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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Leche Pascual SA v Collin & Hobson Plc [2004] EWCA Civ 700 (15 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/700.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 700 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
MERCANTILE COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE ALTON
Claim No. BM1 4012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
MR JUSTICE BODEY
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LECHE PASCUAL SA |
Claimant Appellant |
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- and - |
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COLLIN & HOBSON PLC |
Defendant Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Isabel Hitching (instructed by Hammonds, Birmingham) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath :
Introduction
i) in January 1998 the parties entered into a binding agreement in respect of the supply of four types of single pot yoghurt, namely Leche Pascual brand and "Best In" brand (to be sold to the Bestway chain for retail under its own label, also referred to in the judgment as "own brand"), each in low fat and "thick and creamy" ranges;ii) under that agreement Leche was obliged to supply such quantity of single pot yoghurt as Collin from time to time ordered during the contract period;
iii) an order was placed and was not fulfilled.
Subsequently it was admitted by Leche that it was in breach of contract in failing to meet the order. It was not disputed that Collin wished throughout the contractual period of supply to place further orders for single pot yoghurt but could find no alternative supplier.
i) Collin was entitled to recover losses calculated by reference to profit on anticipated sales during the whole 12 months of the minimum period of supply, as reasonably foreseeable losses of the failure to supply the first order;ii) the losses should be calculated assuming anticipated sales of 6.5m single pots and 3m single pots, respectively, of Leche Pascual brand and Best In brand, each reduced by 25% to reflect uncertainty and risk.
On the basis of those figures, and subject to certain adjustments and with interest, the losses were agreed as £724,353.00.
The Judge's conclusions
"36. I find that (Leche) clearly appreciated (and even if it had not, the reasonable manufacturer/supplier in its position would have appreciated) at the time the contract was made that in the event that it did not produce and supply the single pot yoghurt (both own brand and branded) for onward sale by (Collin), (Collin) would be unable to source that Leche Pascual product from anywhere else.….
It is the fact that there was nowhere, at no time contemporaneous to the breach, any suggestion or assumption that (Collin) should be able, with ease or at all, to identify a suitable alternative source….
37. It follows, therefore, that I find that (Leche) should, or the reasonable yoghurt producer in (Leche)'s position would, have realised that loss of that market was the probable or sufficiently likely result of the breach of contract by failure to deliver the first order on the basis that no alternative source was available or would be available in time to prevent the loss.
38. In light of the above findings I conclude that (Collin) is entitled, based upon its primary case, to recover losses measured by reference not simply to loss of profit on the specific consignment which was not delivered but loss of profit on the basis that (Collin)'s existing market for single pot yoghurts was, as a consequence of that breach, lost to (Collin)…."
Grounds of appeal
i) The judge approached the assessment of quantum of Collin's loss of profits in the wrong way. She took their estimate of sales, based on historic sales of Campina products in 1996, instead of starting from an assessment of their sales in April 1998 (i.e. at the time of breach), and making appropriate adjustments.ii) Alternatively, her discount of 25% was insufficient having regard to the uncertainties of the exercise.
i) She failed to take account of an apparent inconsistency of her findings with Collin's own projections for sales to two supermarket chains, Londis and Nisa (which had been the subject of a separate agreement between the experts);ii) Her assessment of likely sales of Best In products was based on inadequate evidence;
iii) She gave too much weight to the evidence relating to the original successful introduction of Leche Pascual multi-pack yoghurt.
General approach
"Given the historical problems with Campina, the superior Leche Pascual product, the success of Leche Pascual multi-pack yoghurt and the access to larger markets, in my opinion the volume of single pot yoghurt estimated in the counter-claim is achievable and reasonable. I would not regard it as over-optimistic or aggressive." (para 4.67)
"58. Inevitably, where the breach consists of non-supply of a specific product and there is no question of reviewing previous sales performance for that identical product the assessment of the volume of prospective sales becomes one of informed guesswork."
"Obviously there would be dangers in over-heavy reliance upon such data as all sorts of factors, including price, may play an important part." (para 64).
She saw that evidence as relevant in considering the ability of Collin to increase its market from the 1998 position.
