Introduction
This case note analyses the judgment issued by the Court of Justice of the European Union (Grand Chamber) on 24 June 2019 in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland (Independence of the Supreme Court).Footnote 1 The judgment represents the first ruling ever in which the Court, following up on a complaint brought by the Commission, has held that a member state infringed the principle of judicial independence under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, and in particular the principle of the irremovability of judges.
That ground-breaking case was also the first in which the Commission applied the Associação Sindical dos Juízes Portugueses (ASJP) judgmentFootnote 2 to the procedure under Article 258 TFEU. The action of the Commission was based on the assumption, taken from the ASJP judgment, that the principle of effective judicial protection, as enshrined in Article 19(1)(2) TEU, is sufficient to establish the competence of the Court in proceedings under Article 258 TFEU, and has a wider scope of application than Article 47 of the Charter. By bringing such an action, the Commission showed that it had learnt from its ‘failure’ in Case C-286/12, Commission v Hungary, which concerned a Hungarian scheme requiring the compulsory retirement of judges upon reaching the age of 62.Footnote 3 From a formal point of view, the Commission won the Hungarian case. However, the judgment did nothing to rectify the systemic situation concerning the independence of Hungarian courts.Footnote 4 This was because, in its complaint, the Commission limited the scope of its objection to age-based discrimination on the basis of Directive 2000/78.Footnote 5
Accordingly, we will first attempt to demonstrate why it is so important that the Court followed the ASJP judgment and confirmed the applicability of Article 19(1)(2) TEU to this case. In this context, we will also discuss the interplay between Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter. In our view, while the judgment confirms that the substantive content of Article 19 TEU and Article 47 of the Charter seems identical in principle, the Court nonetheless missed an opportunity to determine whether the applicability Article 19 TEU also formally triggers the applicability of the Charter, and of Article 47 in particular.
The judgment touches upon the issue of how justice is organised in the member states – a competence of those states. We will then explain why the position of the Court by which this competence is to be exercised, in due respect of the principle of effective judicial protection, does not imply that the EU is itself in any way claiming the right to exercise that competence or arrogating it. We will show that the Court in this respect applied its firmly-established case law on the intervention of EU law in areas of competence of the member states.
We will also focus further on the Polish context of the judgment. It is worth recalling that Poland is not only the first member stateto be found by the Court to have failed to fulfil its obligations in an infringement action under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, but also the first member state to be made subject to the Commission’s Rule of Law FrameworkFootnote 6 and the first member state to undergo Article 7(1) TEU proceedings. This illustrates the scale of the rule of law crisis in Poland. One of the dimensions of the crisis is that, under the cover of reform of the justice system, the Polish government aimed to remove certain Supreme Court judges from office and replace them with judges appointed on the basis of new rules. Therefore, we will look at the Court’s position on the true purpose of judicial ‘reform’ in Poland. We also discuss the status of the National Council of the Judiciary (NCJ), a constitutional body responsible for nominating judges in Poland,Footnote 7 in light of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. These issues can also be considered from a more general point of view. As far as the status of the NCJ is concerned, it is particularly noteworthy that, for the first time in history, the Court has specified terms for the functioning of a body that is not a court but which was established for the purpose of safeguarding judicial independence and which takes part in the judicial appointment process in a given member state.
The above is preceded by a brief review of the subject matter of the proceedings against Poland, as well as summaries of the Advocate General’s Opinion and the Court’s judgment.
