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Soft Law in EU Competition Law and its Judicial Reception in Member States: A Theoretical Perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Extract
This work draws from accounts on the nature and legal effects of soft law instruments in EU and international law with the ultimate aim to construct a theoretical framework for recognition of EU competition soft law—guidelines, communications, notices, and the like—in the judicial discourse of national courts of the European Union. “Recognition” is used to encompass instances in which the national judiciary either explicitly interprets—that is, agrees or disagrees with—the content of competition soft instruments, or treats their substance in a roundabout, implicit way—without explicit reference to soft law in the judgment proper. This second option is called “the persuaded judiciary scenario.” Importantly, a foundational assumption of the current work is that courts do not transform soft law into hard law when subjecting the former to judicial interpretation/recognition.2
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References
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134 In order to take account of this substantive judicial disagreement, the Commission issued a new version of the de minimis notice in 2014 (O.J. 2014 C 4136) where paragraph 2 of the old de minimis notice (O.J. 2001 C 368) was replaced by the holding of the CJEU in para. 37 of its Expedia judgment.Google Scholar
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142 With regard to state aid soft law, the previous section, see, infra Section C.II, showed that incidental binding force has also been accepted by the courts.Google Scholar
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153 Stone-Sweet discusses the high stakes involved in novel lawmaking in the following way: “At this first stage governments and parliaments enjoy wide policy-making discretion, but face high constitutional uncertainty.” This constitutional uncertainty is according to the current author unfortunately not tackled by the CJEU when it comes to the issue of competition soft law. Stone-Sweet, supra note 151, at 114.Google Scholar
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155 Council Regulation (EC) No. 1/2003 of 16 Dec. 2002 on The Implementation of the Rules on Competition Laid Down in Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty, 2003 O.J. L 1, 1.Google Scholar
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160 See, supra Section C.II.Google Scholar
161 Miasik contends that, “Another way of applying general principles in judicial practice is to refer to them in order to inspire the judiciary to interpret [national] law in a manner compatible with a particular principle … the more applicants raise issues of general principles of law in their submissions to courts, the more valuable judgments dealing with those principles will be delivered.” See Miasik, Dawid, Application of General Principles of EC Law by Polish Courts—is the European Court of Justice Receiving a Positive Feedback?, in General Principles or EC Law in a Process of Development, 357, 382, 391 (Ulf Bernitz et al. eds., 2008).Google Scholar
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163 Tridimas, supra note 8, at 163; Usher, supra note 93, at 52–71; Raitio, supra note 127, at 54.Google Scholar
164 Hofmann, supra note 92, at 162; Usher, supra note 93, at 52. For a more detailed discussion of the difference, see Tridimas, supra note 8, at 170.Google Scholar
165 Tridimas, supra note 8, at 170.Google Scholar
166 Usher, John, General Principles and National Law—A Continuing Two-Way Process, in General Principles of EC law In the Process of Development, 393, 402 (Ulf Bernitz et al. eds., 2008).Google Scholar
167 August Töpfer & Co. GmbH v. Commission of the European Communities, CJEU Case C-112/77, 1978 E.C.R. 01019.Google Scholar
168 Tridimas, surpa note 8, at 163. For a similar argument, see also Raitio, supra note 126, at 59.Google Scholar
169 It is submitted by Raitio that, “The principle of legitimate expectations is primarily applicable to individual decisions, but it may in limited cases apply to the exercise of a more general power and thus to the EU legislation as well.” Raitio, supra note 126, at 54.Google Scholar
170 See, among others, Joined Cases Compagnie Industrielle Et Agricole Du Comté De Loheac and Others v. Council and Commission, CJEU Cases 54–60/76, 1997 E.C.R. I–00645; Mulder v. Minister Van Landbouw En Visserij, CJEU Case C-120/86, 1988 E.C.R. 02321; Von Deetzen v. HZA Hamburg-Jonas, CJEU Case C-170/86, 1988 E.C.R. 02355.Google Scholar
171 This problem is most acute in the abuse of dominance field under Art. 102 as noted by Gormsen, supra note 106, and numerous others.Google Scholar
172 Council Regulation (EC) No. 1/2003 of 16 Dec. 2002 on The Implementation of the Rules on Competition Laid Down in Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty, 2003 O.J. L1, 1.Google Scholar
173 See Sharpston, supra note 20, at 110–12.Google Scholar
174 Id. at 142.Google Scholar
175 Community loyalty cannot create duties on its own but only together with another rule of community law or principle or objective of community policy which is to be promoted; the latter also needs to be sufficiently and precisely defined. See John Temple-Lang, Art. 10 EC—The Most important “General Principle” of Community Law, in General Principles or EC Law In the Process of Development, 75, 79, 86, 88 (Ulf Bernitz et al. eds., 2008). There are, however, signals that this situation might be changing in the future. Id. at 85.Google Scholar
