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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
10 March 1998 (1)
(Bananas - Common organisation of the market - Import regime - Framework
Agreement on Bananas - GATT - Article 234 of the EC Treaty)
In Joined Cases C-364/95 and C-365/95,
REFERENCES to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Finanzgericht
Hamburg (Germany), for a preliminary ruling in the proceedings pending before
that court between
T. Port GmbH & Co.
and
Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas
on the interpretation of Article 234 of the EC Treaty, on the validity of
Commission Regulation (EC) No 478/95 of 1 March 1995 on additional rules for
the application of Council Regulation (EEC) No 404/93 as regards the tariff
quota arrangements for imports of bananas into the Community and amending
Regulation (EEC) No 1442/93 (OJ 1995 L 49, p. 13) and on the direct effect of
the provisions of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),
THE COURT,
composed of: G.C. Rodríguez Iglesias, President, C. Gulmann, M. Wathelet,
R. Schintgen (Rapporteur), (Presidents of Chambers), G.F. Mancini,
P.J.G. Kapteyn, J.L. Murray, D.A.O. Edward, J.-P. Puissochet, G. Hirsch and
P. Jann, Judges,
Advocate General: M.B. Elmer,
Registrar: H.A. Rühl, Principal Administrator,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- T. Port GmbH & Co., by G. Meier, Rechtsanwalt, Cologne,
- the German Government, by E. Röder, Ministerialrat in the Federal
Ministry of Economic Affairs, acting as Agent,
- the Spanish Government, by A. J. Navarro González, Director-General for
Community Legal and Institutional Coordination, and R. Silva de
Lapuerta, Abogado del Estado, of the State Legal Service, acting as
Agents,
- the French Government, by C. de Salins, Head of Subdirectorate in the
Legal Directorate of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and G. Mignot,
Foreign Affairs Secretary in the same directorate, acting as Agents,
- the United Kingdom Government, by L. Nicoll, of the Treasury
Solicitor's Department, acting as Agent, and D. Anderson, Barrister,
- the Council of the European Union, by A. Brautigam and J. Huber, Legal
Advisers, and J.-P. Hix, of its Legal Service, acting as Agents, and
- the Commission of the European Communities, by D. Booß and P.J. Kuyper,
Legal Advisers, and K.-D. Borchardt, of its Legal Service, acting as
Agents,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of T. Port GmbH & Co., represented by
G. Meier; the German Government, represented by E. Röder; the Spanish
Government, represented by R. Silva de Lapuerta; the French Government,
represented by F. Pascal, Attaché d'Administration Centrale in the Legal
Directorate of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting as Agent; the Council,
represented by A. Brautigam, J. Huber and J.-P. Hix; and the Commission,
represented by P.J. Kuyper and K.-D. Borchardt, at the hearing on 4 February
1997,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 24 June
1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By orders of 22 and 27 September 1995, received at the Court on 16 November
1995, the Finanzgericht (Finance Court), Hamburg, referred to the Court for
a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty three questions on the
interpretation of Article 234 of that Treaty, on the validity of Commission
Regulation (EC) No 478/95 of 1 March 1995 on additional rules for the
application of Council Regulation (EEC) No 404/93 as regards the tariff quota
arrangements for imports of bananas into the Community and amending Regulation
(EEC) No 1442/93 (OJ 1995 L 49, p. 13) and on the direct effect of the
provisions of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (hereinafter 'GATT').
- Those questions were raised in proceedings brought by T. Port GmbH & Co., a
traditional importer of third-country bananas, against Hauptzollamt
(Principal Customs Office) Hamburg-Jonas concerning the post-clearance
recovery of customs duties on imports of bananas from Ecuador.
Legislative background
- Title IV of Council Regulation (EEC) No 404/93 of 13 February 1993 on the
common organisation of the market in bananas (OJ 1993 L 47, p. 1) substituted
a common regime governing trade with third countries for the various national
regimes previously in force.
- The first paragraph of Article 17 of Regulation No 404/93 provides:
'Any importation of bananas into the Community shall be subject to the
submission of an import licence issued by the Member States at the request of
any party concerned, irrespective of his place of establishment within the
Community, without prejudice to the special provisions made for the
implementation of Articles 18 and 19.'