Background
The Commission approached the Court about the Polish Law on the Supreme Court of 8 December 2017, which had come into force on 3 April 2018. This law lowered the mandatory retirement age of Supreme Court judges in Poland from 70 to 65. After the law entered into force, judges on that court could only continue to carry out their duties if they submitted a declaration six to twelve months before reaching the age of 65 expressing their intention to continue in their post, accompanied by a certificate confirming that their health did not prevent them from carrying out the duties of a judge. The extension was furthermore conditional on the President of Poland consenting to them continuing to carry out the duties of a Supreme Court judge.Footnote 8 Before giving that consent, the President was obliged to seek the opinion of the NCJ. In drafting its opinion, the NCJ needed to consider whether continuation was in ‘the interest of the system of justice or an important social interest, in particular, the rational use of the staff of the Supreme Court, or the needs arising from the workload of individual chambers of the Supreme Court’.Footnote 9 The law also applied to sitting Supreme Court judges who had already reached the age of 65 by the time it entered into force.Footnote 10 Consequently, nearly 40% of the sitting Supreme Court judges were affected by the reduction in mandatory retirement age set out in the Law on the Supreme Court. This included the Supreme Court’s First President, whose term of office was supposed to come to an end on 30 April 2020 (in accordance with the Polish Constitution, which states that the First President of the Supreme Court is appointed for a six-year term of office). Wojciech Sadurski called it ‘one of the most striking instances of changing the Constitution by statute’.Footnote 11
The Commission brought an action before the Court based on two complaints. In its first complaint, the Commission alleged that Poland had infringed Article 19(1)(2) TEU read in conjunction with Article 47 of the CharterFootnote 12 because, in breach of the principle of judicial independence and the principle of the irremovability of judges, in particular, the new Law on the Supreme Court lowered the mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court judges who had been appointed to their posts before 3 April 2018, i.e. the date on which the law entered into force. In its second complaint, the Commission claimed that with the new Law, Poland had infringed Article 19(1)(2) TEU read in conjunction with Article 47 of the Charter by conferring on the Polish President the discretionary power to extend the term of Supreme Court judges beyond the new mandatory retirement age fixed in that law – by up to two additional three-year terms.
In separately submitted documents, the Commission further requested the Court to grant interim measuresFootnote 13 and to decide the case under an expedited procedure.Footnote 14 By order of 19 October 2018, the Vice-President of the Court provisionally granted that request, pending the adoption of an order terminating the proceedings for interim measures.Footnote 15 The final order was issued by the Court on 17 December 2018.Footnote 16 The Court granted the Commission’s application for interim measures until delivery of the final judgment in the case. The scope of this contribution does not allow an analysis of the decision on the interim measures. It is, however, noteworthy that the Court’s order interfered with the autonomy of the national legislature.Footnote 17 In a nutshell, the Court ordered Poland to reinstate the former law repealed by the national legislature.Footnote 18 Those circumstances gave rise to the further question of whether an order formulated in this way could only be enforced by adopting an act of law reinstating the judgesFootnote 19 or whether the judges could be reinstated directly on the basis the Court of Justice’s order. It appears that the Court opted for the latter solution.Footnote 20
Also, in an order handed down on 15 November 2018, the Court held that the case would be determined under the expedited procedure, as a result of which the proceedings were completed in just eight months, i.e. more than twice as fast as cases that had to proceed without the benefit of the expedited procedure.Footnote 21
Opinion of the Advocate General and the judgment of the Court
Advocate General E. Tanchev proposed that the Court declare that with the adoption of the new law on the Supreme Court, Poland had failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 19(1)(2) TEU on both points raised by the Commission.Footnote 22 It is worth noting that, contrary to the stance adopted by the Commission, the Advocate General submitted that the scope of application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter should be assessed separately, meaning that for Article 47 to be applicable, it was necessary to demonstrate the existence of a link between the contested provisions of the Law on the Supreme Court and the implementation of EU law within the meaning of Article 51(1) of the Charter. Ultimately, the Advocate General concluded that the Commission had failed to present arguments regarding the application of Article 47 of the Charter independently of Article 19(1)(2) TEU or to specify how these provisions amounted to the implementation of EU law within the meaning of Article 51(1) of the Charter. Therefore, the Advocate General deemed the allegation of infringement of Article 47 to be inadmissible.Footnote 23
The Court agreed with the Advocate General, ruling that Poland had failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 19(1)(2) TEU by providing that the lower mandatory retirement age of Supreme Court judges would apply to judges appointed before 3 April 2018, and by granting the President of Poland the discretionary power to extend the term of Supreme Court judges beyond the newly-fixed mandatory retirement age.
