Competition Commission v Aveng (Africa) Ltd t/a Steeledale and Others (84/CR/Dec09, 08/CR/Feb11) [2011] ZACT 18 (6 April 2011)

80 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Settlement Agreement — Confirmation of settlement agreement between the Competition Commission and Aveng (Africa) Ltd t/a Steeledale regarding alleged contraventions of the Competition Act — The Competition Commission initiated complaints against multiple respondents for engaging in prohibited practices of price fixing and market allocation in the mesh and rebar markets — The Tribunal confirmed the settlement agreement as an order, reflecting the parties' resolution of the alleged contraventions.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These proceedings took the form of an application to the Competition Tribunal for confirmation of a settlement agreement concluded between the Competition Commission of South Africa and Aveng (Africa) Limited trading as Steeledale. The matter was determined by the Competition Tribunal sitting in Pretoria, with the panel comprising N Manoim (Presiding Member), Y Carrim (Tribunal Member), and A Wessels (Tribunal Member). The application was heard and decided on 6 April 2011.


The settlement related to two underlying complaint referrals by the Competition Commission, namely a complaint concerning welded mesh fabric reinforcement products (“mesh”) and a complaint concerning steel reinforcing bars (“rebar”), each involving alleged cartel conduct prohibited by the Competition Act 89 of 1998. The settlement agreement was placed before the Tribunal for confirmation as a Tribunal order in terms of the statutory settlement-confirmation and administrative-penalty provisions relied upon by the parties.


Procedurally, the Commission had initiated and investigated the mesh and rebar complaints, referred them to the Tribunal under separate Tribunal case numbers, and then entered into settlement discussions with Steeledale. The judgment itself is confined to a short order in which the Tribunal confirmed the settlement agreement as an order of the Tribunal, annexing the agreed terms.


2. Material Facts


The material factual basis recorded in the settlement agreement (and relied upon for the confirmation order) began with the initiation of the mesh complaint on 26 January 2009 by the Commissioner under section 49B(1) of the Competition Act. The initiation followed a corporate leniency application by Murray and Roberts Steel (Pty) Ltd filed on behalf of its subsidiary, BRC Mesh Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd. On the information placed before the Commission through that process, the Commission investigated and concluded that, from as early as 2001 to at least 2008, certain firms (including Steeledale) had engaged in price fixing and market division through customer allocation in the mesh market.


On the Commission’s investigation findings as recorded, the mesh conduct included participation in an industry body, the South African Fabric Reinforcing Association (SAFRA), through which suggested or recommended price lists and periodic adjustments were calculated and circulated. In addition to formal SAFRA meetings, the relevant firms also met informally and communicated telephonically to agree on discount levels for customer categories and to coordinate the implementation of price increases. The Commission further recorded the existence of an understanding that certain customers “belonged” to specific competitors, and that pursuit of those customers would be met with retaliation; a customer sheet was prepared identifying customer allocations and which customers were “free game”.


The settlement agreement also recorded the initiation of the rebar complaint on 26 January 2009 under section 49B(1), following a leniency application made on 9 October 2008 by Murray and Roberts Steel on behalf of its subsidiary Reinforcing Steel Contractors (Pty) Ltd. The Commissioner later amended the initiation on 31 January 2011 to include additional rebar suppliers based on further information received during the investigation. The Commission’s investigation led it to conclude that cartel conduct in the rebar market took place in five regions, namely Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, and the Western Cape, and that, although regionally implemented, it formed part of a single overall national conduct with common participants, a similar modus operandi, and the same object of price fixing, customer allocation, and collusive tendering. The Commission recorded that the respondents used an agreed price list for pricing and cover pricing, and an agreed allocation sheet for allocating customers and colluding on tenders.


As to what was disputed, the settlement agreement explicitly recorded that Steeledale did not dispute its contraventions as alleged in the mesh referral affidavit. The agreement then contained express admissions by Steeledale in relation to both markets. In respect of mesh, Steeledale admitted agreements, arrangements, or understandings with competitors involving price fixing and customer allocation. In respect of rebar, Steeledale admitted agreements, arrangements, or understandings involving price fixing, customer allocation, and collusive tendering.


