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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kupeli & Ors v Atlasjet Havacilik Anonim Sirketi [2017] EWCA Civ 1037 (21 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1037.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1037 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MRS JUSTICE SLADE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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MRS OZLEM KUPELI AND 668 OTHERS |
Claimant/ Respondents |
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- and – |
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ATLASJET HAVACILIK ANONIM SIRKETI |
Second Defendant/ Appellant |
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Deok Joo Rhee QC and Jamie Carpenter (instructed by Hudson Morgan Williams) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 14th July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
"These regulations apply to a contract including a consumer credit agreement between a consumer and a trader which is for the supply of goods or services to the consumer by a trader and which is made:
(a) during a visit by the trader to the consumer's home or place of work, or to the home of another individual;(b) during an excursion organised by the trader away from his business premises; or(c) after an offer made by the consumer during such a visit or excursion."
"… a person who, in making a contract to which these Regulations apply, is acting in his commercial or professional capacity and anyone acting in his name or on behalf of a trader."
"(1) A consumer has the right to cancel a contract to which these regulations apply within the cancellation period.
(2) The trader must give the consumer a written notice of his right to cancel the contract and such notice must be given at the time the contract is made, except in the case of a contract to which regulation 5(c) applies, in which case the notice must be given at the time the offer is made by the consumer."
"Legal assistance for CTA victims
The Alevi Cultural Centre and Cemevi (IAKM-Cemevi) had initiated the support for the victims of the Cyprus Turkish Airlines, and now there is legal assistance. IAKM-Cemevi have invited lawyers to a meeting.
The notice from the IAKM-Cemevi reads as follows:
A group of lawyers and legal assistants from Goldsworth Solicitors will take instructions from victims of Cyprus Turkish Airlines on 12 May between 11.00-16.00 hours. The meeting will take place at the Ingiltere Kulture Merkezi and Cemevi, and we would like to see you among us. We invite all the victims of Cyprus Turkish Airlines."
"… I would be quite prepared, in an appropriate case involving truly feasible alternative interpretations of a convention, to allow the evidence contained in the travaux préparatoires to be determinative of the question of construction. But that is only possible where the court is satisfied that the travaux préparatoires clearly and indisputably point to a definite legal intention:…Only a bull's eye counts. Nothing less will do."
"Whereas the special feature of contracts concluded away from the business premises of the trader is that as a rule it is the trader who initiates the contract negotiations, for which the consumer is unprepared or which he does not [expect]; whereas the consumer is often unable to compare the quality and price of the offer with other offers; whereas this surprise element generally exists not only in contracts made at the doorstep but also in other forms of contract concluded by the trader away from his business premises;
Whereas the consumer should be given a right of cancellation over a period of at least seven days in order to enable him to assess the obligations arising under the contract;
Whereas appropriate measures should be taken to ensure that the consumer is informed in writing of this period for reflection"
i) French: "le consommateur ne s'est, en aucune façon, préparé à ces négotiations et se trouve pris au dépourvu…"
ii) Italian: "il consommatore è impreparato a queste transative e si trova preso di sorpresa…"
iii) Spanish: "el consumidor no está, de ningún modo, preparado para dichas negociaciones y se encuentra desprevenido…".
"This Directive shall apply to contracts under which a trader supplies goods or services to a consumer and which are concluded:
- during an excursion organized by the trader away from his business premises, or
- during a visit by a trader
(i) to the consumer's home or to that of another consumer;(ii) to the consumer's place of work;
where the visit does not take place at the express request of the consumer."
i) French: "pendant une excursion organisée par le commerçant en dehors de ses établissements commerciaux."
ii) Italian: "durante un'escursione organizzata dal commerciante al di fuori dei propri locali commerciali".
iii) Spanish: "durante una excursión organizada por el comerciante fuera de sus establecimientos comerciales."
"This Directive shall also apply to contracts for the supply of goods or services other than those concerning which the consumer requested the visit of the trader, provided that when he requested the visit the consumer did not know, or could not reasonably have known, that the supply of those other goods or services formed part of the trader's commercial or professional activities."
"'trader' means a natural or legal person who, for the transaction in question, acts in his commercial or professional capacity, and anyone acting in the name or on behalf of a trader."
"… the meaning and scope of that concept must be determined by considering its usual meaning in everyday language, whilst also taking into account the context in which it occurs and the purpose of the rule of which it is part…"
"[35] As regards the question whether a contract was concluded during an excursion organised by the trader, it must be observed, first, that a contract concluded in a town other than the one in which the consumer lives and at a certain distance from it, such that he has had to undertake a journey to reach that town, must be considered to have been concluded during an excursion within the meaning of Directive 85/577.
[36] Secondly, where the initiative for such an excursion comes from the trader, in the sense that he invites the consumer to a specified place by letters and/or telephone calls indicating the date, time and place of the meeting, it must be considered that the excursion has been organised by the trader within the meaning of Directive 85/577.
[37] As regards the question whether the contract was concluded away from the trader's business premises, it must be observed that this concept refers to premises in which the trader usually carries on his business and which are clearly identified as premises for sales to the public.
[38] The answer to the third question must therefore be that a contract concluded in a situation in which a trader has invited a consumer to go in person to a specified place at a certain distance from the place where the consumer lives, and which is different from the premises where the trader usually carries on his business and is not clearly identified as premises for sales to the public, in order to present to him the products and services he is offering, must be considered to have been concluded during an excursion organised by the trader away from his business premises within the meaning of Directive 85/577."
"Is it compatible with Article 1(1) of Directive 85/577/EEC for the rights of consumers, in particular their right of cancellation, to be made subject not only to the existence of a doorstep-selling situation as referred to in Article 1(1) of the directive but also to additional criteria for responsibility, such as a trader's deliberate use of a third party in the conclusion of the agreement or a trader's negligence in respect of the third party's conduct in connection with the doorstep selling?" (Emphasis added)
"[41] By this question the referring court essentially seeks to know whether Arts 1 and 2 of the Directive must be interpreted as meaning that, when a third party intervenes in the name of or on behalf of a trader in the negotiation or conclusion of a contract, the application of the Directive can be made subject not only to the condition that the contract has been concluded in a doorstep-selling situation defined in Art.1 of the Directive but also to the condition that the trader was or should have been aware that the contract was concluded in that situation.
[42] In that regard, suffice it to observe that there is no basis in the wording of the Directive for inferring the existence of such an additional condition. Article 1 of the Directive provides that it applies to contracts concluded between a trader and a consumer in a doorstep-selling situation and, under Art.2 of the Directive, for the purposes thereof, "trader" means any person who acts in the name or on behalf of a trader.
[43] Moreover, to accept such an additional condition would be contrary to the objective of the Directive which is to protect the consumer from the element of surprise inherent in doorstep selling."
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Lord Justice Floyd: