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{
"Date": "3 Nov, 2020",
"Action No.": "CTEA1/2020",
"Neutral Cit.": "[2020] HKCT 10",
"case_title": "COMPETITION COMMISSION V. QUANTR LTD AND ANOTHER",
"page_title": "COMPETITION COMMISSION V. QUANTR LTD AND ANOTHER | [2020] HKCT 10 | HKLII",
"case_history": [
{
"name": "CTEA1/2020",
"link": "https://www.hklii.hk/en/appealhistory/CTEA/2020/1"
}
],
"appeal_history": [],
"case_url": "https://www.hklii.hk/en/cases/hkct/2020/10",
"neutral_cit": "[2020] HKCT 10",
"court_code": "HKCT",
"content": "CTEA1/2020 COMPETITION COMMISSION v. QUANTR LTD AND ANOTHER\nCTEA 1/2020\n[2020] HKCT 10\nIN THE COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF THE\nHONG KONG SPECIAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGION\nCOMPETITION TRIBUNAL ENFORCEMENT ACTION NO 1 OF 2020\n________________________\nBETWEEN\nCOMPETITION COMMISSION\nApplicant\nand\nQUANTR LIMITED\n1\nst\nRespondent\nCHEUNG MAN KIT\n2\nnd\nRespondent\n________________________\nBefore:\nHon Linda Chan J\nDate of Judgment:\n3 November 2020\n________________________\nJ U D G M E N T\n________________________\n1.\nThere is before the Tribunal a joint application\n[1]\nmade by the Applicant, the Competition Commission (“\nCommission\n”), and the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents, Quantr Limited and Cheung Man Kit, pursuant to\nrule 39\nof the\nCompetition Tribunal Rules\n(\nCap 619D\n) (“\nCTR\n”) for the following Order:\n“1. It is declared that the 1\nst\nRespondent has contravened the First Conduct Rule under\ns.6\nof the\nCompetition Ordinance\n(\nCap. 619\n) (the “\nOrdinance\n”).\n2. It is declared that the 2\nnd\nRespondent is a person involved in the 1\nst\nRespondents contravention under s.91 of the Ordinance.\n3. The 1\nst\nRespondent do pay to the Government a pecuniary penalty in the amount of HK$37,702.26.\n4. All further proceedings in this action, in particular, the Applicants claim against:\n(i) The 1\nst\nRespondent for an order under s.94(1) and paragraphs 1(a) and 1(c) of Schedule 3 of the Ordinance as set out in paragraph 59 of the Originating Notice of Application (“\nONA\n”);\n(ii) The 2\nnd\nRespondent for:\n(a) a pecuniary penalty under s.93 of the Ordinance as set out in paragraph 61 of the ONA; and\n(b) a director disqualification order under s.101 of the Ordinance as set out in paragraphs 62 63 of the ONA; and\n(iii) The 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents for an order under s.96(1) of the Ordinance as set out in paragraph 61.2 of the ONA.\nbe stayed upon the terms set out in the Schedule to this Order with liberty to apply as to carrying such terms into effect. For the avoidance of doubt, there be also a liberty to restore the stayed proceedings in the event of any non-compliance of the terms as set out in the Schedule to this Order.\n5. The Respondents do pay the Applicants costs of and incidental to these proceedings on a joint and several liability basis. Such costs are to be taxed if not agreed.”\n2.\nThe Schedule referred to in §4 of the proposed Order is reproduced in\nAppendix 1\nto this Judgment. In short, it sets out (1) the actions required to be taken by the 1\nst\nRespondent to ensure that all its current and future staff will have sufficient knowledge of, and will comply with, the competition law in future; and (2) the obligations of the 2\nnd\nRespondent to guarantee and oversee the 1\nst\nRespondents implementation of the same.\n3.\nThe proceedings were commenced by the Commission against (1) the 1\nst\nRespondent in respect of an alleged contravention of the First Conduct Rule pursuant to\nsection 6\nof the\nCompetition Ordinance\n(\nCap 619\n) (“\nOrdinance\n”); and (2) the 2\nnd\nRespondent in respect of his involvement in the 1\nst\nRespondents contravention under section 91 of the Ordinance.\n4.\nThe background of the proceedings and the factual bases for seeking the proposed Order are stated out in the Statement of Agreed Facts prepared pursuant to rule 39 of CTR and §72 of the Competition Tribunal Practice Direction No 1. The Statement of Agreed Facts, with confidential information replaced by abbreviations, is in\nAppendix 2\nto this Judgment.