As before a check on the green card was carried out at the frontiers with all the delays that such a check entails.
In order to obviate this formality the Council adopted Directive No 72/166/EEC of 24 April 1972. By means of that directive machinery at two levels, and based on agreement, was introduced:
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with the support of the Council of Bureaux in London the national bureaux concluded an agreement solely under private law in order to guarantee the settlement of accident claims independently of the existence of a contract of insurance:
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In addition the Directive presupposed the conclusion of an agreement between the individual national bureaux and their respective administrations.
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The removal of the check of the green card at the Italian frontiers was made possible by the fact that by Ministerial Decree of 12 October 1972 the UCI was authorized to undertake the settlement of claims for damage which had been caused by motor vehicles from the remaining five Member States (since the Decree of 11 December 1973 motor vehicles from the new Member States are included) and also by the fact that on 16 October 1972 in Brussels the UCI concluded the agreement provided for in Article 2 (2) of the Council Directive of 24 April 1972 with the bureaux of the other five original Member States of the EEC and on 12 December 1973 in Paris with the bureaux of the three new Member States.
Under that agreement the settlement of claims for compensation made by persons suffering loss by reason of accidents is to be carried out in accordance with the legal provisions of the individual Member States concerning compulsory insurance by the appropriate national bureau in the territory of which the accident occurred but the costs of that bureau are to be refunded by the bureau of the State to which the person who caused the accident belongs. Article 4 of the Agreement contains provisions concerning the relations between the Paying Bureau and the Handling Bureau and the relations between the members of these bureaux and their correspondents appointed to handle and settle claims. Article 4 (a) provides that:
‘If a member of the Paying Bureau has an organization situated in the country of the Handling Bureau and established there for the purpose of transacting Motor Insurance, the Handling Bureau will, if so requested, leave the handling and settlement of claims to the Member.”
The Italian bureau only recognized the following provision from the Optional Clauses set out in Article 4 (b):
“(b)
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A Member of the Paying Bureau may request the Handling Bureau to leave the handling and settlement of claims to a nominated correspondent, who may be one of the following:
(i)
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A Member of the Handling Bureau”.
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On the other hand it did not recognize the optional provisions whereby the correspondent may be:
“(ii)
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an organization established in the country of the Handling Bureau for the purpose of transacting insurance, whether motor insurance or some other class of insurance;
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(iii)
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an organization established in the country of the Handling Bureau and specializing in the handling of claims on behalf of Insurers.”
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The abolition of the check on the green card, provided for between the original Member States by Commission Recommendation No 73/185/EEC of 15 May 1973 (OJ L 194 of 16. 7. 1973, p. 13) from 1 July 1973, finally came into effect by means of Commission Decision No 74/166/EEC of 6 February 1974 (OJ L 87 of 30. 3. 1974, p. 13) as from 15 May 1974 for the nine Member States.
From this arose a noticeable change in the role of the national bureaux and the scope which the latter allowed to the bureau responsible for settlement in particular in Italy. Before the introduction of compulsory insurance in Italy the third party injured by a foreign motor vehicle had to make a claim directly to the foreign insurer. The Italian bureau acted in this respect solely as “servicing bureau” but not as “Handling Bureau” : acting upon a request sent to the Italian bureau or one of its agencies by an insured who was in possession of a green card the Italian bureau investigated any claim made against that insured person. To this end it immediately made contact either directly or through the Paying Bureau with the member of the Paying Bureau which had issued the green card in order to regulate the handling or investigation of the claim on behalf of the member of the Paying Bureau as the settlement of the claim required the agreement of that member.
During that period the UCI recognized in this connexion the instructions issued by the members of foreign bureaux to the Van Ameyde office to act as their agents and permitted the cooperation of this bureau in the handling and settling of such accident claims in which foreign motor vehicles insured with members of the foreign bureaux were involved. However the UCI expressly reserved the right to re-examine its position if compulsory insurance was introduced in Italy.
Since the introduction of compulsory insurance for motor vehicles in Italy persons injured by a foreign motor vehicle can and must apply directly to the UCI in respect of all damage caused in Italian territory irrespective of the nationality and the residence of the insurer and of the insured as the Italian legislature sought to ensure public safety in its territory by granting the legal monopoly for handling and settling international accident claims to the UCI.