The settlement agreement recorded that Steeledale first approached the Commission to settle the mesh referral after it was referred on 2 December 2009, but that the parties were at that stage unable to agree on an appropriate penalty because the rebar investigation had not been finalised. After the rebar referral in February 2011, Steeledale approached the Commission again with a view to settling both matters, culminating in the signed settlement agreement dated 28 February 2011.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question presented to the Tribunal in this decision was whether the agreed settlement agreement between the Competition Commission and Steeledale should be confirmed as an order of the Tribunal in terms of the Competition Act provisions invoked by the parties, including the statutory provisions enabling settlement confirmation and the imposition of an administrative penalty.


Although the settlement agreement contained extensive factual admissions of prohibited practices under section 4(1)(b)(i), (ii), and (iii) of the Act, the Tribunal order itself did not reflect a contested adjudication on the merits of whether the conduct contravened the Act. Instead, the matter before the Tribunal, as presented, primarily concerned the application of the statutory settlement mechanism to the agreed facts and admissions, together with the formal confirmation of agreed relief (including a penalty and forward-looking undertakings).


Accordingly, the dispute as reflected in the judgment was not framed as a live dispute of fact. It was also not framed as a contested value judgment on liability. It was, rather, an exercise of the Tribunal’s statutory function to make the agreed terms binding as a Tribunal order, on the basis of the parties’ agreement and admissions.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal’s reasons were expressed in a brief form. The order stated that the Tribunal confirmed the order as agreed to and proposed by the Competition Commission and the respondent, annexed and marked “A”. The Tribunal did not set out a detailed analysis of the evidence, nor did it articulate an extended reasoning process in the text provided.


What can be extracted from the judgment, without adding to it, is that the Tribunal acted on the basis that the Commission and Steeledale had concluded a settlement agreement intended to be made an order of the Tribunal under the Competition Act. The Tribunal’s confirmation indicates acceptance of the settlement mechanism invoked by the parties and of the appropriateness of issuing an order in the agreed terms, including the administrative penalty and the agreed undertakings.


The confirmed settlement agreement embodied several distinct elements: formal admissions of contraventions of section 4(1)(b) in both mesh and rebar markets; an agreed administrative penalty calculated as a percentage of turnover; and forward-looking obligations concerning compliance, internal circulation of a summary statement, and cooperation with the Commission’s ongoing prosecution of remaining respondents in the referred matters. The Tribunal’s reasoning, as reflected, consisted of endorsing these agreed terms through confirmation rather than independently re-determining each element in a reasoned merits judgment.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal’s final decision was to confirm the settlement agreement as an order of the Tribunal. The relief confirmed included, in particular, the following consequences as set out in the settlement agreement.


The settlement imposed an administrative penalty of R 128 904 640, stated to represent 8% of Steeledale’s total annual turnover for the 2008 financial year. The settlement further provided that the penalty would be paid into the Commission’s designated bank account and then paid over by the Commission to the National Revenue Fund in accordance with the Act.


The settlement confirmed a structured payment arrangement under which Steeledale would pay the penalty within 24 months of confirmation, in four equal instalments, with the first instalment payable within seven days of confirmation and the subsequent instalments payable at eight-month intervals.


In addition to the penalty, the confirmed order included undertakings by Aveng/Steeledale to circulate a summary of the settlement to its directors and shareholders within 30 days of confirmation, to refrain from engaging in conduct contravening sections 4(1)(b)(i), (ii), and (iii), to take reasonable steps to ensure divisions or subsidiaries do not engage in similar conduct, to continue implementing its compliance programme, and to cooperate with the Commission in prosecuting remaining respondents in the mesh and rebar referrals, including making employees available for consultation and evidence where possible. The settlement also recorded a commitment to cooperate in the Commission’s Construction Fast Track Settlement Process.


