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Document 61976CC0014
Opinion of Mr Advocate General Reischl delivered on 15 September 1976. # A. De Bloos, SPRL v Société en commandite par actions Bouyer. # Reference for a preliminary ruling: Cour d'appel de Mons - Belgium. # # Case 14-76.
Generalinio advokato Reischl išvada, pateikta 1976 m. rugsėjo 15 d.
A. De Bloos, SPRL prieš Société en commandite par actions Bouyer.
Prašymas priimti prejudicinį sprendimą: Cour d'appel de Mons - Belgija.
5,1 ir 5 straipsnis.
Byla 14-76.
Generalinio advokato Reischl išvada, pateikta 1976 m. rugsėjo 15 d.
A. De Bloos, SPRL prieš Société en commandite par actions Bouyer.
Prašymas priimti prejudicinį sprendimą: Cour d'appel de Mons - Belgija.
5,1 ir 5 straipsnis.
Byla 14-76.
ECLI identifier: ECLI:EU:C:1976:120
OPINION OF MR ADVOCATE-GENERAL REISCHL
DELIVERED ON 15 SEPTEMBER 1976 ( 1 )
Mr President,
Members of the Court,
In order to understand the reference for a preliminary ruling made to the Court by the Cour d'Appel, Mons, by order of 9 December 1975 the following preliminary remarks must be made:
On 24 October 1959 the French company Bouyer, the registered office of which is in Tomblaine, Meurthe et Moselle, concluded a contract with the Belgian company De Bloos, the registered office of which is in Leuze, whereby the exclusive distribution rights of the products produced by Bouyer for Belgium, Luxembourg and the former Belgian Congo were granted to the abovementioned Belgian company. The contract was initially for three years but subsequently, as neither party had given notice to terminate it, it was impliedly extended. In accordance with Regulation No 17 it was notified to the Commission; however no individual exemption was necessary as, by virtue of communication from the Commission in 1969, it fell within the scope of the regulation providing for exemption of categories of agreements (Regulation No 67/67, OJ English Special Edition 1967, p. 10).
In the autumn of 1972 difficulties evidently arose between the parties to the contract. They were caused by the fact that Bouyer had entered into negotiations in Belgium with another undertaking concerning the distribution of its products. De Bloos regards this as a breach of contract having certain legal consequences. In this respect it relies on a Belgian Law of 27 July 1961 as amended by the Law of 13 April 1971. Thereby contracts such as the one at issue are deemed to have been concluded for an indefinite period if they are extended on two occasions. In addition the law provides that the injured party in the case of unilateral revocation without compliance with a reasonable period of notice has a right to fair compensation, and that if notice is given by the grantor on grounds other than the wrongful act of the grantee then reasonable additional compensation is payable.
In reliance on these provisions De Bloos appealed to the commercial court in Tournai. It sought a ruling that the exclusive dealing agreement had been dissolved on 1 October 1972 through breach of contract by Bouyer and an order that the French company should pay damages.
The defendant company challenges the jurisdiction of the court in which the action was brought. The abovementioned Belgian law provides that actions by the grantee under a contract conferring an exclusive concession against his supplier for breach of contract can be brought in the court which has jurisdiction at the place of residence of the trader if the exclusive dealing contract produces effects in Belgium. However the commercial court did not take account of this provision as, clearly correctly, it regarded it as being superseded by the Convention of 27 September 1968 on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters which entered into force on 1 March 1973. It relied rather on the Convention in particular Article 5 thereof which provides that:
‘A person domiciled in a Contracting State may, in another contracting State, be sued:
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in matters relating to a contract, in the courts for the place of performance of the obligation in question …’ |
The commercial court implied from clauses in business letters and invoices from the defendant which specified that the courts of Nancy were to have jurisdiction, that the bills were payable in Nancy and that the goods were to be delivered to the business premises of the defendant, that the defendant company had to perform its obligations not in Belgium but in France. Therefore it decided that the jurisdiction of Belgian courts to deal with the case was excluded.
De Bloos appealed against this judgment to the Cour d'Appel in Mons. In its assessment of the facts the Cour d'Appel at first reached another conclusion in that it found no agreement that the place of performance be in France and thus no agreement conferring jurisdiction within the meaning of Article 17 of the abovementioned Convention in respect of the disputed obligation. It decided that the abovementioned clauses only applied to individual business transactions but not for the outline contract which was the sole object of the court proceedings. In addition the court thought it conceivable that the Belgian courts might have jurisdiction either on the basis of abovementioned Article 5 (1) of the Convention on jurisdiction or under Article 5 (5) thereof which runs as follows:
‘as regards a dispute arising out of the operations of a branch, agency or other establishment, in the courts for the place in which the branch, agency or other establishment is situated.’
The Cour d'Appel is not without its doubts in this respect for the following reasons:
In applying Belgian law — it is Belgian law that is to be applied to the particular situation by the court on the basis of a provision for conflict of laws contained in the Belgian law of 1961 as the exclusive dealing agreement produces effects in Belgium — the court reached the conclusion, with regard to Article 5 (1) of the Convention, that is with regard to the courts for the place of performance, that the claim made could be classified in various ways. One view was that it may be decisive that the duty to pay compensation replaces the obligation to comply with a reasonable period of notice; in the principal obligation of the grantee, may be found the basis for the claim to compensation which may therefore be regarded as a contractual right. Another view was that the grantor has a choice between complying with a reasonable period of notice or paying damages, the duty to pay damages being a legal consequence of the dissolution of the contract, that is to say, a new, independent obligation. Accordingly the place of performance is regarded as being either in Belgium, that is the area where the principal obligations of the grantee are to be performed or, as the obligations to make payment are to be performed where the debtor resides, then the place of performance is that at which the defendant French debtor resides.