The activities of the UCI are no longer restricted to investigating the case in collaboration with the original insurer; it has rather become the Handling Bureau and is thereby entitled to investigate accident claims and to settle them as though it had issued the policy itself. The UCI also remains directly liable to the injured person if it assigns the settlement of accident claims to insurance companies operating in Italy as the correspondents of foreign insurance companies with whom the insurance policy was effected and which issued the green card. It is further authorized to grant compensation for damages directly if the accident was caused by a motor vehicle which was not insured within the meaning of the Law of 24 December 1969 but if necessary it can have recourse against the owner and the driver of the motor vehicle.
From this time onwards the Italian bureau itself specified the Italian correspondent for the foreign insurers against civil liability of foreign nationals who were involved in a traffic accident in Italy: it sent letters to this effect both to the other foreign bureaux and to their members stating that in future it would only recognize the nominations of the locally competent member of the Italian bureau as the correspondent insurance company and would only forward cases for investigation to that Italian company; it further informed them that in future foreign insurers had to apply directly to the Italian insurer so nominated and could no longer apply to the bureau.
The Lloyd's “Service Motor Policies” which had referred accident claims to the Italian office of Van Ameyde informed that office of this position and added that it had no option but to accept this state of affairs and therefore requested the office to cease investigating the cases referred to it and to transfer them to the Italian bureau.
Furthermore the Italian bureau complained about a French company which continued to refer accident claims to the Van Ameyde office “although since June 1971 it is no longer authorized to investigate cases” (letter of the French bureau of 9 September 1975).
The other national bureaux called on their members in the form of an ultimatum to accord with this practice “in conformity with the Uniform Agreement between Bureaux” (letter of the Belgian bureau of 5 September 1975).
In these circumstances and in compliance with the precise instructions given to it by its principals — the foreign companies — the Italian office of Van Ameyde ceased investigating the documents referred to it and transferred them to the Italian bureau. However, as it regarded itself as the victim of a virtual boycott — not on the grounds of its nationality as it was an Italian company but because of its nature as a “private” office — it initiated proceedings before the Tribunale di Milano in order to obtain a declaration that the claim made by the UCI that the investigation and settlement of accident claims should be referred only to insurance companies which were members of the UCI was unlawful.
By order of 29 April 1976 the Tribunale di Milano stayed the proceedings and referred the following questions to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
1.
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Are Council Directive No 72/166/EEC (OJ, English Special Edition 1972 (II), p. 360), Commission Recommendation No 73/185/EEC (OJ L 194, p. 13) and Commission Decision No 74/166/EEC (OJ L 87, p. 13) to be interpreted as authorizing provisions of national law, agreements, decisions and practices agreed between the national insurers' bureaux, or action by an individual national bureau or of the undertakings affiliated thereto which have as their object or effect the restriction or elimination of competition from undertakings whose business is confined to the settlement of claims in respect of accidents caused by vehicles from another country, such business being wholly reserved to insurance undertakings which are members of the said national bureau?
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2.
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Whatever the answer to Question 1, do Articles 85, 86 and 90 of the EEC Treaty prohibit any provision of national law, any agreement between bureaux or any decision, concerted practice or action which tends to reserve exclusively to the insurance undertakings which belong to the national bureau the settlement of claims in respect of damage arising out of the use of foreign vehicles, to the exclusion of undertakings engaged solely in the business of settlement and which are not members of the bureau, even though they may have been nominated by the insurers of the vehicle causing the damage who are based in its country of origin?
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3.
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Whatever the answer to Question 1, do the principle of nondiscrimination (Article 7 of the Treaty), the provisions concerning the right of establishment (Article 52 et seq. of the Treaty) and the freedom to provide services (Article 59 of the Treaty) prohibit any provision of national law or any action the effect of which is directly or indirectly to obstruct in a Member State the effective exercise and the carrying on of the business of the settlement of claims by an undertaking established in the territory of the said Member State, even if the provision or the action is the work of a national insurers' bureau within the meaning of the definition given in Directive No 72/166/EEC?
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4.
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If the answer to Question 1 is in the affirmative, are the Community measures therein mentioned to be regarded as lawful when considered from the standpoint of conformity with Articles 7, 52, 59, 85, 86 and 90 of the EEC Treaty and of any other consideration which might vitiate them, including want of a statement of reasons and of observance of essential procedural requirements?
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