No distinct costs order was recorded in the Tribunal’s order as provided.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the text provided.


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998 (as amended), including sections 4(1)(b)(i), 4(1)(b)(ii), 4(1)(b)(iii), 19, 22, 26, 49B(1), 58(1)(a)(iii), 59(1)(a), 59(2), and 59(4).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the text provided.


Held


The Competition Tribunal confirmed, as an order of the Tribunal, the settlement agreement concluded between the Competition Commission and Aveng (Africa) Limited trading as Steeledale. The confirmed order incorporated Steeledale’s admissions of prohibited practices in contravention of section 4(1)(b) in relation to mesh and rebar, imposed an administrative penalty of R 128 904 640 payable in instalments over 24 months, and made binding Steeledale’s undertakings regarding future compliance measures and cooperation with the Commission in ongoing cartel prosecutions.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Tribunal’s order reflected the application of the Competition Act’s mechanism permitting the Competition Tribunal to confirm a settlement agreement between the Competition Commission and a respondent as an order of the Tribunal, thereby making the agreed terms enforceable as a Tribunal order.


The confirmed settlement applied the statutory framework under which administrative penalties may be imposed for prohibited practices, with the penalty quantified by reference to a percentage of the firm’s annual turnover as recorded in the agreement, and with payment directed through the Commission for onward payment to the National Revenue Fund as contemplated by the Act.


The settlement also reflected the principle that cartel conduct falling within section 4(1)(b) includes price fixing, market division through customer allocation, and collusive tendering, and that a respondent may, by agreement with the Commission, bind itself to forward-looking obligations aimed at ensuring compliance and facilitating enforcement against other alleged cartel participants.

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[2011] ZACT 18
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Competition Commission v Aveng (Africa) Ltd t/a Steeledale and Others (84/CR/Dec09, 08/CR/Feb11) [2011] ZACT 18 (6 April 2011)

