Competition Commission v Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd (019224) [2014] ZACT 100 (19 August 2014)

75 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Consent Agreement — Confirmation of settlement agreement between the Competition Commission and Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd for contraventions of the Competition Act — Cycad admitted to engaging in collusive tendering practices regarding the Thabazimbi Pipeline Project — Tribunal confirmed the consent agreement as an order under section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act, 1998.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These proceedings were brought in the Competition Tribunal of South Africa as an application to have a settlement agreement (consent agreement) confirmed as an order of the Tribunal in terms of the Competition Act 89 of 1998.


The Competition Commission acted as the applicant and Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd as the respondent. The matter was heard before a panel comprising N Manoim (Presiding Member), M Mokuena (Tribunal Member), and Y Carrim (Tribunal Member).


The procedural history reflected in the judgment and annexure indicates that the Commission initiated a complaint on 1 September 2009 (CC case number 2009Sep4641) following leniency applications under the Commission’s Corporate Leniency Policy. After broader investigations and a public invitation to construction firms to settle alleged contraventions, Cycad—implicated as a non-responding firm—entered into a consent agreement with the Commission. The Tribunal hearing occurred on 13 August 2014, with the last submission and decision on 19 August 2014, when the Tribunal confirmed the settlement as an order.


The general subject-matter concerned alleged collusive tendering in the construction sector, specifically an agreement involving the payment of “loser’s fees” in connection with a pipeline tender, treated as a contravention of section 4(1)(b)(iii) of the Competition Act.


2. Material Facts


The Tribunal’s order confirmed a consent agreement which recorded the factual basis for the settlement. The relevant background, as set out in the consent agreement, was that the Commission initiated a complaint on 1 September 2009 under section 49B(1) into prohibited practices in the construction industry, including alleged price fixing, market allocation, and collusive tendering prohibited by section 4(1)(b).


The Commission’s subsequent investigation, together with numerous leniency applications, led it to believe there was widespread collusion in the construction sector. In response, the Commission published an invitation on its website on 1 February 2011 inviting firms to settle on favourable terms if they disclosed projects involving prescribed and non-prescribed prohibited practices. A number of firms concluded consent agreements which were confirmed by the Tribunal in July 2013. Cycad was among firms implicated by those who responded to the invitation, and later agreed to settle the specific project in which it was implicated.


The specific conduct admitted by Cycad related to the Thabazimbi (Northam) Pipeline Project. On or about February 2008, Cycad reached an agreement with competitors Shearwater Construction (Pty) Ltd and Phambili Pipelines (Pty) Ltd that the winning bidder would pay a loser’s fee to the losing bidders. Cycad was awarded the tender and paid loser’s fees to Shearwater (recorded as R1 143 420) and to Phambili (recorded as R1 140 000) in instalments between 31 August 2008 and 12 December 2008.


The project concerned the construction of a 750 mm diameter cement mortar-lined, fusion bonded medium density polyethylene coated steel pipe, approximately 30.4 kilometres in length, between Padda Junction and Tuschenkomst, required for a water purification system. The client was identified as Pilanesburg Platinum Mine at Northam, and the project was completed in January 2010.


Cycad admitted that it entered into the agreement with its competitors in contravention of section 4(1)(b)(iii) of the Act. The consent agreement further recorded Cycad’s cooperation with the Commission, including disclosure and undertakings to cease the prohibited practice and to cooperate in any further proceedings.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question for the Tribunal, as reflected in the order, was whether the settlement reached between the Commission and Cycad should be confirmed as an order of the Tribunal under section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act, read with the settlement mechanism in section 49D (as referenced in the consent agreement).


