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Commerce Commission v Viagogo AG [2019] NZCA 472; [2019] 3 NZLR 559 (2 October 2019)

Last Updated: 16 May 2021

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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND

I TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
CA159/2019
[2019] NZCA 472



BETWEEN

COMMERCE COMMISSION
Appellant


AND

VIAGOGO AG
Respondent

Hearing:

29 August 2019

Court:

Clifford, Gilbert and Goddard JJ

Counsel:

J D Every-Palmer QC, J L W Wass and A D Luck for Appellant
A J Lloyd, H O Meikle-Downing and S L Michelsen for Respondent

Judgment:

2 October 2019 at 3.00 pm


JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

  1. The appeal is allowed.
  2. The application for interim relief is remitted to the High Court.
  1. There is no order as to costs.

____________________________________________________________________

REASONS OF THE COURT

(Given by Goddard J)


Table of contents

Para No.

Introduction

Summary

The proceedings

The Commission’s claims against Viagogo

(a) Viagogo makes representations about the quantity of tickets available for an event that are false, misleading or deceptive, in breach of ss 9, 11 and 13(b) of the FTA.

(b) Viagogo makes representations about the price of tickets that are false, misleading or deceptive in breach of ss 9, 11 and 13(g) of the FTA.

(c) Viagogo makes representations that consumers are guaranteed to receive valid tickets which are false, misleading or deceptive in breach of ss 9, 11, 13(e) and 13(i) of the FTA.

(d) Viagogo has in the past made representations that it was an “official” ticket seller that were false, misleading or deceptive in breach of ss 9, 11 and 13(e) of the FTA.

The Commission’s without notice application for an interim injunction

High Court decision

[7] With one exception, [Dale v Jeffrey HC Auckland CIV-2007-404-2015, 24 April 2007] New Zealand courts have consistently declined to determine interlocutory applications, including those for interim relief, where the defendant has objected to jurisdiction until that issue is resolved. In Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd the Court of Appeal held that where the defendant served overseas had filed a protest to jurisdiction, the plaintiff’s summary judgment application could not be determined until jurisdiction had been resolved. [Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd [1997] 1 NZLR 186 (CA).] Subsequent High Court decisions have followed that approach in relation to applications for interim injunctions. [Rimini Ltd v Manning Management and Marketing Pty Ltd [2003] 3 NZLR 22 (HC); Hamilton v Infiniti Capital Andante Ltd HC Auckland CIV-2008-404-2304, 7 May 2008.] All these cases involved defendants that had been served.

[39] First, jurisdiction at heart is dependent on valid service on the defendant. ... Where service offshore is involved, some rectitude is required. It involves, as has often been said, an exercise of sovereignty within the country in which service is effected. ... Of course in some circumstances, involving true urgency, formal service by means of substituted service might be permissible. ... However, no application for substituted service was made in this case.

(Footnotes omitted.)

The Commission’s appeal

Interim relief against overseas defendants: relevant provisions

The High Court’s power to grant interim injunctions

7.53 Application for injunction

(1) An application for an interlocutory injunction may be made by a party before or after the commencement of the hearing of a proceeding, whether or not an injunction is claimed in the party’s statement of claim, counterclaim, or third party notice.

(2) The plaintiff may not make an application for an interlocutory injunction before the commencement of the proceeding except in case of urgency, and any injunction granted before the commencement of the proceeding—

(a) must provide for the commencement of the proceeding; and

(b) may be granted on any further terms that the Judge thinks just.

(a) Freezing orders may be granted under pt 32 of the High Court Rules where an applicant has a good arguable case on an accrued or prospective cause of action that is justiciable in the High Court, or (if certain conditions are met) in an overseas court.[11] As the reference to prospective causes of action makes plain, the substantive proceeding need not have been filed (and may not be able to be filed for some time, until the cause of action accrues).

(b) Part 33 provides for search orders to be granted in a proceeding or before a proceeding commences, to secure or preserve evidence that may be relevant in the proceeding.[12]

(c) Rule 7.81 provides for interim relief to be granted in support of judicial proceedings “commenced or to be commenced outside New Zealand”.

12 Jurisdiction of High Court

The High Court has—

(a) the jurisdiction that it had on the commencement of this Act; and

(b) the judicial jurisdiction that may be necessary to administer the laws of New Zealand; and

(c) the jurisdiction conferred on it by any other Act.

General principles governing grant of interim injunctions

The purpose of such an injunction is to improve the chances of the court being able to do justice after a determination of the merits at the trial. ...

