Competition Commission v Afgri Operations Ltd; In re: Competition Commission v Afgri Operations Ltd and Others (43/CR/Jun11) [2011] ZACT 36; [2011] 1 CPLR 93 (CT) (15 June 2011)

80 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Consent Agreement — Confirmation of consent agreement between the Competition Commission and Afgri Operations Limited regarding alleged price fixing — Afgri admitted to participating in the fixing of SAFEX tariffs and using these tariffs to determine non-SAFEX rates — Tribunal confirmed the consent agreement as proposed by the parties, finding that the conduct constituted a contravention of section 4(1)(b)(i) of the Competition Act, 1998.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter was heard by the Competition Tribunal of South Africa as proceedings to confirm a consent agreement concluded between the Competition Commission (the applicant) and Afgri Operations Limited (the respondent). The Tribunal’s decision, delivered on 15 June 2011, took the form of an order confirming the terms agreed to by the Commission and Afgri.


The consent agreement arose within a broader Commission investigation and referral concerning alleged prohibited practices in the grain storage industry, involving multiple silo operators and the Grain Silo Industry (Pty) Ltd (GSI). Although the “in re” portion of the case caption reflected multiple respondents, the Tribunal order in this judgment concerned only the bilateral settlement between the Commission and Afgri.


The procedural history reflected in the consent agreement was that the Commissioner initiated a complaint on 17 March 2009, later expanded on 12 April 2011 following further investigative conclusions. The Commission decided to refer the complaint to the Tribunal, but Afgri resolved its exposure by concluding a consent agreement in terms of section 49D of the Competition Act, with confirmation sought from the Tribunal under the Tribunal’s statutory powers to make the agreement an order of the Tribunal.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned allegations of horizontal price fixing in relation to SAFEX grain storage tariffs, associated conduct affecting non-SAFEX storage rates, and the exchange of detailed cost information among competing grain silo operators through the GSI.


2. Material Facts


The material facts were largely contained in the consent agreement and were presented as the Commission’s investigative conclusions together with Afgri’s admissions.


The Commission’s investigation concluded that the relevant silo operators (including Afgri) were competitors in the market for grain storage services, and that they were also members and/or shareholders of the GSI, which, although a private company, operated as an industry association for members of the grain storage industry. The Commission’s factual account further recorded that SAFEX placed the onus on the GSI to recommend SAFEX tariffs, based on the GSI’s perceived industry knowledge and understanding of storage costs.


The mechanism described was that the GSI’s technical committee, comprising representatives of silo operators, proposed SAFEX tariffs in response to requests from SAFEX. In doing so, the GSI consulted its shareholders, who submitted individual proposals; these proposals were collated and evaluated, after which the technical committee decided on and submitted proposed tariffs to SAFEX on behalf of the GSI and its members. These tariffs were accepted and applied by SAFEX. The Commission’s conclusions characterised the “essence of the conduct” as the joint determination and agreement to SAFEX tariffs by firms in a horizontal relationship (competitors), which the Commission considered to be price fixing.


In addition, the Commission concluded that, in certain instances, the fixed SAFEX tariffs were used by silo operators as, or in order to determine, their non-SAFEX storage rates, in a way described as indirectly collusive because the SAFEX tariffs had been fixed in contravention of the Act. The Commission also concluded that the silo operators exchanged detailed cost information annually by providing it to the GSI, which aggregated the information and provided members with an annual average cost of conducting a grain storage business.


Against this backdrop, Afgri admitted that it participated (as a member of the GSI) in the fixing of SAFEX tariffs as described in the agreement, that it used SAFEX tariffs as or in order to determine its non-SAFEX rates in the manner described, and that it exchanged detailed cost information with other silo operators through the mechanism set out in the agreement. The consent agreement recorded that Afgri no longer engaged in that conduct at the time of settlement, and that non-SAFEX rates determined via the SAFEX-tariff method had been applied by Afgri until approximately November 2008 (wheat), March 2009 (sunflower seed and soy bean), and May 2009 (maize).


