Adv Classes
Adv Classes
Monday 28
- Review comments on the Van Hender Loss case of EU Basic.
- German Constitutional Court has reserved the right to review rulings from the
EU Court of Justice if its rulings go beyond their competence (Weiss case –
ECB).
- Direct effect and Supremacy go hand in hand.
- Costa vs. Enel case: Court said that since there is direct effect, EU law has
supremacy.
- Supremacy: In the field of competence of the EU, EU law is always superior to
the national laws.
Tuesday 29
- EU = 27 countries
o Free trade area
o Customs Union = single tariffs for foreign states.
- EFTA = Currently Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. It emerged
when the UK was not admitted to the EU
- European Economic Area: EU + Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway entered
into a common market. EFTA Court has jurisdiction in controversies between
EU and EFTA countries with respect to the EEA but has to apply the case law
of the CJEU.
- Mix Agreements = Agreements signed by the EU -as a subject of international
law-, its member countries, individually, and a third party.
- Monetary Union level: EU is almost here.
November, Monday 4
Free movement of goods in the EU
Landmark cases, Dassonville and Cassis de Dijon, which were instrumental in
shaping EU law concerning the free movement of goods within the internal market.
Dassonville, Case 8/74 (1974)
Background: This case involved Belgian importers of Scotch whisky who were
charged for not having a certificate of origin as required by Belgian law. They
argued that this requirement was an unjustifiable restriction on trade within the EU.
Ruling: The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that any national
measure that hinders trade between Member States, directly or indirectly, actually
or potentially, is a "measure having equivalent effect" to quantitative restrictions
(MEQRs) and is therefore prohibited by Article 34 of the Treaty on the Functioning of
the European Union (TFEU).
Significance: The Dassonville ruling introduced the "Dassonville formula," which set
a broad definition of what constitutes a restriction on trade. This laid the foundation
for the EU’s prohibition of measures that could impede the free movement of
goods.
Cassis de Dijon, Case 120/78 (1979)
Background: This case arose when Germany refused to allow the importation of
Cassis de Dijon, a French fruit liqueur, due to its alcohol content being below the
minimum level required by German law. The German rule effectively restricted the
importation of the liqueur from France.
Ruling: The CJEU held that, in the absence of EU-wide harmonized laws, Member
States could not restrict imports simply because of differences in domestic
standards unless the restriction was necessary to protect fundamental societal
interests, such as public health or consumer protection. This established the "rule of
reason" principle.
Significance: The Cassis de Dijon ruling introduced the concept of "mutual
recognition," which asserts that goods legally sold in one Member State should
generally be allowed in all Member States. It also established that certain
"mandatory requirements" could justify restrictions, but only if proportionate.
Together, Dassonville and Cassis de Dijon have significantly impacted the EU’s
single market by clarifying and expanding the legal basis for the free movement of
goods.
- Article 35
Quantitative restrictions on exports, and all measures having equivalent
effect, shall be prohibited between Member States.
- Article 36
The provisions of Articles 34 and 35 shall not preclude prohibitions or
restrictions on imports, exports or goods in transit justified on grounds of
public morality, public policy or public security; the protection of health and
life of humans, animals or plants; the protection of national treasures
possessing artistic, historic or archaeological value; or the protection of
industrial and commercial property. Such prohibitions or restrictions shall not,
however, constitute a means of arbitrary discrimination or a disguised
restriction on trade between Member States.
Tuesday 5, 2024
Continuation… EU internal markets and free movement of goods and people.
- One of the aims of the EU is to eliminate internal barriers for the movement
of goods and people.
- 3 types of measures may go against this an are dealt with in the treaties:
o Customs (art. 30 TFEU).
o Taxes (art. 170 TFEU).
o Quantitative restrictions and similar (Art. 34 and 35 TFEU).
- Analyzing if we are before a violation of Arts. 34 and 35
o Are we before a law that sets a quantity restriction, or is it a similar
effect?
o Is it justified under article 36?
o Proportionality test
- In Cassis de Dijon the EU Court accepted that consumer protection was a
justification under Art. 36. In the Italian trailers case, the same happened for
road safety. Other justifications include human rights.