The basic principle is that the court should take whichever course seems likely to cause the least irremediable prejudice to one party or the other.

Proceedings against overseas defendants

6.29 Court’s discretion whether to assume jurisdiction

(1) If service of process has been effected out of New Zealand without leave, and the court’s jurisdiction is protested under rule 5.49, the court must dismiss the proceeding unless the party effecting service establishes—

(a) that there is—

(i) a good arguable case that the claim falls wholly within 1 or more of the paragraphs of rule 6.27; and

(ii) the court should assume jurisdiction by reason of the matters set out in rule 6.28(5)(b) to (d); or

(b) that, had the party applied for leave under rule 6.28,—

(i) leave would have been granted; and

(ii) it is in the interests of justice that the failure to apply for leave should be excused.

(2) If service of process has been effected out of New Zealand under rule 6.28, and the court’s jurisdiction is protested under rule 5.49, and it is claimed that leave was wrongly granted under rule 6.28, the court must dismiss the proceeding unless the party effecting service establishes that in the light of the evidence now before the court leave was correctly granted.

Interim injunctions against overseas defendants

Submissions for the Commission

Submissions for Viagogo

Analysis

The different senses of the term “jurisdiction”

(a) the High Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine the Commission’s substantive proceedings against Viagogo; and

(b) the High Court has jurisdiction to grant interim relief against Viagogo at this stage in the proceedings.

The recent New Zealand authorities

It is difficult to see how the Court can thereafter logically decide that it has no jurisdiction. It is the jurisdiction of the Court to entertain the claim which is now at issue, and that must be determined prior to the Court embarking on a hearing of the proceeding, whether substantively or in any interlocutory way. If the summary judgment application were to proceed, ACS would have to submit to the jurisdiction if it desired to defend. That would almost certainly involve the filing of affidavits, as well as an appearance by counsel to argue the issues.

Where service offshore is involved, some rectitude is required. It involves, as has often been said, an exercise of sovereignty within the country which service is effected. ... Of course in some circumstances, involving true urgency, formal service by means of substituted service might be permissible. That much is contemplated by the English Court of Appeal decision in Bayat v Cecil [[2011] EWCA Civ 135[2011] EWCA Civ 135; , [2011] 1 WLR 3086 at [68]]. However, no application for substituted service was made in this case.

(Footnotes omitted.)

If a foreign defendant has indeed been served, the Court has provisional jurisdiction. It is subject to any protest as to jurisdiction. In the present case such a protest is foreshadowed. STP makes these points: it is a Singaporean company, over which the New Zealand Courts have no personal jurisdiction. The ICC arbitration is taking place in London, where the English Courts have supervisory jurisdiction pursuant to the Arbitration Act 1986 (UK). The interim measures application does not concern an asset located in New Zealand (although that is debateable). No relief or order has been sought against the New Zealand decision-maker, and the only measures sought are orders that a Singaporean company with no presence in New Zealand takes steps to seek to influence that process.

[The defendant] must have the right to file a proper protest, and evidence in support of it. The Court will then consider whether it has jurisdiction. It should not now proceed on the basis that it should make interim orders, however innocuous they perhaps might be, on the basis it might have jurisdiction.

Service is not a prerequisite to the grant of interim relief

Interim relief pending determination of a protest to jurisdiction

[53] In his judgment in the Court of Appeal, Longmore LJ described the service of the English court’s process out of the jurisdiction as an “exorbitant” jurisdiction, which would be made even more exorbitant by retrospectively authorising the mode of service adopted in this case. This characterisation of the jurisdiction to allow service out is traditional, and was originally based on the notion that the service of proceedings abroad was an assertion of sovereign power over the defendant and a corresponding interference with the sovereignty of the state in which process was served. This is no longer a realistic view of the situation. The adoption in English law of the doctrine of forum non conveniens and the accession by the United Kingdom to a number of conventions regulating the international jurisdiction of national courts, means that in the overwhelming majority of cases where service out is authorised there will have been either a contractual submission to the jurisdiction of the English court or else a substantial connection between the dispute and this country. Moreover, there is now a far greater measure of practical reciprocity than there once was. Litigation between residents of different states is a routine incident of modern commercial life. A jurisdiction similar to that exercised by the English court is now exercised by the courts of many other countries. The basic principles on which the jurisdiction is exercisable by the English courts are similar to those underlying a number of international jurisdictional conventions, notably the Brussels Convention ... and the Lugano Convention ... . The characterisation of the service of process abroad as an assertion of sovereignty may have been superficially plausible under the old form of writ (“We command you ...”). But it is, and probably always was, in reality no more than notice of the commencement of proceedings which was necessary to enable the defendant to decide whether and if so how to respond in his own interest. It should no longer be necessary to resort to the kind of muscular presumptions against service out which are implicit in adjectives like “exorbitant”. The decision is generally a pragmatic one in the interests of the efficient conduct of litigation in an appropriate forum.