The consent agreement further recorded Afgri’s acceptance that a contravention of section 4(1)(b)(i) may lead to an administrative penalty if the Tribunal deems it appropriate, and Afgri’s agreement to pay a penalty of R15 600 000.00, described as 4% of Afgri’s total grain silo storage turnover for the 2009 financial year. The agreement also included forward-looking undertakings that Afgri would cooperate with the Commission in the prosecution of the wider referral, and that Afgri would develop and implement a competition law compliance programme and provide training, with a copy to be submitted to the Commission within 60 business days of confirmation.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question before the Tribunal in this judgment was whether it should confirm the consent agreement concluded between the Competition Commission and Afgri, thereby making its terms an order of the Tribunal.


Within the four corners of the consent agreement, the legal characterisation of the admitted conduct was that it constituted a contravention of section 4(1)(b)(i) of the Competition Act, namely prohibited conduct arising from an agreement between competitors involving price fixing (as framed in the consent agreement). The consent agreement also recorded that the original complaint had been initiated against initial respondents for alleged contraventions of sections 4(1)(b)(i) and 8(a), although the settlement with Afgri proceeded on the basis of the section 4(1)(b)(i) contravention as set out in the agreement.


The dispute as presented to the Tribunal for purposes of this judgment was not a contested adjudication of facts or law. It was primarily the application of statutory settlement and confirmation provisions (as invoked in the consent agreement) to an agreed factual and legal basis, coupled with an agreed administrative penalty and remedial undertakings.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal’s reasoning, as reflected in the judgment, was confined to confirming the agreed order. The Tribunal recorded that it confirmed the order as agreed to and proposed by the Competition Commission and the respondent, annexed to the order and marked “A”.


The Tribunal thus acted consistently with the statutory framework contemplated in the consent agreement, which expressly sought confirmation in terms of the Competition Act provisions governing consent agreements and the Tribunal’s power to confirm settlements. The judgment did not engage in an extended analysis of the underlying contravention, nor did it set out additional evaluative findings beyond the confirmation of the agreement as an order.


To the extent that the outcome entailed an evaluative component, it lay in the Tribunal’s acceptance of the settlement structure presented to it, including the agreed administrative penalty, the timing and mechanics of payment, the cooperation undertakings, and the compliance programme obligations, all of which were incorporated into the confirmed order by reference to the annexure.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal confirmed the consent agreement between the Competition Commission and Afgri Operations Limited, making it an order of the Tribunal.


The confirmed relief included Afgri’s obligation to pay an administrative penalty of R15 600 000.00 within 30 business days of confirmation, to cooperate with the Commission in the prosecution of the referral (including testifying and providing evidence within the agreement’s ambit), to refrain from future conduct that would contravene section 4(1)(b), and to develop, implement, and monitor a competition law compliance programme, with a copy to be submitted to the Commission within 60 business days of confirmation.


No separate costs order was set out in the judgment text provided.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the text of the judgment or the consent agreement as provided.


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998 (as amended), including section 4(1)(b)(i), section 8(a), section 19, section 22, section 26, section 49D, section 58(1)(a)(iii), section 58(1)(b), section 59(1)(a), section 59(2), section 59(3), and section 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 consent agreement concluded between the Competition Commission and Afgri Operations Limited. The confirmed order incorporated Afgri’s admissions in relation to participation (through the GSI) in the fixing of SAFEX tariffs, associated use of SAFEX tariffs to determine non-SAFEX rates in certain instances, and the exchange of detailed cost information through the GSI, as well as the agreed administrative penalty, cooperation obligations in the broader referral, and competition compliance programme undertakings.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the statutory mechanism under the Competition Act for resolving competition law complaints through a consent agreement concluded with the Commission and confirmed by the Tribunal as an enforceable order.


Within the agreed factual and legal basis recorded in the consent agreement (and confirmed by the Tribunal), the matter proceeded on the principle that competitors acting through a common industry body to jointly determine or agree tariffs applicable in the market constitutes conduct falling within the prohibition on price fixing as contemplated in section 4(1)(b)(i) of the Competition Act, and that an administrative penalty may be imposed (and agreed) in accordance with the Act’s provisions governing penalties and Tribunal confirmation.