- Article 18(1), as originally worded, provided that a tariff quota of 2 000
tonnes (net weight) was to be opened each year for imports of third-country
bananas and non-traditional ACP bananas. Within the framework of the tariff
quota, imports of third-country bananas were subject to a customs duty of ECU
100 per tonne, whilst there was no duty on imports of non-traditional ACP
bananas.
- Article 19(1) subdivides the tariff quota opened as follows: 66.5% to the
category of operators who previously marketed third-country and/or
non-traditional ACP bananas, 30% to the category of operators who marketed
Community and/or traditional ACP bananas and 3.5% to the category of operators
established in the Community who started marketing bananas other than
Community and/or traditional ACP bananas from 1992.
- Article 19(2) provides that each operator is to obtain import licences on the
basis of the average quantities of bananas that he has sold in the three most
recent years for which figures are available.
- Article 20 of Regulation No 404/93 requires the Commission to adopt detailed
rules for implementing Title IV, which may relate in particular to the issue
of import licences.
- The Commission thus adopted Regulation (EEC) No 1442/93 of 10 June 1993 laying
down detailed rules for the application of the arrangements for importing
bananas into the Community (OJ 1993 L 142, p. 6). That regulation reproduces
the above allocation of the tariff quota among the three categories of
operators, referred to as 'Categories A, B and C'.
- On 19 February 1993 the Republic of Colombia, the Republic of Costa Rica, the
Republic of Guatemala, the Republic of Nicaragua and the Republic of Venezuela
asked the Community to open consultations under Article XXII:1 of GATT in
relation to Regulation No 404/93. The consultations were unsuccessful and
therefore, in April 1993, the Latin American States concerned initiated the
dispute settlement procedure provided for in Article XXIII:2 of GATT.
- On 18 January 1994 the panel set up under that procedure submitted a report
concluding that the import regime introduced by Regulation No 404/93 was
incompatible with the GATT rules.
- That report was not adopted by the parties to GATT.
- On 28 and 29 March 1994 the Community came to an arrangement with the Republic
of Colombia, the Republic of Costa Rica, the Republic of Nicaragua and the
Republic of Venezuela, known as the Framework Agreement on Bananas
(hereinafter 'the Framework Agreement').
- The Framework Agreement comprises two documents: the first, entitled 'Agreed
outcome of the negotiations between Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Venezuela
and the European Community on the EC's import regime for bananas', constitutes
a sort of preamble to the agreement itself; the second document, entitled
'Framework Agreement on Bananas', contains the technical provisions of the
arrangement with the Latin American countries.
- The first document states:
'The attached draft agreement on bananas represents a satisfactory outcome of
the negotiations on bananas in the context of the Uruguay Round.
The agreement also constitutes the outcome of Article XXVIII negotiations and
consultations on bananas between the EC and the abovementioned countries.
Furthermore, the agreement constitutes a settlement of the dispute on bananas
which is the subject of a GATT panel report. It was agreed, therefore, that
Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Venezuela and the EC will not pursue the
adoption of the said panel report.
Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Venezuela agreed that they would not
initiate GATT dispute settlement procedures against the EC's regime for
bananas for the duration of the attached agreement.'
- Point 1 of the second document, which constitutes the Framework Agreement
properly so called, fixes the global basic tariff quota at 2 100 000 tonnes for
1994 and 2 200 000 tonnes for 1995 and the following years, subject to any
increase resulting from the enlargement of the Community.
- In point 2, the Framework Agreement lays down the percentages of that quota
allocated to Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Venezuela respectively.
Those States are to receive 49.4% of the total quota, whilst the Dominican
Republic and the other ACP States are granted 90 000 tonnes for non-traditional imports, the balance being allocated to the other third countries.
- Points 3 to 5 deal with the application or modification of the country quotas
in the event of one country being unable to fulfil its quota or in the event of
an increase in the global quota.
- Point 6 provides that the management of the quotas, including any increase, is
to remain unchanged as laid down in Regulation No 404/93. That point provides
further:
'the supplying countries with country quotas may deliver special export
certificates for up to 70% of their quota, which, in turn, constitute a
prerequisite for the issuance, by the Community, of certificates for the
importation of bananas from said countries by "Category A" and "Category C"
operators.
