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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Competition Commission v BAA Ltd & Anor [2010] EWCA Civ 1097 (13 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1097.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 1097, [2011] UKCLR 1 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) ON APPEAL FROM
THE COMPETITION APPEAL TRIBUNAL (MR JUSTICE BARLING, LORD CARLILE OF BERRIEW QC, MS SHEILA HEWITT)
REF: 11106809
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
____________________
Competition Commission |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BAA Limited |
Respondent |
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Ryanair Ltd |
Intervener |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Lord Pannick QC and Mr Mark Hoskins QC (instructed by Herbert Smith LLP) for the Respondent
Mr Daniel Jowell and Ms Sarah Love (instructed by Nabarro LLP) for Ryanair Ltd (Intervener)
Hearing dates : 23 and 24 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"Summarising the Tribunal's findings on this aspect of the case, the fair-minded and informed observer would conclude in the light of the material facts (1) that from late October 2007 until he stood down from the Investigation there existed a real possibility that Professor Moizer was biased in favour of MAG and (2) that from 2 December 2008 until he stood down from the Investigation there existed a real possibility that Professor Moizer was also biased in favour of the Fund." (paragraph 136)
"There is … no question of BAA having waived the apparent bias before 26 January 2009, whether impliedly or otherwise." (paragraph 172)
"BAA did not waive its right to object to Professor Moizer's apparent bias which existed from October 2007 and we must therefore consider what impact that apparent bias had upon the other members of the Group, who were his co-decision makers." (paragraph 181)
"In our view the fair-minded and informed observer would conclude in the light of the material facts that there was a real possibility that, as a result of Professor Moizer's influence within the Group from October 2007 till February 2009, the deliberations, the thinking and the ultimate outcome of the Investigation were affected by bias."
1. Apparent bias
"(a) that Professor Moizer, as a chartered accountant and professor of accounting, and having sat on other Commission inquiries, was well aware of the importance of impartiality, and of the public perception of impartiality, on the part of the members of the [Panel];
(b) that the Fund has no separate corporate identity; it sits within the 10 local authorities making up Greater Manchester, one of which (Tameside MBC) has had delegated to it the role of administering the Fund; there is further delegation of the Fund's management to the Management Panel made up of councillors from the same 10 local authorities; this Panel, which has duties equivalent to those of a pension fund trustee, is assisted by the Advisory Panel; day to day administration is carried out by a Director of Pensions;
(c) that the administrators of the Fund are subject to rules and fiduciary duties which require them to have regard to the suitability and diversification of investments and to take proper advice in relation to investment decisions;
(d) that Professor Moizer has been a fee-paid adviser to the Fund continuously since about 1987, attending quarterly joint meetings of the Management and Advisory Panels, and giving advice at other times as and when required, sometimes frequently; that his advice and comments are sought on whatever issues happen to arise, and would be sought on an investment such as Gatwick 'as a matter of course'; that Professor Moizer is very well regarded by those whom he advises at the Fund; he is trusted and highly influential, a 'wise man'; his influence is such that he has virtually a power of veto over a proposed investment; his role is effectively at 'officer' level in the Fund;
(e) that for many years the same 10 local authorities have also owned all the shares in MAG, which owns and operates Manchester Airport and certain other UK airports; that between them these 10 local authorities appoint two members to the Board of MAG from among their councillors; that the local authorities also exercise control over MAG's business through a shareholder committee, which can constrain the acquisition of assets and the making of other transactions by MAG, and which receives regular reports from MAG's Board on its business plans, investments and financial results; that there are other connections between MAG and the Fund or between MAG and its local authority owners including: the grant of dividends by MAG to its shareholders, substantial lending to MAG by at least one of the shareholders, and substantial pension contributions by MAG to the Fund (circa £250million);
(f) that the connection between the Fund and MAG is sufficiently close that it could lead the Fund to make a type of investment it would otherwise be highly unlikely to make;
(g) that in 2002 the Commission's legal adviser considered that Professor Moizer's links with MAG, through its local authority owners, were such that the Commission would not have appointed him to the 2002 Manchester QR whose decisions would affect a significant part of the revenue of Manchester Airport for the following five years; and that therefore that he should not be put in a position where it would be possible for him through joint meetings between the two 2002 Inquiry Groups, indirectly to influence the outcome of the Inquiry which concerned MAG;
(h) that in 2002 Professor Moizer himself had been sufficiently concerned about his links with MAG to raise the issue with the Commission at that time;
(i) that in making the reference to the Commission in March 2007 the OFT had limited the scope of that reference so as to require the Commission to focus on BAA and the airport services that it supplied in the UK; that the OFT had identified BAA's common ownership of Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted in England, as well as of Glasgow and Edinburgh in Scotland as being a likely cause of adverse effects on competition and on airline customers and consumers who used BAA's airports; and that the OFT had expressly envisaged divestiture of BAA's airports as a possible outcome of the investigation;
(j) that as a large airport operator with a number of UK airports to its name MAG and all other airport operators in the UK, and even beyond, could be regarded at least to some extent as competitors."
