The Implications of Menarini Marco Bronckers GCLC / 8 December 2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Article 54 CISA and the ECJ/CGEU case law
Advertisements

The Supreme Court of Norway. Burden of Proof A Comparative Look at Selected Procedural Issues The Norwegian Supreme Court2.
COMI IN JUDGMENTS OF THE EUROPEAN COURT OF JUSTICE DR MAREK PORZYCKI European Insolvency Regulation.
INTRODUCTION INTO PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Marko Jovanovic, LL.M. MASTER IN EUROPEAN INTEGRATION Private International Law in the.
The fundamentals of EC competition law
Monti II Regulation and Enforcement Directive on Posting of Workers CBSP Committee 7 November 2012 Jorma Rusanen.
A narrow pathway between fences Seminar on free movement of same sex families in Europe European Parliament, 3 May 2011 Pál Szirányi – Permanent representation.
Announcements l Beginning Friday at 10:50 a.m., you and your moot court partner may sign up as Appellees or Appellants. l The sign-up sheet will be posted.
International Treaty in EU PIL
EU: Bilateral Agreements of Member States
EU: Bilateral Agreements of Member States. Formerly concluded international agreements of Member States with third countries Article 351 TFEU The rights.
1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention and Brussels II bis Interaction within the EU and beyond Prof. Dr. Marta Pertegás First Secretary Hague Conference.
EU Accession to the ECHR The architecture: design and build Tim Jewell Cabinet Office Legal.
The relevance of EU Law and the procedures of the CJEU for the domestic judge Workshop on EU Law on Industrial Emissions Budapest, 3 June 2013 Trier, 11.
Asst. Prof. Dr. Alexander Bürgin IUE1 European Union Law and the Courts Repetition.
Slide 1/30 © copyright Standard training programme in judicial cooperation in criminal matters within the European Union Version: 3.0 Last updated:
APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS IN TAX MATTERS ECHR cases Jussila v. Finland and Ruotsalainen v. Finland 32E29000 European and International.
European Ombudsman Access to environmental information Task Force on Access to Information Geneva, 4 December 2014.
The Law of the European Union Information and Communication.
Introduction to EU Law Cont.d. ECJ – TFI (Arts ) “The Court of Justice and the Court of First Instance, each within its jurisdiction, shall ensure.
Competition law and Article 8 ECHR VMR, 13 March 2008 Jolien Schukking.
7 December 2010 Procedural rights of suspects and accused in the EU The Roadmap and its implementation Adrienne Boerwinkel Senior Legal Adviser Dutch Ministry.
Retroactivity and the General Anti-Avoidance Rule Benjamin Alarie Faculty of Law, University of Toronto.
Support of the foreign language profile of law tuition at the Faculty of Law in Olomouc CZ.1.07/2.2.00/
Emergency Briefing Remote Gambling - European Update THIBAULT VERBIEST Attorney-at-law at the Brussels and Paris Bars Founding Partner of ULYS LawFirm.
European Commission, DG Competition Fifth Annual Conference on Competition Enforcement in the CCE Member States 21 February 2014, Bratislava 1 Due Process.
Some issues about Agencies and Distributorships in Brazil, Australia and New Zealand Fabiano Deffenti Attorney at Law (New York) Legal Practitioner (Australia)
ERA Academy of European Law Trier. Competition rules and regulation of legal professions – Case law of the ECJ 4 th Annual conference on EU Law Institute.
Dr. Ralf Sauer, LL.M. (Yale), Legal Service, European Commission
