Conclusions
OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
ALBER
delivered on 15 May 2003 (1)
Case C-93/02 P
Biret International SA
v
Council of the European Union
((Appeal – Substances having a hormonal action – Directives 81/602/EEC, 88/146/EEC and 96/22/EC – Action for damages – Direct applicability of the WTO agreements – Legal consequences of recommendations and rulings of the WTO Dispute Settlement Body))
I ─ Introduction
1. The appeal ─ against the judgment dismissing an action for damages ─ turns essentially on the question whether the case-law
of the Court, pursuant to which individuals cannot rely on WTO rules to challenge the legality of acts of Community law, also
applies where those rules are embodied in a specific ruling handed down by the WTO Dispute Settlement Body (hereinafter
DSB)
(2)
. The appellant expressly claims that the judgment should be set aside. As to fact, it alleges that it has suffered damage
as a result of a Community prohibition on the importation of beef, which the DSB has found to be inconsistent with the WTO
agreements.
II ─ Law and facts
2. Reference is made to paragraphs 1 to 17 of the contested judgment
(3)
for an account of the legal framework and the facts. They are recapitulated here in summary form, to avoid repetition.
3. As a result of the adoption of Council Directive 81/602/EEC of 31 July 1981 concerning the prohibition of certain substances
having a hormonal action and of any substances having a thyrostatic action
(4)
and Council Directive 88/146/EEC of 7 March 1988 prohibiting the use in livestock farming of certain substances having a
hormonal action,
(5)
the importation into the Community of meat and meat products treated with certain hormones was prohibited.
4. The appellant, Biret International SA (hereinafter
Biret), was established in 1990 with the object of trading in foodstuffs, including meat. It is a 66% subsidiary of Etablissements
Biret et Cie. SA, appellant in the parallel case, Case C-94/02 P.
5. On 15 April 1994, the Community signed the Final Act concluding the Uruguay Round, the Agreement establishing the World Trade
Organisation (hereinafter
the WTO) and all the agreements and understandings in Annexes 1 to 4 to the Agreement establishing the World Trade Organisation (hereinafter
the WTO agreements). The Council approved the conclusion of those agreements in Decision 94/800/EC of 22 December 1994.
(6)
The agreements, which include the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
(7)
(hereinafter
the SPS Agreement) and the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes
(8)
(the Dispute Settlement Understanding, hereinafter
the DSU),
(9)
entered into force on 1 January 1995.
6. On 29 April 1996, the Council adopted Directive 96/22/EC concerning the prohibition on the use in stockfarming of certain
substances having a hormonal or thyrostatic action and of ß-agonists, and repealing Directives 81/602/EEC, 88/146/EEC and
88/299/EEC.
(10)
It confirmed the prohibition on imports and added another substance to the five already prohibited.
7. In February 1998, the DSB found these Community measures to be inconsistent with the SPS Agreement. The Community had until
13 May 1999 to comply with the DSB's recommendations.
8. On 28 June 2000, Biret brought an action under Article 235 EC in conjunction with the second paragraph of Article 288 EC against
the Council for compensation for the damage it had suffered as a result of the adoption and retention of Directives 81/602,
88/146 and 96/22 prohibiting the importation from the USA into the Community of meat and meat products treated with certain
hormones.
III ─ The judgment of the Court of First Instance
9. In respect of the period before 28 June 1995, the Court of First Instance dismissed the action as inadmissible on the ground
that it was time-barred.
(11)
In respect of the subsequent period, it should be noted that by judgment of 7 December 1995 the Tribunal de commerce (Commercial
Court), Paris, opened judicial liquidation proceedings in respect of Biret and provisionally set the date for cessation of
payments at 28 February 1995. However, according to the Court of First Instance, that did not necessarily imply that Biret
was no longer able to engage in any commercial activities during the period from 28 June 1995 to 7 December 1995.
10. The Court of First Instance dismissed the action for damages on the grounds set out in paragraphs 61 to 72 of the judgment:
61
It is clear from case-law which is now firmly established that in view of their nature and structure the WTO Agreement and
its annexes, in the same way as GATT 1947, do not in principle form part of the rules by which the Court of Justice and the
Court of First Instance review the legality of acts adopted by Community institutions under the first paragraph of Article
173 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, the first paragraph of Article 230 EC), that individuals cannot rely on them before
the courts and that any infringement of them will not give rise to non-contractual liability on the part of the Community
...
62
The purpose of the WTO agreements is to govern relations between States or regional organisations for economic integration
and not to protect individuals. As the Court of Justice stated in
Portugal v
Council [Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council [1999] ECR I-8395], the agreements are still founded on the principle of negotiations with a view to entering into reciprocal
and mutually advantageous arrangements and thus differ from the agreements concluded between the Community and non-member
countries whereby the obligations are not necessarily reciprocal. To have the task of ensuring that Community law is in conformity
with those rules fall directly to the Community judicature would be to deprive the legislative or executive bodies of the
Community of the discretion enjoyed by similar bodies of the Community's trading partners.
63
According to that judgment (
Portugal v
Council, paragraph 49) it is only where the Community intended to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context of the
WTO, or where the Community measure refers expressly to the precise provisions of the WTO agreements, that it is for the Community
judicature to review the legality of the Community measure in question in the light of the WTO rules ...
64
It is clear that the circumstances of this case clearly do not correspond to either of the two hypotheses set out in the preceding
paragraph. Since Directives 81/602 and 88/146 were adopted on 1 January 1995, several years before the entry into force of
the SPS Agreement, it is not logically possible for them either to give rise to a specific obligation entered into under that
agreement or to refer expressly to some of its provisions.
65
In the circumstances, therefore, the applicant cannot rely on an infringement of the SPS Agreement.
66
The decision of the DSB of 13 February 1998 referred to above cannot alter that.
67
There is an inescapable and direct link between the decision and the plea alleging infringement of the SPS Agreement, and
the decision could therefore only be taken into consideration if the Court had found that Agreement to have direct effect
in the context of a plea alleging the invalidity of the directives in question ...
68
The plea alleging infringement of the SPS Agreement must therefore be rejected as unfounded.
69
As the applicant has thus failed to establish that the conduct alleged against the defendant institution is unlawful, the
action must in any event be dismissed as unfounded and it is unnecessary to consider the other conditions for non-contractual
liability on the part of the Community ...
70
In its reply, however, the applicant requests the Court of First Instance, in the alternative, to
develop its case-law in the direction of a system of no-fault liability for the Community in respect of its normative acts. In support of that
request, it relies in particular on the
defence of the rule of law, the autonomous nature of an action for damages, the general principles common to the laws of the Member States and considerations
of natural justice linked to application of the
precautionary principle.
71
That submission, which changes the very basis on which the Community could be held liable, must be regarded as constituting
a new plea in law which cannot be introduced in the course of proceedings, as Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure of the
Court of First Instance provides ...
72
It is clear from all the foregoing that in so far as the action is not inadmissible it is in any event unfounded.
IV ─ The appeal
11. The appeal is based on two pleas: incorrect interpretation of Article 300(7) EC and incorrect interpretation of Article 48
of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance.
A ─
Incorrect interpretation of Article 300(7) EC
1. Effetiveness of Article 300(7) EC
(12)
12. The appellant considers that the contested judgment is mistaken about the effect of Article 300(7) EC. In its view, it is
inconsistent to maintain that the WTO agreements are an integral part of Community law but not to admit them as a criterion
for determining the legality of acts of Community secondary legislation.
13. In the judgment in
NV Nederlandse Spoorwegen, the Court held that since, so far as fulfilment of the commitments provided for by GATT is concerned, the Community has
replaced the Member States, the mandatory effect, in law, of these commitments must be determined by reference to the relevant
provisions in the Community legal system,
(13)
which include Article 300(7) EC.
14. On this principle, the Court has already on several occasions reviewed the legality of acts of Community law in the light
of international agreements but has never found the international measure in question to have direct effect.
(14)
15. Biret also cites Advocate General Saggio's Opinion in
Portugal v
Council, in which he objected that it would reduce the scope of Article 300(7) EC. The application of rules of an international agreement
cannot, he said, depend on prior incorporation of the agreement in the Community legal order by means of a transposing or
enabling act. In any case, internal review of the rules of agreements by the Community institutions and the Member States
cannot fail to offer a stronger guarantee of the fulfilment of the obligations undertaken at international level and is therefore
in keeping with the objectives of the WTO Agreement.
(15)
16. Biret further considers that the Court of First Instance did not pay sufficient attention to the DSB's decision, which clearly
established the illegality of the Community acts. The Court of First Instance ruled that the direct effect of that decision
depended on the direct effect of the SPS Agreement. But this was contrary to the interpretation of Community law, according
to which the Court of Justice had never judged the direct applicability of the provisions of a directive by the direct applicability
of the treaties. The appellant considers that the judgment in
Atlanta,
(16)
cited by the Court of First Instance in this connection, is irrelevant as that case concerned admissibility whereas the present
one turns on a question of substance.