The confirmed order further reflected the remedial and preventive principle (as embodied in the settlement terms) that a respondent may be required to implement competition law compliance measures, including training and monitoring, and may undertake to cooperate with the Commission in the prosecution of related proceedings arising from the same investigative matrix.

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[2011] ZACT 36
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Competition Commission v Afgri Operations Ltd; In re: Competition Commission v Afgri Operations Ltd and Others (43/CR/Jun11) [2011] ZACT 36; [2011] 1 CPLR 93 (CT) (15 June 2011)

COMPETITION
TRIBUNAL
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No: 43/CR/Jun11
In the matter between:
The Competition Commission
…......................................................................
Applicant
and
Afgri Operations Limited
…...........................................................................
Respondent
Panel
:
N Manoim (Presiding Member), Y Carrim (Tribunal
Member), and A Wessels (Tribunal Member)
Heard on
15
June 2011
Decided on : 15 June 2011
Order
The
Tribunal hereby confirms the order as agreed to and proposed by the
Competition Commission and the respondent, annexed hereto
marked "A".
Presiding
Member
N Manoim
Concurring:
Y Carrim and A
Wessels
IN
THE
COMPETITION
TRIBUNAL
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
HELD
IN
PRETORIA
CT Case No.
43/CR/Jun11
CC Case No. 2009Mar4349
In
the matter between:
THE COMPETITION COMMISSION
….....................................................................
Applicant
and
AFGRI
OPERATIONS LIMITED
…....................................................................
1
st
Respondent
In
re:
THE COMPETITION COMMISSION
….....................................................................
Applicant
and
AFGRI
OPERATIONS LIMITED
…....................................................................
1
st
Respondent
SENWES
LIMITED
….........................................................................................
2
nd
Respondent
NWK
LIMITED
…................................................................................................
3
rd
Respondent
OWK
OPERATIONS LIMITED
…......................................................................
4
th
Respondent
SUIDWES
(PTY) LIMITED
….............................................................................
5
th
Respondent
VRYSTAAT
KOOPERASIE BEPERK
…...........................................................
6
th
Respondent
OVERBERG
AGRI (PTY) LIMITED
…..............................................................
7
th
Respondent
DIE
HUMANSDORPSE KOOPERASIE BEPERK
…........................................
8
th
Respondent
SENTRAAL-SUID
KOOPERASIE BEPERK
….................................................
9
th
Respondent
GWK
LIMITED
…..............................................................................................
10
th
Respondent
KAAP
AGRI BEDRYF LIMITED
….................................................................
11
th
Respondent
MGK
BEDRYFSMAATSKAPPY (PTY) LIMITED
….....................................
12
th
Respondent
TUINROETE
AGRI BEPERK
…......................................................................
13
th
Respondent
MOREESBURGSE
KORINGBOERE (EDMS) BEPERK
…............................
14
th
Respondent
TWK
LANDBOU BEPERK
…...........................................................................
15
th
Respondent
NTK
LIMPOPO AGRIC BEPERK
…................................................................
16
th
Respondent
GRAIN
SILO INDUSTRY (PTY) LIMITED
…................................................
17
th
Respondent
CONSENT
AGREEMENT IN TERMS OF SECTION 49D READ WITH SECTION S8(1)(a)(iii) AND
58(1)(b) OF THE COMPETITION ACT, 1998 (ACT NO. 89
OF 1998), AS
AMENDED, BETWEEN THE COMPETITION COMMISSION ("THE COMMISSION")
AND AFGRI OPERATIONS LIMITED ("AFGRI"),
IN RESPECT OF AN
ALLEGED CONTRAVENTION OF SECTION 4(1
)(b
)(i)
OF THE COMPETITION ACT, 1998 ("THE ACT").
The
commission
and
Afgri
hereby
agree that application be made to the
Tribunal
for
the confirmation of this
Consent
Agreement
in
terms of section 58(1)(a)(iii) read with section the
Act,
on
the terms set out below:
Definitions
For the
purposes of this
Consent
Agreement
the
following definitions shall apply:
1.1. "Act
means
the Competition Act, 1998 (Act No. 89 of 1998), as amended;
1.2.
"Afgri
means
Afgrl Operations Limited, a company incorporated and registered in
accordance with the laws of the Republic of South Africa
with
registration number 1995/005872/06 and with its registered office and
principal place of business at AFGRI Building, 12 Byis
Bridge
Boulevard, Highveld Ext 73, Centurion, Pretoria, Gauteng;
1.3.
'Commission"
means
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 1
st
Floor, Mulayo
Building (Block C), the dti Campus, 77 Meintjies Street, Sunnyside,
Pretoria, Gauteng;
1.4.
"Commissioner