COMPETITION TRIBUNAL
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No: 84/CR/Dec10
In
the matter between:
The
Competition Commission
…................................................................................................
Applicant
and
Aveng
(Africa) Ltd t/a
Steeledale
............................................................................................
Respondent
Panel: N
Manoim (Presiding Member), Y Carrim (Tribunal Member) and A Wessels
(Tribunal Member)
Heard on:
06 April 2011
Decided
on
:
06 April 2011
ORDER
The
Tribunal hereby confirms the order as agreed to and proposed by the
Competition Commission and the respondent, annexed hereto
marked "A".
M Manoim
Concurring:
Y Carrim and A
Wessels
IN
THE COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH
AFRICA
HELD AT
PRETORIA
In re Application for Confirmation of the Settlement
Agreement:
COMPETITION COMMISSION
…..........................................................................................
Applicant
and
AVENG (AFRICA) LIMITED t/a
STEELEDALE
…...........................................................
Respondent
CC Case
number; 2009JAN4247
CT Case number: 84/CR/Dec09
In the matter between:
THE COMPETITION COMMISSION
….................................................................................
Applicant
and
AVENG (AFRICA) LIMITED trading
as
STEELEDALE
…......................................
First
Respondent
REINFORCING
MESH SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
….............................................
Second
Respondent
VULCANIA
REINFORCING (PTY) LIMITED
…....................................................
Third
Respondent
BRC
MESH REINFORCING (PTY) LIMITED
…...................................................
Fourth
Respondent
CC
Case number: 2009Jan4242
CT
Case number: 08/CR/Feb11
In
the matter between:
COMPETITION
COMMISSION
…..........................................................................
Applicant
and
AVENG (AFRICA) LTD
t/a
STEELEDALE
…...............................................................
1
st
Respondent
REINFORCING
MESH SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
…...................................................
2
nd
Respondent
BEST
FORCE REINFORCING (PTY) LTD
…..............................................................
3
rd
Respondent
APEX
REBAR AND MESH CC
…....................................................................................
4
th
Respondent
DYNAMIC
(PTY) LTD
…..................................................................................................
5
th
Respondent
SILVERTON REINFORCING AND WIRE
PRODUCTS (PTY) LTD
…...................
6
th
Respondent
WJTBANK REINFORCING AND WIRE
PRODUCTS (PTY) LTD
…......................
7"
h
Respondent
KOEDOESPOORT REINFORCING STEEL
(PTY) LTD
…........................................
8
th
Respondent
DOMESTIC REINFORCING STEEL (PTY)
LTD
…....................................................
9
th
Respondent
CIRCLE
REINFORCING (PTY) LTD FOREST WIRE (PTY) LTD
…....................
10
th
Respondent
FOREST WIRE (PTY) LTD
…........................................................................................
11
th
Respondent
REINFORCING AND WIRE PRODUCTS
(PTY) LTD
…..........................................
12
th
Respondent
BARKER
REINFORCING (PTY) LTD
….....................................................................
13
th
Respondent
HULSE
REINFORCING (PTY) LTD
…........................................................................
14
th
Respondent
SIYAZAMA
REINFORCING (PTY) LTD
…................................................................
15
lh
Respondent
ALERT
STEEL (PTY) LTD
…........................................................................................
16
th
Respondent
KOPANONG REINFORCING STEEL
CONTRACTORS (PTY) LTD
…................
17
th
Respondent
MAC-FELL
LADUMA REINFORCING (PTY) LTD
…..............................................
18
th
Respondent
REINFORCING STEEL CONTRACTORS
(PTY) LTD
…........................................
19
th
Respondent
SOUTH AFRICAN REINFORCING CONCRETE
ENGINEERS'
ASSOCIATION
…...................................................................................
20
th
Respondent
SETTLEMENT
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE COMPETITION COMMISSION AND AVENG (AFRICA) LTD
t/a
STEELEDALE
IN RESPECT OF ALLEGED CONTRAVENTIONS OF SECTION
4(1
)(b
)(i),
(ii)
AND
(iii)
OF THE
COMPETITION
ACT NO. 89 OF 1998
AS AMENDED
The
Competition Commission and Aveng (Africa) Limited t/a Steeledaie
hereby agree that application be made to the Competition Tribunal
to
confirm this Settlement Agreement as an order of the Tribunal in
terms of
section 58(1)(a)(iii)
and
59
(1 )(a) of the
Competition Act
No 89 of 1998
, as amended, on the terms set out below.
1.
DEFINITIONS
In this Settlement Agreement, unless the context
indicates otherwise, the following definitions shall apply:
1.1. 'Aveng* means Aveng (Africa) Limited, a company
with various business units and divisions within the Aveng group,
including
Steeledaie, Steeledaie is a business unit of the Aveng
Manufacturing operating group of Aveng.
1.2. 'CLP' means the Corporate Leniency Policy issued
by the Commission in terms of the Act to clarify the Commission's
policy
approach on matters falling within its jurisdiction in terms
of the Act and gazetted in Government Gazette number 31064 of 28 May