Initially, the Court rejected Poland’s argument that the proceedings were devoid of purpose because all the national provisions challenged by the Commission had been repealed by the adoption of the Law Amending the Law on the Supreme Court of 21 November 2018, which entered into force on 1 January 2019. In this respect, the Court recalled its settled case law by which the occurrence of a failure to fulfil obligations must be examined at the end of the period laid down in the reasoned opinion and that, in principle, the Court cannot take subsequent changes into account. In the case at hand, the provisions of the Law on the Supreme Court were still in force when the time limit set by the Commission in its reasoned opinion lapsed.Footnote 24
Subsequently, the Court disagreed with Poland’s submission that the Court did not have the competence to address issues involving the organisation of justice in a member state.Footnote 25 Even though the concrete power to regulate that area remains with the member states, national authorities still ought to comply with their obligations under EU law while exercising those competences.Footnote 26 That does not mean that the Courts’ ruling allows the EU to gain the general competence to impose binding legal rules on the member states in the area of effective judicial protection.Footnote 27 It only means that the Court can verify whether member states have provided remedies sufficiently capable of ensuring effective legal protection in the fields covered by EU law within the meaning of Article 19(1) TEU.
The Court also rejected the argument that the ‘UK/Poland Protocol on the application of the Charter’ was of any significance to the case at hand. The Court observed that the Protocol does not concern Article 19(1) TEU, nor does it exclude the application of the Charter to Poland.Footnote 28
Notably, the Court referred in detail to the scope of application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. The Court explained that to trigger the application of Article 19(1), it is enough that a national court has the competence to rule on questions concerning the application or interpretation of EU law.Footnote 29 The Court dismissed the idea (expressed by Poland and Hungary) that the fact that the national salary reduction measures at issue in the ASJP case were adopted in connection with the implementation of an EU assistance programme was of any significance to the inclusion of the case in the scope of application of EU law.
The Court then recalled that under Article 19(1)(2) TEU, each member state must ensure that the requirements of effective judicial protection are met by bodies which, as ‘courts or tribunals’ within the meaning of EU law, are part of the judicial system in fields covered by EU law. In the case at hand, it was not in dispute that the Supreme Court is such a court.Footnote 30 In the Court’s opinion, if a body like the Supreme Court is to ensure such protection, it must maintain its independence – as confirmed by Article 47(2) of the Charter.Footnote 31
As regards the first complaint of the Commission, the Court recalled that the principle of irremovability requires that judges be able to remain in their posts until they have reached the mandatory retirement age or until the expiry of their mandate, if that mandate is for a fixed term. The Court further noted that this principle is not wholly absolute and that exceptions are possible – subject to the principle of proportionality – provided that they are warranted by legitimate and compelling grounds.Footnote 32 However, the Court rejected Poland’s submission that the goal behind lowering the retirement age of Supreme Court judges was to bring it in line with the generally applicable retirement age threshold for workers in Poland, while at the same time optimising the age structure of the Court’s staff.Footnote 33 In particular, it noted that the explanatory memorandum to the draft of the Law on the Supreme Court raised serious doubts as to whether the reform of the retirement age of judges serving on the Supreme Court was implemented in pursuit of legitimate objectives and not ‘with the aim of side-lining a certain group of judges of that court’.Footnote 34
As to the second complaint, the Court held that the discretionary power conferred on the President of Poland to grant or deny an extension of active service to a Supreme Court judge beyond the regular age of retirement was not in itself sufficient grounds to conclude that the principle of judicial independence has been undermined. Nevertheless, in the Court’s opinion, the substantive conditions and the detailed procedural rules governing the adoption of such decisions by the President of Poland were formulated in a way that could give rise to reasonable doubt in the minds of individuals as to the independence of those judges from external factors, and their neutrality concerning the interests before them.Footnote 35 The Court noted, in particular, that the decisions of the President were discretionary since they had not been governed by objective and verifiable criteria and because the reasons for making them did not need to be stated. Besides, the decisions could not be challenged in court proceedings.Footnote 36 As regards the NCJ, the Court found that the opinions delivered by it would not provide the President with objective information concerning the exercise of the power conferred upon him, due to the simple fact that such opinions included insufficient justification or no justification at all (in the absence of any rule obliging the NCJ to state reasons for them).Footnote 37
Lastly, the Court refuted Poland’s argument referring to the legal regimes of the other member states and the procedure for appointing judges to the Court of Justice of the EU.Footnote 38 The Court held that potential defects in the laws of the other member states cannot be invoked to justify an infringement of Article 19(1)(2) TEU by Poland. The procedure for appointing the Court of Justice’s judges, on the other hand, cannot modify the scope of the obligations imposed on the member states under Article 19(1)(2) TEU.