means
the Commissioner of the
Commission,
appointed
in terms of section 22 of the
Act;
1.5.
"Complaint
means
the complaint under case number 2009Mar4349 initiated by the
Commissioner
on
17
March 2009 and expanded by him on 12 April 2011 pertaining
inter
alia
to
allegations of price fixing in terms of section 4(1)(b)(t) of
ihe
Act;
1.6.
"Consent Agreement
means
this agreement duly signed and concluded between the
Commission
and
Afgri;
1.7.
"grain"
means
wheat, maize, sunflower seed, soy bean and all other grain and
oilseed products which
Afgri
stores
in its silos from time to time;
1.8. "GSt
means
the Grain Silo Industry (Pty) Ltd, a company incorporated and
registered in accordance with the laws of the Republic of South

Africa with its registered office and principal place of business at
Lynwood Corporate Park, Alkantrantstraat, Lynwood Manor, Pretoria,

Gauteng:
1.9.
"initial Respondents"
means
Afgri,
Senwes
Limited, Noord-vVes KoSperasie Limited, OVK Operations Limited,
Suldwes (Pty) Limited, Vrystaat Kofiperasie Limited and the
GSI;
1.10.
"non-SAFBX rates"
means
daily
grain
storage
rates charged by Silo Respondents to customers from time to time in
respect of transactions concluded in the physical market
(ie other
than on
SAFEX);
1.11.
"Respondents"
means
the
initial
and
Subsequent
Respondents;
1.12.
"SAFBX' means
the
South African Futures Exchange of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
which was established to provide market participants with
a price
determination mechanism and a price risk management facility through
which they could manage exposure to adverse price
movements in
underlying commodities;
1.13.
"SAFEX tariffs"
means
daily
grain
storage
rates charged by Silo Respondents to customers in a given season in
respect of transactions concluded on
SAFEX;
1.14.
"Silo Respondents"
means
the
Respondents
other
than the
GSI;
1.15.
"Subsequent Respondents"
means
Overberg Agri (Pty) Limited, Die Humansdorpse Kofiperasie Beperk,
Senfraal-Suid KoSperasle Beperk, GWK Limited, Kaap Agri
Bedryf
Limited, MGK Bedryfsmaatskappy (Pty) Limited, Tuinroete Agri Bpk,
Moreesburgse Koringboere (Edms) Beperk, TWK Landbou Beperk,
NTK
Limpopo Agric Beperk and Villiersdorp KoOperasle Limited; and
1.16.
"Tribunal'
means
the Competition Tribunal of South Africa, a statutory body
established in terms of section 26 of the
Act,
with
its principal place of business at 3
rd
Floor, Mulayo
building (Block C), the dti Campus, 77 Meintjies Street, Sunnyside,
Pretoria, Gauteng.
2. The
Complaint
and
its Investigation
2.1. On 17
March 2009 the
Commissioner
initiated
a complaint against the
Initial
Respondents
for
alleged contraventtons^of-s^ptions 4(1)(b)(i) and
8(a) of the Act,
2.2. The
Commission's
investigation
revealed that
SAFEX
tariffs
were
agreed to not only by the
initial
Respondents
but
by ail members and shareholders of the
GSI
2.3. In the
circumstances, on 12 April 2011 the
Commissioner
expanded
the investigation to include the
Subsequent
Respondents,
2.4.
The
Commission
conducted
its investigation and concluded that:
2.4.1. the
Respondents
had
contravened section 4(1)(b)(i) of the
Act
in
that the
Ssb
Respondents,
through
their participation in the
GSf,
had
fixed
SAFEX
tariffs.
The
Sito
Respondents
were
and are all former cooperatives who own
grain
storage
sifos and are competitors in the market for
grain
storage;
2.4.2. in
certain instances
SAFEX
tariffs
were
used by the
Sib
Respondents
as
or in order to determine their
non-SAFEX
rates
in
a manner which amounted indirectly to collusion since such
SAFEX
tariffs
had
been fixed in contravention of the
Act;
2.4.3. the
Silo
Respondents
had
