Evolving Competition Law Jurisprudence In India : Role Of Procedural Justice (Case Comment on BCCI V. CCI & Surinder Singh Barmi)
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Thus, COMPAT in the BCCI order has clarified on several procedural issues
grappling the CCI as well as the competition law litigants in India. To a great
extent, COMPAT's order puts finality on the status of CCI that it performs a
judicial/quasi judicial function. By virtue of this, CCFs orders must also adhere
to the principles of natural justice, which must be complied at every stage of CCI's proceedings including at the time of DG
report or providing an opportunity to the opposite party to rebut the
evidence furnished against it. Similarly, it has been clarified that CCI is
free to deviate from the findings recorded in the DG report as it ought to
neutrally evaluate the case before it. However, if there has been a
deviation from the specific findings of the DG report, e.g. determination
of relevant market which is the core pillar in any competition law claim
of abuse of dominance, the opposite party must be put to notice and to
that extent sufficient opportunity must be given to the parties to rebut
such findings. CCI must also refrain from concluding on contraventions
of the Act based on media reports and data downloaded from the internet
which remain uncorroborated without affidavits and other testimonies.
These further raise the standard of proof for litigants as the Commission
may now be more pro-active in involving technical experts and/or relying
on evidence which is more conclusive. Therefore, COMPAT's order in
the BCCI case has paved a path for competition litigation where
procedural fairness gains paramount importance, equivalent to the
substantive issues of law, economics and policy enumerated in the Act.
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NLUJ Law Review (2016)