Comments
Confirmation by the Court of the scope of application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU resulting from the ASJP judgment
First, one should welcome the Court’s clear explanation stating that the fact that the national salary reduction measures in the ASJP case were adopted in the context of an assistance programme was of no relevance to including the case within the scope of EU law.Footnote 39 As the Court explained, the Portuguese case fell within the scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU solely because the relevant national body in that case – i.e. the Tribunal de Contas (the Portuguese Court of Auditors) – had the capacity, as a court, to rule on issues of the application or interpretation of EU law, i.e. within the judicial system in the fields covered by this law.Footnote 40 In light of the Court’s prior case law (which was also mentioned by the Polish governmentFootnote 41) that could have been seen as doubtful. In particular, in the Florescu case, Footnote 42 the Court ruled that the memorandum of understanding concluded between the EU and Romania under Article 3a of Regulation 332/2002 Footnote 43 – in which the terms and conditions for that state to receive financial assistance were determined – constituted an act of EU law, the implementation of which caused the case to fall under the scope of EU law and the Charter. In the ASJP judgment, the Court also referred twice to the connection between the reduction in salaries and the implementation of an EU assistance programme. Footnote 44 However, in that case, it attached no significance to that circumstance when it assessed whether the case fell within the scope of EU law. The judgment in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland clarifies that in the ASJP case, the Court opted for a different approach than in the Florescu case based on an alternative reading of Article 19(1)(2) TEU.Footnote 45
This new approach ties in with the role of national courts in the EU system of judicial protection. The novelty of the ASJP judgment in comparison to the Court’s earlier case lawFootnote 46 was that in assessing the standard of judicial independence, the Court referred to the principle of effective judicial protection set out in Article 19(1)(2) TEU without referring to any other element of EU law. The fact that a national body was ruling on cases in which EU law perhaps applied and could be interpreted provided, on its own, sufficient grounds for the Court’s jurisdiction. Undoubtedly, the Court’s approach here opened the way for the Commission to bring an action against Poland concerning the independence of the Supreme Court.Footnote 47
The key to understanding the consequences of the ASJP judgment lies in Article 19(1)(2) TEU, which codifies the principle of effective judicial protection at the level of the Treaty, and which, as the Court held, must be interpreted separately from the principle of effective judicial protection understood either as a general principle of EU law or as a principle enshrined in Article 47 of the Charter. In the ASJP judgment, the Court draws a clear dividing line between the scope of Article 19(1)(2) TEU, which applies to fields ‘covered by EU law’, and the scope of the Charter in light of Article 51(1) thereof, which applies wherever member states implement EU law (as in the case of the general principles of EU law). Footnote 48 The Court reiterated this ruling in its judgment in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland.Footnote 49
Consequently, the organisation of justice in member states, which is a competence of those states, has to be exercised in due respect of the principle of effective judicial protection. This does not mean that the EU is claiming that it can exercise that competence itself; nor is it arrogating it.Footnote 50 Member states are still entitled to determine a judge’s level of remuneration Footnote 51 and retirement age, Footnote 52 the rules governing the possibility for judges to continue holding their positions, Footnote 53 the procedure for appointing judges to their posts, Footnote 54 the disciplinary regulations that apply to judges, Footnote 55 and the scope of competence of administrative courts when reviewing administrative decisions. Footnote 56 However, as the ASJP judgment showed, and as Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland has effectively confirmed, within the European legal area, founded on respect for the values enshrined in Article 2 TEU, the national courts vested by a member state with the application of EU law are required to satisfy the guarantees set out by the principle of effective judicial protection.Footnote 57 The member states’ observance of this requirement, in line with Article 19(1)(2) TEU, in light of Article 47 of the Charter, may be reviewed by the Court, e.g. in the procedure under Article 258 TFEU.