The relevance of an actual or potential protest to jurisdiction

Substituted service

Conclusion

Result






Solicitors:
Meredith Connell, Auckland for Appellant
MinterEllisonRuddWatts, Auckland for Respondent


[1] That is, the application remained a “without notice” application that had not been served on Viagogo in accordance with the High Court Rules 2016, but counsel for Viagogo were advised of the hearing and were present at it, and were heard in relation to the application. The name is derived from Pickwick International Inc (GB) Ltd v Multiple Sound Distributors Ltd [1972] 1 WLR 1213 (Ch).

[2] Commerce Commission v Viagogo AG [2019] NZHC 187 [High Court decision].

[3] Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd [1997] 1 NZLR 186 (CA); Rimini Ltd v Manning Management and Marketing Pty Ltd [2003] 3 NZLR 22 (HC); Hamilton v Inifiniti Capital Andante Ltd HC Auckland CIV-2008-404-2304, 7 May 2008; and Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd [2012] NZHC 3549, [2013] 2 NZLR 122.

[4] High Court decision, above n 2, at [8].

[5] Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd, above n 3.

[6] High Court decision, above n 2, at [13].

[7] At [14].

[8] At [14].

[9] At [15].

[10] At [15].

[11] High Court Rules, r 32.5.

[12] Rule 33.2.

[13] Named after Mareva Compania Naviera SA v International Bulkcarriers SA [1980] 1 All ER 213 (CA).

[14] Named after Anton Piller KG v Manufacturing Processes Ltd [1976] Ch 55.

[15] Applications in the second category should be rare, and every attempt should be made to provide such notice as possible — even if it is only a telephone call or text or email — to alert the defendant to what is happening and enable them to participate on a Pickwick basis.

[16] See American Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 (HL).

[17] Klissers Farmhouse Bakeries Ltd v Harvest Bakeries Ltd [1985] NZCA 70; [1985] 2 NZLR 129 (CA) at 142.

[18] National Commercial Bank Jamaica Ltd v Olint Corp Ltd [2009] UKPC 16, [2009] 1 WLR 1405 at [16] and [17].

[19] Cockburn v Kinzie Industries Inc [1988] NZHC 184; (1988) 1 PRNZ 243 (HC).

[20] Trans-Tasman Proceedings Act 2010: see in particular s 13.

[21] High Court Rules, pt 6 sub-pt 4.

[22] These rules do not apply to service of proceedings in Australia if those proceedings can be served under the Trans-Tasman Proceedings Act: see r 6.36.

[23] Rule 5.49(3).

[24] Rule 5.49(5).

[25] Rule 5.49(6).

[26] Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (Nos. 3 and 4) [1990] Ch 65 (CA), see especially at 81; and Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (No. 6) [1990] 1 WLR 1139 (CA), see especially at 1149–1150.

[27] See for example Hunt v BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd [1980] 1 NZLR 104 (SC); Equipment Finance Ltd v C Keeton Ltd (1999) 13 PRNZ 319 (HC); Chief Executive of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment v Swastik Solution Ltd [2015] NZHC 1913; and Otoy New Zealand Ltd v Kozlov [2017] NZHC 1485. Interim relief has also been granted in these circumstances by the Australian courts: see for example PT Bayan Resources TBK v BCBC Singapore Pte Ltd [2014] WASCA 178, (2014) 288 FLR 299; and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Chen [2003] FCA 897, (2003) 201 ALR 40. The position is the same in England: see for example Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (Nos. 3 and 4), above n 26; Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (No. 6), above n 26; Republic of Haiti v Duvalier [1990] 1 QB 202 (CA); Altertext Inc v Advanced Data Communications Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 457 (Ch); Grupo Torras SA v Sheikh Fahad Mohammed Al-Sabah [2014] 2 CLC 636 (CA); and BVC v EWF [2018] EWHC 2674 (QB).

