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IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The source of this judgment is the web site of the Court of Justice of the European Communities. The information in this database has been provided free of charge and is subject to a Court of Justice of the European Communities disclaimer and a copyright notice. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Sixth Chamber)
16 October 1997(1)
(Dumping - Sheets or plates, of iron or steel, originating in Yugoslavia -
Declaration of independence of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia -
Legal certainty)
In Case C-177/96,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Rechtbank
van Eerste Aanleg te Antwerpen (Belgium) for a preliminary ruling in the
proceedings pending before that court between
Belgian State
and
Banque Indosuez and Others,
European Community,
on the interpretation of Commission Decision No 2131/88/ECSC of 18 July 1988
imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of certain sheets and plates, of
iron or steel, originating in Yugoslavia and definitively collecting the provisional
anti-dumping duty imposed on those imports (OJ 1988 L 188, p. 14),
THE COURT (Sixth Chamber),
composed of: H. Ragnemalm, President of the Chamber, R. Schintgen,
G.F. Mancini, P.J.G. Kapteyn (Rapporteur) and G. Hirsch, Judges,
Advocate General: F.G. Jacobs,
Registrar: R. Grass,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- the Belgian Government, by Jan Devadder, General Adviser in the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, External Trade and Development Cooperation, acting
as Agent, assisted by Bernard van de Walle de Ghelcke, of the Brussels Bar,
- the Commission of the European Communities, by Hubert van Vliet and
Nicholas Khan, of its Legal Service, acting as Agents,
having regard to the report of the Judge-Rapporteur,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 3 July 1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By order of 13 May 1996, received at the Court on 22 May 1996, the Rechtbank
van Eerste Aanleg (Court of First Instance), Antwerp, referred to the Court for a
preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty two questions on the
interpretation of Commission Decision No 2131/88/ECSC of 18 July 1988 imposing
a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of certain sheets and plates, of iron or
steel, originating in Yugoslavia and definitively collecting the provisional
anti-dumping duty imposed on those imports (OJ 1988 L 188, p. 14).
- Those questions were raised in proceedings between, on the one hand, the Banque
Indosuez (hereinafter 'Indosuez'), a company incorporated under Swiss law,
Stahlhandel Schmitz GmbH (hereinafter 'Schmitz'), a company incorporated under
German law, and Rijn- en Kanaalvaart Expeditie SA, a company incorporated
under Belgian law (hereinafter 'Rijn- en Kanaalvaart Expeditie') and, on the
other, the Belgian State concerning anti-dumping duties collected by that State
pursuant to Decision No 2131/88, in respect of imports into the Community of
certain steel products originating in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
(hereinafter 'the FYROM').
- Schmitz imported the products at issue into the Belgian-Luxembourg Economic
Union between 1 May 1992 and 31 July 1992. According to the documents before
the Court, the products came from Rudnici i Zelezarnica Skopje (hereinafter
'Rudnici'), a company established in Skopje (FYROM).
- Decision No 2131/88 was initially based on Commission Decision No 2177/84/ECSC
of 27 July 1984 (OJ 1984 L 201, p. 17) and subsequently on Commission Decision
No 2424/88/ECSC of 29 July 1988 (OJ 1988 L 209, p. 18), both of which concerned
protection against dumped or subsidized imports from countries not members of
the European Coal and Steel Community. Decision No 2424/88 repealed and
replaced Decision No 2177/84.
- According to the eighth recital in the preamble to Decision No 2177/84 and the
third recital in the preamble to Decision No 2424/88, the anti-dumping
arrangements introduced by those decisions were adopted in accordance with
existing international obligations, in particular those arising from Article VI of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade ('the GATT') and from the Agreement
on Implementation of Article VI of the GATT (1979 Anti-Dumping Code).
- On the basis of Article 11 of Decision No 2177/84, the Commission adopted
Decision No 2767/86/ECSC of 5 September 1986 (OJ 1986 L 254, p. 18) imposing
a provisional anti-dumping duty of ECU 68 per 1 000 kilograms on imports of
certain sheets and plates, of iron or steel, 'originating in Yugoslavia'.
Paragraph 14 of the grounds of Decision No 2767/86 expressly referred to Rudnici
as one of the Yugoslav exporters of those products.
- By Decision No 86/639/ECSC of 23 December 1986 accepting an undertaking given
in connection with the anti-dumping investigation concerning imports of certain
sheets and plates, of iron or steel, originating in Yugoslavia and terminating the
investigation (OJ 1986 L 371, p. 84), the Commission accepted an undertaking from
three Yugoslav exporters - one of whom was Rudnici - to eliminate any injury
caused by the dumped products. However, following complaints that the
undertaking had been breached, the Commission adopted Decision
No 229/88/ECSC of 25 January 1988 imposing a provisional anti-dumping duty on
imports of certain sheets and plates, of iron or steel, originating in Yugoslavia (OJ
1988 L 23, p. 13), thereby repealing the decision accepting the undertaking given
by those exporters and re-imposing the provisional anti-dumping duty in regard to
them.