This method, by which EU law intervenes in an area of competence of the member states, is firmly established in the case law of the Court. Unsurprisingly, when justifying the position in Case C-619/18, the Court invoked its rulings in the context of the competence of the member states to regulate the extradition of EU citizens to third countries. There, the competence must be exercised ‘in accordance’ with EU law that falls within the scope of EU citizenship (Article 18 and Article 21 TFEU), Footnote 58 or that deals with the powers of member states within the scope of criminal law, upon which EU law (in particular concerning EU primary law) ‘sets certain limits’. Footnote 59 To date, such limits have appeared, in particular, in cases involving potential threats to the effectiveness of the EU freedoms and EU citizenship. Footnote 60 In this context, Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland is a novelty in EU law and infringement proceedings because it pointed out that such limits may also follow from the principle of effective judicial protection.
The interplay between Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter
Recent case law sheds additional light on the relationship between the two legal provisions upon which the principle of effective judicial protection is currently based in the European legal structure: Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter.
In bringing its action in Case C-619/18 European Commission v Republic of Poland, the Commission referred to ‘Article 19(1)(2) TEU combined with Article 47 of the Charter’Footnote 61 (emphasis added). At the hearing, the Commission stated that it sought, in essence, a declaration that Article 19(1)(2) TEU, read in light of Article 47 of the Charter (emphasis added), had been infringedFootnote 62 by submitting that ‘the concept of effective legal protection referred to in Article 19(1)(2) TEU must be interpreted having regard to the content of Article 47 of the Charter’.Footnote 63 Meanwhile, the Advocate General thought that the Commission failed to present sufficient arguments to support the application of Article 47 of the Charter independently of Article 19(1)(2) TEU or to explain how these regulations amounted to the implementation of EU law within the meaning of Article 51(1) of the Charter. Although the Court was not as explicit as the Advocate General, it focused its considerations almost exclusively on the content of Article 19(1)(2) TEU, referring only rarely to Article 47 of the Charter.Footnote 64 It would seem that such an approach is based primarily on the Court’s decision to the effect that Article 19(1)(2) TEU provides sufficient grounds to assess whether a national regulation might infringe the principle of judicial independence.Footnote 65 This was already apparent in the ASJP judgment, in which the request for a preliminary ruling concerned the ‘principle of judicial independence, enshrined in the second subparagraph of Article 19(1) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter’.Footnote 66 The Court rephrased that question, submitting that ‘By its question, the referring court seeks, in essence, to ascertain whether Article 19(1)(2) TEU must be interpreted as meaning that the principle of judicial independence precludes […]’.Footnote 67 The position of the Court in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland deserves some consideration for several reasons.
First, the judgment confirms that the substantive content of Article 19(1)(2) TEU and Article 47 of the Charter is, in principle, identical. In Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland the Court did, to some extent, combine Article 19(1)(2) TEU with Article 47 of the Charter and explained that maintaining the independence of the Supreme Court is essential to the ability of that body to offer effective judicial protection resulting from Article 19(1)(2) TEU, ‘as confirmed by the second paragraph of Article 47 of the Charter’.Footnote 68 The wording used by the Court to confirm that the content of Article 19(1)(2) TEU was essentially identical to the content of Article 47 of the Charter means that both regulations offer the same guarantees, even if the protection offered by these guarantees is initiated through different rules. To some extent, that was also envisaged by the Court in a recent judgment in the joined cases on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court, in which the Court analysed the national provisions against the yardstick of Article 47 of the Charter, and then stated that it did not appear that it would be necessary to conduct a separate analysis based on Article 19(1) TEU, given that this would merely reinforce the conclusion arrived at on the grounds of Article 47 of the Charter.Footnote 69 It would also seem that both provisions can be regarded as directly effective from the perspective of the individual.Footnote 70
Second, after Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland, it remains an open question as to whether Article 19(1)(2) TEU can serve as a ‘triggering rule’Footnote 71 for Article 47 of the Charter (within the meaning of Art. 51 of the Charter). This would imply that it is not necessary to assess the scope of application of Article 47 of the Charter independent of Article 19(1)(2) TEU in cases in which Article 19(1)(2) applies. All in all, in the aforementioned joined cases on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court, the Court conducted a separate assessment of each provision and found both to be applicable.Footnote 72 It bears repeating that, contrary to Article 19(1)(2) TEU, which merely requires that a national body can rule on cases to which EU law could apply and be interpreted, for Article 47 of the Charter to be applicable, an additional EU element must be present. Consequently, if there is no possibility to apply Article 47 of the Charter, Article 19(1)(2) TEU can still come into play. However, in our view, wherever Article 19(1)(2) TEU applies, Article 47 of the Charter should be applicable as well. In light of the critical opinion of the Advocate General, it might have been expected that the Court would address that question directly in its judgment; it did not. Taking into account the fact that both provisions offer the same guarantees, this probably did not appear to be too compelling a problem.