The authorisation to deliver the special export certificates shall be granted
by the Commission in order to make it possible to improve regular and stable
trade relations between producers and importers and on the condition that the
export certificates will be issued without any discrimination among the
operators.'
- Point 7 fixes the in-quota customs duty at ECU 75 per tonne.
- Under points 8 and 9, the agreed system is to be operational by 1 October 1994
at the latest and to expire on 31 December 2002.
- Points 10 and 11 provide:
'This agreement will be incorporated into the Community's Uruguay Round
Schedule.
This agreement represents a settlement of the dispute between Colombia, Costa
Rica, Venezuela, Nicaragua and the Community on the Community's banana regime.
The parties to this agreement will not pursue the adoption of the GATT panel
report on this issue.'
- Points 1 and 7 of the Framework Agreement were incorporated in Schedule LXXX
to GATT 1994, which lists the Community customs concessions. GATT 1994 in turn
constitutes Annex 1A to the Agreement establishing the Word Trade Organisation
(hereinafter 'the WTO'). An annex to Schedule LXXX reproduces the Framework
Agreement.
- On 25 July 1994 the Federal Republic of Germany sought an Opinion from the
Court as to the compatibility of the Framework Agreement with the Treaty.
- By judgment of 5 October 1994 in Case C-280/93 Germany v Council [1994] ECR I-4973, the Court dismissed the action brought by the Federal Republic of
Germany for the annulment of Regulation No 404/93.
- On 21 December 1994 the Commission adopted Regulation (EC) No 3224/94 laying
down transitional measures for the implementation of the Framework Agreement
on Bananas concluded as part of the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade
negotiations (OJ 1994 L 337, p. 72).
- On 22 December 1994 the Council unanimously adopted Decision 94/800/EC
concerning the conclusion on behalf of the European Community, as regards
matters within its competence, of the agreements reached in the Uruguay Round
multilateral negotiations (1986-1994) (OJ 1994 L 336, p. 1).
- Article 1(1) of that decision indicates that, among others, the Agreement
establishing the WTO and the Agreements in Annexes 1, 2 and 3 to that
Agreement, including GATT 1994, are approved on behalf of the Community with
regard to that portion of them which falls within its competence.
- By application lodged at the Court Registry on 10 April 1995, the Federal
Republic of Germany brought an action under the first paragraph of Article 173
of the EC Treaty for the annulment of Decision 94/800 to the extent to which it
relates to conclusion of the Framework Agreement (Case C-122/95).
- Council Regulation (EC) No 3290/94 of 22 December 1994 on the adjustments and
transitional arrangements required in the agriculture sector in order to
implement the agreements concluded during the Uruguay Round of multilateral
trade negotiations (OJ 1994 L 349, p. 105) has an Annex XV relating to bananas.
That annex provides that Article 18(1) of Regulation No 404/93 is to be amended
so that, for 1994, the tariff quota is fixed at 2 100 000 tonnes and, for the
following years, at 2 200 000 tonnes. In the framework of that tariff quota,
imports of third-country bananas are to be subject to a customs duty of ECU 75
per tonne.
- Regulation No 478/95, based in particular on Article 20 of Regulation No
404/93, is concerned with the adoption of the measures necessary for
implementation, no longer on a transitional basis, of the Framework Agreement.
- Article 1(1) of Regulation No 478/95 provides:
'The tariff quota for imports of bananas from third countries and non-traditional ACP bananas referred to in Articles 18 and 19 of Regulation (EEC)
No 404/93 shall be divided into specific shares allocated to the countries or
groups of countries referred to in Annex I ...'
- Annex I contains three tables: the first gives the percentages of the tariff
quota allocated to the Latin American States in the Framework Agreement; the
second subdivides the quota of 90 000 tonnes of non-traditional bananas; and
the third provides that all the other third countries are to receive 50.6% of
the total quota.