- Subsequently, by Decision No 2131/88, the Commission imposed a definitive
anti-dumping duty of ECU 48 per 1 000 kilograms on imports of the products in
question 'originating in Yugoslavia' (Article 1). That decision entered into force
on 20 July 1988 for a period of five years from that date.
- Following a request lodged in February 1990 by the Yugoslav Coal and Steel
Federation, the Commission re-opened - on the basis of Article 14 of Decision No
2424/88 - the investigation concerning the imports of the products in question.
- On 17 September 1991, while that investigation was in progress, the FYROM
declared its independence.
- At the close of its review investigation, the Commission found that dumping
persisted, even though the dumping margin had decreased. It accordingly adopted
Decision No 2297/92/ECSC of 31 July 1992 amending Decision No 2131/88/ECSC,
accepting undertakings offered in connection with imports of certain sheets and
plates, of iron or steel, originating in the Republic of Slovenia and the Yugoslav
republics of Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia, and terminating the anti-dumping
proceeding with regard to the Republic of Croatia and the Republic of
Bosnia-Herzegovina (OJ 1992 L 221, p. 36). Decision No 2131/88 was amended
by the imposition of a definitive anti-dumping duty at the slightly reduced level of
ECU 44 per 1 000 kilograms. That decision, as amended, concerns - according to
the wording of Article 1 - imports of the products in question 'originating in the
Republic of Slovenia ... and the Yugoslav republics of Macedonia ..., Montenegro
... and Serbia'. Article 1 of that decision also states that the definitive anti-dumping duty is not to apply to products originating from three particular exporters
- one of which is Rudnici - in view of the undertakings offered by those companies
in the course of the review investigation.
- However, Decision No 2297/92 did not enter into force until 7 August 1992 and
does not therefore apply to the imports at issue in the main proceedings.
- Schmitz, together with its guarantor Banque Indosuez and the customs agent Rijn-
en Kanaalvaart Expeditie, brought proceedings before the Rechtbank van Eerste
Aanleg te Antwerpen seeking recovery from the Belgian State of the anti-dumping
duties paid.
- By judgment given in default of appearance on 29 June 1994, that court ordered
the Belgian State to reimburse those duties.
- The Belgian State disputed that judgment and joined the European Community to
the proceedings, in which the latter did not, however, appear. In those
proceedings, Schmitz, Indosuez and Rijn- en Kanaalvaart Expeditie maintain that
Decision No 2131/88 does not apply to the imports at issue. They argue, first, that
since the FYROM was recognized in 1991 as an independent State, the products
in question - which were obtained from a producer established in Skopje in 1992
- no longer came from Yugoslavia but from the FYROM. Secondly, under the
rules of international law governing State succession, the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) was the sole successor of the former Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, to the exclusion of the FYROM, and thus
inherited the former republic's liability to duties; accordingly, no anti-dumping duty
could be imposed on products coming from the FYROM in respect of the period
in question.
- In those circumstances, the national court decided to stay proceedings and to refer
the following questions to the Court for a preliminary ruling:
'1. Does the name "Yugoslavia" in Commission Decision No 2131/88/ECSC
also refer to the State of Macedonia-Skopje after it had broken away from
(what remained of) Yugoslavia?
2. Are the anti-dumping duties which are to be levied in accordance with
Decision No 2131/88/ECSC on imports into the Belgian-Luxembourg
Economic Union of steel products originating in Yugoslavia also applicable
to such imports originating in the State of Macedonia-Skopje between 1
May 1992 and 31 July 1992 inclusive?'
- It is clear from the facts of the case that, in those two questions, the national court
is essentially asking whether the anti-dumping duties imposed by Decision No
2131/88 on imports of certain steel products 'originating in Yugoslavia' (Article 1)
also apply to products of that kind manufactured by a producer/exporter who had
been established in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, but was in fact -
by reason of the FYROM's declaration of independence - situated in the FYROM
at the time when the products in question were imported.
- As the Court has emphasized on numerous occasions, in interpreting a provision
of Community law it is necessary to consider its wording, its context and its aims
(Case C-84/95 Bosphorus v Minister for Transport, Energy and Communications,
Ireland and the Attorney General [1996] ECR I-3953, paragraph 11).
- The purpose of the anti-dumping measures at issue was to protect Community
industry from products imported into the Community from non-member countries
at a price below their normal value and hence liable to injure Community
producers.
- Consequently, anti-dumping measures focus on the products and their origin. In
order to prevent injury to Community production, they provide for anti-dumping
duties to be imposed on imports from a specified geographical area. Thus Article
13(2) of Decision No 2424/88 provides that any measure imposing an anti-dumping
duty, whether provisional or definitive, is to indicate in particular the product
covered, the country of origin or export and, if practicable, the name of the
supplier.