Last but not least, in light of Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland, it is clear that the application of Article 19(1)(2) TEU is not confined to structural breaches that compromise only the essence of judicial independence, as opposed to Article 47 of the Charter, which supposedly applies to breaches other than structural. This is the position adopted by Advocate General Tanchev in several opinions delivered in cases on the independence of national courts.Footnote 73 The judgment in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland does not make the capacity to assess a breach of judicial independence in light of Article 19(1)(2) TEU conditional upon the structural nature of that breach. In that regard, there would also seem to be no crucial difference between that provision and Article 47 of the Charter.
The actual purpose of the judicial ‘reforms’
The discussed judgment qualifies ‘irremovability’ as a component of the necessary freedom of judges from interference or pressure of any kind due to external factors. It, therefore, contributes, in light of the Court’s case law,Footnote 74 to the external aspect of the requirement of judicial independence. Meanwhile, the requirement of independence itself (including the guarantee of irremovability of judges) forms part of the ‘essence’ of the right to effective judicial protection and the fundamental right to a fair trial. This right is of cardinal importance as a guarantee that all the rights that individuals can derive from EU law will be protected, and that the values common to the member states set out in Article 2 TEU, in particular the value of the rule of law, will be safeguarded.Footnote 75
In this context, one should note the strong words used by the Court concerning the actual purpose of the reform of the Supreme Court. The Court did not stop once it had observed that Poland missed the opportunity to justify the regulations lowering the retirement age of judges with a ‘legitimate objective’,Footnote 76 but went on to note that the explanatory memorandum to the draft new Law on the Supreme Court included ‘information that is such as to raise serious doubts as to whether the reform of the mandatory retirement age of serving judges of the Supreme Court was made in pursuance of such objectives, and not with the aim of side-lining a certain group of judges of that court’Footnote 77 (emphasis added). The Court, in this context, referred to the wording of the opinion of the Venice CommissionFootnote 78 and the explanatory memorandum to the Law on the Supreme Court,Footnote 79 pursuant to which the reform aimed at the ‘de-communisation’Footnote 80 of the Supreme Court was implemented, i.e. judges suspected of having a communist affiliation.
The Court expressed similar doubts concerning the possibility for the Polish president to grant a six-year extension of the period of a judge’s term of active service, while at the same time lowering the mandatory retirement age of judges by five years. The Court decided that combining those two measures further reinforced the impression that the actual aim was to exclude a pre-determined group of Supreme Court judges from service.Footnote 81 This shows once again that the Court’s approach to the appraisal of legislative changes in respect of judicial independence is comprehensive, consisting of an assessment of the combined effect of measures introduced by a member state as opposed to an evaluation of each measure separately.Footnote 82 In other words, even if various measures, taken in isolation, are not capable of calling judicial independence into question, the Court, inevitably, must also assess whether the impact of those measures might, in concert, lead to a different conclusion.
The arguments of the Polish government justifying the analysed legislation thus had several shortcomings.Footnote 83 The Court pointed primarily to the actual purpose of the new Act, which differed from its declared purpose. Another argument, i.e. that it was necessary to optimise the age structure of the Supreme Court staff to, in fact, ‘rejuvenate’ it, can only be deemed unfortunate in light of the new law allowing judges – in theory, at any rate – to continue active service until the age of 71. This implies that the amended law does not differ all that much from the old one. The only novelty was the introduction of the additional mechanism of the power of the executive to assess judges.