17. Biret claims that Article 300(7) EC should be interpreted as meaning that the obligation of the Community institutions to
comply with an international rule depends only on whether that rule forms an integral part of the Community legal order. That
is undoubtedly so in the case of the WTO agreements.
18. It also claims that the contested judgment does not address the argument that, in acceding to the WTO dispute settlement system,
the Community undertook to recognise the DSB's decisions. In so doing, the Community intended to implement a particular obligation
assumed in the context of the WTO.
2. Recognition of direct effect of WTO agreements
19. Should the Court reject this interpretation of Article 300(7) EC, Biret claims that it should develop the case-law on the
effect of the WTO agreements in the Community legal order. First, it claims that the previous case-law is not convincing.
Thus, in the contested judgment the Court of First Instance relied on the argument repeatedly adduced in the previous case-law
that the Community's legislative and executive bodies have a certain discretion under WTO law, which is based on the reciprocal
nature of the obligations assumed in that context and is consequently inalienable. In the present case, however, Biret considers
that, as a result of the DSB's decision of 28 February 1998, the Community institutions no longer have any discretion in the
matter. On that ground alone, the previous case-law does not apply.
20. Moreover, automatic reliance on the discretion accorded to the legislative and executive bodies would suggest that the WTO
dispute settlement mechanism was more tolerant of persistent infringements than other systems. But that is not the case. On
the contrary, the WTO agreements are much more developed than other comparable international agreements.
21. Also, the WTO agreements are not essentially different from other agreements, which the Court has held to have direct effect.
Biret cites the EEC/Portugal free-trade Agreement and the EEC/Yugoslavia Cooperation Agreement, and the case-law in that connection.
(17)
22. It adds that the fact that the parties are contemplating dispute settlement proceedings does not preclude them from holding
the domestic measures to be inconsistent with WTO law. The Court itself drew attention to this point in its judgment in
Atlanta.
(18)
23. The fact remains, according to the appellant, that a legal rule that forms an integral part of Community law has been infringed.
The Community Courts are therefore required to punish that infringement. Even if damages and other compensation might be payable
under the WTO system in the event of an infringement of the agreements, the fact that under Community law Article 228 EC provides
for payment of a lump sum or penalty payment does not alter the fact that the infringement may persist.
24. An argument for admitting the direct applicability of the WTO agreements is that more and more provisions of the agreements
affect the relations between citizens and the States parties to those agreements. Biret cites, in particular, the provisions
on public contracts, protection of intellectual property and food safety regulations.
25. Biret also considers that it is only right, in common justice, that individuals should be able to rely on certain provisions
of the WTO agreements, since they are liable to retaliation (
penalties) under WTO law.
26. Lastly, Biret raises the question of consistency in Community law. It follows from Article 300(7) EC that the WTO agreements
form an integral part of Community law. The Court has frequently ruled that citizens as well as States are subject to Community
law. Citizens must therefore be able to rely on provisions, such as the WTO agreements, that form an integral part of Community
law.
- B ─
Incorrect interpretation of Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance
(19)
Incorrect interpretation of Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance
(19)
27. Biret considers that the contested judgment was wrong to reject its submission regarding a system of no-fault liability on
the ground that it was out of time. In the first place, the reference to the judgment in
Atlanta was inappropriate because that case concerned responsibility for a lawful act. But the present case concerns liability for
illegal acts of Community law on the ground that the Directives at issue infringe WTO law, which is an integral part of Community
law.
28. Moreover, its claim for damages under Article 235 and the second paragraph of Article 288 EC makes frequent mention of the
possibility of no-fault liability for damage. First, in connection with its argument that the Community's international obligations
are separate from the direct applicability of the rules that gave rise to those obligations.
(20)
Second, in connection with the reference to the general principles of law common to the legal orders of the Member States,
including obligations under international agreements,
(21)
and lastly in connection with the description of the damage suffered by Biret as being specific and unusual.
(22)
According to the case-law, a submission may not be rejected on the ground that it is a new plea in law and therefore out
of time if it merely develops submissions made in the application by invoking a number of arguments some of which were adduced
for the first time in the reply.
(23)
Also, it had simply been replying to the objections raised by the Council in its defence.
V ─ The Council's position
29. The Council observes that, in its view, the Court of First Instance had not ruled on the admissibility of the application
with respect to the period between 28 June and 7 December 1995. Should the Court of Justice uphold the appeal, it would therefore
have to refer the case back to the Court of First Instance for further examination.
30. As regards the interpretation of Article 300(7) EC, the Council cites the Opinion in
Germany v
Council, in which Advocate General Gulmann stated that the Court has consistently stressed that the effects of an international agreement
in the Community legal order must be determined by reference to the nature and objectives of the agreement in question.
(24)
It adds that in the judgment in
Demirel the Court imposed the further condition that the provision in question must contain a clear and precise obligation which
is not subject, in its implementation or effects, to the adoption of any subsequent measure.
(25)
31. It contends that the purpose of the WTO agreements is not to establish rights for individuals but merely to govern relations
between States and regional economic organisations on the basis of negotiations based on the principle of reciprocity. Consequently,
it claims that the Court of First Instance described the SPS Agreement and applied Article 300(7) correctly in the contested
judgment.
32. As regards the effect of the DSB's decision, the Council considers that it was reasonable for the Court of First Instance
to cite the judgment in
Atlanta to show that the existence of such a decision could not affect Biret's right to rely on the SPS Agreement. The statements
in the judgment in
Atlanta were general, even if they were made in the context of determining admissibility.
33. The Council cannot understand how, merely by acceding to the WTO, the Community can be deemed to have intended to implement
certain obligations assumed in that context. The appellant has yet to explain what is meant by that notion, which is completely
contrary to the philosophy of the WTO agreements. Nor does the appellant specify the act by which the Community is supposed
to have intended to implement the DSB's decision.
34. The Council rejects the suggestion that the case-law on the direct applicability of the WTO agreements should be developed
and refers to the previous case-law, confirmed by the judgment in
Omega Air among others.
(26)
The Council also rejects the objection regarding the discretion enjoyed by the legislative and executive bodies. In its view,
the objection is mistaken about the ways in which the SPS Agreement can be implemented. The States parties to that agreement
may be guided either by international standards or by some other scientific assessment of the risks or by the precautionary
principle. The Court of First Instance was therefore quite right to take account of the discretion accorded to the legislative
and executive bodies.
35. As regards the plea concerning the incorrect interpretation of Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure, the Council considers
this to be inadmissible. It relates not to a point of law but to the actual content of the application. In any case, scrutiny
of the application suffices to show that it contains no mention of no-fault liability on the part of the Community.
VI ─ Forms of order sought
36. Biret claims that the Court should:
- ─
set aside the judgment delivered by the Court of First Instance on 11 January 2002 in Case T-174/00,
set aside the judgment delivered by the Court of First Instance on 11 January 2002 in Case T-174/00,
- ─
uphold the form of order sought by it at first instance, and
uphold the form of order sought by it at first instance, and
- ─
order the Council to pay the costs.
order the Council to pay the costs.
37. The Council claims that the Court should:
- ─
dismiss the appeal, and
dismiss the appeal, and
- ─
order the appellant to pay the costs.
order the appellant to pay the costs.
VII ─ Assessment
A ─
Conditions for a claim for damages
38. A claim for damages based on non-contractual liability on the part of the Community presupposes illegal conduct on the part
of the Community, actual damage, and the existence of a causal link between the illegal conduct and the alleged damage.
(27)
The case-law also requires that the measure giving rise to the illegal conduct on the part of the Community must be intended
to protect the injured party.
(28)
39. The present appeal turns primarily on the question whether a rule of law that is intended to confer rights on individuals
has been infringed. Is the infringement of the SPS Agreement committed by the Community legislature in adopting Directives
81/602, 88/146 and 96/22 prohibiting imports, as found in the DSB's recommendations of 13 February 1998, and failing to annul
those measures within the period granted to comply with the DSB's recommendations such as to justify a claim by Biret against
the Community? The Court has not so far been called upon to rule on a claim for damages resulting from failure to comply
with a DSB recommendation within the prescribed period. The facts in
Portugal v
Commission
(29)
did not involve any DSB recommendation or decision. In
Atlanta,
(30)
the appellant referred for the first time in its reply to a DSB decision delivered in the interim. Its plea was consequently
dismissed by the Court on the ground that the submission was out of time.
(31)
In the present case, the question of the effects of DSB recommendations in the Community legal order is expressly raised.
B ─
The illegal conduct of the Council
40. Liability of the Council under the second paragraph of Article 288 EC presupposes illegal conduct. The conduct in this case
consists of adopting Directives 81/602, 88/146 and 96/22 prohibiting the importation of meat treated with hormones and failing
to annul them after the DSB made its recommendations on 13 February 1998. The illegality of the conduct arises from the fact
that the directives in question are inconsistent with the SPS Agreement.