- According to Article 3(2) of Regulation No 478/95:
'For goods originating in Colombia, Costa Rica or Nicaragua, the application
for an import licence of Category A or C, as referred to in Article 9(4) of
Regulation (EEC) No 1442/93, shall also not be admissible unless it is
accompanied by an export licence currently valid ...'
- In its Opinion of 13 December 1995 (Opinion 3/94 [1995] ECR I-4577) the Court
found that there was no need to respond to the request for an Opinion made by
the Federal Republic of Germany, that request having become devoid of purpose
because the Framework Agreement, incorporated in the agreements reached in the
Uruguay Round multilateral negotiations, had been concluded after the request
was submitted to the Court.
The facts of the cases before the national court
- T. Port GmbH & Co. (hereinafter 'T. Port'), a traditional importer of third-country bananas, obtained from the Bundesanstalt für Landwirtschaft und
Ernährung (Federal Office for Agriculture and Food, hereinafter 'the
Bundesanstalt') licences to import third-country bananas, against payment of
customs duty of ECU 100 per tonne for the second half of 1993 and for 1994, and
ECU 75 per tonne for 1995, on the basis of quantities sold during the reference
years 1989, 1990 and 1991.
- In 1994 T. Port, pleading that it was suffering hardship, requested additional
licences from the Bundesanstalt.
- In the course of that procedure, the Hessischer Verwaltungsgerichtshof (Higher
Administrative Court, Hesse), by order of 9 February 1995, instructed the
Bundesanstalt to issue to T. Port further import licences for 1995 and
referred questions to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling concerning
the rules governing cases of hardship (judgment of 26 November 1996, Case C-68/95 T. Port v Bundesanstalt für Landwirtschaft und Ernährung [1996] ECR I-6065).
- After using those licences, T. Port asked the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas, in
March 1995, to grant customs clearance for a consignment of bananas from
Ecuador without requiring it either to produce import licences or pay the
customs duty due.
- T. Port instituted proceedings before the Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal
Constitutional Court) against the negative decision of the Hauptzollamt
Hamburg-Jonas, which had been confirmed by decision of the Federal Ministry
of Finance, and against Regulation No 478/95.
- By order of 26 April 1995 the Bundesverfassungsgericht declined to give
judgment in those proceedings on the ground that T. Port was required first to
make an application for an interim order safeguarding its rights. The
Bundesverfassungsgericht stated that it was not impossible that the court
hearing the application for interim relief might, in view of the inconsistency
between Regulation No 404/93 and the obligations incumbent on the Federal
Republic of Germany under GATT, decide not to apply that regulation for the
time being. It also pointed out the courts of appropriate jurisdiction had not
yet examined the legality of Regulation No 478/95.
- T. Port, in reliance on the decision of the Bundesverfassungsgericht, again
asked the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas to grant customs clearance for the
consignment of bananas and to apply a lower rate of customs duty.
- Following a further refusal by the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas, T. Port applied
to the Finanzgericht Hamburg for an interim order safeguarding its rights. T.
Port claimed that Regulations Nos 404/93 and 478/95, although valid under
Community law, should be regarded as legal measures adopted outside the scope
of Community competence, within the meaning of the Bundesverfassungsgericht's
'Maastricht' judgment of 12 October 1993, by reason of their incompatibility
with GATT. The same was true, it claimed, of the judgment in Germany v
Council, cited above, in which the Court of Justice held Regulation No 404/93
to be valid. Those legal measures, which undermined the substance of T. Port's
fundamental rights, were thus not applicable in Germany.
- By order of 19 May 1995 the Finanzgericht Hamburg upheld T. Port's application
and, by interim order, instructed the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas to release
into free circulation the consignment of bananas purchased by T. Port in
Ecuador, without presenting an import licence and at the lower rate of duty of
ECU 75 per tonne. In that order it stated that Regulations Nos 404/93 and
478/95 infringed the GATT rules and that, by virtue of the first paragraph of
Article 234 of the Treaty, the Federal Republic of Germany was entitled not to
apply, for the time being, provisions of Community law that infringed GATT.
In the same order it referred four questions to the Court of Justice for a
preliminary ruling (Case C-182/95 T. Port v Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas).
- On 8, 21 and 28 June 1995, the Finanzgericht Hamburg made three further orders
relating to further consignments of bananas imported by T. Port from Ecuador.