2008.
1.3. 'Mesh' means welded mesh fabric reinforcement
products used in some civil engineering structures and which
increases the
tensile strength of concrete.
1.4. 'Mesh complaint' means the Commission's complaint
initiated under CC case number 2009Jan4247 and referred to the
Tribunal
under Tribunal case number 84/CR/Dec09.
1.5. 'Parties* means the Commission and Aveng (Africa)
Limited t/a Steeledaie.
1.6. 'Rebar* means steel reinforcing bars often used to
reinforce concrete structures.
1.7. 'Rebar complaint' means the Commission's complaint
initiated under case CC case number 2009Jan4242 and referred to the
Tribunal
under Tribunal case number 08/CR/Feb11.
1.8. 'Settlement Agreement* means this settlement
agreement duiy signed and concluded between the Commission and
Aveng.
1.9. 'the Act' means the
Competition Act, 89 of 1998
,
as amended.
1.10. 'the Commission' means the Applicant, the
Competition Commission of South Africa, a statutory body established
in terms
of
section 19
of the Act, with its principal place of
business at Building C, the dti Campus, 77 Meintjies Street,
Sunnyside, Pretoria.
1.11. 'the
Commissioner*
means the
Commissioner of the Commission, appointed in terms of
section 22
of
the Act.
1.12. 'the Tribunal' means the
Competition Tribunal of South Africa, a statutory body established
in terms of
section 26
of
the
Act as a Tribunal
of record, with its principal place of business at Building C,
Mulayo Building, dti campus, 77 Mentjies Street,
Sunnyside,
Pretoria.
2.
THE CONDUCT AND
BACKGROUND
MESH REFERRAL
2.1.
On
26 January 2009, the Commissioner initiated the mesh complaint in
terms of
section 49B(1)
of the Act, following an application for
leniency received from Murray and Roberts Steel (Pty) Ltd ("M&R"),
filed
on behalf of its subsidiary, BRC Mesh Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd
("BRC"). In the corporate leniency application, M&R
submitted information which indicated that as early as 2001 to at
least 2008, Reinforcing &. Mesh Solution (Pty) Ltd ("RMS"),