41. According to the DSB's findings, the SPS Agreement is applicable to Directives 81/602 and 88/146. It is true that the agreement
did not enter into force until 1 January 1995 but, according to the DSB, it contains no limitation on its temporal scope.
It therefore also applies to measures that were adopted before it entered into force but were still in force on 1 January
1995.
(32)
The Council's contention during the hearing that a claim for damages in respect of measures adopted during the 1980s is inadmissible
because the SPS Agreement did not enter into force until 1995 must therefore be dismissed.
42. International agreements concluded by the Community take precedence over secondary legislation.
(33)
The Community concluded the WTO agreements and approved them by Council Decision 94/800. The SPS Agreement therefore takes
precedence over the relevant provisions of the Directives in question. The infringement of WTO law was confirmed by the DSB
on 13 February 1998.
43. Liability in respect of failure to act falls to be considered only where there is a legal obligation to act. In this case,
the legal obligation to act arises from the duty to bring Community law into line with the obligations arising from the SPS
Agreement, as provided in the DSB recommendations of 13 February 1998. The Community was granted a period of 15 months for
that purpose, which expired on 13 May 1999.
44. Although this evidence suggests that the Council's conduct was illegal, the Court of First Instance in the contested judgment
rejected Biret's claim for damages. This decision was based on settled case-law to the effect that, having regard to their
nature and structure, the WTO Agreement and the agreements and understandings annexed to it, including the SPS Agreement,
are not in principle among the rules in the light of which the Court is to review the legality of measures adopted by the
Community institutions.
(34)
However, where the Community intended to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context of the WTO, or where the
Community measure refers expressly to the precise provisions of the agreements and understandings contained in the annexes
to the WTO Agreement, it is for the Court to review the legality of the Community measure in question in the light of the
WTO rules.
(35)
45. The appellant contends that the case-law cited is mistaken about the effect of Article 300(7) EC. It also considers that the
DSB's decision establishes the conditions for the first exception recognised by the Court to the principle that WTO rules
are not directly applicable. In the alternative, it suggests that the case-law should be developed.
46. Biret's claim for damages presupposes that it can rely on provisions of WTO law. In that case, the provisions would have to
be directly applicable and be intended to protect individuals.
1. The direct applicability of WTO law
a) Incorrect interpretation of Article 300(7) EC
47. The appellant alleges that there is a contradiction between the assertion that the WTO agreements form part of Community law
and the contention that individuals cannot rely on them to challenge the legality in Community law of acts of secondary legislation
that are contrary to WTO law.
48. It must first be pointed out that the Court holds that international agreements concluded by the Community form
part of Community law.
(36)
Contrary to Biret's view, it is unnecessary to decide whether the relationship between Community law and international law
is to be understood in a monist sense. On the contrary, the mere fact that international treaty law is classified as Community
law is sufficient to establish the Court's jurisdiction to interpret and apply the provisions of international agreements.
(37)
49. A distinction must however be made between the question whether a provision forms part of Community law and the question whether
individuals may challenge an infringement of that provision. The possibility of bringing an action for infringement depends
on two conditions. As to formal scope, the action must be admissible and as to material scope, the provision at issue must
be directly applicable.
50. In the case of many Treaty provisions, individuals or institutions may not challenge possible infringements by the Community
legislature. Under the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC, a natural or legal person may institute proceedings only if the
contested act is of direct and individual concern to it. An individual cannot, for example, bring an action in the abstract
for infringement of the limits set in a provision defining powers such as Article 95 EC, even though that provision is part
of Community law. Until the Treaty of Nice entered into force, even an action for annulment brought by the European Parliament
was admissible only if the purpose of the action was to protect its prerogatives and not
merely to challenge an infringement of a Treaty provision; see the third paragraph of Article 230 EC in the version contained in
the Treaty of Amsterdam. The Parliament could not, for example, bring an action for annulment on the ground that an act of
the Commission or of the Council was in breach of the prohibition on discrimination contained in Article 12 EC, although that
provision undoubtedly forms part of Community law.
51. In addition to this requirement as to admissibility, there is a further requirement as to material scope: the provision on
which an individual relies must be directly applicable. The Court has recognised that some provisions of the EC Treaty are
directly applicable. For example Articles 25,
(38)
49,
(39)
90
(40)
and 141
(41)
EC. But many others are not, for example Article 293
(42)
EC. All these provisions indubitably form part of Community primary law. Nevertheless, natural or legal persons may bring
an action for infringement of those provisions only in the context of questions raised in an incidental manner under Article
241 EC.
52. It is clear from these rulings that the question whether or not WTO law forms part of Community law has no bearing on the
question whether individuals may challenge an infringement of that law. It follows that the case-law on WTO law and the fact
that individuals may not rely on it to challenge acts of Community secondary legislation is based not on a mistake as to the
effects of Article 300(7) EC but on the system of rules on the admissibility and validity of actions against acts of secondary
legislation of the Community institutions. The appellant's first plea must accordingly be rejected.
b) Exceptions
53. Biret also claims, that in acceding to the WTO dispute settlement system, the Community undertook to recognise the DSB's decisions.
The present case consequently concerns the implementation of a particular obligation assumed in the context of the WTO.
54. The Court has admitted two exceptions to the rule that WTO agreements are not directly applicable. The Court may review the
legality of Community measures in the light of the WTO rules where the Community intended to implement a particular obligation
assumed in the context of the WTO or where the Community measure refers expressly to the precise provisions of the WTO agreements.
(43)
55. As far as I know, the Court has so far allowed an individual to rely on provisions of GATT or WTO law to challenge the legality
of Community acts in only three cases.
56.
In
Fediol, the issue was the legality of a decision rejecting Fediol's application under Article 3 of Regulation (EEC) No 2641/84
(44)
for the adoption of appropriate commercial policy measures to deal with illicit commercial practices on the part of Argentina
(charges on exports of soya products and quantitative restrictions on the exportation of soya beans). Fediol claimed that
these practices were contrary to Articles III, XI, XX and XXIII of GATT.
57. The Commission maintained that the application was inadmissible on the ground that the GATT rules are not sufficiently precise
to give rise to such rights on the part of individuals. The Court did not agree with that view. The Court has certainly held,
on several occasions, that various GATT provisions were not capable of conferring on citizens of the Community rights which
they can invoke before the courts. Nevertheless, it cannot be inferred from those judgments that citizens may not, in proceedings
before the Court, rely on the provisions of GATT in order to obtain a ruling on whether conduct criticised in a complaint
lodged under Article 3 of Regulation No 2641/84 constitutes an illicit commercial practice within the meaning of that regulation.
The GATT provisions form part of the rules of international law to which Article 2(1) of that regulation refers, as is borne
out by the second and fourth recitals in its preamble, read together.
(45)
It follows, according to the Court, that, since Regulation No 2641/84 entitles the economic agents concerned to rely on the
GATT provisions in the complaint which they lodge with the Commission in order to establish the illicit nature of the commercial
practices which they consider to have harmed them, those same economic agents are entitled to request the Court to exercise
its powers of review over the legality of the Commission's decision applying those provisions.
(46)
58. The Court's ruling was based on the authorisation contained in Article 3(1) of Regulation No 2641/84, according to which
any natural or legal person, or any association not having legal personality, acting on behalf of a Community industry which
considers that it has suffered injury as a result of illicit commercial practices, may lodge a written complaint. Illicit commercial practices for the purposes of that provision are defined in Article 2(1) of the regulation as
any international trade practices ... which are incompatible with
international law or with the generally accepted rules (my emphasis). That judgment is consequently an example of the second type of exception (express reference to the precise
provisions of the WTO agreements).
59. An example of the first type of exception (intention to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context of the WTO)
is afforded by the judgment in
Nakajima.
(47)
In that case, the issue was the legality of a regulation imposing an anti-dumping duty. The proceeding was initiated at the
request of the Committee of European Printer Manufacturers (Europrint) on the basis of Regulation (EEC) No 2176/84.
(48)
Nakajima claimed inter alia that Regulation (EEC) No 2423/88,
(49)
which replaced the contested regulation, was at variance with a number of the provisions in the GATT Anti-Dumping Code. The
Council considered that claim to be inadmissible because, as is the case with the General Agreement, the Anti-Dumping Code
does not confer on individuals rights which may be relied on before the Court, its provisions being not directly applicable.
(50)
60. The Court rejected that view. It pointed out, first, that Nakajima was not relying on the direct effect of the provisions
of the GATT Anti-Dumping Code. It was in fact questioning, in an incidental manner under Article 241 EC, the applicability
of Regulation No 2423/88. Citing the judgment in
Kupferberg,
(51)
the Court added that Regulation No 2423/88 had been adopted in order to comply with the international obligations of the
Community under the General Agreement and the Anti-Dumping Code. It was therefore incumbent on the Community to ensure compliance
with the obligations arising from such agreements.