\n5.\nThe juridical basis and the justifications for adopting the\nCarecraft\nprocedure to dispose of enforcement proceedings commenced by the Commission against respondents who admit liability has been fully considered by Harris J in\nCompetition Commission v Kam Kwong Engineering Company Limited & ors\n[2020] 4 HKLRD 61\n, at §§6-17. For present purposes, the following principles are relevant:\n(1) The justifications for adopting the\nCarecraft\nprocedure, which found its genesis in an application made by the Official Receiver in the UK for an order to disqualify certain persons as directors under the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986, apply equally to proceedings under the Ordinance.\n(2) The Tribunal must be satisfied that it has the power to make the orders proposed and that the orders are appropriate. Once satisfied, the Tribunal should exercise a degree of restraint when scrutinizing the proposed settlement terms, particularly when both parties are legally represented and are able to evaluate the desirability of settlement.\n(3) In deciding whether the agreed order conforms with legal principle, the Tribunal is entitled to treat the consent of the respondent as an admission of all facts necessary to the granting of relief sought against it. The same applies to declarations sought by consent.\n6.\nSection 94(1) of the Ordinance provides that:\n“If the Tribunal is satisfied that a person has contravened, or been involved in a contravention of a competition rule, it may (whether or not it makes make any order under section 93 imposing a pecuniary penalty), either of its own motion or on application made for this purpose, make any order it considers appropriate against that person, including all or any of the orders specified in Schedule 3.”\n7.\nThe range of orders which may be made by the Tribunal, as specified in Schedule 3, include a declaration of contravention, an order restraining conduct that constitutes contravention, an order requiring the disposition of operations, assets or shares of any undertaking, an order declaring an agreement to be void or voidable or requiring the parties to modify or terminate it, and an order requiring any person who has contravened or been involved in the contravention to do or refrain from doing anything specified in the order.\n8.\nAs stated in the Statement of Agreed Facts, the contravention of the First Conduct Rule involved the 1\nst\nRespondent (acting by the 2\nnd\nRespondent) engaged in communications with, and eventually made and given effect to an agreement or engaged in concerted practice with another company (“\nX\n”) whereby they exchanged details of their respective quotations (including price sensitive information) and coordinated their return bids pursuant to a request for quotation exercise undertaken by Ocean Park Corporation (“\nOcean Park\n”) to carry out a workflow automation project through a Nintex software (“\nProject\n”). The agreement and concerted practice between the 1\nst\nRespondent and X had the object of preventing, restricting, or distorting competition in relation to the quotation exercise undertaken by Ocean Park and constituted price fixing, which is one of the “serious anti-competitive conducts” as defined in section 2(1) of the Ordinance.\n9.\nI am satisfied that on the facts as admitted by the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents in the Statement of Agreed Facts, the 1\nst\nRespondent contravened the First Conduct Rule and the 2\nnd\nRespondent was involved in such contravention. It is appropriate to make the declarations sought in §§1-2 of the proposed Order.\n10.\nAs regards §3 of the proposed Order, the power to impose a pecuniary penalty is conferred by section 93(1) of the Ordinance which provides as follows:\n“If the Tribunal is satisfied, on application by the Commission under section 92, that a person has contravened or been involved in a contravention of a competition rule, it may order that person to pay to the Government a pecuniary penalty of any amount it considers appropriate.”\n11.