common law, that is to say judge-made case law. During the 18
restraint of trade. Indeed, on the other side of the Atlantic, the common law doctrine
was a source of inspiration of the US Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890. The doctrine
still remains part of UK law.
completed.
But the doctrine is also applicable to other contractually imposed restrictions on
3
-
cartels and
-
solus petrol ties.
Unless such contractual restrictions are reasonable in the interests of the parties and
are not unreasonable in the public interest, they are not enforceable in legal
proceedings. Hence, the period for which and geographical area within which a
restriction operates and the kind of activities to which it applies must all be shown to
be no more than reasonably related to the legitimate business interests of the person
in whose favour the restriction operates or the restriction will be unenforceable by
legal proceedings.
The sole legal sanction provided by the doctrine is the unenforceability of
unreasonable restrictions. The consensual operation of such restrictions by the
parties is not, as such, unlawful either as a crime or as a tort (an unerlaubte
Handlung) so the doctrine provides no legal remedy for third parties who suffer loss
as a result of the operation of restrictions, however unreasonable they may be.
The contractual unenforceability of „covenants
[contractual undertakings] in undue
restraint of trade“ reflects a laisser faire philosophy subject to the provision of a
reasonable degree of protection for the legitimate commercial interests of employers,
buyers of businesses and so on. The absence of positive legal remedies for third
parties injured as a result of the operation of such restraints reflects the
unwillingness of the judiciary to become involved in disputes about the economic
rights and wrongs of restrictions of competition and the related social and political
issues: the training and experience of the judges simply did not equip them to decide
such disputes.
Because of the development in the second half of the 20
th
Century in the United
Kingdom of statute-based competition law, the practical importance of the common
law doctrine is now largely confined to the traditional areas of its primary
application – contracts of employment and the like and contracts for the sale of a
business. However, the doctrine retains an importance, especially for individuals and
4
small firms, precisely because the restrictions of competition to which the doctrine
applies are often of so little overall economic importance that, for that reason, more
modern competition law may often not apply to them.
At the same time, the common law doctrine did not and does not in itself provide an
adequate basis for a modern competition law. In particular: -
-
the doctrine does not apply to abuse of economic power as such; it applies
only to cases where restrictions have been accepted under agreements
between the parties;
-
the application of the common law doctrine depends entirely on the parties
to the relevant agreement invoking it;
-
the only „sanction“ provided by the doctrine is unenforceability of offending
contractual terms.
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