- By judgment of 22 August 1995 the Bundesfinanzhof annulled the four orders of
the Finanzgericht Hamburg on the ground that no final decision had been taken
in the main proceedings when the bananas were released into free circulation.
- T. Port appealed against that judgment to the Bundesverfassungsgericht.
- Pursuant to Article 82a(1)(b) of the Rules of Procedure of the Court, the
President of the Court, by decision of 8 September 1995, stayed the
proceedings in Case C-182/95 T. Port v Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas pending
delivery of the Bundesverfassungsgericht's judgment.
- By decisions of 29 August and 1 September 1995 the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas
required post-clearance recovery of the customs duties payable on the bananas
which T. Port had imported from Ecuador without presenting the requisite
import licences.
- By decisions of 5 and 12 September 1995 the Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas
dismissed T. Port's applications for suspension of the operation of those
decisions.
- In response to applications by T. Port, the Finanzgericht Hamburg, by orders
of 22 and 27 September 1995, suspended the operation of the decisions of the
Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas of 29 August and 1 September 1995 amending customs
duties, without requiring a guarantee to be furnished.
- For the rest, the Finanzgericht Hamburg recognises that, following the
judgment in Germany v Council, cited above, Regulation No 404/93, save for the
provisions at issue in the judgment in Case C-68/95 T. Port, cited above, must
be regarded as valid under Community law. It nevertheless considers that the
provisions of that regulation and of Regulation No 478/95 are contrary to
certain fundamental GATT rules which the Federal Republic of Germany, as a
contracting party to GATT, is required to observe. In those circumstances,
the question arises, in its view, whether, having regard to the first
paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty, the application in Germany of the
relevant GATT rules must take precedence over that of Regulations Nos 404/93
and 478/95.
- The national court also states that the right of the courts of appropriate
jurisdiction, recognised by the Bundesverfassungsgericht in the
abovementioned order of 26 April 1995, to give an interim decision on the
conflict between the application of Regulation No 404/93 and the obligations
incumbent on the Federal Republic of Germany under GATT necessarily implies
that a person subject to Community law may rely on certain GATT provisions in
legal proceedings. It therefore considered that the question of the direct
effect of the provisions of GATT should once again be referred to the Court of
Justice, even though, in earlier decisions, in particular in Germany v
Council, cited above, the Court of Justice had found that the GATT rules do not
display the unconditional nature which is an essential precondition for them
to be recognised as rules of international law that are immediately applicable
in the domestic law of the contracting parties.
- Finally, the national court entertains doubts as to the compatibility of
Regulation No 478/95 with the general principle of non-discrimination, as
stated in particular in the second subparagraph of Article 40(3) of the EC
Treaty.
- Consequently, the Finanzgericht Hamburg considered that the final decision to
be given in each of the cases before it called for an answer to the first three
questions which it had already submitted to the Court in Case C-182/95 T. Port
v Hauptzollamt Hamburg-Jonas. It therefore decided to stay proceedings
pending a preliminary ruling from the Court, in both cases, on the following
questions:
'1. Is the first paragraph of Article 234 of the EC Treaty to be interpreted
as meaning that the application of Articles I, II and III of GATT takes
precedence in the Federal Republic of Germany over Articles 18 and 19
in conjunction with Article 17 of Regulation (EEC) No 404/93?
2. (a) Is Regulation (EC) No 478/95 based on Regulation (EEC) No 404/93
valid?
(b) If so, is the first paragraph of Article 234 of the EC Treaty to be
interpreted as meaning that the application of Article XIII of
GATT takes precedence over that regulation?
3. In the event that questions 1 and 2(b) are answered in the affirmative:
are Community citizens entitled to rely in proceedings before the
courts of Member States of the Community on the precedence of the
aforesaid GATT provisions as regards their application?'
- By order of the President of the Court of 15 December 1995 the two cases were
joined for the purposes of the written and oral procedure and the judgment.