impermissibly exchanged detailed cost information by providing same
to the
GSl
on
an annual basis. The
GSl
had
aggregated the information and provided its members with an annual
average cost of conducting a
grain
storage
business; and
2.4.4. there
had been no other contravention of the
Act
2.5.
In reaching
such conclusions the
Commission
found
that:
2.51.
notwithstanding that they are competitors, the
Silo
Respondents
were
and are shareholders or members of the
GSl.
Although
the
GSl
is
a private company, it operates as an industry association for
members of the
grain
storage
industry;
2.5.2.
SAFEX
placed
the onus for recommending
SAFEX
rates on
the
GSl
on
the basis that it had the necessary knowledge and understanding of
the
grain
storage
industry and the costs involved in providing
grain
storaae
services;
2.5.3.
Afgri
undersiood
that the
GSl
proposed
such tariffs to
SAFEX
because
uniform tariffs were necessary for the proper functioning of
SAFEX,
2.5.4. the
GSl's
technical
committee (the members of which were representatives of the
Silo
Respondents)
was
responsible for proposing
SAFEX
tariffs
on
behalf of the
GSl
and
its members, in response to requests from
SAFEX
for
proposed
SAFEX
tariffs,
the
GSl
consulted
its shareholders. They were requested to and did submit to the
GSl
individual
proposals. These proposals were collated and evaluated by the
GSl's
technical
committee which decided on and submitted to
SAFEX
proposed
SAFEX
tariffs
on
behalf of the
GSL
These
were accepted and applied by
SAFEX;
2.5.5. the
essence of the conduct complained of is that
SAFEX
tariffs
proposed
by the
GSl
were
agreed to by alt of the
Silo
Respondents
in
their capacity as members of the
GSK
Given
that they are competitors in the provision of
grain
storage
services, the joint determination of
SAFEX
tariffs
by
means of the
GSl
amounted
to prohibited price fixing in the form of an agreement between firms
in a horizontal relationship for the direct fixing
of
grain
storage
prices;
2.5.6. the
manner in which
SAFEX
tariffs
were
determined was restrictive of competition;
2.5.7. until
about 2008,
SAFEX
requested
proposed
SAFEX
tariffs
from
the
GSl
on
an annual basis;
2.5.8. in
about 2008, as is set out below, the
GSl
declined
to provide proposed
SAFEX
tariffs
any
longer on account of the
Commission's
contentions
that the
Respondents
were
contravening section 4(1)(b)(l) of the
Act,
2.5.9. in
certain instances
SAFEX
tariffs
were
used by the
Silo
Respondents
as
or In order to determine their
non-SAFEX
rates
in
a manner which amounted indirectiy to collusion since such
SAFEX
tariffs
had
been fixed in contravention of the
Act,
and
2.5.10.
the
Silo
Respondents
had
impermissibly exchanged detailed cost. information by providing same
to the
GS!
on
an annual basis. The
GSI
had
aggregated the information and provided its members with an annual
average cost of conducting a
grain
storage
business.
2.6. The
Commission
took
a decision to refer the
Complaint
to
the
Tribunal,
3.
Statement of
Conduct by
Afgri
3.1.
Having
conducted a detailed factual and legal investigation of the matters
which form the subject matter of the
Compliant,
Afgri
admits that it -
3.1.1.
participated, as a member of the
GSi,
in
the fixing of
SAFEX
tariffs
as
described in paragraphs 2.5.1 to 2.5,8 above;
3.1.2. used
SAFEX
tariffs
as
or in order to determine its
non-SAFEX
rates
as
described in paragraph 2.5.9 above. In this regard it (s admitted
that
non-SAFFX
rates
determined
in this manner were applied by
Afgri
until
-
3.1. 2.1. about November 2008
in respect of wheat; and
3.1.2.2. about March 2009 in
respect of sunflower seed and soy bean;
and
3.1.2.3.
about May
2009 in respect of maize; and