- Since the geographical origin of the products is the relevant criterion with regard
to anti-dumping duties, a change in the name or political organization of the
geographical area referred to as the country of origin or of export in a decision
imposing a provisional or definitive anti-dumping duty has no impact on the
economic purpose of the duty imposed and cannot therefore by itself remove
products originating in that geographical area from the duty's field of application.
- Furthermore, as the Commission has rightly pointed out, if a supplier whose
products were being dumped could avoid anti-dumping duties solely because the
authorities of the territory in which he was situated had declared it independent,
the anti-dumping measures could well fall short of their objective, which is to shield
an established Community industry from injury. Even if, as a matter of public
international law, the supplier came within the jurisdiction of a new State, that does
not mean that his dumping practices would cease to injure Community industry.
- In the present case, Decision No 2131/88 which, according to its wording, imposed
a definitive anti-dumping duty on imports of certain steel products 'originating in
Yugoslavia', was intended at the time of its adoption to apply to the entire
territory of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Although that republic
has meanwhile split into several States, the expression 'Yugoslavia' used in
Decision No 2131/88 cannot but designate the same geographical area which was
once co-extensive with that republic and now corresponds to the territory of those
new States collectively, including that of the FYROM.
- It follows that the anti-dumping duties provided for in Decision No 2131/88 apply
to steel products manufactured by a producer/exporter who had been established
in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, but was in fact - by reason of the
FYROM's declaration of independence - situated in the FYROM at the time when
the products in question were imported.
- As regards the argument put foward by Schmitz, Indosuez and Rijn- en
Kanaalvaart Expeditie that Decision No 2131/88 does not apply to products
originating in the FYROM under the rules of international law governing State
succession, suffice it to note that those principles are not directly applicable to anti-dumping duties, since such duties do not constitute State debts but charges payable
by individuals.
- Lastly, as the Advocate General stated in paragraph 33 et seq. of his Opinion, it
must be determined whether interpretation of the expression 'Yugoslavia' as
encompassing all the States existing on the territory of the former Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia is compatible with the principle of legal certainty.
- The principle of legal certainty is a fundamental principle of Community law which
requires in particular that rules imposing charges on a taxpayer be clear and
precise so that he may be able to ascertain unequivocally what his rights and
obligations are and take steps accordingly (Case C-143/93 Van Es Douane Agenten
v Inspecteur der Invoerrechten en Accijnzen [1996] ECR I-431, paragraph 27).
- It must therefore be determined whether Decision No 2131/88 enables those
concerned to ascertain their legal position with precision, so far as concerns the
payment of anti-dumping duties on products which they imported from the
FYROM at the material time.
- It is clear from Decision No 2131/88 that references therein to the expression
'Yugoslavia' indicate all the territory lying within the boundaries of the Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. At the time when the decision was adopted, the
expression 'Yugoslavia' was not capable of bearing any other interpretation.
- However, as the Court has pointed out in paragraph 23 above, since the
fragmentation of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, that expression in
the decision cannot but designate the territory of the former republic.
- Consequently, the parties concerned are in a position to ascertain with precision
the scope of Decision No 2131/88 and, in particular, their obligation to pay anti-dumping duties on products imported from the FYROM.
- In the light of the foregoing, the answer to the questions raised must be that the
anti-dumping duties imposed pursuant to Article 1 of Decision No 2131/88
on imports of certain steel products 'originating in Yugoslavia' also apply to
products of that kind manufactured by a producer/exporter who had been
established in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, but was in fact - by
reason of the FYROM's declaration of independence - situated in the FYROM at
the time when the products in question were imported.
Costs
- The costs incurred by the Belgian Government and by the Commission of the
European Communities, which have submitted observations to the Court, are not
recoverable. Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings,
a step in the proceedings pending before the national court, the decision on costs
is a matter for that court.
On those grounds,THE COURT (Sixth Chamber)
in answer to the questions referred to it by the Rechtbank van Eerste Aanleg te
Antwerpen by order of 13 May 1996, hereby rules:
The anti-dumping duties imposed pursuant to Article 1 of Commission Decision
No 2131/88/ECSC of 18 July 1988 - imposing a definitive anti-dumping duty on
imports of certain sheets and plates, of iron or steel, originating in Yugoslavia and
definitively collecting the provisional anti-dumping duty imposed on those imports
- on imports of certain steel products 'originating in Yugoslavia' also apply to
products of that kind manufactured by a producer/exporter who had been
established in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, but was in fact - by
reason of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia's declaration of
independence - situated in the FYROM at the time when the products in question
were imported.
RagnemalmSchintgen
Mancini
Kapteyn Hirsch
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 16 October 1997.
R. Grass
H. Ragnemalm
Registrar
President of the Sixth Chamber
1: Language of the case: Dutch.
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/1997/C17796.html