Aveng (Africa) Limited t/a Steeledale ("Steeledale"),
Vulcania Reinforcing ("Vuicania"), and BRC bad engaged
in
the prohibited practices of fixing prices and dividing markets by
allocating customers, in contravention of
sections 4(1)(b)(i)
and
4
<
1
}(b)(») of the Act.
2.2
The
Commission duly conducted an investigation into the mesh complaint,
as a result of which it found that Steeledale, RMS, Vulcania
and BRC
had entered into agreements, arrangements and/or understandings
which contravened
sections 4(1)(b)(i)
and (ii) of the Act. The
Commission found that the respondents were members of an industry
body, the South African Fabric Reinforcing
Association ("SAFRA"),
in which suggested price lists (or recommended price lists) as well
as periodic adjustments
to these price lists, were calculated and
circuiated. In addition to the formai meetings at SAFRA, the
respondents met informally
and had telephonic discussions for
purposes of agreeing on the levels of discounts to be offered to
different categories of customers
in the mesh market. The
respondents also discussed how to handle price increases of
reinforcing mesh, including the date these
increases would be
effected on customers, how much prices would increase by and how to
collectively implement such price increases.
2.3
The
Commission's investigation also revealed that there was a clear
understanding between the respondents that certain customers
in the
mesh market belonged to certain competitors, and that targeting such
customers would result in retaliation against the
offending cartel
member. For this purpose, a customer sheet was prepared by cartel
members identifying which customer belonged
to which competitor, as
welt as which customers were free game' for all to supply.
REBAR COMPLAINT
2.4.
On
26 January 2009, the Commissioner initiated the rebar complaint in
terms of
section 49B(1)
of the Act, following an application made to
the Commission on 09 October 2008 by M&R on behalf of its
subsidiary Reinforcing
Steel Contractors (Pty) Ltd for corporate
leniency in terms of the CLP. On 31 January 2011, on the basis of
additional information
received in the investigation, the
Commissioner
amended the initiation to include certain additional
rebar suppliers, in the corporate leniency application, M&R
Steel provided
information to the Commission indicating that RSC and
its competitors,
inter
alia,
Steeledaie,
Silverton Reinforcing and Wire Products (Pty) Ltd, Reinforcing Mesh
Solutions
(Pty) Ltd, Koedoespoort Reinforcing Steel (Pty) Ltd,
Witbank Reinforcing and Wire Products (Pty) Ltd, Dynamic (Pty) Ltd,
and Bestforce
Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, in the market for the supply,
cutting, bending and sale of rebar may have entered into agreements,
arrangements
or understandings which possibly contravened
sections
4(1
)(b)(i),(ii) and (Hi) of the Act
2.5. The Commission duly conducted an investigation
into the rebar complaint, as a result of which it found that two or
more of
the following firms in various combinations entered into
agreements, arrangements and understandings which contravened
sections 4(1
)(bXi), (ii) and (iii) of the Act: Steeledale, RMS,
Best Force Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Apex Rebar and Mesh CC, Dynamic
(Pty) Ltd,
Siiverton Reinforcing and Wire Products (Pty) Ltd,
Witbank Reinforcing and Wire Products (Pty) Ltd, Koedoespoort
Reinforcing
Steel (Pty) Ltd, Domestic Reinforcing Steel (Pty) Ltd,
Circle Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Forest Wire (Pty) Ltd, Reinforcing and
Wire
Products (Pty) Ltd, Barker Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Hulse
Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Styazama Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Alert Steel
(Pty)
Ltd, Kopanong Reinforcing Steel Contractors (Pty) Ltd,
Mac-Fell Laduma Reinforcing (Pty) Ltd, Reinforcing Contractors (Pty)
Ltd
and the South African Reinforcing Concrete Engineers'
Association.
2.6. The Commission found that the
cartel conduct of the respondents in the rebar complaint took place
in five regions - Gauleng,
KwaZuIu-Natai, Mpumalanga, Limpopo and
Western Cape. The Commission's investigation concluded that although
the aforesaid conduct
took place in five regions, it was part of a
single overall national conduct involving common participants,
similar
modus
operandi
and the
same object of fixing prices, allocating customers, and collusive
tendering. There were discussions, meetings, or contacts
between the
respondents to discuss prices, margins, tenders/projects as well as
customers, in most instances, the respondents
used an agreed price
list to determine prices/cover pricing and an agreed allocation
sheet to allocate customers and collude
on tenders.
3.
SETTLEMENT
DISCUSSIONS
3.1. The Commission referred its findings on the mesh
complaint on 02 December 2009. Immediately thereafter, Steeledale
approached
the Commission with the view of settling the mesh
complaint referral. At the time of this approach, the Commission was
finalising
its investigation of the rebar complaint and it invited
Steeledale to settle both complaints as both cartels involved
Steeledale's
operations.
3.2. Steeledale has not disputed that it has
contravened the provisions of the Act as alleged by the Commission
in its mesh complaint
referral affidavit. However, due to the fact
that the Commission had not finalised its investigation of the rebar
complaint,
Steeledale was not in a position to settle without
knowing what the Commission's findings were in that matter. The
parties were