\nThe approach of the Tribunal in determining the amount of penalty has been stated by Godfrey Lam J in\nCompetition Commission v W. Hing Construction Company Limited & ors\n[2020] 2 HKLRD 1229\nat §§46-74. In short, the Tribunal adopts a structured methodological approach which involves 4 main steps:\n(1) Step 1: determining the “Base Amount”. This involves identifying the value of the undertakings sales directly or indirectly related to the contravention within Hong Kong in the financial year in question (“\nValue of Sales\n”) and applies a “Gravity Percentage” of 15% to 30% and multiplied by the number of years of the undertakings participation in the contravention.\n(2) Step 2: making adjustments for aggravating, mitigating and other factors.\n(3) Step 3: applying the statutory cap.\n(4) Step 4: applying cooperation reduction and considering plea of inability to pay, if any.\n12.\nThe proposed pecuniary penalty of HK$37,702.26 is appropriate and proportionate to the contravention by the 1\nst\nRespondent, taking into account the following facts and matters:\n(1) The Value of Sales directly related to the contravention was less than HK$150,000 and the contravention took place within a few months.\n(2) The 1\nst\nRespondent has agreed to undertake steps to ensure genuine compliance with the Ordinance in future.\n(3) The amount of pecuniary penalty is less than 10% of the turnover of the 1\nst\nRespondent in the year of infringement.\n(4) The 1\nst\nRespondent has been cooperative with the Commission and has admitted the facts stated in the Statement of Agreed Facts shortly after the commencement of the proceedings.\n13.\nI am also satisfied that it is appropriate to make an order in terms of §4 of the proposed Order, so as to give effect to the terms of settlement reached between the parties.\n14.\nAs to costs, the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents agreed to pay the costs of the proceedings on a joint and several basis. This is consistent with the usual order disposed of through the\nCarecraft\nprocedure.\n(Linda Chan)\nJudge of the Court of First Instance\nHigh Court\nMinterEllison LLP, solicitors for the applicant\nHumphrey & Associates, solicitors for the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nrespondents\nAppendix 1\nSchedule\nA. Circulation of Commission Materials\n1. The 1\nst\nRespondent shall within 7 working days of this order to circulate by email copies of the following documents published on the Applicant's website\n(\n“\nCommission Materials\n”\n)\nto all current staff and to indicate to such staff that such documents be studied carefully:\n(1) “The\nCompetition Ordinance\nand SMEs” brochure;\n(2) “Combat Market Sharing” brochure;\n(3) “Fighting Bid-rigging” brochure;\n(4) “How to comply with the\nCompetition Ordinance\nPractical Compliance Tools for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises” brochure; and\n(5) “Guideline on the First Conduct Rule”.\n2. In respect of all new staff recruited by the 1\nst\nRespondent within a period of 3 years after the date of the order to be made herein, the 1\nst\nRespondent shall within 7 working days of the commencement date of their employment circulate by email copies of the Commission Materials to such new staff and indicate to such new staff that such documents be studied carefully.\n3. The 1\nst\nRespondent shall provide a copy of the email referred to in paragraph 1 to the Applicant within 14 working days of the order to be made herein, and any emails circulated pursuant to paragraph 2 within 3 working days upon receipt of the Applicant's request for a period of 3 years from the date of the order to be made herein.\nB. Competition compliance policy\n4. The 1\nst\nRespondent shall adopt a competition compliance policy, in the form of a written statement signed by the 1\nst\nRespondents director(s), which shall at least indicate the personal commitment of the 1\nst\nRespondents director(s) to compliance with competition law and that competition law compliance is the responsibility of all staff\n(\n“\nPolicy\n”\n)\n.\n5. The 1\nst\nRespondent shall, prior to the adoption of the Policy, first submit its draft Policy for the Applicants review within 14 working days from the date of the order to be made herein.