The dispute presented to the Tribunal at this stage was not framed as a contested determination of liability on the merits, but rather as an application of law to an agreed set of facts embodied in the consent agreement, together with the statutory question whether the agreement could properly be made an order of the Tribunal. The Tribunal’s function, on the face of the order, was thus directed at the confirmation of settlement terms (including the administrative penalty and behavioural undertakings) under the empowering provisions of the Act.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal’s reasoning, as reflected in the judgment, was concise and limited to the confirmation mechanism. The Tribunal recorded that it confirmed as an order, in terms of section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act, the settlement agreement reached between the Commission and Cycad, annexed to the order.


The legal principle applied was the statutory power of the Tribunal to confirm a settlement agreement as an order of the Tribunal. The order indicates that the Tribunal exercised this power in relation to the parties’ concluded settlement agreement (the consent agreement), thereby converting the agreed terms into an enforceable Tribunal order.


No additional evaluative reasoning on the merits of the prohibited practice allegations is contained in the order itself beyond the fact that the settlement agreement—containing Cycad’s admission of contravention and agreed penalty and undertakings—was confirmed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal confirmed the settlement agreement between the Competition Commission and Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd as an order of the Tribunal in terms of section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act.


As a consequence of the confirmed consent agreement, Cycad became bound to the settlement terms, including payment of an administrative penalty of R3 394 151, recorded as representing 2% of Cycad’s annual turnover for the financial year ended 28 February 2011, payable within 30 days of confirmation. The consent agreement also recorded various behavioural and compliance undertakings, including refraining from future collusive tendering, circulating a summary to employees, and developing and submitting a competition law compliance programme to the Commission within 60 days of confirmation.


The judgment text provided does not record any separate or additional costs order beyond the confirmation of the consent agreement.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the judgment text provided.


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998 (as amended), including sections 4(1)(b)(iii), 19, 22, 26, 49B, 49D, 58(1)(a), 58(1)(a)(iii), 58(1)(b), 59(1)(a), 59(2), 59(3), 59(4), and 67.


Corporate Leniency Policy (Government Notice No. 628 of 23 May 2008, published in Government Gazette No. 31064 of 23 May 2008).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment text provided.


Held


The Competition Tribunal confirmed, as an order under section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act 89 of 1998, the consent agreement concluded between the Competition Commission and Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd concerning collusive tendering (payment of loser’s fees) in contravention of section 4(1)(b)(iii) of the Act, with the agreed administrative penalty and compliance undertakings becoming enforceable as a Tribunal order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Competition Tribunal may, in terms of section 58(1)(a) of the Competition Act 89 of 1998, confirm a settlement agreement concluded between the Competition Commission and a respondent as an order of the Tribunal, thereby rendering the settlement terms enforceable.


A consent agreement concluded under the Competition Act framework (including section 49D, as referenced in the agreement) may validly incorporate an admission of contravention, an agreed administrative penalty determined with reference to the statutory penalty provisions (including section 59), and forward-looking behavioural and compliance undertakings, all of which may be confirmed as part of the Tribunal’s order.

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[2014] ZACT 100
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Competition Commission v Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd (019224) [2014] ZACT 100 (19 August 2014)