(52)
61. Again in connection with an action for the annulment of a regulation imposing definitive anti-dumping duties, the Court held
in Case C-76/00 P
Petrotub and Republica v
Council that the purpose of Regulation No 384/96 as amended by Regulation No 2331/96 is to transpose into Community law as far as
possible the new and detailed rules contained in the WTO Anti-Dumping Code. It followed that the Community adopted those regulations
and in particular Article 2(11) in order to satisfy its obligations arising from the Anti-Dumping Code and in particular from
Article 2.4.2 of that code. It was therefore for the Court to review the legality of the contested regulation imposing anti-dumping
duties in the light of Article 2.4.2 of the Anti-Dumping Code.
(53)
This too is an example of the first type of exception (intention to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context
of the WTO).
62. The question is whether in the present case there was an intention to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context
of the WTO or an express reference to the precise provisions of the WTO agreements.
63. The Court of First Instance considered that the present case did not constitute an exception. It held that, since Directives
81/602 and 88/146 were adopted several years before the entry into force of the SPS Agreement on 1 January 1995, it is not
logically possible for them either to give rise to a specific obligation entered into under that agreement or to refer expressly
to some of its provisions.
(54)
64. The Court of First Instance also found in the contested judgment, with reference to the judgment in
Atlanta,
(55)
that the decision of the DSB of 13 February 1998 did not mean that Biret could rely on an infringement of the SPS Agreement.
It held that there is an inescapable and direct link between the decision and the plea alleging infringement of the SPS Agreement,
and the decision could therefore only be taken into consideration if the Court had found that agreement to have direct effect
in the context of a plea alleging the invalidity of the directives in question.
(56)
65. The point about the respective dates on which Directives 81/602 and 88/146 and the SPS Agreement were adopted must be accepted.
The Court of First Instance held that Directive 96/22 had no bearing on the case as, in its view, a claim for damages could
in any case only be considered for the period prior to 7 December 1995.
66. However, the question arises whether the legal assessment of the DSB decision will stand re-examination. The Court of First
Instance pointed out in paragraph 14 of the contested judgment that the Community had informed the WTO that it intended to
comply with its WTO obligations but that it needed a reasonable time to do so. It was then granted a period of 15 months,
expiring on 13 May 1999, to comply with its obligations under the SPS Agreement.
67. It remains to be seen how far that statement by the Community, in this instance the Commission, can be regarded as a Community
measure intended to implement a particular obligation assumed in the context of the WTO (the first type of exception).
68. The first objection to such an interpretation is that the statement in question was made in the context of international law.
It was made to the WTO. A statement to the WTO cannot produce legal effects within the Community that are comparable with
the regulations at issue in
Nakajima and
Petrotub, transposing the Anti-Dumping Code into Community law.
69. Moreover, it is not clear that this statement to the WTO by the Community's executive body was intended to have any legal
consequences within the Community. The DSB recommendations of 13 February 1998 are to be transposed into Community law by
the adoption of the Commission proposal of 24 May 2000 for a directive amending Directive 96/22. This is confirmed in the
second recital in the preamble to the proposal.
(57)
It cannot therefore be accepted that the statement by the Community to the WTO was intended to transpose a WTO obligation
into Community law. Consequently, neither of the exceptions recognised in the case-law applies in the present case.
c) The direct applicability of WTO law resulting from DSB recommendations
70. Biret argues that, in acceding to the WTO dispute settlement system, the Community undertook to recognise the DSB's decisions
and recommendations. In this connection, the Court of First Instance found in the contested judgment that the decision of
the DSB of 13 February 1998 did not mean that Biret could rely on an infringement of the SPS Agreement. It held that there
is an inescapable and direct link between the decision and the plea alleging infringement of the SPS Agreement, and the decision
could therefore only be taken into consideration if the Court had found that agreement to have direct effect in the context
of a plea alleging the invalidity of the directives in question.
(58)
71. It remains to be seen what legal significance DSB decisions have in Community law and in particular whether they imply that
WTO law is directly applicable in the sense that individuals may rely on the findings of the DSB to support a claim for damages.
72. For the sake of clarity, it must be observed once again that the Court has not so far ruled on this point of law. In
Portugal v
Commission there was no DSB recommendation or decision to be taken into account. In
Atlanta, the appellant referred for the first time in its reply to a DSB decision delivered in the interim. Its submission was consequently
out of time and was held by the Court to be inadmissible.
73. The judgment in
Atlanta is of interest inasmuch as the Court stated in that judgment that the appellant could have maintained its plea alleging the
illegality of the Community regulation
and adduced in particular the dispute settlement mechanism set up within the WTO in 1995 in support of its argument that the
provisions of GATT were of direct effect.
(59)
Thus the Court expressly mentioned in that judgment the possibility that an award of the new dispute settlement mechanism
may alter the effect of WTO law in the Community legal order.
i) The Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes
74. As the Court has already noted in the judgment in
Portugal v
Council, the new WTO dispute settlement mechanism differs significantly from the provisions of GATT 1947.
(60)
In the context of GATT 1947, panel decisions could be accepted only by consensus of the parties to the agreement. The DSU
agreed in 1994 reversed that rule and now provides that decisions of the DSB must be accepted unless they are rejected by
consensus of the parties to the agreement (see Article 17(14) of the DSU). The consensus required under GATT 1947 was replaced
by the introduction of an interim review by the panel (Article 15 of the DSU) and the establishment of a standing Appellate
Body comprising independent persons of recognised authority with demonstrated expertise (Article 17 of the DSU). This change
gives a considerable legal twist to the dispute settlement procedure under GATT 1947, which is more concerned with commercial
policy.
(61)
75. It is true that, under the new mechanism, a solution that is mutually acceptable to the parties to a dispute is clearly to
be preferred (see the third sentence of Article 3(7) of the DSU), as the Court has already pointed out in
Portugal v
Council.
(62)
However, that applies only while the procedure before the panel or the Appellate Body is still going on (see Article 5(5)
of the DSU). An example of such an agreed solution under Article 3(6) of the DSU being reached by the parties to a dispute
after the commencement but before the conclusion of the dispute settlement procedure is the agreement between the EC and New
Zealand on the importation of butter.
(63)
The panel procedure was suspended, the parties reached agreement, the EC amended its legislation and the dispute settlement
procedure was concluded without a DSB recommendation or ruling. However, once a DSB recommendation or ruling has been adopted,
it must be
unconditionally accepted (Article 17(14) of the DSU). The parties are no longer free to reach a settlement and may only agree on the period
of time within which to comply with the DSB ruling (Article 21(3)(b) of the DSU) or the terms of a mutually satisfactory solution
(Article 22(8) of the DSU). Mutually agreed solutions must be consistent with the WTO agreements (Article 3(5) of the DSU).
76. According to the DSU,
prompt compliance with recommendations or rulings of the DSB is
essential to ensure effective resolution of disputes (Article 21(1) of the DSU). If it is impracticable to comply
immediately,
(64)
the Member concerned must have a
reasonable period of time in which to do so (Article 21(3) of the DSU). The period is to be proposed by the Member in question and approved by the
DSB. Or it may where appropriate be mutually agreed by the parties to the dispute. If neither course produces a result, the
period is to be determined through
binding arbitration (Article 21(3) of the DSU).
77. In the DSB procedure at issue in the present case, the period for compliance was set at 15 months in an arbitration procedure
initiated at the Community's request.
(65)
The period expired on 13 May 1999. The period granted for compliance is in keeping with Article 21(3)(c) of the DSU which
provides that the period must not normally exceed 15 months. The new dispute settlement mechanism is binding on the parties
to the agreement and claims exclusive jurisdiction (Article 23(1) of the DSU).
78. As already mentioned, DSB recommendations and rulings must be
unconditionally accepted by the parties (Article 17(14) of the DSU). Should they fail to do so within the
reasonable period of time, compensation and the suspension of concessions are available. These are described in the DSU as
temporary measures (Article 22(1) of the DSU). They are to be resorted to only as a temporary measure pending the withdrawal of the measure
which is inconsistent with WTO law (Article 3(7) of the DSU). Neither compensation nor suspension of concessions, described
as a
last resort (see the fifth sentence of Article 3(7) of the DSU), is preferred to full implementation of a recommendation to bring a measure
into conformity with WTO law (Article 22(1) of the DSU).
79. Compensation is voluntary (Article 22(1) of the DSU). Suspension of concessions is subject to prior authorisation from the
DSB (Articles 2(1) and 22(2) of the DSU). It may not therefore be imposed unilaterally, as it could be under GATT 1947.
(66)
Furthermore, concessions may only be suspended until such time as the DSB recommendations or rulings are implemented or
the Member provides a solution to the nullification or impairment of benefits or a mutually satisfactory solution is reached
(Article 22(8) of the DSU).
