The Road Haulage Association (RHA) has been given permission by the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) to represent the haulage industry in legal action against truck manufacturers.
The landmark judgment entitles the trade body to proceed with its collective claim on behalf of hauliers seeking damages from the major European truck manufacturers who were found to have operated a price-fixing cartel between 1997 and 2011.
The claim is the first ever opt-in collective proceedings to have been certified by the CAT under the new regime.
The RHA also faced a competing opt-out (alternatively opt-in) application by UK Trucks Claim Limited (UKTC) which was dismissed in its entirety.
The RHA says its application was also contested by all of the truck manufacturers.
The RHA issued its application for a collective proceedings order or CPO in July 2018. However, the hearing to determine whether the CAT would award the CPO was held only in April 2021, following a stay of proceedings until the Supreme Court had delivered judgment providing guidance on the collective proceedings regime in another collective claim.
Based on the CAT’s judgment, the RHA’s action will cover the following claims by businesses of any size engaged in road haulage operations (on a hire and reward or own-account basis) in respect of trucks of 6 tonnes and over registered in the UK:
The CAT, however, has imposed some limits on the scope of the RHA’s collective proceedings owing to concerns over the complexity and/or proportionality of including certain elements proposed by the RHA.
In particular, elements excluded by the Tribunal include:
The RHA claim, which more than 18,000 operators have already joined or are planning to join, is currently valued at over £2 billion.
Once the terms of the collective proceedings order have been confirmed by the CAT, there will be an opportunity for more truck operators to join the claim, including those who have already started individual actions, and the Tribunal agreed with RHA’s assessment that many more firms would likely do so.
Richard Smith, managing director of the RHA, said “The RHA is delighted that the Tribunal has approved its application to represent the UK haulage industry in recovering damages on behalf of operators impacted by the truck cartel.
“There has been a significant amount of work and effort since launching the claim 4 years ago and this judgment represents a huge endorsement of the RHA’s determination to stand up and fight, not only for its members, but the industry as a whole.
“We would also like to thank litigation funder Therium, which since 2017 has provided the funding that allowed affected truck owners to bring this claim through the courts.
“It is my understanding that our claimant group is the largest of its type in Europe and I would encourage anyone who has not yet signed up to do so.”
Representing the RHA, Steven Meyerhoff, director at Backhouse Jones said “This judgment, in which the RHA has succeeded on almost every single point, despite the truck manufacturers’ attempts to derail the action, demonstrates that the Competition Appeal Tribunal’s opt-in regime is very much suited for well thought-out applications on behalf of large and small businesses seeking redress for anti-competitive behaviour.
“The RHA has ticked all of the boxes and we look forward to progressing the claim as quickly as possible in order to obtain redress for those operators who are part of the claim.”
To join the claim and read about the truck cartel legal action click here https://www.truckcartellegalaction.com/
Source: Commercial Fleet News