COMPETITION
TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No.: 019224
In the matter
between:
THE COMPETITION
COMMISSION
…....................................................................................
Applicant
and
CYCAD PIPELINES
(PTY)
LTD
...............................................................................................
Respondent
Panel: N Manoim
(Presiding Member),
M Mokuena (Tribunal
Member) and
Y Carrim (Tribunal
Member)
Heard on: 13 August
2014
Last submission : 19
August 2014
Decided on : 19
August 2014
Order
The Tribunal Hereby
confirms as an order in terms of section 58(1 )(a) of the Competition
Act, 1998 (Act No.89 of 1998) the settlement
agreement reached
between the Competition Commission and the Respondent, annexed hereto
marked “A”.
Presiding Member
Mr Norman Manoim
Concurring: Ms
Medi Mokuena and Ms Yasmin Carrim
IN
THE COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
(HELD
IN
PRETORIA)
CT CASE NO:
CC CASE NO:
2009Sep4641
In the matter
between:
THE COMPETITION
COMMISSION
...................................................................................
Applicant
and
CYCAD PIPELINES
(PTY)
LTD
.........................................................................................
Respondent
CONSENT AGREEMENT
IN TERMS OF SECTION 49D AS READ WITH SECTIONS 58(1)(a)(iii) and 58(1)
(fa) OF THE
COMPETITION ACT, NO. 89 OF 1998
, AS AMENDED, BETWEEN THE
COMPETITION COMMISSION AND CYCAD PIPELINES (PTY) LTD, IN RESPECT OF
CONTRAVENTIONS OF
SECTION 4(1)(b)(iii)
OF THE
COMPETITION ACT, 1998
The Competition
Commission ("Commission”) and Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Ltd
(“Cycad”) hereby agree that application
be made to the
Competition Tribunal (“Tribunal") for the confirmation of
this Consent Agreement as an order of the Tribunal
in terms of
section 49D
as read with
sections 58(1)(a)(iii)
and
58
(1 )(b) of the
Competition Act no. 89 of 1998
, as amended (“the Act”),
in respect of contraventions of section 4(1 )(b)(iii) of the Act.
1 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 “
CLP

means the Commission's Corporate Leniency Policy (Government Notice
No. 628 of 23 May 2008, published in Government Gazette
No. 31064 of
23 May 2008);
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 Competition Commission, appointed in
terms of section 22 of the Act;
1.5

Complaint”
means
the complaint initiated by the Commissioner of the Competition
Commission in terms of section 49B of the Act undér
case
number 2009Sep4641;
1.6 “
Consent
Agreement
” means this agreement duly signed and concluded
between the Commission and Cycad;
1.7

Cycad”
means
Cycad Pipelines (Pty) Limited, a company duly incorporated under the
laws of the Republic of South Africa with its principal
píace
of business at 159 Van Den Dooi Road, Nuffield, Springs, Gauteng,
South Africa. Cycad Is involved in ail aspects of
pipeline
construction and pipeline refurbishment in the water, gas, fuel and
sewerage/effluent industries;
1.8 “
Invitation

means the Invitation to Firms in the Construction Industry to Engage
in Settlement of Contraventions of the Act, as published
on the
website of the Commission on 1 February 2011;
1.9 “
Loser’s
fee
” means a fee paid by the winner of the tender to
unsuccessful tenderers or losers of the tender as a compensation for
the
costs of tendering;
1.10 “
Non-prescribed
prohibited practices
” refers to prohibited restrictive
horizontal practices relating to the construction industry that are
contemplated in section
4(1 }(b) of the Act and that are on-going or
had not ceased three years before the complaint was initiated, as
contemplated in
section 67 of the Act;
1.11 “
Parties

means the Commission and Cycad;
1.12 “
Phambili
Pipelines
” means Phambifi Pipelines (Pty) Ltd, a wholly
owned subsidiary of Basil Read Holdings Limited (“Basil Read”),

with its principal place of business at the Basil Read Campus, 7
Romeo Street, Hughes, Boksburg, Gauteng, South Africa;
1.13 "
Prescribed
prohibited practices
" refers to prohibited restrictive
horizontal practices relating to the construction industry that are
contemplated in section
4(1 )(b) of the Act and that ceased after 30
November 1998, but more than three years before the complaint was
initiated;
1.14 “
Respondent