- In view of the considerations set out in the national court's orders for
reference, it is appropriate to examine together the first question and the
second part of the second question, which both concern the interpretation of
the first paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty, in relation to various GATT
provisions. It is then appropriate to consider the third question, which
depends on an affirmative answer to the first question and the second part of
the second question, and relates to the direct effect of GATT provisions. The
first part of the second question, which relates to the validity of Regulation
No 478/95, should be examined last.
The interpretation of the first paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty
- By its first question and the second part of its second question, the national
court wishes essentially to ascertain whether the first paragraph of Article
234 of the Treaty must be interpreted as allowing disapplication of Articles
17, 18 and 19 of Regulation No 404/93 and of Regulation No 478/95 on the ground
that those measures are contrary to Articles I, II, III and XIII of GATT.
- Under the first paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty, the rights and
obligations arising from agreements concluded before the entry into force of
the Treaty between one or more Member States on the one hand, and one or more
third countries on the other, is not to be affected by the provisions of the
Treaty.
- According to settled case-law (see in particular Case C-124/95 The Queen v
HM Treasury and Bank of England ex parte Centro-Com [1997] ECR I-81,
paragraphs 56 and 57), the purpose of that provision is to make clear, in
accordance with the principles of international law, that application of the
Treaty does not affect the commitment of the Member State concerned to respect
the rights of third countries under an earlier agreement and to comply with its
corresponding obligations. Consequently, in order to determine whether a
Community rule may be deprived of effect by an earlier international
agreement, it is necessary to examine whether that agreement imposes on the
Member State concerned obligations whose performance may still be required by
third countries which are parties to it.
- Thus, for a Community provision to be deprived of effect as a result of an
international agreement, two conditions must be fulfilled: the agreement must
have been concluded before the entry into force of the Treaty and the third
country concerned must derive from it rights which it can require the Member
State concerned to respect.
- However, it is clear from the documents before the Court that the main
proceedings are concerned with post-clearance recovery of customs duties
payable on bananas imported from Ecuador in 1995.
- Furthermore, Ecuador was not a contracting party to GATT 1947 and did not
become a member of the WTO, and therefore a party to GATT 1994, until 1996.
- It follows that neither GATT 1947, concluded before the entry into force of the
Treaty, nor GATT 1994 can be effectively relied on, in circumstances such as
those of the present cases, to preclude the application, under the first
paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty, of provisions of Regulations Nos
404/93 and 478/95.
- The answer to the first question and the second part of the second question
must therefore be that the first paragraph of Article 234 of the Treaty must
be interpreted as not applying to cases involving imports of bananas from a
third country which is not a party to an international agreement concluded by
Member States before the entry into force of the Treaty.
The direct effect of the provisions of GATT
- The third question, concerning the direct effect of the provisions of GATT,
was submitted only in case the first question and the second part of the second
question were answered in the affirmative.
- In view of the negative answer given to those questions in paragraph 65 of this
judgment, there is no need to answer the third question.
The validity of Regulation No 478/95
- By the first part of its second question, the national court queries the
validity of Regulation No 478/95. It is clear from the order for reference
that it considers that regulation to be contrary to Article XXIII of GATT
because the general rules for dividing up the quotas take no account of earlier
imports.
- For the reasons given in relation to the answer to the first question and the
second part of the second question, it is unnecessary for the Court to give a
ruling on this point.
- The national court also asks whether Regulation No 478/95 should be declared
invalid on the ground that the system for allocating the tariff quota which it
introduces is contrary to the general principle of non-discrimination, as
stated in the second paragraph of Article 40(3) of the Treaty.
- T. Port and the German Government submit that the allocation of country quotas
to certain third countries, under Article 1(1) of Regulation No 478/95, limits
the import opportunities of economic operators who traditionally import
bananas from other third countries. They also consider that, in the case of
imports from the third countries to which country quotas have been allocated,
Regulation No 478/95 discriminates against Category A and C operators, as
compared with Category B operators, in that, by virtue of Article 3(2), only
the former are required to obtain export licences from the competent
authorities in the third countries concerned in order to import bananas from
those countries.
- The French Government submits that the Community is not required to accord
equal treatment to the various third countries and that a difference of
treatment between economic operators must be accepted if it is the consequence
of differences in the treatment accorded to those countries. It also
observes, as does the Commission, that the country quotas allocated to the
third countries party to the Framework Agreement essentially reflect the
average quantities previously imported from those same countries.