\n6. Within 7 working days from the date of receiving the Applicants approval, the 1\nst\nRespondent shall adopt the Policy as approved by the Applicant and promulgate the Policy to all current and future staff, and procure that each staff member signs a statement acknowledging their receipt and understanding of the Policy.\n7. For a period of 3 years from the date of the order to be made herein, the 1\nst\nRespondent shall keep a record of the staff acknowledgements referred to in paragraph 6 and provide them for the Applicants inspection within 3 working days upon receipt of the Applicants request from time to time.\nC. Attendance at the Applicants training\n8. The 1st Respondent shall procure all current staff to attend one of the Applicants public seminars or workshops on competition law within 12 months of the order to be made herein.\n9. In respect of all new staff recruited by the 1\nst\nRespondent within a period of 3 years after the date of the order to be made herein, the 1\nst\nRespondent shall procure that they attend one of the Applicants public seminars or workshops on competition law within 12 months from the commencement date of their employment.\n10. For a period of 3 years from the date of the order to be made herein, the 1\nst\nRespondent shall keep proper training records recording each staffs name, the date and venue of the seminar or workshop attended, and provide a copy of the records for the Applicants inspection within 3 working days upon receipt of the Applicant's request from time to time.\nD. The 2\nnd\nRespondents Obligations\n11. The 2\nnd\nRespondent shall guarantee and oversee the 1\nst\nRespondents implementation of the above and, to the extent applicable, shall personally complete the implementation of the above.\n12. The 2\nnd\nRespondent shall ensure the 1\nst\nRespondent is equipped with sufficient funds to enable the latter to meet any of its monetary liabilities set out in the Tribunals orders, including any pecuniary penalty ordered against it.\nAppendix 2\nSTATEMENT OF AGREED FACTS\nINTRODUCTION\n1. On 22 January 2020, the Competition Commission (“\nCommission\n”) issued proceedings pursuant to ss. 92, 94, 96, and 101 of the\nCompetition Ordinance\n,\nCap. 619\n(“\nOrdinance\n”) against the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents, seeking:\n(a) a declaration that the 1\nst\nRespondent has contravened the First Conduct Rule under s.6 of the Ordinance and that the 2\nnd\nRespondent has been involved in the 1\nst\nRespondents contravention under s.91 of the Ordinance;\n(b) a pecuniary penalty against each of the Respondents in respect of their contravention of the First Conduct Rule or involvement in the contravention, and orders requiring them to pay the Commissions costs arising from the investigation and the proceedings;\n(c) an order requiring the 1\nst\nRespondent to undertake certain compliance measures;\n(d) a disqualification order against the 2\nnd\nRespondent; and\n(e) such further and/or other relief as the Competition Tribunal (“\nTribunal\n”) may consider appropriate.\n2. Subject to the approval of the Tribunal, the Commission and the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents agree to dispose of these proceedings by way of the summary procedure as provided for in Rule 39 CTR and §72 CTPD1. The procedure as envisaged by the parties is that sanctioned by the High Court in England and Wales in the case of\nRe Carecraft Construction Co Ltd\n[1994] 1 WLR 172\nand clarified by the English Court of Appeal in\nSecretary of State for Trade and Industry v Rogers\n[1996] 1 WLR 1569\n, and as adopted in Hong Kong for proceedings under\ns.214\nof the\nSecurities and Futures Ordinance\n,\nCap.571\nand\ns.168H\nof the former\nCompanies Ordinance\n,\nCap.32\n.\n3. This Statement of Agreed Facts (“\nStatement\n”) is submitted pursuant to Rule 39 CTR and §72 CTPD1 for the purpose of setting out the factual basis upon which the Tribunal is asked to make the orders sought.