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Irish League of Credit Unions Proceedings

ClosedAbuse of dominance
Case details
  • Close date:7 May 2007
  • Publication date:7 May 2007
  • Relevant legal provision:Section 5/Article 102
  • Status details:Closed
  • Outcome:Judgment
  • Procedure:Civil (Pre 2022 Act)
Documents
Parties Involved
Irish League of Credit Unions
Outline of the Case

Outcome of the court action

In 2007, the Supreme Court overturned an earlier High Court judgment that the Irish League of Credit Unions (ILCU) had abused its dominant position in the market for Savings Protection for Members’ Deposits in Credit Unions (SPS).

The case

In the High Court proceedings, the Competition Authority (the Authority) alleged that the ILCU was dominant in the market for SPS and had abused this dominance by tying its SPS to the purchase of its credit union representation services. The Authority viewed this loss of access to the SPS as a breach of competition law, as it would deny non-ILCU credit unions access to an important facility for protecting individual members’ savings.

In the opinion of the Authority this action restricted competition in the market for credit union representation. In October 2004, the High Court found in favour of the Authority.

The ILCU appealed the judgment to the Supreme Court where the High Court’s decision was overturned. This case was the first time that the Supreme Court had been called on to adjudicate on a substantive issue in Irish competition law.

Relevant provision

Section 5 of the Competition Act 2002

Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union

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