Thursday 07
Lecture by Joseph H.H. Weiler
- EU treaties are superior to the member states’ constitutions. Therefore, EU
Court decisions are of a constitutional level, which gives it a lot of power.
- EU law is not supreme over all national law, just over national law within the
sphere of competencies of the EU.
- The Principle of Supremacy is being questioned by some member states,
since the EU treaties are now regulating things beyond economy.
- Polish constitutional court has rejected supremacy. Other constitutional courts
are also questioning it.
- EU Court decisions on the rule of law in Poland:
o EU Court pronouncing on how the judiciary in Poland was organized
o The EU Court founded their ruling on the fact that its organization was
a EU matter since such judges would have to apply EU law.
o Poland set that a judge could exceed their retirement age, provided
that it was approved by the Ministry of Justice.
o EU Court deemed this broke rule of law, since it conflicted with the
independence of judgment = guarantee against removal from office.
- Art. 255 committee on appointment of judges:
o Appointment of judges is for 6 months, removable.
- Judges in the EU Court have manifested fears of not being renewed if they
rule against their country or are not able to file a dissenting ruling.
- Former German government is thus proposing to go for a 12-year term
nonrenewable.
- Judges are appointed by common accord of the member states.
- Prof. Weiler thinks that the government can agree by common accord to issue
a statement that judges will be automatically renewed if he/she asks for it
and that at the end of the renewal there will be no more renewal. This would
also apply to seating judges. This to avoid going through the process to
modify the treaties.
- Case of appointment of Judge Gonçalo Manoel de Vilhena de Almeida Ribeiro:
o The 255 committee invented a 20-year experience requirement to sit
in the EU Court. There is no such requirement.
o Portugal withdraws the candidate.
o However, the president of the 255 committee will appear before the
governments to sustain their decision.
- The function of the 255 committee is advisory. However, in practice, the
governments follow their advice.
- There is a bottom-line problem: there is no clarity on how does each member
state chooses their appointee for the EU Court.
- EU Courts judges have to be beyond any questioning.
Monday 11
Free movement of persons in the EU
Rottmann Case C135/08
Zambrano Case C34/09
Directive 2004/38/EC – Citizens Rights Directive.
EU Law – nationality is based on member state law. A national of the member state
is also a citizen of the union. (what is being a citizen of the union?)
Rottmann case:
- Austrian national, who also acquired the German nationality. When getting
the German nationality, he lost Austrian one. He didn’t declare he had a
criminal procedure back in Austria, so Germany wanted to revoke the German
one thus leaving him without nationality.
- Questions for the court:
o Will he lose EU citizenship.
o Will Austria had to give nationality back?
- EU court ruled that Germany had to determinate if loosing the nationality was
a due sanction.
- EU court ruled that it was up to Austria to give the nationality back. They did
say that if the German procedure was not completed, then Austrian
nationality was not lost.
Zambrano
- Zambrano was an asylum seeker in Belgium. He had his asylum rejected but
started working. He had kids in Belgium, with Belgian citizenship.
- The Zambrano judgement established that a third country national parent
who is the primary carer of an EEA minor child could not be refused a right to
reside and work in the host member state if the refusal of a right to reside
would force the EEA child to leave the country, thus depriving them of their
European citizenship rights.
- Because of the ruling and subsequent amendments to EEA regulations the
Zambrano case now acts as an immigration route that states that EU member
states can grant a right of residence the primary carer of an EU national child
if refusing this would mean the child’s care would be jeopardized.
Tuesday 12
Under EU law (COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 2003/86/EC), EU citizens have the right to
request a residence permit if they are residing in another EU country. Said country
must issue the permit within 9 months of the request.
Students are also considered under the Freedom of Movement of Workers concept.
Freedom of establishment: Freedom to establish businesses in any EU country.
However, controls may be enacted in the case of strategic industries.
Freedom for providing services: Companies can provide services in other EU
states without need to establish in such country for +/- 1 year.
Friday 15
European Commission v. Malta
- Case on options given by Malta for obtaining nationality or residence permit.
- EU Commission had concerns on money laundry and security. Who would be
applying for it?
- The Commission maintains that citizenship should reflect a genuine
connection between the individual and the Member State, not be available for
purchase.
- Malta defends its program by emphasizing its sovereign right to determine
nationality laws. The Maltese government argues that the scheme includes
due diligence procedures and investment requirements that contribute to the
country's economic and social development.
- Against Malta:
o Abuse of right
o The principle of mutual trust would be undermined. The new citizens
would be EU citizens, and able to participle in the other members
states.
- In defense of Malta:
o A matter of national competence. TEFU – citizenship is an exclusive
competence of the member state.
o The regulation has limits, even for the number of citizens that can be
naturalized.
o There cannot be a standard of EU citizen. Each country can keep their
identity.
o This is beyond the competence of EU courts and law.
- Naturalization is a very sensitive political matter in Europe. It’s constantly
being debated, especially in election periods.
- Advocated general: Defended Malta. Nor mutual trust nor sincere cooperation
is affected.
2. Unconditional:
o The provision must not depend on further actions by the EU or Member
States.
3. Judicially Enforceable:
o It must be possible for a court to enforce the provision without
additional legislative or administrative measures.
Italy cases:
The Case C-105/14, Taricco and Others (commonly referred to as Taricco I), is a
landmark judgment by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) that
addresses the relationship between EU law, national criminal law, and fundamental
rights. The case revolves around the enforcement of EU obligations in cases of
serious VAT fraud and the tension between EU law and constitutional principles of
Member States.
Significance of Taricco I
1. EU Law Supremacy:
o The judgment reaffirmed the supremacy of EU law, even in sensitive
areas like criminal law.
2. Protection of EU Financial Interests:
o It highlighted the importance of effectively combating VAT fraud, which
directly affects the EU’s financial resources.
3. Tension Between EU and National Law:
o The case exposed potential limits to the principle of EU law primacy
when fundamental constitutional principles of Member States are at
stake.
The Taricco II case (C-42/17, M.A.S. and M.B.), also known as the follow-up to
Taricco I (C-105/14), revisited the contentious issues surrounding the relationship
between EU law, national criminal law, and constitutional principles. In Taricco II, the
Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) sought to address the tension
between the enforcement of EU obligations and the protection of national
constitutional identity.
Significance of Taricco II
1. Balancing Supremacy and Sovereignty:
o Taricco II marked a shift from the CJEU’s traditionally strong assertion
of EU law supremacy toward a more nuanced approach that respects
national constitutional identities.
2. Judicial Dialogue:
o The case exemplifies the importance of judicial dialogue in resolving
conflicts between EU law and national constitutional law, fostering
mutual respect between courts.
3. Precedent for Future Cases:
o Taricco II set an important precedent for how the CJEU might handle
future cases involving tensions between EU obligations and national
constitutional principles.
Conclusion
Taricco II reflects a significant moment in the evolution of EU law, highlighting the
complexities of enforcing EU obligations while respecting the constitutional
identities and fundamental rights of Member States. It underscores the importance
of balancing the effectiveness of EU law with the protection of national legal
traditions and individual rights.
Comments by the class:
At the end, after Taricco II, the Italian national court kept applying the national
principles.
Principle of legality: “Nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege”, meaning "No crime, no
punishment without law." This principle ensures that:
- Individuals can only be punished for actions that were clearly defined as
criminal at the time they were committed.
- Punishments are only imposed if they are prescribed by a pre-existing law.
There is no competence for the EU to harmonize on criminal law nor fiscal policy.
The short prescription period for the omission of VAT as a crime in Italy cheated the
EU law (Art. 325 of the TFEU), since it affected the EU’s source of revenue. Art. 325:
Take effective and dissuasive measures to combat fraud and other illegal activities
that harm the financial interests of the EU and ensure that EU financial interests
receive the same level of protection as national financial interests.
In Taricco I, the CJEU focused on procedure. In Taricco II the CJEU considered that, in
the end, the statute of limitations was not procedure but substance.