\n4. For the purpose of resolving these proceedings summarily, by reference to the facts as set out below, which the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondents admit and accept:\n(a) The Commission contends and the 1\nst\nRespondent admits that it has contravened the First Conduct Rule under s.6 of the Ordinance by having made and given effect to an agreement or engaged in a concerted practice with B Co whereby they exchanged future price sensitive information (“\nInformation Exchange\n”) and/or coordinated their return bids to a request for quotation exercise (“\nBidding Exercise\n”); and\n(b) The Commission contends and the 2\nnd\nRespondent admits that, by his personal involvement in the facts stated in this Statement, he is liable under s.91 of the Ordinance for counseling or procuring the 1\nst\nRespondents contravention, and/or being directly and knowingly concerned in or a party to the contravention.\n5. The facts as set out in this Statement is agreed by the parties and is filed before the Tribunal to support the joint application by the Applicant and the Respondents for an order to be made under Rule 39 CTR (“\nJoint Application\n”).\n6. For the avoidance of doubt, the agreed facts as set out in this Statement shall remain binding on the Respondents regardless of the Tribunals decision on the Joint Application. This includes for all purposes connected with or ancillary to these proceedings including, but not limited to, the prosecution of any proceedings that are stayed against the 1\nst\nand 2\nnd\nRespondent pursuant to the terms of the draft order that was submitted together with the Joint Application on August 2020.\n7. The Applicant shall also be at liberty to disclose this Statement to any third party where it considers proper to do so in the interests of the public.\nAGREED FACTS\nA The Relevant Parties\n8. The Applicant is the Competition Commission established under s.129 of the Ordinance.\n9. The 1\nst\nRespondent was at all material times, and still is:\n(a) a limited liability company incorporated on 25 August 2016 in Hong Kong whose registered office is RM1305, Prosper Commercial Building, No. 9 Yin Chong Street, Mong Kok, Kowloon, Hong Kong; and\n(b) engaged in the business of, among other things, reselling IT software and providing necessary IT solutions to end-users.\n10. The 2\nnd\nRespondent was at all material times, and still is, the sole director and sole shareholder of the 1\nst\nRespondent.\n11. B Co was at all material times, and still is, a limited liability company registered in Hong Kong engaged in the business of, among other things, reselling IT software and providing necessary IT solutions to end-users.\n12. Nintex Pty Limited (“\nNintex\n”) was at all material times, and still is:\n(a) a limited liability company incorporated in Australia; and\n(b) part of a multinational undertaking specializing in the development of workflow automation technologies and supplying relevant software products by the brand name of “Nintex”.\n13. H at all material times represented and acted for Nintex as its “Territory Manager North Asia” based in Hong Kong.\nB The Workflow Automation Project\n14. In or about early 2017, Ocean Park Corporation (“\nOcean Park\n”) planned to carry out a workflow automation project (“\nProject\n”) to replace its existing manual process in preparing IT account application forms. The Project aimed to automate the manual process through software that adopted the Microsoft SharePoint platform. Ocean Park identified a piece of Nintex software (“\nSoftware\n”) as the suitable software for the Project.\n15. H initially introduced T, director of B Co, to Ocean Park for the purpose of providing Ocean Park with an online demonstration of the proposed solution using the Software.\n16. In or around April to May 2017, Ocean Park began the process of procuring the Software and relevant IT services. The Projects estimated budget was HK$250,000.\n17. Since Nintex did not deal directly with end-users in Hong Kong, H recommended to Ocean Park a number of Nintexs local resale partners that offered the Software and relevant IT services (the “\nResellers\n”), including the 1\nst\nRespondent and B Co who were, at all material times, competitors in the market for the resale of IT solutions to end-users in Hong Kong.