![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Williams v Williams [2004] EWCA Civ 870 (15 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/870.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 870 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
(His Honour Judge Moseley QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
Sir Andrew Morritt
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
JOHN WILLIAMS | ||
HETTY MARY WILLIAMS | Respondents/Claimants | |
-v- | ||
CHRISTOPHER REEVES KILEY | ||
(Trading as CK Supermarkets) | Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR MICHAEL DARCY (instructed by John Collins & Partners of Swansea) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
(a) any trade other than that of a grocer and general store; or
(b) the trade or business of a sugar confectioner or tobacconist.
By paragraph 2 the judge declared what would constitute a breach of that injunction by reference to the area of the retail display, namely, a display in excess of -
(a) a confectionery display stand 1 metre in width and 2 metres in height; or
(b) either a Gallagher counter top unit for tobacco or equivalent shelf space.
"The Lessee hereby covenants with the lessor as follows:
.....
(14) (b) to carry on or permit or suffer to be carried on at all times during the term hereby granted in or upon the said shop premises situate on the ground floor of the demised premises the trade or business of a grocery and general stores (which term shall not include a footwear repair service and collection centre Dry Cleaning and Laundry service Ladies Hairdressing Meat Purveyor Pharmaceutical Chemist or Newsagents Sugar Confectioner Tobacconist or Post Office) and for this purpose (1) to display the goods applicable to such business in the shop window (ii) not to obscure the plate glass window in any way either by painting or otherwise .....
(c) not to use or permit the use of the demised premises or any other part thereof for any other purpose than aforesaid."
"7 Mr Kiley operates a supermarket at the 2 shops without much regard for the covenant not to use them other than as a grocery and general store. He sells a range of products which are normally sold nowadays by supermarkets. These include not only grocery items but also tobacco and cigarettes and stationery items. The proportion of his turnover attributable to these items was not given in evidence, but they account for 12% of his display area. The documents provided to me concerning turnover were not analysed by the 2 experts who gave evidence but ..... counsel for the claimants undertook the exercise and gave me the figures in his skeleton argument without objection by [counsel for the defendants]. Those figures show for the 3 years ending 30 April 1999, 2000, 2001, that his turnover in tobacco sales greatly exceeds that of the claimants' CTN business next door and in the years 2000 and 2001 has been over double the turnover of the claimants. In the years ending 30 April 2000 and 2001 his confectionery sales turnover has also been substantially in excess of the turnover of the claimants. He has a display stand for tobacco and cigarettes which is about 8 feet long by 2 feet wide with 7 shelves and is 50% greater than the claimants' display. His confectionery display area, which is larger than normal in a supermarket, varies in size with the seasons but is at least 5 or possibly 6 metres long and contains 5 or possibly 6 shelves. Two pillars are also used to display confectionery items and there are also bins and displays at the checkout containing confectionery."
"10 ..... In my judgment in November 1963 general stores would have sold some tobacco products and a limited range of confectionery and would have been identifiable as general stores notwithstanding such sales. Grocery stores would probably have sold some sweets but probably not tobacco and would have been identifiable as grocery stores notwithstanding the sale of sweets. So in my judgment Mr Kiley is not precluded by the covenant in the lease from selling some confectionery and tobacco provided those sales do not amount to the use of the premises for a trade other than the trade or business of a grocery and general store."
At paragraph 12 he added:
"In my judgment the evidence shows that in addition to using the premises as a grocery and general store Mr Kiley has been using them also as a tobacconist and confectioners and is therefore in breach of the second leg of the covenant. That seems to me amply proved by the evidence I heard concerning the size of the two sales areas and the volume of turnover in both confectionery and tobacco products. Mr Kiley's business in my view goes well beyond that of a grocery and general store selling as part of that business some tobacco and confectionery."
Having handed down his judgment on liability, the judge then considered how it should be implemented. Having heard further argument, he directed the parties to try to agree a single joint expert to report on (a) the terms of the injunction and (b) the quantum of damage.
"In my view, the judge applied the correct test. He considered the character of use as a general store, as understood in 1963, and concluded that the defendant was not precluded from selling some confectionery and tobacco, so long as it was not sufficient in scale to amount to a distinct trade or business. If it crossed that line, then the fact that the shop might still qualify as a 'general store', in the sense understood in the St Marylebone case, would not help the defendant, in view of the specific prohibition of the trades of tobacconist or confectioner."
While the Court of Appeal agreed with the judge as to those two points, they disagreed with him in relation to the appointment of a joint expert. By paragraph 3 of the order of the Court of Appeal they directed that -
"The case management directions in paragraphs 3 to 5 of the order made on the 28 January 2002 be set aside and the matter of future case management be referred to a judge for further directions as to the determination of the issue as to 'What is the defendant's permitted quantity or manner of sales of tobacco and confectionery?'"