Final ruling Taricco II: Article 325(1) and (2) TFEU must be interpreted as requiring
the national court, in criminal proceedings for infringements relating to value added
tax, to disapply national provisions on limitation, forming part of national
substantive law, which prevent the application of effective and deterrent criminal
penalties in a significant number of cases of serious fraud affecting the financial
interests of the European Union, or which lay down shorter limitation periods for
cases of serious fraud affecting those interests than for those affecting the financial
interests of the Member State concerned, unless that disapplication entails a breach
of the principle that offences and penalties must be defined by law because of the
lack of precision of the applicable law or because of the retroactive application of
legislation imposing conditions of criminal liability stricter than those in force at the
time the infringement was committed.
Tuesday 19
Germany – case of the indirect buying by the ECB of bonds issued by the member
states. The EU Court, with vague arguments, upheld the buying of bonds even do -
as the teacher even agree- it was manifestly against the treaties (Art. 123 – 1 /
prohibition of financing to the member states).
The ESM – European Stability Mechanism – was ideated among the Eurozone
countries to provide an stability mechanism in case of financial stress of any of their
members.
Thursday 21
Reaction by Germany: The German Constitutional Court manifested the EU Court
ruling lacked “comprehensible” reasoning. Among others, they criticized the lack of
importance to the proportionality principle -applied to the division of competences-
and that it disregarded the effects of the PSPP.
They also argument that ECB acted “ultra vires”, since they didn’t have powers to
implement the policy.
The EU Court, with its ruling, broadened the mandate of the ECB and the scope of
the treaties, and thus went beyond its mandate – “ultra vires” and had no effect in
Germany.
The German Court recognized that the national courts still have a say with respect
to the interpretation of the treaties with respect to the competence given to the EU
since it was the member states which gave the competence. However, they did
recognize the importance of the EU Court roll to have a standardized reading of the
EU treaties and the principle of supremacy.
Polish case:
- EU law has also direct application in local laws. They must be aligned with EU
law.
Tuesday 26
EU External Relations – CCP and CFSP
Principles governing EU external action
Art. 3(5) TEU – In its international relations, the EU should uphold its values and
interests and contribute to the protection of its citizens. However, it’s a broadly
general article. Not commonly used.
Art. 21 TEU – EU’s actions shall be governed by the principles which inspired its
creation: democracy, rule of law, human rights, equality, solidarity and respect for
the principle of the UN Charter and international law.
Common Foreign and Security Policy – Second Pillar of the Maastricht treaty.
Regulated solely in the TEU.
The first step of sanctions is to agree to them under the TEU, unanimity in the
European Council. However, specific measures -economic sanctions- are regulated
in the TFEU – both on countries and individuals. Used to protect the interests of the
EU.
Mixed agreement includes subjects that are a matter of national competence (e.g.
portfolio investment).
Treaties can have provisional application prior to EP’s consent. In the case of mixed
agreements, solely the part that comprehends EU exclusive competencies.
- Individuals can file annulment action against EU sanction acts if their names
are on the list. The annulment action will be only with regards to the part that
affects them. This is because it would comply with the “direct and individual
concern” requirement.
- The cases highlight a conflict between EU law and international law. In the
professor’s view, what the CJEU did was indirectly review the sanctions
imposed by the UNSC for which it has no competence.
- CJEU: General Court’s faulted by revising the UNSC resolution based on ius
cogens principles of international law. It said that EU law was sufficient to do
it.
- Outcome: CJEU – Ruled in favor of Mr. Kadi and sustained that he had to be
granted due procedure and the possibility of review of the sanctions.
However, it gave the Council and the Commission 3 months to adopt a new
regulation and thus frozen the effects of the ruling for such a period.
Chat GPT Summary: The Kadi cases before the Court of Justice of the
European Union (CJEU)—Kadi I (C-402/05 P and C-415/05 P) and Kadi II (C-
584/10 P, C-593/10 P, and C-595/10 P)—are landmark decisions that address
the intersection of EU law, international law, and fundamental rights. These
cases arose from the imposition of sanctions under United Nations Security
Council (UNSC) resolutions and raised critical issues about the relationship
between EU law and international obligations. They were actions for
annulment under Art. 263 TFEU.
