a) It could go back on the assurance to TMR, and refuse any similar benefit to any other party.
(b) It could honour the assurance to TMR, and extend it to the respondents and any other party in a similar position.
(c) It could honour all or part of the assurance to TMR but not extend it to any other party.