[28] Rimini Ltd v Manning Management and Marketing Pty Ltd, above n 3; Hamilton v Infiniti Capital Andante Ltd, above n 3; and Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd, above n 3.

[29] Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd, above n 3.

[30] Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd, above n 3; and High Court decision, above n 2.

[31] Rimini Ltd v Manning Management and Marketing Pty Ltd, above n 3; and Hamilton v Infiniti Capital Andante Ltd, above n 3.

[32] The term is more apt where the issue is whether a court has jurisdiction to hear a claim of a particular kind: for example, whether a claim falls within the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Employment Court. That usage underscores the confusion that can arise if the term is also used indiscriminately to refer to the quite distinct question of whether or not a particular New Zealand statute applies in a case with cross-border elements. A court may have subject‑matter jurisdiction in this sense — for example, the Employment Court may have (subject‑matter) jurisdiction to hear an employment dispute — even though the substance of the dispute is not governed by New Zealand employment legislation.

[33] Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd, above n 3; and Cockburn v Kinzie Industries Inc, above n 19.

[34] Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd, above n 3.

[35] At 189–190.

[36] At 190.

[37] Rimini Ltd v Manning Management and Marketing Pty Ltd, above n 3.

[38] At [39].

[39] At [39].

[40] At [39].

[41] At [39]–[40].

[42] Hamilton v Infiniti Capital Andante Ltd, above n 3.

[43] At [8].

[44] At [13], citing Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc v Universal Specialties Ltd, above n 3, at 189–190.

[45] At [14].

[46] At [14].

[47] At [14] and [16].

[48] At [16].

[49] Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd, above n 3, at [29].

[50] At [29].

[51] At [32].

[52] At [38].

[53] At [39], citing Cockburn v Kinzie Industries Inc, above n 19.

[54] At [39].

[55] At [39].

[56] At [40].

[57] At [43].

[58] At [60].

[59] As noted at [26] above, the position is the same in relation to freezing orders, search orders, and orders for interim relief in support of foreign proceedings.

[60] Some examples are listed at n 27 above.

[61] Société Générale de Paris v Dreyfus Bros [1885] UKLawRpCh 106; (1885) 29 Ch D 239; and Kuwait Asia Bank EC v National Mutual Life Nominees Ltd [1990] 3 NZLR 513 (PC) at 524.

[62] Abela v Baadarani [2013] UKSC 44, [2013] 1 WLR 2043. Lord Neuberger, Lord Reed and Lord Carnwath agreed with the judgment of Lord Sumption. Lord Clarke also agreed with these observations of Lord Sumption at [45].

[63] As noted above, r 7.81 provides for interim relief to be granted in support of judicial proceedings commenced or to be commenced outside New Zealand, provided certain criteria are met.

[64] National Commercial Bank of Jamaica Ltd v Olint Corp Ltd, above n 18, at [20].

[65] Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (Nos. 3 and 4), above n 26, at 81.

[66] Lord Collins (ed) Dicey, Morris and Collins on the Conflict of Laws (15th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2012) vol 1 at [11-129]; Williams & Glyn’s Bank Plc v Astro Dinamico Compania Naviera SA [1984] 1 WLR 438 (HL) at 443–444; and Air Nauru v Niue Airlines Ltd [1993] 2 NZLR 632 (HC) at 638.

[67] High Court decision, above n 2, at [14].

[68] At [14].

[69] Discovery Geo Corp v STP Energy Pte Ltd, above n 3, at [39].

[70] Lord Collins, above n 66, at [8-051]; Knauf UK GmbH v British Gypsum Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1570, [2002] 1 WLR 907 at [46]–[47]; Cecil v Bayat [2011] EWCA Civ 135, [2011] 1 WLR 3086 at [67]–[70] and [113]; Von Wyl v Engeler [1998] 3 NZLR 416 (CA) at 421; Metropolitan Glass and Glazing Ltd v The Ship “Lydia Oldendorf” (2000) 14 PRNZ 671 (HC); Laurie v Carroll [1958] HCA 4; (1958) 98 CLR 310 (HCA); Myerson v Martin [1979] 1 WLR 1390 (CA); and Mondial Trading Pty Ltd v Interocean Marine Transport Inc (1985) 65 ALR 155 (HCA).

[71] Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters 658 UNTS 163 (signed 15 November 1965, entered into force 10 February 1969). Acceding to this widely ratified Convention would simplify service of New Zealand proceedings in Switzerland and many other European countries, and in a number of countries in the Asia-Pacific region with which New Zealand has significant links including China and Japan.


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