therefore unable to reach agreement on an appropriate
penalty in respect of the mesh complaint.
3.3. In February 2011, the Commission referred its
findings in the rebar complaint. Shortly thereafter, Steeledale
approached
the Commission with a view to settling both the mesh and
rebar complaints.
4.
ADMISSIONS
Mesh
4.1. Steeledale admits that it entered into agreements,
arrangements and understandings with its competitors in the mesh
market
as detailed in clause 2.2 and 2.3 above in which it:
4.1.1. fixed the price of mesh in contravention of
section 4(1)(bXi)
of the Act; and
4.1.2. divided the market by allocating customers in
contravention of
section 4{1)(b)(ii)
of the Act.
Rebar
4.2.
Steeledale admits
that it entered info agreements, arrangements and understandings
with its competitors in the rebar market as
detailed in 2.5 and 2.6
in which it:
4.2.1. fixed the price of rebar in contravention of
section 4(1)(bX0
of the Act;
4.2.2. divided the market of rebar by allocation
customers in contravention of
section 4(1)(b)(ii)oftheAct
; and
0in;
line-height: 0.27in">
4.2.3 engaged in collusive tendering in respect of
rebar tenders in contravention of
section 4{1Xb)(iii)
of the Act
5.
AGREEMENT
CONCERNING FUTURE CONDUCT
5.1. Aveng agrees and undertakes:
5.1.1. to prepare and circulate a statement summarising
the content of this Settlement Agreement to its directors and
shareholders
within 30 days of the date of confirmation of this
Settlement Agreement as an order of the Tribunal;
5.1.2. refrain from engaging in any conduct in
contravention of
sections 4(1
)(b)(i), (H) and (Hi) of the Act and
to take reasonable steps to make sure that none of its divisions or
subsidiaries is engaged
in similar conduct or any other conduct that
contravenes any of the provisions of chapter 2 of the Act;
5.1.3. commit to continue implementing Aveng Group's
compliance programme designed to ensure that its employees,
management, directors
and/or subsidiaries and divisions do not
engage in any conduct which constitutes a prohibited practice in
terms of the Act.
6.
COOPERATION
6.1. Steeledaie undertakes to cooperate fully with the
Commission in its prosecution of the remaining respondents in the
mesh
and rebar complaint referrals, respectively.
6.2. This cooperation includes, but is not limited to:
6.2.1. providing the Commission with all relevant
evidence available to it that might assist the Commission in its
prosecution
of the remaining respondents in the mesh and rebar
complaint referrals.
6.2.2. ensuring that all Steeledale current employees,
and to the extent possible, former employees, who have knowledge of
the
meetings and discussions between Steeledale and its competitors,
referred to above, are available to and cooperate with the
Commission,
both for purposes of consultation and to give evidence
in proceedings before the Tribunal.
.1
6.3 Aveng further commits to cooperate in the
Commission's Construction Fast Track Settlement Process.
7.
ADMINISTRATIVE
PENALTY
7.1. In accordance with the
provisions of
section 58(1)(a}{m)
as read- with
sections 59(1
)(a)
and 59(2), Steeledale is liable for and has agreed to pay an
administrative penalty ("penalty") in the sum of
R
128 904 640
(one
hundred and twenty
eight
million
nine
hundred and four thousand
six
hundred
and
forty rands only)
which represents
8% of Steeledale's total annual turnover for the 2008 financial
year.
7.2 This payment shall be made into the Commission's
bank account, details of which are as follows:
Name:
Competition
Commission Fee Account
Bank:
ABSA
Bank, Pretoria
Account no,
4050778576
Branch code:
323
345
7.3 The penalty will be paid over by the Commission to
the National Revenue Fund in accordance with the provisions of
section 59(4)
of the Act
8. TERMS OF PAYMENT
8.1.
Steeledale will
make the payment of the penalty referred to in paragraph 7.1 to the
Commission within 24 (twenty-four) months
from the date of
confirmation of this settlement agreement bv the Tribunal, in 4
(four) equal instalments.
8.1.1. The first instalment of R32 228 160 (thirty two
million two hundred and twenty six thousand one hundred and sixty
rands)
shall be payable within seven days from the date of the
confirmation of this settlement agreement by the Tribunal;
8.1.2. The second
instalment of R32 228 160 (thirty two million two hundred and twenty
six thousand one hundred and sixty rands)
shall be payable within
eight (8) months from the date of payment of the first instalment;
8.1.3. The third instalment of R32 226 160 (thirty two
million two hundred and (wenty six thousand one hundred and sixty
rands)
shall be payable within eight (8) months from the date of
payment of the second instalment; and
8.1.4. The-fourth and final instalment of R32 226 160
(thirty two million two hundred and twenty six thousand one hundred
and
sixty rands) shall be payable within eight (8) months from the
date of payment of the third instalment
9.
FULL AND FINAL
SETTLEMENT
9.1. This settlement agreement, upon confirmation
thereof as an order of the Tribunal, concludes all proceedings
between the Commission
and Steeledaie relating to the alieged
contraventions of the Act by Steeledale that are the subject of the
Commission's investigation
and referrals under CC Case Number
2009Jan4247/CT Case Number 84/CR/Dec09 and CC case Number
2009Jan4242/CT case Number 08/CR/Feb11.
Dated
and signed at
Morningside
on this the
28
th
day of February 2011
Financial
Director: Kobus Verster
Aveng Group
duly
authorised
Dated
and signed at
Pretoria
on this the
28
th
day of February 2011
Shan
Ramburuth
Commissioner
Competition
Commission