Background
UNSC Sanctions Regime: Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, the
UNSC adopted resolutions requiring Member States to freeze the assets of
individuals and entities associated with terrorism.
Mr. Yassin Abdullah Kadi, a Saudi businessman, was listed by the UN
Sanctions Committee as being associated with Al-Qaeda, leading to the
freezing of his assets.
Mr. Kadi's Challenge: Mr. Kadi challenged the EU regulation, arguing that it
violated his fundamental rights, including the right to property and the right
to be heard, as guaranteed by EU law.
Kadi I (2008)
Legal Issue: Whether the EU regulation implementing the UN sanctions
violated EU fundamental rights and whether the CJEU could review such
regulations.
The CJEU held that EU law is an autonomous legal order and subject to its
own fundamental rights standards. It ruled that:
- The EU regulation violated Mr. Kadi's fundamental rights because it
provided no opportunity for judicial review or for Mr. Kadi to challenge the
listing.
- EU regulations implementing UN sanctions must comply with EU
fundamental rights.
- The Court annulled the EU regulation as far as it applied to Mr. Kadi but
maintained its effects temporarily to allow the EU to remedy the situation.
- Kadi II (2013)
CJEU Judgment:
The CJEU upheld Mr. Kadi’s challenge, reiterating that:
- The evidence provided was insufficient to justify the sanctions.
- The rights of defense and effective judicial protection had been violated
because Mr. Kadi was not given adequate information to contest the
allegations.
- The Court annulled the relisting.
Key Implications
- Autonomy of EU Law: The Kadi cases affirmed the independence of EU law
from international law, emphasizing that all EU measures must respect
the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights.
Tuesday 3, 2024
Common Foreign and Security Policy
- Is subject to specific rules and procedures. Cannot go into the same set of
general competences of the EU.
- They are not mentioned in Art. 3-6 TFEU.
- The role of the EU’s courts is limited. Only with respect to the compliance of
article 40 TEU (that they don’t go ultra vires) and Article 275 TFEU (actions on
annulments by individuals due to sanctions, considering Art. 29 TEU).
- EU budget cannot be used to provide aid in defense matters to third
countries.
- Defined by the European Council (agreeing the general measure) and the
Council (agreeing on the specific measures).
- The Council is the main body for decisions on CFSP. They are assisted by the
High Representative of CFSP. The High Representative has also a seat in the
Commission.
- The Council represents their government and countries. While the
Commission shouldn’t represent the interests of their states, but the general
interest of the Union, it is an intergovernmental organ.
- If the Commission is dismissed, the High Representative will lose his role as
VP in the Commission and keep his role in the Council for Foreign Affairs.
- European External Action Service = A mix of employees of the Council and
Commission, plus diplomats of the countries, working on the EU’s external
policy.
- EU Court usually confirms sanctions.
- Main nature of the sanctions: economic.
Russia Today case:
- Russia Today France was prohibited from broadcasting.
- They alleged violation of freedom of speech and that the Council exceed their
faculties.
- The EU General Court confirmed the sanctions.
- Important paragraph 50: These sanctions must be able to be imposed at the
EU level.
- First time the Council imposed a sanction beyond purely economic measures.
- The Court did the proportionality test based on what the EU Court of Human
Rights would have done. They based the necessity test on public interest.
Contested argument.
- Fundamental rights can be restricted, but not those who touch provisions of
ius cogens (e.g. prohibition of torture).
Chat GPT summary on Russia Today: General Court's Findings
On July 27, 2022, the General Court upheld the Council's measures, concluding that
the restrictions did not infringe upon RT France's freedom of expression. The
Court's key legal determinations included:
Competence of the Council: The Court affirmed that the Council had the authority to
adopt restrictive measures under the EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy
(CFSP), especially in response to threats to international peace and security.
Proportionality and Necessity: The Court evaluated whether the measures were
appropriate and necessary to achieve their objectives. It determined that the
temporary suspension of RT France's broadcasting was proportionate, given the
exceptional context of the military aggression and the need to counter propaganda.