80. In any event, the DSB must continue to keep under surveillance the implementation of adopted recommendations or rulings (Article
22(8) of the DSU). This means that, even where compensation has been paid or concessions have been suspended, there is still
a duty to comply with the DSB recommendations or rulings. Payment of compensation or acceptance of the suspension of concessions
do not therefore constitute a waiver, conferring exemption from the duty to fulfil the obligations assumed under the WTO agreements.
81. In the light of the foregoing findings as to the structure of the dispute settlement procedure, it must be concluded that
there is ultimately no alternative but to implement the recommendations or rulings of the DSB. In particular, they cannot
be circumvented by negotiation between the parties.
ii) Reduction in the discretion enjoyed by the EC legislative and executive bodies
─ Power to agree a waiver
82. One argument against recognising the direct applicability of WTO provisions is that WTO Members are accorded some discretion
in complying with DSB recommendations and rulings. In particular, it is suggested that they may pay compensation or accept
the suspension of concessions (
penalties, as it were, imposed by the other Members) instead of withdrawing a measure adopted for the purpose of health and consumer
protection. To recognise the direct applicability of WTO rules would reduce the discretion enjoyed by the Community's legislative
and executive bodies.
(67)
The Council expressly referred during the hearing to the possibility of negotiating a waiver.
83. However ─ as explained above ─ the option, available under Article XXIII of GATT 1947, of accepting countermeasures as the
price for maintaining measures that are inconsistent with WTO law is precluded under the new dispute settlement mechanism.
Once a DSB recommendation or ruling has been adopted, the parties to the WTO Agreement no longer have any discretion as to
whether to comply with it. They must do so
unconditionally and
immediately. Ultimately, a Member cannot decline to fulfil its obligations under the WTO agreements.
84. Contrary to the assertions made by the Council representative at the hearing, even a waiver is ruled out. In the DSU dispute
settlement procedure, the parties to a dispute may no longer agree a waiver, that is to say exemption from the obligations
incurred under the WTO agreements. In the first place, the temporary suspension of concessions (
penalty) requires prior authorisation from the DSB (Article 22(2) of the DSU) and can no longer be agreed by the parties to a dispute.
In the second place, all agreements between the parties to a dispute, including
a mutually satisfactory solution, must be consistent with the WTO agreements (Article 3(5) to (7) of the DSU). A waiver agreed between the parties to a dispute
would not meet these requirements inasmuch as it would grant exemption from the obligations incurred under the WTO agreements.
85. The only waiver recognised under WTO law is that granted under Article XXV(5) of GATT 1947 which has very rarely been invoked.
Pursuant to point 1(a) of GATT 1994, GATT 1947 forms part of that agreement and consequently also of WTO law. The waiver in
question, under the heading of joint action by the contracting parties, must be approved by a double majority (more than half
the contracting parties and a two thirds majority of the votes cast). An agreement between two parties to a dispute does not
meet that requirement. Nor has a waiver within the meaning of Article XXV GATT 1947 been approved in the dispute settlement
procedure at issue in the present case. However, according to the judgment in
Kupferberg,
(68)
the mere fact that a waiver may be granted does not exclude the direct application of WTO rules.
(69)
86. Non-compliance with a DSB recommendation or ruling may be a commercial policy option. However, it is clear from the above
account of the DSU that it is not a lawful option. Consequently, under WTO law and in particular the Understanding on Rules
and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), the legislative and executive bodies no longer have any discretion
that could be reduced by recognising WTO law to be directly applicable.
87. In my view, the answer to the question whether the Court should favour the commercial policy option, which ─ as it found in
Portugal v
Council ─ is in any event only temporary, by counselling judicial self-restraint, or whether it should support the principle of legality
by recognising that DSB recommendations and rulings are binding and that an individual may rely on them in an action for damages
must be that it should support the principle of legality after the expiry of the reasonable period of time allowed to comply
with the DSB recommendation or ruling.
88. Non-compliance with a DSB recommendation or ruling is a commercial policy option only because there is no means of enforcing
such recommendations or rulings. They can only be supported by the traditional retaliation measures (suspension of concessions).
This is bound up with their nature as instruments of international law. There is in principle no way of enforcing international
law. This was also true of Community law before the Maastricht Treaty entered into force. Only with the introduction of Article
228(2) EC did it become possible for the first time to require Member States to make lump sum or penalty payments for failure
to comply with decisions. The fact that DSB recommendations and rulings are unenforceable is consequently no reason for the
Court to disregard them.
─ Implementation of DSB recommendations
89. There may at most be a reduction in the discretion enjoyed by the legislative and executive bodies when it comes to implementing
DSB recommendations. It is apparent from paragraphs 12 and 13 of the contested judgment that the report adopted by the DSB
on 13 February 1998 required the European Communities
to bring the SPS measures found ... to be inconsistent with the SPS Agreement into conformity with the obligations of the
European Communities under that Agreement. The wording of that injunction means that a further legal act is required to implement the recommendations. This interpretation
is confirmed by the fourth sentence of Article 3(7) of the DSU according to which, in the absence of a mutually agreed solution,
the first objective of the dispute settlement mechanism is usually to secure the withdrawal of the measures concerned if these
are found to be inconsistent with the provisions of any of the agreements covered by the DSU. According to the DSB ruling,
Directive 96/22 should therefore have been repealed. Directives 81/602 and 88/146 had already been repealed by Directive 96/22.
This is in line with Commission proposal COM(2000)320 of May 2000 for a directive amending Directive 96/22.
90. Consequently, although it must in principle be admitted that the DSB recommendations adopted in February 1998 required an
act of Community legislation to be adopted subsequently, the question arises whether Biret may not even so be entitled to
rely on the DSB ruling. That view is supported by the fact that the period of time granted for bringing Community law into
line with the obligations under the SPS Agreement expired long ago. At the Community's request, it was given 15 months to
comply with the ruling. That period expired on 13 May 1999.
91. More than four years have now passed since May 1999 without any change in the law, be it WTO law or Community law. The question
therefore arises whether Biret must accept this state of affairs without compensation or whether in these circumstances it
may rely on a binding DSB ruling establishing the illegality of the Community legislation, with the result that WTO law will
be deemed to be directly applicable and the way will be opened for Biret to bring an action for damages.
92. The Court has recognised freedom of trade
(70)
as a fundamental right or, as it is expressed in more recent judgments, freedom to pursue an economic activity
(71)
as a general principle of Community law. It seems unfair to deny a citizen a right to claim damages where the Community legislature,
by failing to act, maintains a state of affairs that is contrary to WTO law more than four years after the expiry of the period
allowed to comply with the DSB recommendations and continues unlawfully to reduce the citizen's fundamental rights.
93. Recognising the direct applicability of WTO law as a basis for a claim for damages does not reduce the discretion of the legislative
and executive bodies in deciding how to implement a DSB recommendation. How the Community establishes the conformity of its
measures with its obligations under the SPS Agreement is and remains a matter for the competent Community bodies. Thus, on
the basis of new scientific information or in the form of temporary protective measures, the Community could well impose an
import ban again, this time in conformity with the SPS Agreement. The way opened by proposal COM(2000)320 remains open even
if the SPS Agreement is held to be directly applicable on the basis of the DSB recommendation of 13 February 1998. Recognition
of the direct applicability of WTO law embodied in a DSB ruling does not mean that an individual has a right to require the
Community bodies to take a particular course of action. Biret is merely entitled to seek monetary compensation from the Community
provided that the other conditions are met.
94. According to the case-law, the end of an action for damages is not the abolition of a particular measure but compensation
for damage caused by a Community institution.
(72)
The recognition that WTO law has direct effect does not therefore open the way for Biret to demand a particular form of conduct
on the part of the Community. Thus, Biret cannot call for the ban on the importation of meat treated with hormones to be lifted,
thereby ending the Community legislature's task of health and consumer protection. The issue is the basis for a possible claim
for monetary damages against the Community or the competent Community bodies which have failed to implement the DSB recommendation
or ruling within the period of time prescribed by the WTO. Recognition of the direct applicability of WTO law embodied in
DSB recommendations or rulings does not therefore mean that meat treated with hormones can be imported into the Community.
95. It must consequently be concluded that the Court will not reduce the discretion enjoyed by the legislative and executive bodies
of the Community in implementing DSB recommendations if, in the case at issue, it holds that WTO law should apply after the
expiry of the period of time allowed to comply with the DSB recommendations of 13 February 1998.
96. In the light of these findings, it must therefore be concluded that recognition of the direct applicability of WTO law as
the basis for a possible claim for damages is not invalidated on the ground that it might reduce the discretion enjoyed by
the legislative and executive bodies of the Community.
iii) The principle of reciprocity
97. Another argument against recognising the direct applicability of WTO law is that it would be contrary to the principle of
reciprocity, which is a strong feature of WTO relations. It is argued that the WTO rules would acquire an effect not accorded
to them in the legal orders of the Community's trading partners. This would considerably weaken the Community's negotiating
position in the WTO.