"65. I accordingly conclude that (Collin)'s market was capable of increasing and, indeed, increasing to a significant extent bearing in mind that as a consequence of the successful sale of Leche Pascual multi-pot, (Collin) was able to achieve an uplift in respect of total ambient yoghurt sales of the order of 130% for the year ending April 1998 as compared with the previous year. Obviously that does not prove that a similar expansion was possible in relation to the single pot once it was introduced the following year; nevertheless it does put into context Mr Hall's expressed doubt that a similar percentage increase in sales volumes, from a cold start, from 4 million to 9.5 million pots for the single pot was achievable. Of course, the risks of displacement and/or saturation of the market, particularly where the subsequent launch is to be of the same product but simply in single, rather than multiple, packs, must not be ignored nor do I do so."
"79. I have concluded that the estimate of sales of 6.5 million branded product is a realistic commercial estimate of the sales achievable but for (Collin)'s loss of this market as a consequence of (Leche)'s failure to supply. It is plain that (Collin), and (Leche), could reasonably have expected to have more than matched and, indeed, significantly, beaten the historic sales achieved in the immediately preceding year in respect of the Campina brand and that there was sufficient scope within the market - even within (Collin)'s existing customer base - for such expansion to take place. Though the percentage uplift over the immediately preceding year is substantial, there were plainly factors inhibiting the sales of Campina products over the year to April 1998 and significant advantages of Leche Pascual over Campina which gave it better potential performance. If tangible support for achievability is needed, then it is to be found in the multi-pot sales of the same product which would inevitably have given customers the confidence that the product had market appeal and would be saleable in addition to, rather than in substitution for, in whole or part, the Leche Pascual multi-pot. Nevertheless such success can by no means be treated as a racing certainty.
80. It is accordingly appropriate when calculating loss under this head to discount the figure in respect of both own brand and branded sales not only to reflect the risk of erosion in the context of Bestway branded sales but also the risk that the volumes might otherwise not be achieved. I consider that a discount of 25%, the figure adopted by Mr Long in relation to issue 6, would adequately reflect those risks and that losses should therefore be calculated assuming sales volumes of 2.25 million in respect of own brand and 4.875 million branded product."
Particular issues
"Mr Hall believes that this projection appears to be at odds with the defendant's assumption that significant growth could have been achieved in the volume of Leche Pascual single pot yoghurt sold in the year ending 30th April 1999 as compared with the previous track record of sales of Campina single pot yoghurt, with no time lags."
As to Mr Long, it recorded:
"Mr Long draws no particular conclusions from this matter other than that some differences have arisen due to the estimating process supplied by the defendant, hence the Londis and Nisa projected sales of single pot Leche Pascual yoghurt appears conservative in the context of the total projected sales." (para 44 to 48).
The list of issues presented to the court by the experts includes as one of the relevant issues:
"The defendant's expectation of the volume of sales of single pot yoghurt to Londis and Nisa as reflected in … Mr Long's report."
"The estimate made at the time the contract was entered into was that there would be sales of some 3 million pots per annum, being 1.5 million each of low-fat and thick and creamy on top of sales of the branded product. These figures sound large. In reality, however, it would represent a monthly sale of 125,000 pots of each fat type, that is approximately 30,000 of each, per flavour per month, from a significant number of depots spread countrywide. It was a contemporaneous estimate put forward by Bestway and accepted as apparently feasible and achievable by both the Defendant and the Claimant at the time, to be fair, Mr Roessink did indicate in evidence that he was dependent upon the assessment of others as to the potential, the Claimant having had at that stage no real experience of the UK market. I have no doubt that the estimate represented what both Bestway and Mr Collin believe was realistically achievable. Having regard to the Bestway business, their policy in relation to own brand and the like, there was no reason to consider that the estimate was unreasonable based otherwise on sound commercial judgment by those who knew their market albeit there must obviously have been a risk that results would not match expectations."
She also considered and rejected Mr Hall's suggestion that for every sale of the own brand product there would be an equal reduction in sales of the branded product (para 78).
The 25% deduction
Conclusion
Mr Justice Bodey
Lord Justice Potter