This ruling underscores the EU's capacity to impose restrictive measures on media
entities when deemed necessary to protect its foundational values and security
interests. It also highlights the balance between upholding fundamental rights and
addressing significant threats to peace and stability.
December 5, 2024
Art. 218 TFEU allows the EU to conclude international treaties. The Commission
negotiates.
When an agreement includes matters that are not of exclusive EU competence, the
agreement needs to be additional executed by the member states.
Why Belgium asked for the opinion? -stage: the Council haven’t agreed to the CETA
yet-. Belgium was seeking legal argument to support its opposition to the
agreement.
The EU cannot sign an agreement that gives a different tribunal the possibility to
interpret EU law.
A first attempt was made on the 90’s, however the EU Court of Justice issued an
opinion reflecting that the EU didn’t had competence to do so under the EU Treaties.
In the Treaty of Lisbon, a provision was incorporated to allow this (modification of
Art. 6 TEU).
Likely, the Council of Europe and ECHR had to be adjusted to allow international of
organizations, and not just states (Protocol 15).
Autonomy of the European Union Law = No external Courts can decide on EU law.
Difference with the CETA case = There the EU Court of Justice accepted the
agreement because they argued that the CETA dispute resolution mechanism would
take EU law as a “fact” and not interpretate it.
Recap. Class
Mercosur-EU case:
- Negotiations on the text have been concluded. Next step is signing and
ratification of the treaty by the party states.
- EU Commission must decide whether it is solely a trade agreement -requiring
only EU approval- or if the signature of the 27 states is needed.
- The Commission presents the treaty to the Council for approval. If well the
commission presents and recommends to the Council, it is up to the Council
to approve the road to take.
- If there is no agreement, France can take it to the Council.
- See 218 par. 11 = Opinion from the Court: A Member State, the European
Parliament, the Council or the Commission may obtain the opinion of the
Court of Justice as to whether an agreement envisaged is compatible with the
Treaties. Where the opinion of the Court is adverse, the agreement envisaged
may not enter into force unless it is amended, or the Treaties are revised.
- If the Council agrees to conclude the treaty, France challenges it under an
annulment action.
- Decisions of the Council are taken by unanimity or qualified majority.
- The Trade Agreement could be approved by a qualified majority in the Council
if it’s solely a trade agreement because it is an exclusive -largely-
competence of the EU, as for the shared competences of internal markets, its
mostly harmonized.
- The Opinion -is concludes non-compatible- has the same effect as an
annulment.
- The other option is to go through unanimity in the Council -e.g. if it regulates
competences not exclusive given to the EU or harmonized, intellectual
property-.
- If it includes matters not of the competence of the EU -e.g. education-, it
additionally needs the individual approval of member states and that they are
a party.
- Yuliya doesn’t think that the agreement could be questioned for failing to
comply with the negotiation of an “association agreement” mandate if what
is signed is qualified just as a trade agreement. The substances would be a
stronger argument.
- The question would be “can the agreement be signed by the EU?”. This was
handled before in an agreement between the EU and Singapore (review this).
The States wanted it to be classified as a mixed agreement by the
Commission wanted it to be just EU under its competences. See Art. 207. The
Court said that it was legally an agreement that could be signed by the EU,
but politically it should be mixed.
However, this case made case law that the competence for EU to conclude
trade agreements is very ample -as long as it doesn’t touch investment
matters-.
- Yuliya: This expansion of competencies by the EU Court in favor of the
Commission and the EU undermines the legitimacy of the EU and spikes euro-
skepticism.
- France has 2 options:
o Opinion: But unlikely to get a favorable ruling.
o Rebel: Either not applying or recuring to national constitutional court in
a ultra vires like case as the Weiss case in Germany.
- Even if they go along the road of approval by the member states, the
Commission still has the option to go for the provisional application of the
Mercosur agreement.
- When does provisional application stop? It should stop when one of the
member states rejects the treaty, theoretically. This is based on the principle
of international law. However, EU hasn’t followed this.