The law on apparent bias
"whether the fair-minded and informed observer, having considered the facts, would conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was biased."
"The observer who is fair-minded is the sort of person who always reserves judgment on every point until she has seen and fully understood both sides of the argument. She is not unduly sensitive or suspicious, as Kirby J observed in Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488, 509, para 53. Her approach must not be confused with that of the person who has brought the complaint. The 'real possibility' test ensures that there is this measure of detachment. The assumptions that the complainer makes are not to be attributed to the observer unless they can be justified objectively. But she is not complacent either. She knows that fairness requires that a judge must be, and must be seen to be, unbiased. She knows that judges, like anybody else, have their weaknesses. She will not shrink from the conclusion, if it can be justified objectively, that things that they have said or done or associations that they have formed may make it difficult for them to judge the case before them impartially.
Then there is the attribute that the observer is 'informed'. It makes the point that, before she takes a balanced approach to any information she is given, she will take the trouble to inform herself on all matters that are relevant. She is the sort of person who takes the trouble to read the text of an article as well as the headlines. She is able to put whatever she has read or seen into its overall social, political or geographical context. She is fair-minded, so she will appreciate that the context forms an important part of the material which she must consider before passing judgment."
"The court must look at all the circumstances as they appear from the material before it, not just at the facts known to the objectors or available to the hypothetical observer at the time of the decision."
"to assume the vantage point of a fair-minded and informed observer with knowledge of the relevant circumstances. It must itself make an assessment of all the relevant circumstances and then decide whether there is a real possibility of bias." (AWG Group Ltd v Morrison [2006] EWCA Civ 6 per Mummery LJ, at paragraph 20)
"the policy of the common law is to protect litigants who can discharge the lesser burden of showing a real danger of bias without requiring to show that such bias actually exists."
October 2007 to November 2008
"Once the fair-minded and informed observer became aware of MAG's participation in the investigation and MAG's aims, he or she would look again at Professor Moizer's connections with that company. Noting that for about twenty years Professor Moizer has been advising its owners, the fair-minded and informed observer would assume that over such a long time there would have been established a very natural regard and loyalty between them. The fair-minded observer would of course take account of the fact … that Professor Moizer is retained to advise in relation to the Fund rather than to advise the local authorities at large; but he or she would also be aware of the realities of the situation: the observer would see Professor Moizer as the trusted and long-standing adviser of the local authorities who own MAG, and who by their presence on its board and through the shareholder committee, play an active role in directing MAG's business strategy (for example, giving clearance for MAG's Gatwick bid, according to press reports in August 2008), and who receive dividends from the proceeds of MAG's airport business. The fair-minded and informed observer would note that these are the same local authorities whose councillors attend meetings of the Fund's panels with Professor Moizer, and whom he regards as his clients."
"Professor Peter Moizer is a member of the inquiry into the BAA Airports. I am writing to you about a financial interest that Professor Moizer has in one of the parties to the Manchester inquiry.
Professor Moizer is one of their external advisers to [the Fund] which is a pooled investment vehicle with a value currently of over £6000 million. His role is to give independent strategic advice on the management of the Fund's investments; he receives a fee for his advice on an ongoing basis. The fund's administering authority is Tameside MBC. Employees of all local and joint authorities in the Greater Manchester area (apart from teachers, police officers and fire fighters) and of many other public bodies have automatic access to the Scheme … The ten local authorities within the Greater Manchester area are the shareholders of [MAG]"
"would consider that, given the discomfort clearly felt by the Professor and the Commission at that time, at least as much discomfort should be felt now, when the Professor was in a better position to affect the interests of MAG than in 2002."
The position after 2 December 2008
2. No operative effect
3. Contamination
"In our view, the fair-minded and informed observer would conclude in the light of the material facts that there was a real possibility that, as a result of Professor Moizer's influence within the [Panel] from October 2007 until February 2009, the deliberations, the thinking and the ultimate outcome of the investigation were affected by bias."
"I am unable to accept that there is an invariable rule, or it is necessarily the case, that where one member of a tribunal is tainted by apparent bias the whole tribunal is affected second-hand by apparent bias, and therefore should recuse themselves, or should be excluded, from the proceedings. After all, it is common practice where a juror has to be discharged … for the judge to consider whether there is a risk of 'contamination' of other jurors, and if there is no reason to think that there is, to continue the trial with the remaining jurors."
4. Waiver
"… a party with an irresistible right to object to a judge hearing or continuing to hear a case may … waive his right to object. It is however clear that any waiver must be clear and unequivocal, and made with full knowledge of all the facts relevant to the decision whether to waive or not."
