Case law

  • Case Details
    • National ID: Court of Justice (Third Chamber), Judgement C-430/17
    • Member State: European Union
    • Common Name:Walbusch Walter Busch GmbH & Co. KG v Zentrale zur Bekämpfung unlauteren Wettbewerbs Frankfurt am Main eV
    • Decision type: Court of Justice decision
    • Decision date: 23/01/2019
    • Court: Court of Justice
    • Subject:
    • Plaintiff:
    • Defendant:
    • Keywords: Consumer protection, Distance contracts, right of withdrawal, general terms
  • Directive Articles
    Consumer Rights Directive, Chapter 3, Article 6, 1., (h) Consumer Rights Directive, Chapter 3, Article 8, 4.
  • Headnote

    ECLI identifier: ECLI:EU:C:2019:47

     

    The ECJ points out that the purpose of the Consumer Rights Directive is to afford consumers, in distance contracts, extensive protection by ensuring that they are informed and by conferring on them a number of rights. According to the ECJ, the pre-contractual information is of fundamental importance for a consumer, since it is on the basis of that information that the consumer decides whether he or she wishes to be contractually bound to the trader.

    The ECJ held that, in the case of distance contracts, the information requirements should be adapted to take into account the technical constraints of specific media, such as restrictions on the number of characters on specific mobile telephone screens or the time constraint on television sales spots.

    The ECJ ultimately found that, if there is limited space, the trader should comply with a minimum set of information requirements and refer the consumer to another source of information, for instance by providing a toll free telephone number or a hypertext link to a webpage of the trader where the relevant information is directly available and easily accessible.

  • Facts

    The facts of the case date back to 2014 when Walbusch Walter Busch (“Walbusch”), a clothing retailer, distributed an advertising leaflet with a detachable mail order coupon as a supplement to various newspapers and magazines. The coupon contained specific information about the trader, as well as information about the consumer’s right of withdrawal coupled with a reference to a website link giving access to the model withdrawal form.

    The Zentrale zur Bekämpfung unlauteren Wettbewerbs Frankfurt am Main eV, a consumer association, submitted an application to the Landgericht Wuppertal (Wuppertal Regional Court, Germany) for an order to cease the publication of that leaflet as it considered that the information provided on the leaflet did not satisfy the formal information requirements relating to the consumer’s right of withdrawal in distance contracts as set out in Article 6(h) of the Consumer Rights Directive.

  • Legal issue
    • For the purposes of applying Article 8(4) of Directive [2011/83], does the answer to the question whether a means of distance communication (in this instance, an advertising leaflet containing a mail order coupon) allows limited space or time to display information depend on:

    1. Whether (in the abstract) the means of distance communication allows only limited space or time by its very nature, or

    2. Whether (in the particular case) it offers limited space or time in the design selected for it by the trader?

    • Is it compatible with Article 8(4) and Article 6(1)(h) of Directive [2011/83] for information on the right of withdrawal to be restricted to an indication of the existence of a right of withdrawal, in the case, as provided for in Article 8(4) of Directive [2011/83], where there is limited scope for displaying that information?

    • Do Article 8(4) and Article 6(1)(h) of Directive [2011/83] make it a mandatory requirement in all cases, including in a case where there is limited scope for displaying information, for the model withdrawal form set out in Annex I(B) to Directive [2011/83] to be attached to the means of distance communication before a distance contract is concluded?

  • Decision

    • The assessment of whether, in a specific case, the means of communication allows limited space or time to display the information, in accordance with Article 8(4) of Directive 2011/83/EU must be carried out having regard for all of the technical features of the trader’s marketing communication. In that regard, it falls to the national court to ascertain whether, considering the space and time occupied by the communication and the minimum size of the typeface which is appropriate for the average consumer targeted by that communication, all the information set out in Article 6(1) of that Directive may objectively be displayed within that communication.

    • Article 6(1)(h) and Article 8(4) of Directive 2011/83 must be interpreted to the effect that, in a situation where the contract is concluded through a means of distance communication which allows limited space or time to display the information, and where a right of withdrawal exists, the trader is required to provide the consumer, on the means of communication in question and before the conclusion of the contract, with information regarding the conditions, time limit and procedures for exercising that right. In such a situation, that trader must provide the consumer with the model withdrawal, as provided for in Annex I(B) of that Directive, by another source in plain and intelligible language.

    URL: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/TXT/?uri=CELEX:62017CJ0430

    Full text: Full text

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  • Result

    The ECJ ruled that, if there is limited space, the trader should comply with a minimum set of information requirements and refer the consumer to another source of information, for instance by providing a toll free telephone number or a hypertext link to a webpage of the trader where the relevant information is directly available and easily accessible.