28th March 2024
“Walker Morris has acted on behalf of the successful energy supplier defendant in the first business energy commission claim to be heard in the High Court. The decision provides welcome High Court authority and clarity on key issues arising on commission claims in the energy sector.”
– Nick McQueen, Partner, Commercial Dispute Resolution
Energy suppliers will be all-too aware of the current trend for claims management companies to encourage customers to pursue energy suppliers with claims that hidden or secret commissions have been paid to brokers/agents/introducers at their expense.
Walker Morris’ energy disputes experts have acted on behalf of the successful energy supplier defendant in Expert Tooling and Automation Limited v ENGIE Power Limited [1] in the first business energy commission claim to be heard in the High Court. This decision provides much needed authority and clarity in respect of key, determinative issues in business energy commission claims.
The landmark judgment should be welcomed by defendants and would-be claimants alike – both for its clear and comprehensive summary of the law in this emergent field, and as a cautionary tale against commencing ill-founded energy commission claims.
Over the past year, Walker Morris Partner Nick McQueen, Commercial Dispute Resolution specialist and energy disputes expert, has acted on behalf of successful energy supplier defendants in county court cases The Dark Blue Pig v ENGIE and Leicester Indoor Bowls and Social Club v Drax, with the support of Laura Singleton, Tayla Boote and Sean Gallagher.
As our earlier briefings explain, those cases have been helpful in establishing the essential elements of a commission claim, and in demonstrating application of the law in the energy sector context.
The team’s successes to date have culminated in the Expert Tooling ruling from the High Court, which is now the leading authority in business energy commission claims.
In Expert Tooling the Judge transferred the claim from the County Court to the High Court in order to give the County Court some authoritative guidance. When denying the Claimant permission to appeal, the High Court Judge described the conflicting County Court judgments as “unfortunate”. This High Court authority should now avoid such unfortunate conflicting judgments going forwards.
The Expert Tooling judgment is important as it authoritatively settles the common law position on business energy commission claims. Key points to note include:
In Expert Tooling, like in The Dark Blue Pig and Leicester Indoor Bowls and Social Club, the scope of the broker’s fiduciary duty to the customer did not extend to disclosing the amount of a commission payment.
In Expert Tooling, there was no evidence of dishonesty, nor of intention to induce a breach of contract.
In Expert Tooling, as will be the case in other energy sector commission claims, the customer knew that commission was payable. The judge opined that, had the claimant asked for detail surrounding the commission, there was “no reason to believe it would not have been told”. The fact that the question was not asked and that the amount of commission ultimately remained undisclosed did “not amount to an intentional concealment of those facts”, and at no other point was there evidence of such an intention.
The High Court’s incisive clarification around the limitation period should provide an early and immediate cut-off for many of the potential claims facing energy suppliers today – especially many of the claims brought in relation to numerous contracts within large portfolios.
This landmark High Court judgment will deliver some much-needed clarity and stability in relation to commission claims litigation – particularly within the energy sector. The case builds on Dark Blue Pig and Leicester Indoor Bowls and Social Club. It may persuade existing claimants to discontinue their claims against energy supplier where there can be no basis to allege dishonesty – especially those based on contracts signed more than 6 years ago, and it may discourage would-be claimants and claims management companies from issuing further ill-founded claims.
Nick McQueen and Walker Morris’ energy sector energy disputes team have unparalleled experience, expertise and success in this area and can bring their unique breadth of knowledge and practical insight to advice provided to their clients. Nick and the team regularly act for businesses facing energy sector commission claims. As well as helping clients to handle and successfully defend an increasing number of claims, they help businesses to carry out health check reviews of existing contracts, operational processes and relationships, thereby helping to ‘future-proof’ against commission claims.
Please contact Nick McQueen or Laura Singleton for further information, training or advice.
[1] [2024] EWHC 374 (Ch)
[2] A ‘fiduciary’ is someone who undertakes to act for or on behalf of another in circumstances which give rise to a relationship of trust and confidence. The distinguishing obligation of a fiduciary is an obligation of loyalty: a fiduciary must not act for its own benefit without the informed consent of its principal. (The principal, in these cases, is the customer/claimant). Even if a person acting as a broker in relation to energy supply contracts is, at law, an ‘agent’, that is not the same as, nor conclusive to, the agent being a fiduciary.
[3] Twinsectra Ltd v Yardley (2002) UKHL 12 and Royal Brunei Airlines Sdn Bhd v Tan (1995) 2 AC 378
[4] Limitation Act 1980