- At the hearing, the Spanish and French Governments, the Council and the
Commission also stated that the difference in treatment arising from the
exemption of Category B operators from the obligation to obtain export
licences was objectively justified by the need to restore, between them and
Category A and C operators, the competitive balance which Regulation No 404/93
was designed to establish. They state in that connection that, in Germany v
Council, cited above, the Court recognised the legality of certain advantages
afforded to Category B operators because of the need to achieve such a balance.
However, the increase in the tariff quota and the lowering of the customs duty
provided for in the Framework Agreement and incorporated into Regulation No
404/93 by Regulation No 3290/94 had the effect of disturbing that balance to
the detriment of Category B operators.
- In considering whether Regulation No 478/95 is contrary to the general
principle of non-discrimination, as stated in Article 40(3) of the Treaty, it
is necessary to distinguish between the introduction of country quotas and the
exemption of Category B operators from the requirements of the export-licence
system.
- With regard to the first aspect, it must be emphasised that, in Germany v
Council, cited above, the Court held that it was lawful to introduce the global
tariff quota for imports of third-country and non-traditional ACP bananas as
distinct from traditional imports from the ACP countries which enjoyed
favourable terms under the Lomé Convention.
- It must also be borne in mind that there is no general principle of Community
law obliging the Community, in its external relations, to accord third
countries equal treatment in all respects. Therefore, as the Court held in
Case 52/81 Faust v Commission [1982] ECR 3745, paragraph 25, if different
treatment of third countries is compatible with Community law, then different
treatment accorded to traders within the Community must also be regarded as
compatible with Community law where that different treatment is merely an
automatic consequence of the different treatment accorded to third countries
with which such traders have entered into commercial relations.
- Here, it is clear that the restrictions on import opportunities which the
introduction of country quotas is likely to entail for economic operators in
Categories A and C are the automatic consequence of differences in the
treatment accorded to third countries, depending on whether or not they are
parties to the Framework Agreement and on the size of the quota allocated to
them in that agreement.
- As to the exemption of Category B operators from the export-licence system,
that difference in treatment is not the automatic consequence of any
difference of treatment of some third countries as compared with others.
79
- That difference in treatment derives not from the fact that the export-licence
system, as provided for in the Framework Agreement and implemented by
Regulation No 478/95, is applicable to imports from certain third countries,
whether or not they are parties to the Framework Agreement, but from the fact
that, among the Community operators who have entered into commercial relations
with third countries imports from which are subject to the export-licence
system, some are under an obligation to obtain export licences whilst others
are exempt from that requirement.
- It constitutes, moreover, a clear difference in the treatment of Category A
and C operators as compared with Category B operators, since, as asserted by
the German Government, which has not been contradicted on that point,
application of the export-licence system to Category A and C operators means
that they have to pay a price for bananas from the third countries concerned
which is some 33% higher than that paid by Category B operators.
- It is therefore necessary to consider whether that difference of treatment is
incompatible with the prohibition laid down in the second subparagraph of
Article 40(3) of the Treaty, which is merely a specific enunciation of the
general principle of equality, one of the fundamental principles of Community
law (see in particular Joined Cases 117/76 and 16/77 Ruckdeschel v Hauptzollamt
Hamburg-St Annen [1977] ECR 1753, paragraph 7, Joined Cases 124/76 and 20/77
Moulins et Huileries de Pont-à-Mousson and Another v Office Interprofessionnel des
Céréales [1977] ECR 1795, paragraph 16, Case 125/77 Koninklijke Scholten-Honig
v Hoofdproduktschap voor Akkerbouwprodukten [1978] ECR 1991, paragraph 26, and
Joined Cases 103/77 and 145/77 Royal Scholten-Honig v Intervention Board for
Agricultural Products [1978] ECR 2037, paragraph 26), or whether, on the
contrary, it may be objectively justified, as contended by the Spanish and
French Governments, the Council and the Commission, by the need to restore the
competitive balance between those categories of operators.
