Enforceability in National Court - Direct/Indirect/State Flashcards
Van Gend
Dutch company obliged to pay customs tax; ECJ held that even if Article 12 TFEU did not make express reference to individuals, it was still directly effective
RATIO: A Treaty article will be directly effective if it is 1) sufficiently clear and precise 2) unconditional and 3) leaves no room for discretion in implementation by Member States
Where there is a conflict with earlier domestic law, EU law will be given supremacy.
Defrenne v Sabena
Male stewards employed by Sabena were paid more than woman stewards despite there being no difference in their duties; Defrenne contested this as being in violation of Article 157 TFEY; held Treaty article was directly effective as it satisfied the Van Gend criteria.
RATIO: Article 157 TFEU has direct horizontal and vertical effect.
Leonesio
Regulation required Member States to make cash payments to farmers who phased out dairy cattle; Leonesio did this but the Italian Ministry of Agriculture refused to pay the cash premium; ECJ held that the regulation had direct vertical effect
RATIO: Regulations ‘produce immediate effects, and [are], as such, apt to attribute to individuals rights which national courts must uphold.
Antonio Munoz Cia SA v Frumar
Established that the defendants had applied a false variety name to their grapes in violation of a Regulation that this was actionable on the part of a competitor
RATIO: Regulations have direct horizontal effect.
Van Duyn
Van Duyn refused entry to the UK due to her involvement in the Church of Scientology; invoked Article 45 TFEU and Article 4 Directive 64/221 (which states that decisions must be based solely on personal conduct of persons concerned); held Directive had direct vertical effect
Ratio: Directives have direct vertical effect where the terms are clear, precise and unconditional (other criteria must also be met)
Current association with a group of body can constitute ‘personal conduct’ for the purposes of the Directive then in place and now Article 27(2) Directive 2004/38; the activities of the group or body need not necessarily be illegal for a Member State to deny entry to or expel its members.
Marshall
Marshall forced to retire at 62 whereas men could work until 65; brought claim against her employer, who was part of NHS, based on the Equal Treatment Directive; held that employer as a public authority as part of NHS and direct effect could be relied on (on condition of Ratti and Van Gend criteria being met)
RATIO: Directives have vertical direct effect and can be enforced against public authorities.
Marhall No.II – 2nd reference to ECJ re amount of compensation – English law had an upper limit whereas treaty didn’t. again successful as able to rely on vertical direct effect.
Advocates General viewed law as ‘odd’ and unfair as it gave greater rights to public sector workers than private sector. Concerned re basic principle of equality before the law
Duke
Not long after Marshall, another woman in exactly same position sued her employers in English courts for the same reason – forcing her to retire earlier than a man.
Duke failed in her claim as her employer was not the state or emanation of the state so claim was horizontal and could not succeed. Unable to rely on direct effect of directive even though facts were virtually identical to Marshall.
Paola Faccini Dori
Dori relied on a Directive to withdraw from an English language course (Directive allowed consumers to cancel contracts within 7 days if contract made away from business premises); ECJ held that Dori could not rely on Directive against a private body
RATIO: ECJ ruled Directives do not have horizontal direct effect
Note: Advocate General criticized this on grounds of legitimate expectations of those seeking to rely on EU law. – old directives could not be said to be in the public domain – not fair to rely on them horizontally. However, new directives since 1st nov 1993 have to be published and therefore should all be capable of both vertical and horizontal direct effect assuming satisfy van gend.
Vaneetveld
Mrs Vaneetveld, following an accident, claimed her husband’s insurance; insurance company paid out under impression they were no longer married, but later found they were merely separated; company tried to reclaim money, which was allowed under Belgium law, and Mrs Vaneetveld tried to rely on a Directive to protect her
RATIO: ECJ ruled Directives do not have horizontal direct effect
Note: Advocate general criticized this on grounds that public bodies should not be disadvantaged to those in the private sector and that this could affect the consistency/fairness between business in different Member States. Main concern was that the law lacked uniformity.
Van Gend
Sufficiently clear, precise and unconditional to have direct effect
Ratti
Ratti invoked two Directives as a defense against a criminal prosecution by Italy; time limit for one of the Directives had expired, but not the other; held that Ratti was only able to rely on the one for which the time limit had elapsed
RATIO: For Directives to have direct vertical effect, the date of their implementation must have passed
Foster
Female employees forced to retire earlier than male employees; British Gas was nationalized at the time; ECJ held that British Gas was an emanation of the state and therefore a Directive could be relied on against it.
RATIO: Directives can be relied n against organisations or bodies which 1) are under a statutory duty to provide a public service, 2) are under state control, and 3) have special powers. Bodies which meet this criteria will be considered emanations of the state.
Farrell v Whitty
Whitty crashed his van at speed whilst drunk and uninsured. 4 passengers sitting in rear of van not in seats and unrestrained, one of them, Farrell was killed. Her Sister was injured and sought compensation from MIB. Under Irish law at the time, there was no obligation for a driver to have insurance to cover passengers in a part of the vehicle that was not designed and constructed with seating accommodation, and so MIBI was under no liability under Irish law to compensate her. Question arose whether Ireland had complied with European Directives.
Could victims of uninsured drivers claim against the Motor Insurers Bureau (MIBI) in cases where European directives on the scope of motor insurance had been inadequately implemented into UK law? Or did a victim have to sue the state in a Francovich action for damages for breach of the state’s duty under EU law to implement the directive correctly?
RATIO: A body does not need to meet all 3 Foster criteria to be an emanation of the State; instead, it is probably reasonable to conclude that a body will be an emanation of the state if satisfies 2 criteria outlined.
• The state has delegated to it a public interest task (a variant of the public service condition); and
• It satisfied either the second (SC) or third (SP)
Doughty
Rolls Royce was wholly owned by government but operated as a ‘commercial undertaking’ which traded with the government on an ‘arm’s length’ commercial basis
RATIO: A body will not necessarily be deemed to be an emanation of the State where it lacks special powers and has no statutory duty, even if it is wholly owned by the government.
Griffin
South West Water Services was a privatized water utility: accepted that they had a statutory duty and special powers but argued they were not under state control; held to be a emanation of the state.
RATIO: A body does not have to be state controlled to be an emanation of the state, it is sufficient that the industry in which it operates is subject to State regulation. (Note: not confirmed by ECJ)