means Cycad;
1.15 “
Shearwater
"
means Shearwater Construction (Pty) Ltd, a company incorporated under
the laws of the Republic of South Africa with its principal
place of
business at 30 Activia Road, Activla Park, Germiston, Gauteng.
Shearwater provides the installation of cross country bulk
order
pipelines, primarily for the petrochemical and gas industry and to a
lesser degree, for waste water;
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 BACKGROUND
2.1 On 01 September
2009, following the receipt of applications for immunity in terms of
the CLP, the Commission initiated a complaint
in terms of section
49B(1) of the Act under case number 2009Sep4641 into particular
prohibited practices relating to conduct in
construction projects, by
the firms listed below.
2.2 The complaint
concerned alleged contraventions of section 4(1 )(b) of the Act as
regards price fixing, market allocation and
collusive tendering. The
investigation was initiated against the following firms: Grinaker
LTA, Aveng (Africa) Ltd, Stefanutti
Stocks Holdings Ltd, Group Five
Ltd, Murray & Roberts, Cohcor Ltd, G. Liviero & Son
Building (Pty) Ltd, Giuricich
Coastal Projects (Pty) Ltd, Hochtief
Construction AG, Dura Soletanche-Bachy (Pty) Ltd, Nishimatsu
Construction Co Ltd, Esorfranki
Ltd, VNA Pilings CC, Rodio
Geotechnics (Pty) Ltd, Diabor Ltd, Gauteng Piling (Pty) Ltd,
Fairbrother Geotechnical CC, Geomechanics
CC
3
Wilson Bayiy
Holmes-Ovcon Ltd and other construction firms, including joint
ventures.
2.3 Subsequent to
the initiation of the complaint, the Commission received numerous
applications for leniency under the CLP, which
implicated several
construction firms in collusive practices.
2.4 The Commission’s
investigation of the above complaint, as well as several others in
the construction industry, led the
Commission to believe that there
was widespread collusion in the construction sector in contravention
of section 4(1)(b}(iii) of
the Act. Accordingly, in line with the
purpose of the Act as well as the Commission's functions, thf5
Commission decided to invite
construction firms that were involved in
collusive conduct to apply to engage in settlement on favourable
terms. The Invitation
was launched and published on the Commission’s
website on 1 February 2011. This was also done in the interests of
transparency,
efficiency, adaptability and development of the
construction industry, the provision of competitive prices, as well
as in order
to expedite finalisation of the investigations, under a
fast track process.
2.5 The Invitation
required firms to apply for settlement by disclosing all construction
projects that were the subject of prescribed
and nonprescribed
prohibited practices. The dosing date to apply for settlement in
terms of the Invitation was 15 April 2011.
2.6 The Commission
received settlement applications from 21 firms that disclosed a total
number of 300 projects which were the subject
of collusive conduct.
Of the 300 projects disclosed, 180 projects involved prescribed
prohibited practices and 140 non-prescribed
prohibited practices.
2.7 The 21 firms
that responded to the Invitation implicated 25 firms which did not
respond to the Invitation. Of the: 21 firms,
fifteen concluded
consent agreements with the Commission, which agreements were
confirmed as orders of the Tribunal on 22 and 23
July 2013.
2.8 The Commission
thereafter continued with its investigation of the 25 firms that did
not respond to the Invitation and were implicated
by those that
applied. Cycad is one of the 25 implicated firms. Cycad has agreed to
settle the project it is implicated in.
3 CONDUCT IN
CONTRAVENTION OF THE ACT
The Thabazlmbi
(Northam) Pipeline Project
Cycad reached an
agreement with Shearwater and Phambili Pipelines on or about February
2008 in that they agreed on a loser’s
fee in respect of the
Thabazimbi (Northam) Pipeline project In terms of the agreement,
Cycad, Shearwater and Phambili Pipelines
agreed that the winning
bidder will pay a loser’s fee to the losing bidders.
Cycad was awarded
the tender and paid a loser’s fee in the amount of R1 143 420
to Shearwater and R1 140 000 to Phambili in
instalments between 31
August 2008 and 12 December 2008. This conduct is collusive tendering
in contravention of section 4(1) (b)
(ifi) of the Act
The project was for
the construction of a 750 mm diameter cement mortar-lined, fusion
bonded medium density polyethylene coated,
steel pipe of