Meanwhile, Poland’s argument on the need to standardise the mandatory retirement age of judges to the threshold generally applicable in Poland was flawed, primarily because no such standardisation ever took place. Under the general regime, there is merely the possibility of, but no obligation to retire at the age of 60 (for women) or 65 (for men), whereas the new rules applicable to judges forced them to leave active service.Footnote 84 The difference in this respect is prima facie evident.
The Court noted an additional distinction between the case at hand and the ASJP case. In the latter, the adopted legislative measures (entailing salary reductions) were limited in time and applied to all employees of public institutions. In the case at hand, the new rules applied only to the Supreme Court – not to all courts – and to specific judges whose judicial functions were ended prematurely and definitively,Footnote 85 thus significantly influencing the composition of the Supreme Court.Footnote 86 Again, this led to the conclusion that the new rules could be perceived as having been adopted with the aim of side-lining a certain group of judges and not to standardise the retirement age for a broader group of employees in the judicial branch (or public officers in general) which, in light of the ASJP case, should (in principle) be more readily accepted as a legitimate objective from the perspective of judicial independence.
The status of the National Council of the Judiciary in light of Article 19(1) TEU
The Commission did not directly include the provisions on the NCJ in its infringement complaint under Article 258 TFEU. Still, in its treatment of the second complaint of the Commission on the discretionary power of the Polish President to extend the term of active service of Supreme Court judges, the Court ruled that a body like the NCJ must satisfy certain requirements if its opinions are to contribute to reinforcing the objectivity of the procedure by which the President grants extensions.Footnote 87 In particular, the Court held that the body itself must be independent of the legislative and executive authorities and the authority to which it delivers its opinions. The opinion itself must be based on criteria that are both objective and relevant, and it must be properly reasoned.Footnote 88 Hence, for the first time in history, the Court has specified the terms for the functioning of a body that, not being a court, had been established to safeguard judicial independence for the sake of a decision of an executive body (the President) on the career of a national judge (here: the extension of the period of judicial activity of a Supreme Court judge).
It is worth noting that in a more recent judgment on the new Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court, the Court reiterated the position that a body like the NCJ must be sufficiently independent of the legislative and executive authorities and the authority to which it submits its motions for the appointment of judges (here: judges in the new Disciplinary chamber of the Polish Supreme Court).Footnote 89 Consequently, the Court has started to construct a certain minimum standard for judicial councils in the EU. This should not, of course, be taken to imply that every member state needs a body like the NCJ. However, if such a body does exist and it participates in the judicial appointment process, as in Poland, it needs to have sufficient independence from the legislature and the executive, as well as from the authority to which it submits its motions for the appointment of judges. Also, its opinions (resolutions) must be based on objective, relevant and properly reasoned criteria.
In the judgment on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court, the Court also pointed to five factors that may prove significant in assessing whether the Polish NCJ is independent of the legislative and executive authorities.Footnote 90 In the context of the case discussed here, the last of these factors, which focuses on the existence of effective judicial review, deserves particular attention because, in practice, the Polish legal system precluded the possibility of judicial review of resolutions of the NCJ in the nomination procedure for positions at the Supreme Court.Footnote 91 The Court found that the lack of judicial review of resolutions of the NCJ plays a certain role in light of EU law standards of judicial independence. By contrast, although in the judgment discussed here the Court held that the NCJ’s opinion on the extension of a judge’s term of active service had to be based on objective and relevant criteria and properly reasoned,Footnote 92 it did not point out the need to subject it to judicial review.Footnote 93
This difference can be explained in the following manner. In the judgment on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court, the issue was the constitutional prerogative of the Polish President to appoint judges according to Article 179 Polish Constitution, and not his ‘regular’ decisions to extend the term of active service of judges (which is not his prerogative). According to Article 179, ‘Judges shall be appointed for an indefinite period by the President of the Republic on the motion of the National Council of the Judiciary’. Therefore, judicial review is only possible concerning the NCJ’s resolutions proposing candidates for judicial appointments. The situation was different in the judgment at hand. The opinion of the NCJ on the extension of the term of judicial activity of a given Supreme Court judge was non-binding, and judicial review thereof thus somewhat irrelevant. This was probably why the Commission did not question the inability to challenge opinions of the NCJ at law. It did, however, imply that the President’s decision on the extension of the term of active judicial service is not subject to judicial review, which was one of the reasons why the Court considered the President’s decision discretionary in light of Article 19(1)(2).Footnote 94