"8 It is common ground between the parties that the effect of the covenants contained in the lease is not to impose an absolute prohibition on the sale of any confectionery or tobacco products by Mr Kiley. Rather, the covenant precludes the operation of a confectioner or tobacconist business. It was accepted by His Honour Judge Moseley at the hearing on 28 January 2002 that some level of tobacco and confectionery sales by Mr Kiley is permissible as being ancillary to his principal business activity. There is therefore a practical difficulty in determining at what point the level of sales of confectionery and tobacco products by Mr Kiley are prohibited by the covenant. This is an issue which will ultimately have to be determined by the court.
At the hearing on 4 September 2003 His Honour Judge Hywel Moseley QC directed that a single joint expert be appointed to prepare a report as to the terms of any injunction.
The judge has, following representations from the parties, decided that the terms of the injunction should be decided first and that quantum of any loss suffered by the claimants should be decided later.
You are asked to prepare a report stating:
1) At what point sales of (a) tobacco and (b) confectionery would amount to the use of the premises for a trade other than the trade or business of a grocery and general store;
2) What physical restraint on trade would need to be imposed to ensure that sales do not exceed such limit.
The parties have suggested that the following physical restraints may be appropriate. These are not necessarily exhaustive and you may wish to suggest others."
"In my opinion the likely parameters of whether there is a separate trade must take into account:
(a) the facing space offered;
(b) the absolute value of the particular sales; and
(c) the ratio of the sales in question to the total.
The evidence indicates that the CK Supermarket has the facility for greater facings to the customer for tobacco but when I visited was using part of the tobacco facings for medicines. The absolute values of sales shows the CK Supermarkets sales of tobacco and confectionery are at similar levels to the Williams' takings. Though the CK Supermarkets sales as a ratio to total sales are below the 'norm' or range for a convenience store they do reflect a significant percentage of total sales, being for tobacco (15.5%-16.1%) and confectionery (4%-4.4%), between 19.5% and 20.5% at the present time. Taken together, in my opinion they are a separate trade. In isolation only the tobacco is probably large enough to be a separate trade category, if measured just in sales values. Confectionery is always going to be low because of the unit price. In my opinion the point at which there would be a cut off is about £12,500 per month or about 10% of sales for tobacco and if confectionery is above about 40% of this or £5,000 per month of this then that would be the value of a separate trade."
" ..... A percentage of that display area could be allowed for within the CK Supermarket store at Sketty Park. I suggest that that could be as follows:
.....
Tobacco
(a) either a counter top unit on each of the tills allowing in total for approximately 70% of the facings currently in Mr and Mrs Williams' shop; or
(b) in the alternative a smaller eg one metre wide unit with six shelves for tobacco and ancillary products, at the one till."
"23 The evidence is in my previous judgment at paragraph 10. From that evidence I surmise that the displays which would have been used on this part of the trade in 1963 would have been small. It is defined in imprecise terms in that judgment. But my view is that Mr Gregory's opinion is too generous to Mr Kiley. We must look at his figures with more restricted shelves in mind.
24 Mr Gregory suggests at his page 82:
'The claimants' suggestions are for much reduced display facings with reduction of between 70% and 80% of the existing display area for confectionery and a significantly reduced Gallagher rather than Imperial tobacco dispenser. One of the tobacco dispensers is for a portable dispenser which has significantly reduced display area and the other is for a significantly smaller desk-top dispenser being 0.6 of a metre wide and only having three shelves. The portable dispenser does not appear practical from a security aspect. The third alternative put forward to the claimants is for a vending machine. In my opinion a vending machine is probably impracticable as a method of selling cigarettes within a supermarket or convenience store.'
25 He refers to Mr and Mrs Williams' shop. It may [have] been relevant to look at the Williams' shop but the covenants are for Kiley's shop. The purpose was to restrict competition between the shops. So one can look at Mr Williams' shop.
26 Mr Davey put forward a more restricted proposal. He proposes:
(a) a 1 metre wide by 2 metre high confectionery display stand, and
(b) a 10-brand tobacco vending machine/Gallagher counter-top unit/Gallagher mini merchandiser.
27 He illustrates this by some photographs which I have seen.
28 I should not want to be as precise as this for the tobacco. There seems to me to be no requirement of a counter-top vending machine.
29 I will define shelf space as in one of these units; I think the unit will [be the] 10-brand tobacco vending machine. I will not limit it to 10 brands.
30 Subject to this, in the light of the previous evidence and Mr Gregory's report, I think Mr Davey's plan should be adopted."
It was based on that that the judgment was formulated in the terms it was, and the judge expressed some doubt as to whether there had been an accurate transcription in relation to the description of the vending machine, but nothing, I think, turns on it.
(Counsel addressed the court on costs)
R U L I N G
Paragraphs 26-29 are included for your information, reference paragraph 19