3.1.3.exchanged
detailed cost information with other
Silo
Respondents
as
described in paragraph 2.5.10 above,
3.2.
Afgri
no
longer engages in the conduct referred to in paragraph 3,1 above.
3.3.
Afgri
records
that in determining its current
non-SAFEX
rates
it
has regard
inter
alia
to
current
SAFEX
tariffs
but
understands this to be consistent with the
Act
since
SAFEX
tariffs are
no
longer fixed in contravention of the
Act.
4.
Administrative
Penalty to be Paid by
Afgri
4.1. Having
regard to the provisions of section 58(1)(a)(iii) read with sections
59(1)(a), 59(2) and 59(3) of the
Act
Afgri
accepts
that a contravention of section 4(1)(b)(i) of the
Act
may
lead to the imposition of an administrative penalty where the
Tribunal
deems
it appropriate.
4.2.
Afgri
agrees
to pay an administrative penalty in the amount of R 15 600 000,00
(the
"penalty').
4.3. The
penalty
constitutes
4% (four per cent) of
Afgri's
total
grain
silo
storage turnover for the 2009 financial year.
4.4.
Afgri
will
pay the
penalty
to
the
Commission
within
30 business days of confirmation of this
Consent
Agreement
by
the
Tribunal.
4.5. The
penalty
shall
be paid into the
Commission's
bank
account, details of which are as follows:
Bank
name: Absa Bank
Branch name:
Pretoria
Account
holder:
Competition
Commission Fees Account
Account
number:
4050778576
Account
type:
Current
Account
Branch Code:
323 345
4.6.
The
penalty
will
be paid over by the
Commission
to
the National Revenue Fund in accordance with section 59(4) of the
Act.
5.
Agreement
Concerning Future Conduct of
Afgri
5.1.
Afgri
agrees
to fully cooperate with the
Commission
in
relation to the prosecution of its referral of the
Complaint
(the
"Referral"). Without limiting the generality of the
foregoing,
Afgri
specifically
agrees:
5.1.1. to
testify in the Referral in respect of alleged contraventions of the
Act
falling
within the ambit of this
Consent
Agreement;
and
5.1.2. to
the extent that it has not already done so and that it is in
existence, to provide evidence, written or otherwise, which
is in
its possession or under its control, concerning the alleged
contraventions of the
Act
failing
within the ambit of this
Consent
Agreement.
5.2.
Afgri
agrees
that it will in future refrain from the provision of contractual
undertakings that constitute contraventions of section
4(1 )(b) of
the
Act.
5.3.
Afgri
shall
develop, implement and monitor a competition law compliance
programme incorporating corporate governance (the
"programme")
designed
to ensure that its employees, management and directors do not engage
in future contraventions of Chapter 2 of the
Act
In
particular, after confirmation of this
Consent
Agreement
by
the
Tribunal,
Afgri
shalf:
5.3.1.
formulate and implement the
programme;
5.3.2. as
part of the
programme,
provide
training on relevant competition law compliance to all relevant
persons and/or officials employed by
Afgri;
and
5.3.3.
review (and update where necessary) the
programme
annually
to ensure
Afgri's
continued
compliance with the
Act.
5.4.
Afgri
shall
submit a copy of the
programme
to
the
Commission
within
60
business days of the date of confirmation of this
Consent
Agreement
by
the
Tribunal.
6.
Full and
Final Settlement of
Complaint
against
Afgrl
This
Consent
Agreement,
upon
its confirmation by the
Tribunal,
shall
be in full and final settlement of and conclude all proceedings
between the
Commission
and
Afgri
relating
to any alleged contravention by
Afgri
of
the
Act
that
falls within the ambit of the
Complaint
and/or
is disclosed in this
Consent
Agreement
Dated and
signed at
Centurion
on the 2 day
of
June
2011,
For
Afgri
CEO
For
the Commission
Commissioner
Pretoria
3 June 2011