\nC Invitations for Quotation\n18. On 9 June 2017, Ocean Park, by email, invited the Resellers to submit a quotation for the Project. The emails attached certain documents relating to the specifications for the Project, and requested interested Resellers to return completed versions of the attached Compliance Form and Quotation Form to Ocean Park by 3:30 pm on 15 June 2017.\n19. The Quotation Form requested the Resellers to provide quotations in respect of:\n(a) two mandatory items, being: (1) the license fee for the Software for the first year, and (2) the accompanying development and installation services (titled Workflow Development for IT Services Application) (“\nItem (2)\n”); and\n(b) certain optional items.\nD The Agreement / Concerted Practice\n20. Shortly after Ocean Park sent out the invitations to submit a quotation for the Project, on 9 June 2017, between 18:28 and 21:36, WhatsApp messages were exchanged among H (of Nintex), the 2\nnd\nRespondent, and T (of B Co). The following,\ninter alia\n, were exchanged:\nTable 1: Messages between H (of Nintex) and the 2\nnd\nRespondent\nTime\nMessages from H\n(of Nintex)\nMessages from the 2\nnd\nRespondent\n18:28\nPlease manage the ocean park RFQ immediately\n收到\n[2]\n21:29\nPlease coordinate with T about the ocean park tender. What shall he propose? What shall you propose? Who is going to win it? Of course, he will let you implement if he win the case, etc. Please do talk to him\n21:29/\n\n 21:30\nOk\nhe told me the ocean park ask him to quo lesser man day\n[3]\nif same man day and price, who will win?\nlet me ask him tuesday\n21:31\nPlease ask him today or tomorrow. We need to submit all those proposal and quotation in early next week. Otherwise, insufficient time for ocean park to award the tender and place the order to me\nTable 2: Messages between the 2\nnd\nRespondent and T (of B Co)\nTime\nMessages from the 2\nnd\nRespondent\nMessages from T\n(of\nB Co\n)\n21:31\nH ask me what is the arrangement of ocean park\nu want to get the deal?\ni am ok to anything\nYes, share me your effort estimation and I will check against mine\n21:32\nThen we can discuss the arrangement.\nI quoted x man days and $x each day, so total x\n21:33\nHaha, you quoted more expensive than mine on manday rate\nsmiling face (Emoji)\n21:35\nI only quote $x after they removed the SAP integration part\n21:36\nokok\nTable 3: Messages between H (of Nintex) and the 2\nnd\nRespondent\nTime\nMessages from H\n(of Nintex)\nMessages from the 2\nnd\nRespondent\n21:35\n同T講咗佢應該自己做返\n[4]\nWhat the hell\n[Cheung then sent H a screen capture showing the WhatsApp conversation between T and Cheung as follows:\nCheung: H ask me what is the arrangement of ocean park. u want to get the deal? i am ok to anything.\nT: Yes, share me your effort estimation and I will check against mine. Then we can discuss the arrangement.\nCheung: i quoted x man days and $x each day, so total x\nT: Haha, you quoted more expensive than mine on manday rate. I only quote $x after they removed the SAP integration part.]\n21. With regards to the communications as set out at Tables 1-3 above, H referred to in the above is H, i.e. H; T referred to in the above is T, i.e. T. The figures of $x and $x referred to above relate to Item (2) of the two mandatory items in Ocean Parks Quotation Form, that is, the price for the development and installation of the Nintex software. At this point in time, neither the 1\nst\nRespondent nor B Co had submitted their quotations to Ocean Park.\n22. The 1\nst\nRespondent submitted its quotation to Ocean Park by the deadline of 3:30 pm on 15 June 2017, quoting HK$x for Item (2) on the Quotation Form.\n23. Ocean Park eventually awarded the Project to the 1\nst\nRespondent and issued a purchase order in the amount of HK$x to the 1\nst\nRespondent on 28 June 2017.\n24. The 1\nst\nRespondent completed the Project in about two months time.