- EU Court tends to fall on an argument that the EU treaties created a new
legal order (See 157 of Opinion 2/13 -previous class-).
- Migration is not an exclusive competence of the EU.
Study:
EU External Relations
Restrictive measures or ‘sanctions’ constitute a key tool of foreign policy by which
the EU aims to create a change in the policy or behaviour of a country. They can
take the form of arms embargos, asset freezes, restrictions on entry into and travel
through the territory of the EU, import or export bans etc. They can target
governments, companies, individuals and groups or organisations (such as terrorist
groups for example).
In addition to terrorist organisations such as Al-Quaeda, around thirty countries
have already had sanctions imposed on them by the Council of the European Union,
including Afghanistan, Belarus, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Iran, Libya, Russia, Syria,
Tunisia, Ukraine and Zimbabwe.
Eyad Makhlouf (the cousin of Syrian President Bashir Al Assad) had his funds frozen
by the Council on the grounds that he was the brother of Rami Makhlouf (one of the
most powerful Syrian businessmen) and a General Intelligence Directorate officer
involved in violent repression against the Syrian civilian population. The General
Court upheld the freeze, finding that Mr Makhlouf did not produce evidence that
could cast doubt on the claim that he supported the Syrian regime. Furthermore, Mr
Makhlouf’s rights of defence had not been violated because he was afforded the
opportunity to defend himself effectively against the Council.
Makhlouf v Council, T-383/11, 13 September 2013
In 2010, the Iranian company Fulmen and its director were subject to a freeze of
their funds on the basis that they were implicated, according to the Council, in the
installation of electrical equipment at a secret site connected to the Iranian nuclear
programme. The General Court, however, annulled the freeze. It found that the
Council had based its reasoning on mere unsubstantiated allegations and that it had
thus not provided evidence of an intervention by Fulmen or by its director at the site
concerned. The General Court held that the Council was required to produce such
evidence.
Fulmen and Fereydoun Mahmoudian v Council, T-439/10 and T440/10, 21 March
2012
In Plaumann & Co. v. Commission, Case 25/62, 1963 E.C.R. 95, the Court of Justice
required that in order to allow individuals to challenge a regulation, this regulation
should affect them “by reason of certain attributes, which are particular to them or
by reason of circumstances in which they are differentiated from all other persons
and by virtue of these factors distinguishes them individually.”
The approval process for treaties to be signed by the European Union (EU) depends
on the treaty's subject matter and the legal basis provided in the EU Treaties. Here’s
a detailed explanation:
B. Unanimity
When is Unanimity Required?
o Unanimity is required in sensitive areas, where Member States retain a
higher degree of sovereignty or where the treaties explicitly mandate
it. Examples include:
1. Areas of Shared Competence:
Agreements concerning sensitive policy areas, such as
taxation, social policy, and cultural matters (Article 218(8)
TFEU).
2. Institutional Matters:
Treaties affecting the EU’s institutional framework or
amendments to existing treaties.
3. Foreign and Security Policy:
Agreements relating to the Common Foreign and Security
Policy (CFSP) require unanimity (Article 31 TEU).
4. Accession Agreements:
Treaties for new Member States joining the EU must be
unanimously approved by the Council and ratified by all
Member States.
4. Practical Examples
Qualified Majority Voting:
EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA):
o Most provisions were approved by QMV, as the agreement primarily
concerned trade policy.
Unanimity:
Accession Treaties:
o For example, the Treaty of Accession for new Member States joining
the EU requires unanimity.
CFSP Agreements:
o Sanctions or defense-related agreements require unanimous approval
in the Council.
Conclusion
QMV applies as the general rule for treaties related to areas of EU
competence, ensuring efficiency in decision-making.
Unanimity is reserved for sensitive areas where Member States wish to
maintain stronger control or where the treaties explicitly require it.
Shared competences between the European Union (EU) and its Member States do
not become permanently exclusive to the EU once the EU acts on them.
However, the principle of pre-emption applies, which temporarily limits Member
States' ability to act in areas where the EU has exercised its shared competence.
