Case law

  • Case Details
    • National ID: Case C‑421/12
    • Member State: European Union
    • Common Name:N/A
    • Decision type: Court of Justice decision
    • Decision date: 10/07/2014
    • Court: European Court of Justice
    • Subject:
    • Plaintiff: European Commission
    • Defendant: Kingdom of Belgium
    • Keywords: price reductions, Scope of the UCP Directive – Full harmonisation
  • Directive Articles
    Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Chapter 1, Article 2, (b) Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Chapter 1, Article 2, (d) Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Chapter 1, Article 3, 1. Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Chapter 1, Article 4
  • Headnote
    (1) The exclusion of the profession of dentist and of physiotherapist from the scope of the national law implementing Directive 2005/29 contravenes article 3(1) of that Directive, read in conjunction with Article 2(b) and (d) thereof.

    (2) The maintaining in force of more restrictive provisions on the announcements of price reductions than prescribed by Directive 2005/29 contravene article 4 of that Directive.
  • Facts
    On 2 February 2009, the European Commission sent a letter of formal notice to the Kingdom of Belgium in which it set out 11 complaints concerning various infringements of Directive 2005/29. In its letters of reply of 3 and 24 June 2009, the Kingdom of Belgium reported that it would be introducing legislative amendments in order to resolve a number of the issues raised by the Commission. To that end, the Law of 6 April 2010 entered into force on 12 May 2010.

    Following an analysis of that legislation, the Commission found that it failed to address four of the complaints set out in the formal notice. Accordingly, on 15 March 2011, it issued a reasoned opinion to the Kingdom of Belgium concerning those complaints, to which the latter replied on 11 May 2011.

    As it was not satisfied with the Kingdom of Belgium’s reply with regard to the three complaints set out in its reasoned opinion, the Commission decided to bring an action.
  • Legal issue
    (1) Does the exclusion of the profession of dentist and of physiotherapist from the scope of the national law implementing Directive 2005/29 contravene article 3(1) of that Directive, read in conjunction with Article 2(b) and (d) thereof?

    (2) Does the maintaining in force of a general prohibition on the announcements of price reductions and doorstep selling than prescribed by Directive 2005/29 contravene article 4 of that Directive?
  • Decision

    (1) The court repeated the principle that a Member State may not plead provisions, practices or circumstances existing in its internal legal system in order to justify a failure to comply with the obligations under rules of EU law, as well as the principle that even where the settled case-law of a Member State interprets the provisions of national law in a manner deemed to satisfy the requirements of a directive, that cannot achieve the clarity and precision needed to meet the requirement of legal certainty, particularly in the field of consumer protection, in ruling that the Kingdom of Belgium was in breach of article 2(b) (and (d) and 3(1) of Directive 2005/29.

    (2) The court ruled that, given the goal of complete harmonisation at EU level of the rules concerning unfair commercial practices of undertakings vis-à-vis consumers, the maintaining force of more restrictive provisions than provided for in Directive 2005/29 amounted to a breach of article 4 of that Directive.

    URL: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:62012CJ0421&from=EN

    Full text: Full text

  • Related Cases

    No results available

  • Legal Literature

    No results available

  • Result
    The court referred the case back to the national court.