It should also be noted that, in the judgment discussed here, the Court stated that:
the national rule which the Commission’s second complaint concerns does not deal with the process for the appointment of candidates to carry out the duties of a judge, but with the possibility, for serving judges who thus enjoy guarantees essential to carrying out those duties, to continue to carry them out beyond the normal retirement age, and that rule thereby concerns the conditions under which their careers progress and end.Footnote 95
Therefore, the Court may differentiate between the status of a judge and that of a candidate for a judgeship from the perspective of the scope of effective judicial protection, as expressed in Article 19(1)(2) TEU. In particular, this could lead to the finding that an obligatory judicial review of the nomination process for judicial positions is not required under all circumstances. The wording used by the Court in the judgment on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court is not entirely clear in that regard.Footnote 96 On the one hand the demand of effective judicial review might be seen as an obligatory element of that procedure in order to guarantee the independence of nominated judges. In such a situation the national court should be vested with the competence to check the resolutions of the NCJ, at the very least, as to whether there was no ultra vires or improper exercise of authority, error of law or manifest error of assessment.Footnote 97 That would also mean that candidates for judicial positions would be able to derive certain rights from Article 19 (1)(2) TEU which should be protected by national courts. On the other hand, that part of the judgment on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court could be also interpreted as setting effective judicial review of the resolutions of the NCJ presenting candidates for judicial positions only as one of several relevant factors that need to be taken into account to appraise the judicial nomination process in light of Article 19(1)(2) TEU from the perspective of the independence of the nominated judges.Footnote 98 The lack of judicial control of the NCJ’s resolutions would then be only regarded as throwing more doubt on the independence of the nominated judges but would not be decisive for their capability to meet the requirements of independence and impartiality. The Court should decide on that problem in a case pending before the Court concerning candidates for judicial positions at the Polish Supreme Administrative Court.Footnote 99
Conclusion
The judgment in Case C-619/18, European Commission v Republic of Poland is a landmark decision. The Court ruled for the first time on the compatibility of national measures on the organisation of the judicial system in question with EU law in the context of an infringement action under Article 258 TFEU. The Court grasped this opportunity to find, also for the first time, that a member state had failed in its obligations under Article 19(1)(2) TEU.
To make this possible, the Court needed to adhere to the ASJP judgment, which offered a new reading of Article 19(1)(2) TEU. The Court followed this path, emphasising that the member states cannot successfully argue their position by referring solely to the fact that the organisation of justice is the exclusive competence of said states. EU law sets certain limits on the powers of member states, and such limits do also follow from the principle of effective judicial protection.
Consequently, this case has confirmed that the infringement procedure is a supervisory mechanism that is not limited to specific violations of EU law but can also serve to address questions of fundamental constitutional importance for the Union.Footnote 100 Notably, it was the first time – but not the last – that the Commission would bring an action against Poland in connection with judicial ‘reforms’. In a more recent judgment delivered on 5 November 2019, the Court held that Poland had failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 19(1)(2) TEU insofar as the power had been conferred on the Minister of Justice to extend the period of active service of the judges based on vague discretionary criteria.Footnote 101 Yet another case is currently pending on the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court and disciplinary proceedings against judges.Footnote 102
It is likely that the Commission will build further on this case law and that it will use the infringement proceedings, rather than the (up to now) toothless Article 7 TEU procedure, to address rule of law issues in member states.Footnote 103 In its communication of July 2019, the Commission held that ‘it is determined to bring to the Court of Justice rule of law problems affecting the application of EU law, when these problems could not be solved through the national checks and balances’.Footnote 104 This will help the Commission to continue to fully play the role of guardian of the Treaties and the principle of the rule of law as enshrined in Article 2 TEU.