(73)
98. Proponents of this argument are thinking primarily of the United States of America. The US legislation on the implementation
of the WTO agreements precludes any claim by a private person against the American authorities.
(74)
Similarly, the Community legislature too sought to limit the legal effects of implementing WTO law within the Community.
The 11th recital in the preamble to Decision 94/800 states that
... by its nature, the Agreement establishing the World Trade Organisation, including the Annexes thereto, is not susceptible
to being directly invoked in Community or Member State courts.
99. Such unilateral restrictions on the legal effects of an international agreement are effective only within the limits of international
law. They are governed, in particular, by the rules of international customary law on reservations laid down in Articles 19
to 23 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (hereinafter the
VCLT). As the reservation contained in Decision 94/800 has not been formulated in writing by the Community and communicated to
its WTO trading partners, the first condition required by international law for this restriction to be effective (Article
23(1) VCLT) has not been met.
(75)
100. The reservation contained in Decision 94/800 is open to objection even under Community law. The Court is required under Article
220 EC to ensure that the law is observed in the interpretation and application of the Treaty. Moreover, the WTO agreements
are binding on the Court, as on all the other institutions of the Community, under Article 300(7) EC. The scope of these rules
of primary legislation cannot be reduced by an act of secondary legislation in the form of a Council decision.
101. It is true that the Court, in its case-law on GATT and WTO law has repeatedly observed that these agreements are based on
the principle of reciprocity.
(76)
However, it ruled in its judgment in
Kupferberg that the fact that the courts of one of the parties consider that certain of the stipulations in the agreement are of direct
application is not of itself such as to constitute a lack of reciprocity between the parties.
(77)
Advocate General Gulmann expressed the same view in Case C-280/93
Germany v
Council.
(78)
102. It should also be pointed out that reciprocity is really a commercial policy issue, decked out in the legal trappings of a
principle of reciprocity. There appears to be considerable doubt as to whether the Community's trading position might be weakened at all by recognising
the direct applicability of WTO law as a basis for a claim for damages. If the Community has infringed WTO rules, it is ─
as already explained ─ required to comply with any DSB recommendations or rulings. If another Member has infringed WTO rules,
the Community may initiate a dispute settlement procedure and demand that it comply with the DSB ruling. The possibility of
negotiation arises only where it is assumed that the parties to the dispute agree as to the continued existence of rules that
are contrary to WTO law. However ─ as already explained ─ that is not the case.
103. The Court applies the principle of legality only in so far as it recognises that the DSB recommendation of 13 February 1998
has legal effect within the Community after the period of time allowed for implementation expired on 13 May 1999 inasmuch
as citizens of the Community may rely on the Community's conduct in breach of WTO law as a basis for a claim for damages.
iv) Comparison with situations within the Community
104. Recognition that conduct contrary to WTO law on the part of Community bodies may establish the basis for a claim to damages
arising from non-contractual liability is consistent with the Court's case-law on comparable situations within the Community.
This applies both to the case-law on the significance of actions for infringement of the Treaty and to Member States' liability
for failure to implement directives within the prescribed period.
─ Actions for infringement of the Treaty
105. In the context of penalising conduct contrary to the Treaty on the part of Member States, the Court regards recognition of
a citizen's claim for damages against the defaulting Member State as an appropriate means of applying the principle of legality.
Thus the Court found France to be in breach of the Treaty when it continued to prohibit the importation of certain beef products
from the United Kingdom after the expiry of the Community export ban on British beef imposed to protect against BSE and the
introduction of a date-based export scheme.
(79)
It is settled case-law that there is an interest in pursuing actions for infringement of the Treaty in order to establish
the basis of liability which a Member State may incur as a result of its default towards other Member States, the Community
or private parties.
(80)
─ Liability arising from failure to implement directives
106. Similarly, the case-law on Member States' liability towards citizens of the Community in the event of failure to implement
directives serves to ensure that Member States comply with Community law and implement directives within the prescribed time-limit.
Attention is drawn to the judgments in
Francovich
(81)
and
Dillenkofer
(82)
in this connection. A Member State ought not to profit from the fact that it is in default and the citizen ought not to be
obliged to suffer as a result of the unlawful conduct of the Member State. Here too, establishing the basis of the Member
State's liability serves to exert pressure on the defaulting Member State to bring the situation into line with the Treaty.
107. In the judgment in
Francovich, the Court stated that the full effectiveness of Community rules would be impaired and the protection of the rights which
they grant would be weakened if individuals were unable to obtain redress when their rights are infringed by a breach of Community
law for which a Member State can be held responsible.
(83)
The possibility of obtaining redress from the Member State is particularly indispensable where the full effectiveness of
Community rules is subject to prior action on the part of the State and where, consequently, in the absence of such action,
individuals cannot enforce before the national courts the rights conferred upon them by Community law.
(84)
108. This situation appears to be comparable with the situation in which Biret finds itself. By binding DSB recommendation of 13
February 1998, an act of Community legislation was found to be inconsistent with WTO law. Biret is prevented by the Community's
failure to act from importing meat treated with certain hormones into the Community. Its freedom to pursue an economic activity
is reduced.
109. The Court helps to assert the principle of legality in those cases by recognising the direct applicability of provisions which
usually have no such effect. It is clear from the third paragraph of Article 249 EC that the provisions of directives do not
in principle establish rights on which individuals may rely. Directives are only binding, as to the result to be achieved,
upon the Member States to which they are addressed and do not as a rule establish rights for individuals. Similarly, in the
circumstances described in this case, WTO law should be recognised exceptionally as being directly applicable and thereby
opening the way to a claim for damages.
v) The fundamental right of freedom to pursue an economic activity
110. Lastly, from the point of view of Community law, another argument for recognising the direct effect of DSB recommendations
and rulings after the expiry of the period of time allowed to comply with them is the fundamental right of freedom to pursue
an economic activity. As already explained, that fundamental right is unfairly reduced if a citizen is obliged to accept without
compensation the Community bodies' failure to implement the DSB ruling or recommendation for a period of four years.
111. This appears to be even less acceptable in that, as the contested judgment confirms, the Community has expressly assured the
WTO that it is prepared to fulfil its obligations. There is thus not only a binding ruling or recommendation of the DSB but
also an act of a Community body expressly referring to that ruling or recommendation.
112. It is true that the assurance in question was given in the context of international law and, as already explained, produces
no direct effects in the Community legal order. It must nevertheless be borne in mind that the Commission makes such statements
to the WTO after first informing the competent Council committee of the outcome of the dispute settlement procedure. Both
Community bodies therefore acknowledge that Community law is contrary to WTO law and must accordingly be amended to comply
with the DSB recommendations. If it is not amended within the prescribed period, that means that the Commission and the Council
are going back on their own position. This is another argument for recognising the possibility of claiming damages.
vi) Sufficiently precise rules
113. Under the new WTO dispute settlement mechanism, DSB recommendations and rulings must be implemented
unconditionally and
immediately. The parties to a dispute cannot escape their obligations under the WTO agreements by negotiating a waiver. In the light
of this feature of the dispute settlement mechanism, it seems reasonable to suppose that after a DSB recommendation or ruling
has been adopted and the period of time allowed to comply with it has expired, there is an
unconditional and sufficiently precise obligation within the meaning of the case-law on directly applicable provisions of international agreements.
(85)
vii) Interim conclusion
114. It must consequently be concluded that WTO law is directly applicable where DSB recommendations or rulings have found a Community
measure to be inconsistent with WTO law and the Community has failed to implement the recommendations or rulings within the
prescribed period.
2. Infringement of a protective measure
115. As explained at the outset, it is not sufficient that the infringed measure be directly applicable. It must also be intended
to protect individuals. It is settled case-law that this is not so in the case of WTO law. The purpose of the WTO agreements
is to govern relations between WTO Members and they are not by their nature such as to establish rights of individuals.
(86)
116. The WTO agreements are primarily concerned with customs duties and international trade. However, it is clear from the judgment
in
Van Gend en Loos that basic provisions on customs duties may be directly applicable. In that judgment, the Court recognised that Article 12
of the EEC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 25 EC) was directly applicable.
(87)
That provision imposes a general prohibition on customs duties on imports and exports and customs duties of a fiscal nature
and it is addressed only to States, not to citizens. In that respect it is entirely comparable with the rules of WTO law and
in particular the rules of GATT 1947 and GATT 1994.
117. Moreover, the WTO agreements also guarantee freedom and prohibit discrimination. Regulations concerning trade affect the citizen's
freedom to pursue an economic activity. Trade in States organised on market economy principles is conducted primarily by private
individuals. In particular, provisions on sanitary and phytosanitary measures such as those contained in the SPS Agreement
are of considerable importance to citizens engaged in trade. It is apparent from the first recital in the preamble to the
SPS Agreement and from Article 2(3) that the agreement is intended to prevent a disguised restriction on international trade.
