High Court deals Telecom a double whammy
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Telecom takes another hit, may have to pay back millions
By Tom Pullar-Strecker | The Dominion Post | Friday, 9 April, 2010
Telecom may have to pay back millions of dollars it received from rival telecommunications companies, including Vodafone, after receiving a double whammy from the High Court at Wellington.
The court upheld a claim by Vodafone that the Commerce Commission made a mistake when it calculated the reasonable costs Telecom incurred providing phone services to uneconomic customers, by not considering the impact of new technologies on its modelling.
The High Court set aside the commission's calculations of the Telecommunications Services Obligation (TSO) levy in 2004-05 and 2005-06 and ordered the commission to reconsider them. Vodafone said the commission might also have to lower the charges in other years.
Vodafone corporate affairs manager Tom Chignell said it was willing to work with the commission and Telecom to "agree [on] a commercial solution".
In a separate judgment, the High Court threw out an appeal by Telecom, which claimed the commission underestimated the costs Telecom faced providing phone services to uneconomic customers by applying an appropriate return on capital in its calculations that was too low. Had its appeal been successful, the TSO levy could have been raised.
Telecom group general counsel Tristan Gilbertson said it was surprised by both rulings and believed the matters could be looked at again by the Supreme Court. "The judgment in favour of Vodafone appears to be inconsistent with the recent Court of Appeal decision in a related TSO case on efficient past investments."
That case was being appealed to the Supreme Court and Mr Gilbertson said there was merit in having "all TSO matters heard together in the Supreme Court at the same time".
Craigs Investment Partners analyst Geoff Zame said Vodafone had paid Telecom about $100 million under the TSO and would be hoping to claw some of that back.
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