The Cour d'Appel finds difficulties in the application of Article 5 (5) of the Convention on jurisdiction in that according to the facts as stated in the proceedings the exclusive dealer was not entitled to deal in the name of the supplier and that he was not subject to the control and direction of the supplier. Therefore it has doubts whether the Belgian exclusive dealer can be regarded as a branch etc. within the meaning of Article 5 (5) of the Convention.
For these reasons the court stayed proceedings in order to obtain a preliminary ruling on the interpretation of the Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments. The following questions were formulated in its order for reference of 9 December 1975:
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In an action brought by the grantee of an exclusive sales concession against the grantor in which he claims that the latter has infringed the exclusive concession, may the term ‘obligation’ in Article 5 (1) of the Convention of 27 September 1968 on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters be applied without distinction to each of the obligations set out below or must its application to any of them be excluded:
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II — |
Where, on the one hand, the grantee of an exclusive sales concession is not empowered either to negotiate in the name of the grantor or to bind him and, on the other hand, he is not subject either to the control or direction of the grantor, is such a person at the head of a branch, agency or other establishment of the grantor within the meaning of Article 5 (5) of the Brussels Convention? |
I — |
Before I can examine these questions I must first state my opinion concerning a problem of procedural law. This results from the fact that the Government of the United Kingdom also submitted observations concerning the reference for a preliminary ruling which, in accordance with the usual practice, was communicated to all Member States of the Community although the Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments and the Protocol on its interpretation for the time being only apply in relation to the original Member States of the Community. As became evident in the course of the procedure there is no unanimity on the question whether such observations are admissible from the three new Member States. In support of their admissibility, reference is particularly made to Article 5 of the Protocol on interpretation which refers to the EEC Protocol on the Statute of the Court of Justice in respect of references for a preliminary ruling. The view is taken that since Article 20 of the abovementioned Protocol certainly refers to all Member States the same must also apply in relation to proceedings under Article 3 of the Protocol on interpretation. In addition reference is made to Article 37 of the EEC Protocol on the Statute of the Court of Justice whereby all Member States have the right to ‘intervene in cases before the Court’. Against this the French Government, which was the only party to raise objections, stated that exclusion of the new Member States from the proceedings is supported by the fact that only courts of the original Member States and their ‘competent authorities’ within the meaning of Article 4 of the Protocol on interpretation are able to refer questions to the Court of Justice. Moreover only the Contracting States, that is those States which concluded the Convention, are in a position to define its contents. In our examination of this problem doubts may certainly be felt whether reference to Article 5 of the Protocol on interpretation is sufficient to justify the participation of the new Member States in the reference for a preliminary ruling concerning the Convention on jurisdiction. It must not be overlooked that Article 5 begins with the words ‘except where this Protocol otherwise provides’. This may be understood in the sense that the point at issue is the purpose and system of the Protocol and that the determining factor is for which Member States is the Protocol already binding. In addition reference may be made to Article 4 of the Protocol in which — apart from the Commission and the Council — reference is only made to notice being given to the Contracting States. This may be regarded as a general clarification of the right of participation but it is difficult to see why, in relation to proceedings under Article 4 of the Protocol on interpretation which also concerns only questions of interpretation, there should be a different sphere of application in respect of Member States from that relating to proceedings under Article 3. On the other hand it must be acknowledged that the references made in the course of the proceedings to Article 3 (2) of the Act concerning the Conditions of Accession and the Adjustments to the Treaties and Article 63 of the Convention on jurisdiction have considerable force. Article 3 (2) of the Act concerning the Conditions of Accession provides that the new Member States undertake, ‘to accede to the conventions provided for in Article 220 of the EEC Treaty, and to the protocols on the interpretation of those conventions by the Court of Justice, signed by the original Member States and to this end they undertake to enter into negotiations with the original Member States in order to make the necessary adjustments thereto.’ As we know these negotiations have already reached the first stage. Article 63 of the Convention on jurisdiction provides that: ‘The Contracting States recognize that any State which becomes a member of the European Economic Community shall be required to accept this Convention as a basis for the negotiations between the Contracting States and that State necessary to ensure the implementation of the last paragraph of Article 220 of the Treaty establishing the European Economic Community. The necessary adjustments may be the subject of a special convention between the Contracting States of the one part and the new Member State of the other part’. According to the Report on the Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judicial Decisions in Civil and Commercial Matters — which for the sake of brevity I shall call ‘the Report’ — this means that the basic principles of the Convention may not be departed from and therefore that the essence and the fundamental principles of the Convention will also apply in respect of the new Member States. Consequently future Contracting States have a genuine interest which should be protected in taking part in proceedings concerning its interpretation; the corresponding legal decisions will — at least in respect of the basic principles of the Convention — form part of the body of law which must be adopted by the new Member States. However since it is certainly not easy to define what is fundamental to the Convention and what allows of adjustment, I believe there should be no hesitation in allowing new Member States in general to submit observations in respect of requests for a preliminary ruling concerning the Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments. This conclusion is further supported by the fact that we are here concerned with objective proceedings intended to ascertain the purport of the Convention in which in principle nothing is left open to the parties thereto. In addition, if occasion arises, the intentions which the Contracting States had at the time of concluding the Convention may be taken into account as regards statements by the original Member States. I do not think it is necessary to examine in detail Article 37 of the EEC Protocol on the Statute of the Court of Justice as its application to proceedings of the present nature appears to me to be extremely doubtful and I therefore suggest that it be ruled that there is no objection to collaboration by the new Member States in proceedings concerning the interpretation of the Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of Judgments. |
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3. |
In conclusion I therefore suggest that the questions referred for a preliminary ruling by the Cour d'Appel, Mons, should be answered as follows:
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( 1 ) Translated from the German.