Restrictions on trade through the adoption of sanitary and phytosanitary measures are in principle likely to result in discrimination
between domestic and imported goods and those engaged in the trade in such goods. Restrictions on trade therefore affect the
citizen's freedom to pursue an economic activity.
118. Moreover, the fact that a rule is intended to protect interests of a general nature ─ in this case the liberalisation of international
trade through the WTO agreements ─ does not preclude the possibility that it is also intended to protect individual interests.
In
Kampffmeyer, the Court held, with regard to Regulation No 19 of the Council on the progressive establishment of a common organisation
of the markets in grain,
(88)
that the regulation was directed to ensuring appropriate support for the agricultural markets of the Member States during
the transitional period on the one hand and to allowing the progressive establishment of a single market by making possible
the development of the free movement of goods within the Community on the other. The fact that the interests the regulation
was intended to protect are of a general nature did not prevent their including the interests of individual undertakings which
are engaged in intra-Community trade.
(89)
Similarly, it must also be accepted that the rules on liberalisation contained in the WTO agreements and the provisions of
the SPS Agreement in particular are intended to protect individuals.
119. Consequently the second condition for establishing a claim to damages is also met. The SPS Agreement is also intended to protect
individual traders.
3. Conclusion as to the illegality of the Council's conduct
120. In the light of the foregoing considerations, it must be concluded that Articles 3 and 5 of the SPS Agreement embodied in
the DSB recommendations of 13 February 1998 are directly applicable since those recommendations were not implemented within
the prescribed period which expired on 13 May 1999. It follows that Biret may rely on a rule that is intended to protect it.
Thus, contrary to the findings of the contested judgment, there is a serious infringement of the law.
C ─
Damage and the causal link
121. In the contested judgment, the Court of First Instance did not address the factual aspects of a claim of liability, namely
actual damage and the existence of a causal link between the damage and the illegal conduct.
(90)
The case must therefore be referred back to the Court of First Instance for further examination in accordance with the first
paragraph of Article 61 of the Statute of the Court of Justice.
122. It should merely be added in this connection that the existence of actual damage or a causal link cannot be excluded on the
ground that the importation of meat treated with hormones could have been prohibited by measures consistent with the WTO,
particularly if further scientific evidence of the harmful effect of the substances had been produced or the import ban had
been adopted as a preventive measure. Such an argument is suggested by the approach adopted in the Commission proposal of
24 May 2000. The prohibition on one of the hormones in question is based on new scientific information. As regards the five
other hormones, the provisional prohibition applies until more scientific information is made available.
(91)
123. Such an argument does not preclude actual damage or the existence of a causal link. The new scientific information was not
yet available in the crucial period when the illegality of the Community measure was established in February 1998. It was
not even available when the period of time granted to comply with the DSB recommendations ─ which must in principle be considered
in a claim for damages ─ expired in May 1999. Scientific information produced later to justify such a prohibition cannot diminish
illegal conduct on the part of the Community. Otherwise, a claim for damages would always be precluded in cases where non-compliance
with WTO law was attributed to a lack of scientific evidence. Scientific information is constantly increasing.
124. As regards the provisional prohibition proposed in the case of the other five hormones, it should be pointed out that this
represents a change in the legal basis of the measure. The illegal measure referred to in the DSB ruling of February 1998
was not adopted as a temporary measure until the necessary scientific information became available. It seems unfair for the
citizen to be obliged to accept without compensation a restriction of his fundamental right to freedom to pursue an economic
activity when the Community legislature proposed a new legal ground for its own conduct.
125. It must consequently be concluded that the contested judgment should be set aside and the case referred back to the Court
of First Instance for further examination.
D ─
Incorrect interpretation of Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance
126. In the alternative only, the second plea remains to be considered briefly in case the Court does not follow the course suggested
above. Biret contends that it raised the question of no-fault liability in its application and its submission should therefore
not have been rejected as out of time.
127. The question whether this objection was raised in the application is a matter of fact which cannot be reviewed in the appeal
procedure. In view of the statement in the contested judgment that in its reply Biret requested the Court of First Instance
to develop its case-law in the direction of a system of no-fault liability,
(92)
it is advisable to refer to the judgment in
Atlanta. In that judgment the Court held that a submission which changes the very basis on which the Community could be held liable,
that is from liability for an unlawful act to liability for a lawful act, must be regarded as constituting a new plea in law
which is inadmissible.
(93)
Pursuant to Article 42(2) of the Rules of Procedure of the Court and Article 48(2) of the Rules of Procedure of the Court
of First Instance no new plea in law may be introduced in the course of the proceedings unless it is based on matters of law
or of fact which come to light in the course of the procedure.
VIII ─ Costs
128. Under Article 118 in conjunction with Article 69(2) of the Rules of Procedure of the Court, the unsuccessful party is to be
ordered to pay the costs. Since the Council has been unsuccessful and Biret has applied for them, the Council must be ordered
to pay the costs.
IX ─ Conclusion
129. In the light of the foregoing considerations it is proposed that the Court:
(1) Set aside the judgment delivered by the Court of First Instance on 11 January 2002 in Case T-174/00
Biret International v
Council and refer the dispute back to the Court of First of Instance.
(2) Order the Council to bear the costs.
(3) Order the Commission to bear its own costs.
- 1 –
- Original language: German.
- 2 –
- Name given in the Agreement establishing the World Trade Organisation (WTO) (hereinafter
the WTO Agreement), see Article IV(3) of the WTO Agreement, (OJ 1994 L 336, p. 3).
- 3 –
- Judgment in Case T-174/00
Biret International v
Council [2002] ECR II-17.
- 4 –
- OJ 1981 L 222, p. 32.
- 5 –
- OJ 1988 L 70, p. 16.
- 6 –
- Council Decision 94/800/EC of 22 December 1994 concerning the conclusion on behalf of the European Community, as regards matters
within its competence, of the agreements reached in the Uruguay Round multilateral negotiations (1986-1994) (OJ 1994 L 336,
p. 1).
- 7 –
- OJ 1994 L 336, p. 40.
- 8 –
- OJ 1994 L 336, p. 234.
- 9 –
- Name given in the WTO Agreement (cited in footnote 2), see Article III(3) of the Agreement.
- 10 –
- OJ 1996 L 125, p. 3.
- 11 –
- Paragraphs 37 to 43 of the contested judgment.
- 12 –
- Article 300(7) EC reads:
Agreements concluded under the conditions set out in this Article shall be binding on the institutions of the Community and
on Member States.
- 13 –
- Judgment in Case 38/75
NV Nederlandse Spoorwegen [1975] ECR 1439, paragraph 16.
- 14 –
- In the case of GATT, the appellant refers to the judgments in Case 38/75
NV Nederlandse Spoorwegen, cited in footnote 13, and Case 112/80
Dürbeck [1981] ECR 1095.
- 15 –
- Biret refers to the statements contained in points 18 and 24 [properly 23] of Advocate General Saggio's Opinion in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council [1999] ECR I-8395, I-8397.
- 16 –
- Judgment in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta and Others v
Commission and Council [1999] ECR I-6983.
- 17 –
- Judgments in Case 104/81
Kupferberg [1982] ECR 3641, paragraph 20, and Case C-162/96
Racke [1998] ECR I-3655, paragraph 36.
- 18 –
- Biret refers to paragraph 21 of the judgment in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16.
- 19 –
- Article 48 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance reads as follows: § 1 In reply or rejoinder a party may offer further evidence. The party must, however, give reasons for the delay in offering
it. § 2 No new plea in law may be introduced in the course of the proceedings unless it is based on matters of law or of fact which
come to light in the course of the procedure.
- 20 –
- The appellant is referring to points 33 to 36 of the application.
- 21 –
- The appellant is referring to points 37 to 39 of the application. It refers in particular to the relevant French and Belgian
case-law.
- 22 –
- The appellant is referring to point 58 et seq. of the application.
- 23 –
- Biret cites the judgment in Case 2/57
Hauts Fourneaux de Chasse v
High Authority [1957-1958] ECR 199.
- 24 –
- The Council is referring to point 127 of Advocate General Gulmann's Opinion in Case C-280/93
Germany v
Council [1994] ECR I-4973, I-4980.
- 25 –
- The Council cites the judgment in Case 12/86
Demirel [1987] ECR 3719, paragraph 12 [properly paragraph 14].
- 26 –
- Judgment in Joined Cases C-27/00 and C-122/00
Omega Air [2002] ECR I-2569.
- 27 –
- See judgments in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16, paragraph 65, and Case C-352/98 P
Bergaderm and Goupil v
Commission [2000] ECR I-5291, paragraph 42.
- 28 –
- Judgments in Joined Cases 5/, 7/ and 13/ to 24/66
Kampffmeyer and Others v
Commission [1967] ECR 245, 262, Case 5/71
Schöppenstedt v
Council ECR [1971] 975, paragraph 11, and Case C-282/90
Vreugdenhil v
Commission [1992] ECR I-1937, paragraph 19.