\nE The Contravention\n25. The communications between the 1\nst\nRespondent (\nvia\nthe 2\nnd\nRespondent) and B Co (\nvia\nT) and the Information Exchange as set out at Table 2 in in §20 above constituted the making and giving effect to an agreement and/or engaging in a concerted practice between the 1\nst\nRespondent and B Co to:\n(a) exchange future price sensitive information in the Bidding Exercise (i.e., the Information Exchange); and/or\n(b) discuss who would win the Bidding Exercise.\n26. The 1\nst\nRespondent acted on the Information Exchange by lowering its quotation for Item (2) from HK$x to HK$x, i.e. the price planned to be submitted by B Co, in the quotation it submitted to Ocean Park following the Information Exchange with B Co.\n27. The said agreement or concerted practice between the 1\nst\nRespondent and B Co had the object of preventing, restricting, or distorting competition in relation to the Bidding Exercise and is one that involves serious anti-competitive conduct (i.e. price-fixing) for the purpose of s.2(1) of the Ordinance.\n28. By his personal involvement as particularized below, the 2\nnd\nRespondent has been involved in a contravention of a competition rule under s.91 of the Ordinance:\n(a) At the material times, the 2\nnd\nRespondent was the sole director and sole shareholder of the 1\nst\nRespondent;\n(b) The 2\nnd\nRespondent, on behalf of the 1\nst\nRespondent, was the individual directly agreeing with Nintex (\nvia\nH) that he would discuss with B Co (\nvia\nT) their respective proposed quotations and coordinate in the Bidding Exercise. The 2\nnd\nRespondent was also the individual that directly initiated the Information Exchange with B Co (\nvia\nT) as set out in Table 2 above;\n(c) The 2\nnd\nRespondent, at all material times, possessed actual knowledge of all the undisputed facts stated above; and\n(d) The 2\nnd\nRespondent acted on the Information Exchange by lowering the 1\nst\nRespondents quotation for Item (2) from HK$x to HK$x, i.e. the price planned to be submitted by B Co, in the quotation it submitted to Ocean Park following the Information Exchange with B Co (\nvia\nT).\nF The 1\nst\nRespondents Financial Information\n29. The following financial information about the 1\nst\nRespondent is relevant to the calculation of the recommended pecuniary penalty, the amount and underlying methodology of which is agreed by the parties:\n(a) Ocean Park paid a total amount of HK$x to the 1\nst\nRespondent for the completion of the Project, including a license fee of HK$x for the Software, and a service fee of HK$x (comprising HK$x for Item (2) and HK$x for an optional item);\n(b) The 1\nst\nRespondents contravention took place during its first financial year starting from 25 August 2016 and ending on 31 December 2017. Based on the method stipulated in\ns.2\n(1) of the\nCompetition (Turnover) Regulation\n,\nCap.619C\n, the 1\nst\nRespondents turnover for the relevant financial year is HK$x, being its total gross revenue of HK$x after deducting taxes of HK$x directly related to the revenues; and\n(c) In the same financial year and other than the Project, the 1\nst\nRespondent did not make any other sales from reselling Nintex workflow automation software or provided related services.\n30. Using the above information, and based on the proper approach for the determination of the pecuniary penalty for an undertaking that has contravened a competition rule as established by the Tribunal in its judgment in\nCompetition Commission v W. Hing Construction Co Ltd & Ors\n[2020] HKCT 1\nand as reflected in the Commissions\nPolicy on Recommended Pecuniary Penalties\n, the Commission recommends, and the 1\nst\nRespondent agrees to jointly apply, that the Tribunal imposes a pecuniary penalty in the amount of HK$37,702.26 on the 1\nst\nRespondent in light of its admission of a contravention of the First Conduct Rule under s.6 of the Ordinance.\n[1]\nBy way of a consent summons dated 11 August 2020\n[2]\nTranslates to\n“Noted.”\nin English.\n[3]\nThe term “man day” is a reference to the number of billable working days which the Reseller is quoting to Ocean Park as its service fee in addition to the Software licence fee.\n[4]\nTranslates to\n“Spoken with T, he should be doing the Project himself.”\nin English.",
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