approximately 30.4 kilometre in length between Padda Junction and
Tuschenkomst required for water purification system.
The client for the
project was Piianesburg Platinum Mine at Northam. The project was
completed in January 2010.
4 ADMISSEON
Cycad admits that it
entered Into the agreement detailed in paragraph 3 above with its
competitors, Shearwater and PhambilS Pipelines,
in contravention of
section 4(1 )(b) (iii) of the Act.
5 CO-OPERATION
In so far as the
Commission is aware, Cycad:
5.1. has provided
the Commission with truthful and timely disclosure, including
information and documents in its possession or under
its control,
relating to the prohibited practice;
5.2. has provided
full and expeditious co-operation to the Commission concerning the
prohibited practice;
5.3. has provided a
written undertaking that It has immediately ceased to engage in, and
will not in future engage in, any form
of prohibited practice;
5.4. has confirmed
that it has not destroyed, falsified or concealed information,
evidence and documents relating to the prohibited
practice;
5.5. has confirmed
that it has not misrepresented or made a wilful or negligent
misrepresentation concerning the material facts
of any prohibited
practice or otherwise acted dishonestly.
6 FUTURE CONDUCT
Cycad agrees and
undertakes to:
6.1. provide the
Commission with fuli and expeditious co-operation from the time that
this Consent Agreement is concluded until
the subsequent proceedings
in the Competition Tribunal or the Competition Appeal Court are
completed. This includes, but is not
limited to:
6.1.1. to the extent
that it is in existence and has not yet been provided, providing
(further) evidence, written or otherwise,
which is in its possession
or under its control, concerning the contraventions contained in this
Consent Agreement;
6.1.2. availing its
employees and former employees to testify as witnesses for the
Commission in any cases regarding the contraventions
contained in
this Consent Agreement.
6.2 prepare and
circulate a statement summarising the content of this agreement to
its employees, managers and directors within
fourteen (14) days of
the date of confirmation of this Consent Agreement as an order of the
Tribunal;
6.3 refrain from
engaging in collusive tendering in contravention of section 4
(1)(b)(iii) of the Act, and from engaging in any
prohibited practice
in future;
6.4 develop,
implement and monitor a competition law compliance programme as part
of its corporate governance policy, which is designed
to ensure that
its employees, management, directors and agents do not engage in
future contraventions of the Act. In particular,
such compliance
programme should include mechanisms for the identification,
prevention, detection and monitoring of any contravention
of the Act;
6.5. submit a copy
of such compliance programme to the Commission within 60 days of the
date of confirmation of the Consent Agreement
as an order by the
Tribunal; and
6.6 undertake
henceforth to engage in competitive bidding.
7. ADMINISTRATIVE
PENALTY
7.1 Having regard to
the provisions of sections 58(1)(a)(iii) as read with sections 59(1
)(a), 59(2) and 59(3) of the Act, Cycad
agrees that it is liable to
pay an administrative penalty in the sum of R3 394 151 [Three Million
Three Hundred and Ninety Four
Thousand One Hundred and Fifty One
Rand] which penalty represents 2% of Cycad’s annual turnover
for the financial year ended
28 February 2011
7.2. Cycad shall pay
the amount set out above in paragraph 7.1 to the Commission within 30
days from the date of confirmation of
this Consent Agreement as an
order of the Tribunal.
7.3. This payment
shall be made 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:
4[...]
Account type:
Current Account
Branch Code: 323
345
Reference: Case
number 2009Sep4641 & Cycad
7.4. The penalty
will be paid over by the Commission to the National Revenue Fund in
accordance with section 59(4) of the Act.
8. FULL AND FINAL
SETTLEMENT
This agreement is
entered into in full and final settlement of the specific conduct set
out in paragraph 3 of this consent agreement
and, upon confirmation
as an order by the Tribunal, concludes all proceedings between the
Commission and Cycad in respect of this
conduct only.
For Cycad
Pipeline (Pty) Ltd
Dated and signed at
Kemaon Park on the 4 day of July 2014
Name: W. Metburgh
Designation: CEO
For the Commission
Dated and signed at
Pretoria on the 14
th
day of July 2014
Tembinkosi
Bonakele
Commissioner