- In that regard, it must be emphasised that, as the Court recognised in Germany
v Council, cited above, the common organisation of the market in bananas, as
established by Regulation No 404/93, and in particular the system of tariff-quota allocation, involves certain restrictions or differences of treatment
detrimental to Category A and C operators, whose opportunities for importing
bananas from third countries have thereby been restricted, whereas Category
B operators, who had previously been obliged to market essentially Community
and ACP bananas, have gained an opportunity to import specified quantities of
third-country bananas.
- The Court held that such a difference in treatment is not contrary to the
general principle of non-discrimination in so far as it is inherent in the
objective of integrating previously compartmentalised markets, bearing in
mind the different situations of the various categories of economic operators
before the establishment of the common organisation of the market, and that
pursuit of the objective of the common organisation, which is to guarantee
disposal of Community production and traditional ACP production, entails the
striking of a balance between the various categories of economic operators in
question (paragraph 74).
- Accordingly, where the balance thus achieved by Regulation No 404/93 has been
disturbed because one or more of the parameters on which it is based - such as,
for example, the level of the tariff quota or that of the customs duties on
imports - have been changed, albeit for reasons unconnected with the common
organisation of the market in the bananas sector, it may prove necessary to
restore that balance. The question remains, however, whether in this case it
was proper to do so, to the detriment of Category A and C operators, by means
of a measure such as the exemption of Category B operators from the export-licence system, as provided for in Article 3(2) of Regulation No 478/95.
- The system for the allocation of the tariff quota, as established by
Regulation No 404/93, which reserves 30% of it to Category B operators, is also
applicable to the increase of that quota agreed upon in the Framework
Agreement.
- Category B operators therefore benefit, in the same way as Category A and C
operators, from the quota increase and the concomitant lowering of customs
duties which, according to the Spanish and French Governments, the Council and
the Commission, are the cause of the disturbance of the balance between the
various categories of operator concerned. In addition, the restrictions and
differences in treatment to which Category A and C operators are subject as a
result of the banana import regime set up by Regulation No 404/93 also apply
to the part of the quota corresponding to that increase.
- Therefore, recourse to a measure such as the one contained in Article 3(2) of
Regulation No 478/95 can be justified only if it is shown that the balance
disturbed by the increase in the tariff quota and the concomitant lowering of
customs duties, which also benefit Category B operators, could be restored
only by granting a substantial advantage to that same category of operators
and, thus, at the cost of introducing a new difference in treatment
detrimental to the other categories of operators who had already, when the
tariff quota and the machinery for dividing it up were introduced, been
subjected to similar restrictions and differences in treatment.
- As is clear from the judgment delivered by the Court today in Case C-122/95
Germany v Council, that is not the case.
- In view of all the foregoing considerations, the answer to the third question
must be that Regulation No 478/95 is invalid to the extent to which Article
3(2) thereof imposes only on Category A and C operators the obligation to
obtain export licences for bananas from Colombia, Costa Rica or Nicaragua.
Costs
90. The costs incurred by the German, Spanish, French and United Kingdom
Governments, by the Council of the European Union 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 action pending before the national court, the
decision on costs is a matter for that court.
On those grounds,
THE COURT,
in answer to the questions referred to it by the Finanzgericht Hamburg by
orders of 22 and 27 September 1995, hereby rules:
1. The first paragraph of Article 234 of the EC Treaty must be interpreted as
not applying to cases involving imports of bananas from a third country
which is not a party to an international agreement concluded by Member
States before the entry into force of the Treaty.
2. Commission Regulation (EC) No 478/95 of 1 March 1995 on additional
rules for the application of Council Regulation (EEC) No 404/93 as regards
the tariff quota arrangements for imports of bananas into the Community
and amending Regulation (EEC) No 1442/93 is invalid to the extent to
which Article 3(2) thereof imposes only on Category A and C operators the
obligation to obtain export licences for bananas from Colombia, Costa Rica
or Nicaragua.
Rodríguez Iglesias Gulmann Wathelet Schintgen
Mancini Kapteyn Murray Edward
Puissochet Hirsch Jann
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Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 10 March 1998.
R. Grass
G.C. Rodríguez Iglesias
Registrar
President
1: Language of the case: German.
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/1998/C36495.html