ECJ Rules On Disclosing Cartel Leniency Applications

On 14 June 2011, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) made an important ruling which may force competition authorities to disclose the contents of cartel leniency applications to third parties, and enable domestic courts to order the disclosure by a defendant in a follow on competition damages claim of the information he supplied to the competition authority where the defendant received leniency in the administrative procedure.

The ECJ ruled that EU legislation must not prevent those wishing to bring damages claims against cartel participants from being granted access to leniency documents. The ECJ added that it is for EU Member States' national courts to determine on a case by case basis the conditions under which this access must be permitted or refused by weighing the interests in favour of disclosure of the information against the interests of protecting the information from disclosure.

This ruling means that those wishing to claim damages from a cartel member who applied to an EU competition authority for leniency are now more likely to obtain disclosure of leniency statements. Leniency statements contain companies' "confessions" of prohibited cartel behaviour. This will clearly have practical implications for follow on claims (i.e. claims brought once a competition authority or court has already made a formal decision that particular entities have been a member of a cartel and therefore infringed competition law), and might also impact claims made in the absence of an infringement decision.

This ruling comes as a boost to potential claimants in competition damages claims, most obviously in follow-on claims, which are also the most frequent competition damages claims. This ruling can make the process of the claim easier by enabling disclosure of more evidence of infringement.

Arguably though, the bigger impact of this ruling will be on the competition authorities' future ability to detect cartels. The European Commission and the various competition authorities of the EU Member States had fiercely resisted such disclosure on the basis that cartel leniency programmes offer the best hope of catching cartels. The leniency process is wholly confidential...

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