Below is a detailed explanation:
2. Principle of Pre-emption
Article 2(2) TFEU explains that in areas of shared competence:
"The Member States shall exercise their competence to the extent that the Union
has not exercised its competence."
Key Implication:
o When the EU adopts binding legislation in a shared competence, it
"pre-empts" Member States from acting in the same area.
o Pre-emption applies only to the extent covered by the EU legislation:
Full Pre-emption: Member States cannot legislate or adopt
conflicting rules in the specific area governed by EU law.
Partial Pre-emption: Member States retain the ability to
legislate in areas not covered by the EU’s actions.
5. Practical Examples
A. Consumer Protection
The EU’s directives, such as the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive,
harmonize specific rules across Member States. Once adopted, national laws
must align, but Member States can introduce stricter protections if permitted.
B. Environmental Policy
In areas like climate action, EU legislation often leaves room for Member
States to adopt complementary measures, such as stricter carbon reduction
targets.
Conclusion
Shared competences do not become permanently exclusive to the EU once the EU
acts, but Member States are limited by the principle of pre-emption. Member States
can regain competence in areas not covered or if the EU withdraws its legislation.
This system ensures flexibility and preserves Member States' sovereignty within the
framework of the Treaties.
Here's a detailed breakdown addressing each of your points based on the syllabus
and core EU law concepts:
#### *Supremacy*
- *Definition*: EU law takes precedence over conflicting national law.
- *Key Case: **Costa v ENEL (1964)*
- Facts: Italy nationalized electricity; Costa argued it breached EU law.
- Principle: EU law cannot be overridden by domestic laws; it ensures uniform
application.
- *Legal Basis: Derived from **Article 4(3) TEU* (principle of loyalty/cooperation).
- *Conflicts: Tensions arise when national courts challenge supremacy (e.g.,
**Weiss* case in Germany).
#### *Proportionality*
- *Definition*: Measures taken by the EU or Member States must be appropriate,
necessary, and not go beyond what is required to achieve objectives.
- *Legal Basis*: Article 5(4) TEU.
- *Application*: Used to assess legality of national/EU measures restricting freedoms
(e.g., free movement of goods/persons).
#### *Definition*
- The right of EU citizens and their family members to move, reside, and work freely
within the EU.
#### *Conflicts*
- *Taricco Cases*: Italian courts refused to apply EU law due to constitutional
protections.
- *Weiss Case*: German Constitutional Court challenged ECB measures.
- *Poland K 3/21*: Polish Tribunal rejected primacy of EU law.
#### *Steps*
1. *Proposal*: The Commission or High Representative proposes the negotiation.
2. *Council Mandate*: Council authorizes negotiations.
3. *Negotiation*: Conducted by the Commission/High Representative.
4. *Council Approval*: Adoption requires a qualified majority or unanimity.
5. *Parliament Consent*: For specific agreements (e.g., association agreements).
6. *CJEU Opinion: Ensures compatibility with EU treaties (e.g., **Opinion 2/13* on
ECHR).
1. Legal Basis
Article 34 TFEU:
"Quantitative restrictions on imports and all measures having equivalent effect shall
be prohibited between Member States."
Article 35 TFEU extends the same prohibition to exports.
2. Definition of MEEQRs
MEEQRs were broadly defined in the landmark case Dassonville (Case 8/74):
“All trading rules enacted by Member States which are capable of hindering, directly
or indirectly, actually or potentially, intra-Community trade are to be considered as
measures having equivalent effect to quantitative restrictions.”
3. Examples of MEEQRs
MEEQRs include a wide range of measures that may not explicitly target imports or
exports but create barriers to trade:
National standards or certifications that require imported goods to
comply with additional requirements not applied to domestic goods.
Restrictive packaging, labeling, or marketing requirements.
Advertising restrictions that limit the visibility of imported goods.
Licensing systems that create delays or uncertainty for imports.
Administrative practices that impose higher burdens on foreign products.
6. Significance
The concept of MEEQRs is central to ensuring the free movement of goods in
the EU, a cornerstone of the internal market.
It prevents Member States from using indirect barriers to trade that could
undermine economic integration.