"Waiver would never operate if 'full facts' meant each and every detail of factual information which diligent digging can produce. Full facts relevant to the decision to be taken must be confined to the essential facts. What is important is that the litigant should understand the nature of the case rather than the detail. It is sufficient if there is disclosed to him all he needs to know which is invariably different from all he wants to know."
"170 … the Tribunal does not consider that BAA had actual knowledge of the original link between Professor Moizer and MAG. That link not being known to BAA, neither the January 2008 website publication of MAG's interest in purchasing BAA's airport assets, nor the subsequent press speculation about that interest, would have alerted BAA to the conflict problem …
172 … BAA did not know of the original link giving rise to apparent bias on the part of Professor Moizer until 26 January 2009 when, having been alerted by the Commission's phone call on 22 January, BAA and its advisers researched Professor Moizer's position and discovered the 2002 disclosure. There is therefore no question of BAA having waived the apparent bias before 26 January …
175 … In a further phone call on 27 January the Commission said it was considering writing to BAA regarding Professor Moizer. No letter from the Commission having arrived, on 6 February 2009 Mr Herga wrote to the Commission. The subject matter of the letter … is expressed in general terms: 'the implications of this role [ie as adviser to the Fund] for his position as a member of the Panel' … BAA goes on to seek as a matter of urgency answers to specific questions relating to any involvement of Professor Moizer in the Gatwick bid."
The letter of 6 February was in these terms:
"We understand you are considering writing to us concerning the position of Professor Moizer as strategic adviser to [the Fund] and that implications of this role for his position as a member of the Panel …
As we understand it, Professor Moizer acts as an adviser to [the Fund] (the members of which include employees of local authorities in the Greater Manchester area). His role is as adviser to [the Fund] on investments. On 19 January 2009 BAA received first round bids in relation to the sale of Gatwick. One of the consortia bidding, comprising Borealis and [MAG] (which is owned by local authorities in the Manchester area) has indicated that [the Fund] will invest in that consortium. We understand that MAG is also a potential bidder for Stansted and/or a Scottish airport should the Commission require divestment.
BAA does not want to prejudge the situation and therefore we would be grateful if you could address the following matters:
- Whether Professor Moizer continues to act as an adviser to [the Fund], and if so, to set out what are the terms of his retainer. If he no longer advises [the Fund] when did he cease to do so?
- Whether Professor Moizer has been aware of [the Fund's] interest in investing in the MAG bid, and if so when he became aware;
- Whether Professor Moizer has advised [the Fund] in relation to this investment;
- Identify the Panel and staff meetings in which Professor Moizer participated since becoming aware of [the Fund's] interest in the MAG bid; and
- What steps Professor Moizer and the Commission propose to take in the circumstances.
We would appreciate your urgent attention to this matter."
"Professor Moizer has assured us that he took steps to exclude himself from any possible involvement with any [Fund] bid for Gatwick before he became aware that [the Fund] was considering a bid. He became aware of the Fund's interest via the Press; and he has certainly not advised the Fund on anything to do with its bid. For the sake of completeness we have spoken to [the Fund] which has confirmed that Professor Moizer has had no connection with its bid for Gatwick."
"The basic facts only became known to [BAA] at what was almost the end of the investigation, by which time opinions would inevitably have been formed and the decision-making process was far advanced. Once they ascertained those basic facts, partly through their own research, they raised the issue in a timely manner in their letter of 6 February. It took the Commission nearly three weeks to reply to that letter and the response was less than full, frank and accurate. Not only did the letter not reveal what was actually happening vis-à-vis Professor Moizer but no options were put to BAA: no election was sought. By the time the letter arrived the investigation was virtually over."
(1) Burden of proof
"As to the point whether the party acquiesced in the decision, we need not decide further than to say that it is a very sound rule of practice that a party making such an application should show that neither he nor his solicitor knew of the interest of one of the justices at the time of the hearing … it is a rule of practice and a very good one."
Manisty J added:
"If there had been an application for certiorari the party taking the objection of interest in one of the justices ought certainly to negative the fact that he knew of such interest at the time of the hearing. There may be some cases where that might not be necessary, still it was a wholesome rule of practice and ought not to be departed from in such cases."
(2) The merits
"… as far as I am aware none of the BAA staff working on the market investigation (including myself) were aware of the 2002 Disclosure Notice until 26 January 2009."
"I first became aware of a conflict issue concerning Professor Moizer as a result of the call … on 22 January … but the nature of Professor Moizer's conflict was not clear from that call. I anticipated that the [Commission] would write to us explaining the situation but when there was no further communication we began our own inquiries on the following Monday (26 January) which led to the discovery of the 2002 Disclosure Notice and at around the same time that [the Fund] was a bidder for Gatwick. I was therefore not aware of the involvement of [the Fund] in a bid for Gatwick until around 26 January. I have made inquiries of each member of the market investigation team and they have each told me that they were not aware until on or about 26 January … of the interest of [the Fund] in Gatwick."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jacob:
Lord Justice Patten: