Case law

  • Case Details
    • National ID: C-412/06
    • Member State: European Union
    • Common Name:N/A
    • Decision type: Other
    • Decision date: 10/04/2008
    • Court: European Court of Justice
    • Subject:
    • Plaintiff:
    • Defendant:
    • Keywords: Case law European Union English
  • Directive Articles
    Doorstep Selling Directive, Article 5
  • Headnote
    Council Directive 85/577/EEC of 20 December 1985 to protect the consumer in respect of contracts negotiated away from business premises must be interpreted as meaning that the national legislature is entitled to provide that the right of cancellation laid down in Article 5(1) of the directive may be exercised no later than one month from the time at which the contracting parties have performed in full their obligations under a contract for long-term credit, where the consumer has been given defective notice concerning the exercise of that right.
  • Facts
    On 17 November 1992, Ms Hamilton signed, at her home, a contract for a loan with a bank – whose rights were acquired by Volksbank – in order to finance the acquisition of shares in a real property fund. In accordance with the Law on consumer credit (Verbraucherkreditgesetz) of 17 December 1990 (BGBl. I 1990, p. 2480) that contract contained the following notice concerning the right of cancellation: ‘[i]f the borrower has received the loan, cancellation shall be deemed not to have taken place unless he repays the loan either within two weeks of giving notice of cancellation or within two weeks of the paying out of the loan’. On 16 December 1992, the employees of Volksbank’s predecessor signed the contract in question and paid the amount of the loan to Ms Hamilton, who later began to pay interest on the loan.

    Since the promoter of the real property fund in which Ms Hamilton had bought shares filed for bankruptcy in 1997, there was a significant reduction in the monthly distributions from the fund, which had covered a substantial part of the interest payable under the loan contract at issue. Ms Hamilton therefore decided to reschedule her debt by concluding a building society savings contract and taking out a bridging loan with the effect that, at the end of April 1998, she had entirely repaid the loan to Volksbank’s predecessor, which, consequently, returned the security for the loan.

    On 16 May 2002, Ms Hamilton cancelled the loan contract at issue on the basis of the judgment in Case C-481/99 Heininger [2001]. On 27 December 2004, Ms Hamilton brought an action against Volksbank, on the one hand, for reimbursement of the interest paid under the loan contract at issue and the amount of the loan that she had paid back and, on the other, for compensation for the interest she had paid to the building society with which she had concluded the savings contract.

    In the view of the Oberlandesgericht Stuttgart, the loan contract at issue falls under point (i) of the second indent of Article 1(1) of the doorstep selling directive, since Ms Hamilton had negotiated and signed that contract at her home. However, the Oberlandesgericht Stuttgart has doubts as to whether the provisions laid down in the fourth sentence of Paragraph 2(1) of the Law on the cancellation of doorstep transactions and analogous transactions can be regarded as ‘appropriate consumer protection measures’ because they provide that, in a case such as that before it, the right of cancellation is to lapse.
  • Legal issue
  • Decision

    The ECJ ruled that the doorstep selling directive must be interpreted as meaning that the national legislature is entitled to provide that the right of cancellation laid down in Article 5(1) of the directive may be exercised no later than one month from the time at which the contracting parties have performed in full their obligations under a contract for long-term credit, where the consumer has been given defective notice concerning the exercise of that right. With regard, specifically, to the purpose of the time-limit for cancellation, the fifth recital in the preamble to the directive states that time-limit enables the consumer ‘to assess the obligations arising under the contract’ concluded at the doorstep. The reference in that recital to the concept of ‘obligations arising under the contract’ indicates that the consumer may cancel such a contract during the time that it is in effect.

    Similarly, according to the ECJ, the provision which governs the exercise of the right of cancellation – namely, Article 5(1) of the doorstep selling directive – provides, inter alia, that ‘[t]he consumer shall have the right to renounce the effects of his undertaking’. The use in that provision of the term ‘undertaking’ indicates, as Volksbank argued at the hearing before the Court, that the right of cancellation may be exercised as long as the consumer is not bound, at the time that the right is exercised, by any undertaking under the cancelled contract. That logic flows from one of the general principles of civil law, namely that full performance of a contract results, as a general rule, from discharge of the mutual obligations under the contract or from termination of that contract, says the ECJ.

    Furthermore, with regard to the legal effects of cancellation, particularly in regard to the reimbursement of payment for goods or services provided and the return of goods received, Article 7 of the doorstep selling directive refers to the national laws. It follows that an ‘appropriate measure’ within the meaning of the third paragraph of Article 4 of the doorstep selling directive is one which provides that the performance in full by the parties of their obligations under a long-term loan contract causes the right of cancellation to lapse.

    According to the ECJ, that interpretation is not weakened by the judgments in Heininger and Schulte or in Case C-229/04 Crailsheimer Volksbank [2005]. It can be seen from paragraphs 16 and 18 of Heininger, paragraph 26 of Schulte and paragraph 24 of Crailsheimer Volksbank that the interpretation of the doorstep selling directive provided by the Court in those judgments concerns loan contracts which had not been fully performed. However, that is not the position in the case before the referring court. With regard, specifically, to Heininger, the Court held in that judgment that the doorstep selling directive precludes the national legislature from imposing a time-limit, of one year from the conclusion of the contract, within which the right of cancellation provided for in Article 5 of that directive must be exercised, where the consumer has not received the information specified in Article 4 of that directive. As Volksbank, the German Government and the Commission were fully entitled to argue, that is not the position in the case before the referring court. In that case, the national legislature applies a time-limit of one month from the time at which the contracting parties have performed in full their obligations under a contract.

    With regard to the one-month time-limit provided for by the national legislation at issue in the main proceedings, which runs from the performance in full by the parties of their obligations under the contract, the ECJ points out that, under Article 8 of the doorstep selling directive, that directive does not prevent Member States from adopting or maintaining more favourable provisions to protect consumers in the field which it covers.

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