- 29 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council [1999] ECR I-8395.
- 30 –
- Cited in footnote 16.
- 31 –
- Judgment in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16, paragraph 22 et seq.
- 32 –
- Point 128 of the Appellate Body's report of 16 January 1998 (WT/DS26/AB/R, WT/DS48/AB/R), adopted by the DSB on 13 February
1998. All WTO documents cited in this Opinion are to be found on the WTO website (www.wto.org) under the heading
Trade Topics,
Dispute Settlement.
- 33 –
- Judgments in Joined Cases 21/72 to 24/72
International Fruit Company [1972] ECR 1219, paragraphs 7 to 9 and 28, and Case C-280/93
Germany v
Council [1994] ECR I-4973, paragraph 105.
- 34 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraph 47, Order of the Court in Case C-307/99
OGT Fruchthandelsgesellschaft [2001] ECR I-3159, paragraph 24, and judgments in Case C-307/99
Omega Air, cited in footnote 26, paragraph 93, and Case C-76/00 P
Petrotub [2003] ECR I-79, paragraph 53.
- 35 –
- Judgments in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraph 49, Case C-307/99
Omega Air, cited in footnote 26, paragraph 94, and Case C-76/00 P
Petrotub, cited in footnote 34, paragraph 54.
- 36 –
- Judgments in Case 181/73
Haegeman [1974] ECR 449, paragraphs 2 to 6, Case 104/81
Kupferberg, cited in footnote 17, paragraphs 2 to 6, and Order of the Court of First Instance in Case T-115/94
Opel Austria v
Council ECR [1997] II-39, paragraph 101. The Court even held that this applies to the AETR Agreement, which has been ratified by
the Member States but not by the Community itself (judgment of 16 January 2003 in Case C-439/01
Libor Cipra [2003] ECR I-745, paragraph 24).
- 37 –
- Judgments in Case 181/73
Haegeman, cited in footnote 36, paragraphs 2 to 6, Case C-53/96
Hermès International [1998] ECR I-3603, paragraph 29, Joined Cases C-300/98 and C-392/98
Parfums Christian Dior [2000] ECR I-11307, paragraph 40, and Case C-439/01
Libor Cipra, cited in footnote 36, paragraph 26.
- 38 –
- Judgment in Case 26/62
Van Gend & Loos [1963] ECR 1, 16.
- 39 –
- Judgment in Case C-224/97
Ciola [1999] ECR I-2517, paragraph 27.
- 40 –
- Judgment in Case C-159/89
Commission v
Greece [1991] ECR I-691, paragraph 6.
- 41 –
- Judgment in Case 43/75
Defrenne II [1976] ECR 455, paragraphs 21 to 24.
- 42 –
- Judgment in Case C-336/96
Gilly [1998] ECR I-2793, paragraph 17.
- 43 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraph 49.
- 44 –
- Council Regulation (EEC) No 2641/84 of 17 September 1984 on the strengthening of the common commercial policy with regard
in particular to protection against illicit commercial practices, OJ 1984 L 252, p. 1.
- 45 –
- Judgment in Case 70/87
Fediol v
Commission [1989] ECR 1781, paragraph 19.
- 46 –
- Judgment in Case 70/87
Fediol, cited in footnote 45, paragraph 22.
- 47 –
- Judgment in Case C-69/89
Nakajima v
Council [1991] ECR I-2069.
- 48 –
- Council Regulation (EEC) No 2176/84 of 23 July 1984 on protection against dumped or subsidised imports from countries not
members of the European Economic Community, OJ 1984 L 201, p. 1.
- 49 –
- Council Regulation (EEC) No 2423/88 of 11 July 1988 on protection against dumped or subsidised imports from countries not
members of the European Economic Community, OJ 1988 L 209, p. 1.
- 50 –
- Judgment in Case C-69/89
Nakajima, cited in footnote 47, paragraph 27.
- 51 –
- Cited in footnote 17.
- 52 –
- Judgment in Case C-69/89
Nakajima, cited in footnote 47, paragraphs 28 to 31.
- 53 –
- Judgment in Case C-76/00 P
Petrotub, cited in footnote 34, paragraph 55 et seq.
- 54 –
- Paragraph 64 of the contested judgment, cited in footnote 3.
- 55 –
- Cited in footnote 16.
- 56 –
- Paragraph 66 et seq. of the contested judgment, cited in footnote 3.
- 57 –
- Proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and the Council amending Council Directive 96/22/EC concerning the prohibition
on the use in stockfarming of certain substances having a hormonal or thyrostatic action and of ß-agonists, COM(2000)320 final
of 24 May 2000, in particular the second paragraph on p. 2 and the last paragraph on p. 3.
- 58 –
- Paragraph 66 et seq. of the contested judgment, cited in footnote 3.
- 59 –
- Judgment in Case C-104/76 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16, paragraph 21.
- 60 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraph 36.
- 61 –
- Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann,
The GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement System. International Law, International Organisations and Dispute Settlement, London ─ The Hague ─ Boston 1997, p. 188.
- 62 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraph 36.
- 63 –
- WT/DS72/7 of 18 November 1999.
- 64 –
- The German version of OJ 1994 L 336 contains a translation error. The term
impracticable in the English version should have been rendered as
nicht möglich, not
möglich.
- 65 –
- See report of arbitration judge Julio Lacarte-Muró of 29 May 1998, WT/DS26/15 and WT/DS48/13, point 2.
- 66 –
- Petersmann, cited in footnote 61, p. 182.
- 67 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraphs 39 to 41.
- 68 –
- Judgment in Case 104/81
Kupferberg, cited in footnote 17, paragraph 20 et seq.
- 69 –
- See Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann,
GATT/WTO-Recht: Duplik, in EuZW 1997, p. 652.
- 70 –
- Judgment in Case 240/83
ADBHU [1985] ECR 531, paragraph 9.
- 71 –
- Judgment in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16, paragraph 47, and Order of the President of the Court in Case C-317/00 P (R)
Invest Import und Export and Invest Commerce v
Commission [2000] ECR I-9541, paragraph 57.
- 72 –
- Judgment in Case 5/71
Schöppenstedt v
Council [1971] ECR 975, paragraph 3.
- 73 –
- Judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraphs 43 and 45.
- 74 –
- See paper by Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann,
The Dispute Settlement System of the World Trade Organization and the Evolution of the GATT Dispute Settlement System since
1948, in CMLR 1994, pp. 1157, 1243.
- 75 –
- See also Advocate General Saggio's remarks in his Opinion in Case C-149/96, cited in footnote 15, point 20 et seq.
- 76 –
- See, for example, the judgment in Case C-149/96
Portugal v
Council, cited in footnote 29, paragraphs 42 to 46.
- 77 –
- Judgment in
Kupferberg, cited in footnote 17, paragraph 18.
- 78 –
- Opinion in Case C-280/93
Germany v
Council, cited in footnote 24, point 142.
- 79 –
- Judgment in Case C-1/00
Commission v
France [2001] ECR I-9989.
- 80 –
- See, for example, judgments in Case C-361/88
Commission v
Germany [1991] ECR I-2567, paragraph 31, Case C-365/97
Commission v
Italy [1999] ECR I-7773, paragraph 45, and Case C-207/00
Commission v
Italy [2001] ECR I-4571, paragraph 28 with further references.
- 81 –
- Judgment in Joined Cases C-6/90 and C-9/90
Francovich and Others v
Italy [1991] ECR I-5357.
- 82 –
- Judgment in Joined Cases C-178/94, C-179/94, C-188/94, C-189/94 and C-190/94
Erich Dillenkofer and Others v
Germany [1996] ECR I-4845.
- 83 –
- Judgment in
Francovich, cited in footnote 81, paragraph 33. See also the judgment in Joined Cases C-46/93 and C-48/93
Brasserie du Pêcheur and Factortame [1996] ECR I-1029, paragraph 20.
- 84 –
- Judgment in
Francovich, cited in footnote 81, paragraph 34.
- 85 –
- Judgments in Case 45/75
REWE v
Hauptzollamt Landau [1976] ECR 181, paragraph 24, and Case C-76/91
Caves Neto Costa [1993] ECR I-117, paragraphs 7 and 9.
- 86 –
- See paragraph 62 of the contested judgment.
- 87 –
- Judgment in
Van Gend & Loos, cited in footnote 38, p. 16.
- 88 –
- JO 1962 30, p. 933, not available in English.
- 89 –
- Judgment in
Kampffmeyer, cited in footnote 28, p. 262 et seq.
- 90 –
- See paragraph 69 of the contested judgment.
- 91 –
- See preamble to the Commission proposal, cited in footnote 57, p. 2 in fine.
- 92 –
- Paragraph 70 of the contested judgment.
- 93 –
- Judgment in Case C-104/97 P
Atlanta, cited in footnote 16, paragraph 27.