176 Temple-Lang states that community loyalty is “the most important of the general principles because it is the legal basis of the obligation on all national courts and authorities to comply with all other general principles.” In this regard, it cannot stand on its own and needs to be always used together with another general principle, the latter defining the scope of application of the former. Id. at 77.Google Scholar
177 Gormley, supra note 123, at 312.Google Scholar
178 Commission Notice on the Co-Operation between the Commission and the Courts of the EU Member States in the Application of Arts. 81 and 82 EC of 27 Apr. 2004, 2004 O.J. (C 101/04); Commission Notice on the Enforcement of State Aid Law by National Courts of 9 Apr. 2009, 2009 O.J. (C 85/01).Google Scholar
179 This is in line with Temple-Lang's argument that community loyalty is an underlying consideration of a vast array of Community actions, although the principle is usually not explicitly mentioned. See generally, Temple-Lang, supra note 175.Google Scholar
180 Temple-Lang, supra note 175, at 90, 97. The author submits that Community law is gradually developing a concept of laws which protect private rights and requiring these rights to be protected, when necessary, under Art. 4.3 TEU; this process, however, when fuelled by judicial output (case law), is slow, incremental and uncoordinated.Google Scholar
181 Id. at 101.Google Scholar
182 See generally, Gormley, supra note 123; Senden, supra note 9; Stefan, supra note 2. The principle could, however, produce a duty at least to motivate deviation from soft law provisions as advocated by AG Kokkot in her Expedia opinion. Expedia Inc., CJEU Case C-226/11.Google Scholar
183 See, supra Section D.l.l.b.Google Scholar
184 Klabbers, by citing Everling, endorses the view that Art. 10 EC might be just enough to give legal effect to soft law in view of the instruments’ “meaning within the context of the integration process at large and the goals of the Treaty in particular.” Klabbers, supra note 64, at 1016.Google Scholar
185 See Temple-Lang, supra note 175, at 85.Google Scholar
186 Id. at 111.Google Scholar
187 id. at 101.Google Scholar
188 Usher, supra note 93, at 12.Google Scholar
189 Tridimas, supra note 8, at 43, 45. In EU competition law, the principle of equality is seen as underlying the very basic premise of undistorted competition.Google Scholar
190 Id. at 44.Google Scholar
191 Formal equality is what EU economic integration (including the internal market and competition policies) strives to achieve. See De Burca & Craig, supra note 112, at 605.Google Scholar
192 See, infra Section D.II.Google Scholar
193 Raymond Louwage and Marie-Thérèse Louwage, Née Moriame, v. Commission of the European Communities, CJEU Case C-48/73, 1974 E.C.R. 00081.Google Scholar
194 Stefan (note 2), 220–21.Google Scholar
195 Id. at 219–25. The case of Expedia may serve as a recent example thereof. See Expedia Inc., CJEU C-226/11.Google Scholar
196 Stefan, supra note 2, at 201–25.Google Scholar
197 Werner Mangold v. Rüdiger Helm, CJEU Case C-144/04, 2005 E.C.R. I-09981.Google Scholar
198 Seda Kücükdeveci v. Swedex GmbH & Co. KG., CJEU Case C-555/07, 2010 E.C.R. I-00365.Google Scholar
199 Schiek, Dagmar, The ECJ Decision in Mangold: A Further Twist on Effects of Directives and Constitutional Relevance of Community Equality Legislation, 35 (3) Indus. L. J., 329, 333 (2006).Google Scholar
200 As a matter of EU Law (Article 288 TFEU), a Directive needs to be first implemented at the national level in order to produce legal effects and to be a source of rights and obligations for parties. Thus, a non-implemented Directive cannot create rights and obligations until implemented. In the period between adoption and implementation, however, Member States’ bodies are obliged not to take measures which might work counter to the objectives of the Directive. See Inter-Environnement Wallonie ASBL v Région wallonne, CJEU Case C-129/96, 1997 E.C.R. I-7411. For soft law, the only formal obligation that national organs have is to take utmost account of those instruments, following Grimaldi. Google Scholar
201 For an argument that Mangold is actually not a case where horizontal direct effect of Directives was further confirmed, see Schiek, supra note 199, at 337. Schiek argues that, “a Directive… having direct effect on a legislative activity that impacts on horizontal relations is not the same as a directive having horizontal effect itself.” While the argument is technically correct, the ultimate result of the judgment is nevertheless to create a situation in which the rights and obligations of two private parties (employer and employee) are de facto impacted by the non implemented Directive in question.Google Scholar
202 Finnemore & Toope, supra note 24, at 743.Google Scholar
203 Here we refer to the possibility of multi-party agreement secured at public consultations preceding the adoption of competition soft law.Google Scholar
204 Schauer, supra note 8, at 38.Google Scholar
205 Finnemore & Toope, supra note 24, at 749.Google Scholar
206 Scott & Sturm, supra note 36, at 570–75. See also Stefan, supra note 2, at 219–25.Google Scholar
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