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The Competition Commission of India (“CCI”) is now an active regulatory body and has passed some historic orders in the last 12 months. While the Competition Act, 2002 (“Act”) is still being tested across industries, the members of the CCI have demonstrated their expertise in this area by writing some very reasoned orders and clarifying some grey areas of the Act. In its order dated November 11, 2012 emerging from information provided by Exclusive Motors Private Limited (“Informant”) with respect to an alleged anti-competitive agreement executed by Automobili Lambhorgini S.P.A (“Opposite Party”), the CCI discussed the internationally recognized doctrine of “Single Economic Entity” and held that for the application of section 3 of the Act, an agreement has to be executed between two unrelated “enterprises.” Brief facts of the case are as follows:
The CCI, while passing its order, emphasized upon the definition of “enterprise” under section 2(h) of the Act, as well as explained its application to section 3 in view of the “Single Economic Entity” principle acknowledged and enforced by competition regulators across the world. It held that to establish a contravention under section 3, an agreement has to be proved between “two or more enterprises.” An internal agreement between entities constituting one enterprise cannot be assessed under the Act. This implied that the Dealership Agreement between the Opposite Party and Volkswagen India was outside the ambit of the Act since both these entities were part of the Volkswagen group. The CCI concluded that for section 3 to trigger, the agreement has to be between two or more unrelated “enterprises.” Further, with respect to the allegation of abuse of dominant position under section 4 of the Act, the CCI held that the Informant could neither prove any dominance under section 19(4) of the Act, or any associated abuse. Accordingly, the case was closed.
While this “Single Economic Entity” principle is not specifically provided for in the Act, it will be interesting to see whether the CCI continues to apply it even for 50- 50 joint ventures where the agreement between one parent and the joint venture entity is in contention. Nevertheless, this order will provide comfort to wholly owned subsidiaries where contracts between them and their parent entity could potentially fall within the ambit of section 3 and cause appreciable adverse effect on competition in India..
Dhruv Suri is a Senior Associate at PSA and heads the firm’s Competition Law team. He is also an active member of the Dispute Resolution, M&A, and TMT team. Dhruv represents clients in a wide spectrum of industry ranging from aviation & aerospace, automotive, biometrics, energy, private equity, IT, telecom, media, fashion and education. He represents clients before the Competition Commission of India and advises them on merger control regulations under the Competition Act. His practice includes analyzing business practices and contractual arrangements of clients to ensure that they do not breach any provision of Indian competition laws.
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