Administration in International Organizations PUBLIC COMPETITION LAW Class II, 13th Oct 2014 Krzysztof Rokita.
Conglomerate Merger Control After Tetra Laval Sven B. Völcker 29 April 2005.
European Private International Law JUDr. Tereza Kyselovská.
Seminar on EC case-law Bedanna Bapuly Brno, 2007 October 15th.
The Principles Governing EU Environmental Law. 2 The importance of EU Environmental Law at the European and globallevel The importance of EU Environmental.
1 Practical implications of the BWin judgment by: Justin Franssen.
Dr Marek Porzycki.  the debtor has some assets abroad  the debtor has creditors abroad  the debtor carries out his activities on a cross-border basis.
Ed Cape Professor of Criminal Law and Practice. 2.
Bath and North East Somerset Council Planning Enforcement Training Olwen Dutton Partner, Bevan Brittan.
Tax Court of Canada Cour canadienne de l’impôt International Association of Tax Judges Guindon v Canada Large third party penalties under the Income Tax.
European Law in the Case- law of the Constitutional Court of Latvia Kristine Kruma.
Lost in Translations – An Examination of the Legal & Practical Problems Associated with the Implementation (or Non-Implementation) of Directive 2010/64/EU.
Legal Foundations of European Union Law II Tutorials Karima Amellal.
Institute for Austrian and International Tax Law Cooperative compliance at the crossroad of different legal frameworks – Cooperative.
Compatibility of ICS in CETA with EU law Presentation by: Laurens Ankersmit GUE CETA conference 31/5/2016.
The EU Accession to the ECHR after Opinion 2/13: Reflections, Solutions and the Way Forward Dr Sonia Morano – Foadi and Dr Stelios Andreadakis European.
Seminar on EU Service Directive Budapest, 3 May 2007 Thibaut Partsch
Interactive Gaming Council Board Meeting I-Gaming Legal status
The EU and International Environmental Law
The Notion of State aid © Łukasz Stępkowski, Ph.D. candidate, Chair of Int’l and European Law, advocate.
European Union Law Week 6.
Private and Public law lesson 4 The European integration process and the European legal order (overview)
Parental Liability São Paulo, November 15, 2017 Daniel Douek.
INTRODUCTION INTO PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
European actions.
Public antitrust enforcement- Procedure and Standards of Judicial Review in EU Competition Law EU Antitrust Law September 2018, Zadar Croatia.
General Principles and Problems of Convention Law
ICN CWG SG1 webinar on ‘”Parental liability”
Parental liability & investment firms
Directive 2016/800 on procedural safeguards for children suspected or accused in criminal proceedings Steven Cras Political Administrator, General Secretariat.
Judicial High Council (CSM) Contentious
ICN webinar on parental liability 20 September 2017 Tímea Pálos
Internal (single) market
Private and Public law lesson 4 The European integration process and the European legal order (overview)
The impact of article 47 CFREU on national caselaw between general principles and sectorial Application Jacek Chlebny, professor at the University of Łódź,
Criminal Justice Responses to Terrorism
The Rule of Law & Mutual Recognition Can the EU live up to its own expectations? Nele Audenaert 05/09/2018.
The right to access to justice between EU Charter and ECHR
LECTURE No 6 - THE EUROPEAN UNION’s JUDICIAL SYSTEM I (courts)
FRANK SLEUTJES CASE C About the right to interpretation and translation in criminal proceedings. Esta foto de Autor desconocido está bajo licencia.
PROCURA DELLA REPUBBLICA v. M.
Presentation transcript:

The Implications of Menarini Marco Bronckers GCLC / 8 December 2011

Background Do fundamental rights make a difference for EU competition law? Old question New answers after Lisbon? 2

Background (2) Growing recognition that ECHR was relevant ▫ but was ECtHR case law strictly followed? ▫ now Charter instruction Growing recognition that comp fines are “criminal” under Art. 6 ECHR ▫ but how “criminal” are they (Jussila 2006) ▫ what are the implications? 3

Jussila para. 43 While…the requirements of a fair hearing are the most strict in the sphere of criminal law, the Court would not exclude that in the criminal sphere the nature of the issues to be dealt with before the tribunal or court may not require an oral hearing…there are criminal cases which do not carry any significant degree of stigma. There are clearly “criminal charges” of differing weight. What is more, the autonomous interpretation adopted by the Convention institutions of the notion of a “criminal charge” by applying the Engel criteria have underpinned a gradual broadening of the criminal head to cases not strictly belonging to the traditional categories of the criminal law, for example administrative penalties…customs law…competition law…Tax surcharges differ from the hard core of criminal law; consequently, the criminal-head guarantees will not necessarily apply with their full stringency. 4

Menarini judgment Italian case, relevant to EU law ECtHR confirms criminal character of comp law fines ECtHR accepts administrative enforcement, provided “full jurisdiction” of courts to review ECtHR satisfied with review in this case 5

Criticisms The dissent: the context suggested too much deference to administration ▫ but see ‘bridging’ concurring opinion Questions left open: ▫ how stringent will Art. 6 disciplines be (Jussila 2006)? 6

Implications: standard of review ECtHR: “full jurisdiction” ▫ must cover all points of fact and law ▫ must be able to reformulate (or simply quash?) admin findings 7

Implications: standard of review Art. 263 TFEU: “legality review” ▫ lack of competence ▫ infringement of an essential procedural requirement ▫ infringement of…any rule of law ▫ misuse of powers 8

Implications: standard of review Art. 261 TFEU: courts can be given “unlimited jurisdiction” with regard to penalties Art. 31 Reg. 1/2003: CJEU shall have “unlimited jurisdiction” to review decisions imposing fines; it may “cancel, reduce or increase” fines 9

Implications: standard of review Is there obstacle in the TFEU against “full jurisdiction” required by ECtHR? certainly not in “unlimited jurisdiction” ▫ but does this cover actual finding of infringement? probably not in “legality review” ▫ Art. 263 not as restrictive as ECSC-predecessor 10

Implications: standard of review Is there obstacle in the CJEU case law against “full jurisdiction” required by ECtHR? the problem is “complex economic assessments” ▫ procedural errors ▫ inadequate reasoning ▫ inaccurate statement of fact ▫ manifest error of assessment ▫ misuse of powers 11

Implications: standard of review How to overcome the case law obstacle? “marginalize marginal review” ▫ reduce number of complex assessments ▫ adapt formula to reflect actual intensity 12

Implications: standard of review New formula? In a legality review “the Courts cannot use the Commission’s margin of discretion…as a basis for dispensing with the conduct of an in-depth review of the law and of the facts.” “The review of legality is supplemented by the unlimited jurisdiction…” KME 8 December 2011, paras. 102 &

Implications: standard of review Echo of Menarini’s concurring opinion? “…although the General Court repeatedly referred to the ‘discretion’, the ‘substantial margin of discretion’ or the ‘wide discretion’ of the Commission, including in paragraphs 35 to 37, 92, 103, 115, 118, 129 and 141 of the judgment under appeal, such references did not prevent the General Court from carrying out the full and unrestricted review, in law and in fact, required of it.” KME 8 December 2011, para

Implications: standard of review A more fundamental approach to “full jurisdiction”: eliminate “complex economic assessments” ▫ is there room for any admin discretion in defining criminal infringements (Art. 6 and 7 ECHR)? confirm that courts can reformulate infringement findings make appeals against fines suspensive ▫ also consider presumption of innocence (Art. 6.2 ECHR) 15

Other implications Menarini underscores direct relevance of ECHR to competition law proceedings Consider also other pending cases before ECtHR ▫ Finnish case- questioning absence of cross-examination of witnesses ▫ Dutch case– questioning parental liability presumption 16

Example: parental liability Parent presumed to be liable for conduct 100% subsidiary (Akzo 2009) Rebuttal must show no parental influence generally in subsidiary’s conduct ▫ not just in anti-competitive behavior No rebuttal to date has ever been accepted Recently, COM’s reasons for rejecting rebuttals have been criticized (Air Liquide, Grolsch, Elf Aquitaine 2011) 17

Example: parental liability (2) ECtHR case law (Salabiaku 1988) on presumptions: ▫ reasonably serve public policy goal ▫ may not be automatic ▫ effective rebuttals must be available Compare other instances where corporate veil is pierced (tax; tort; human rights) ▫ unusual ▫ with rebuttals 18

Example: parental liability (3) Does “economic unit” concept justify exceptional approach in competition law? Is fine increase proportionate? Is parental liability as a rule necessary? In any event: COM to identify acceptable rebuttals 19

Conclusion After Menarini, no more business as usual for EU competition law Draft, 25 Nov