EU LEGISLATURE PROCEDURES (Article 113,114,267)
Article 267
➢ Gives the Court of Justice jurisdiction to deliver preliminary rulings on the validity and
interpretation of EU Law
Article 267 (a-b)
➢ Identify issue and that it concerns interpretation of the Treaty or the interpretation/
validity of the acts of the EU institutions (Directives, Regulations) - if so, ECJ has
jurisdiction
1) Is the body a court of a tribunal? (Dorsch Consult Criteria)
➢ This paper aims to define ‘national courts and tribunals’ for the purposes of
Article 234
L
i) Whether the body is established by law
ii) Whether it is permanent
iii) Whether it’s jurisdiction is compulsory
GD
iv) Whether its procedure is inter partes (ie, had hearings where all parties
could be present and be heard/ both parties have a say - oral or written)
v) Whether it applies rules of law
vi) Whether it is independent (Syfait - not independent thus not court)
■ Do not need all 6 or any number of the criteria to be fulfilled – use
your judgment
2) Is a decision on EU Law point ‘necessary’ for judgment? (The CILFIT Criteria)
➢ Assuming that the body hearing a case is a court of tribunal
i) Must decide whether a decision on a question of EU Law is ‘necessary’ to
enable it to give judgment in the case before it
ce
➢ JUDGMENT NOT NECESSARY WHERE:
i) The question is irrelevant for the resolution of the dispute
ii) The provision of EU law in question has already been interpreted by the
Court
iii) The correct interpretation of EU Law is so obvious as to leave no scope
for any reasonable doubt
A
,DIRECT EFFECT, INDIRECT EFFECT, STATE LIABILITY
1) EU Law is supreme even over the national constitution.
2) List our purpose of directive
3) Purpose of the claimant
How do individuals enforce their EU rights in national courts?
1) Treaty Articles
2) Regulations
a) Directly applicable both vertically and horizontally (can be relied in national courts
and apply in all MSs the same)
3) Directives
a) Not directly applicable as they must be incorporated into the national law by
L
national legislation by MS
b) Can be directly/indirectly applicable
c) Direct effect of directives will only ever be vertical (Van Duyn)
GD
Van Gend Criteria (For a treaty article to be directly effective, it must satisfy)
The EU Article Provision had to be:
➢ Sufficiently clear and precise
➢ Unconditional
➢ Leave no room for the exercise of discretion in implementation on the part of member
states or community institutions
Ratti Test
➢ Time for it to be implemented must have lapsed from the date of the claim, otherwise
ce
state can still implement it
Direct Effect
➢ When provisions of EU law which are directly effective give rise to rights or obligations
which individuals may enforce before their national courts
Vertical Direct Effect (Van Duyn/ Marshall)
A
➢ Individuals can enforce rights against the State or a State body
➢ Vertical DE could only be applied if it is against a state body or an emanation of a state
■ Foster amended by Farrell definition of emanation of state - 1 + 2/3
1. Has the body been delegated a public interest task
2. Is the body under state control (Griffin/ Doughty)
3. Does the body has special powers for carrying out its functions (NUT)
➨ If yes, individuals can rely on EU directive in national courts
➨ If no, consider indirect effect
Horizontal Direct Effect (Faccini Dori)
➢ An individual bringing an action against an individual
, - ‘Individual’ includes businesses as well as individual human beings
➨ If yes, individuals can rely on EU directive in national courts
Indirect Effect
➢ Whereby national courts of the member states of the EU are required to interpret
national law in line with provisions of EU law (Article 288 TFEU)
Von Colson
- In conclusion, it was held that it falls on the courts to interpret national law in such a way
as to ensure that the objectives of the Directive are achieved.
Implementing vs Non-Implementing Legislation
Implementing Legislation
L
- National Legislation passed to comply with EU directive but poorly (Von Colson)
Non-Implementing Legislation
- National Legislation which existed before EU directive thus not passed to implement
directive (Marleasing)
Purposive Approach
GD
Purposive Approach vs Clear Conflict
- Add words in to national law (Webb, Von Colson)
Clear Conflict
- Cannot reconcile national law and directive if clear conflict (Wagner Miret)
➨ If Yes, Individuals could rely on national law through EU directive in national courts
➨ If no, can open a separate claim and sue the state for liability
ce
State Liability
- MS liable to compensate individuals if it fails to comply with EU law
Under the Francovich criteria, EU MSs could be liable to pay compensation to individuals who
suffered a loss by reason of the Member State's failure to transpose an EU directive into
national law.
A
The decision in Francovich v Italian State developed the principle of State Liability for a breach
of EU Law.
Francovich Criteria
1) The Directive confers rights on individuals
2) The content of those rights is identifiable from the Directive
3) There is a causal link between the failure to implement the directive and the damage
Factortame (No.4) Added
➢ Was the breach ‘sufficiently serious’?
➨ If yes, state liability
Article 267
➢ Gives the Court of Justice jurisdiction to deliver preliminary rulings on the validity and
interpretation of EU Law
Article 267 (a-b)
➢ Identify issue and that it concerns interpretation of the Treaty or the interpretation/
validity of the acts of the EU institutions (Directives, Regulations) - if so, ECJ has
jurisdiction
1) Is the body a court of a tribunal? (Dorsch Consult Criteria)
➢ This paper aims to define ‘national courts and tribunals’ for the purposes of
Article 234
L
i) Whether the body is established by law
ii) Whether it is permanent
iii) Whether it’s jurisdiction is compulsory
GD
iv) Whether its procedure is inter partes (ie, had hearings where all parties
could be present and be heard/ both parties have a say - oral or written)
v) Whether it applies rules of law
vi) Whether it is independent (Syfait - not independent thus not court)
■ Do not need all 6 or any number of the criteria to be fulfilled – use
your judgment
2) Is a decision on EU Law point ‘necessary’ for judgment? (The CILFIT Criteria)
➢ Assuming that the body hearing a case is a court of tribunal
i) Must decide whether a decision on a question of EU Law is ‘necessary’ to
enable it to give judgment in the case before it
ce
➢ JUDGMENT NOT NECESSARY WHERE:
i) The question is irrelevant for the resolution of the dispute
ii) The provision of EU law in question has already been interpreted by the
Court
iii) The correct interpretation of EU Law is so obvious as to leave no scope
for any reasonable doubt
A
,DIRECT EFFECT, INDIRECT EFFECT, STATE LIABILITY
1) EU Law is supreme even over the national constitution.
2) List our purpose of directive
3) Purpose of the claimant
How do individuals enforce their EU rights in national courts?
1) Treaty Articles
2) Regulations
a) Directly applicable both vertically and horizontally (can be relied in national courts
and apply in all MSs the same)
3) Directives
a) Not directly applicable as they must be incorporated into the national law by
L
national legislation by MS
b) Can be directly/indirectly applicable
c) Direct effect of directives will only ever be vertical (Van Duyn)
GD
Van Gend Criteria (For a treaty article to be directly effective, it must satisfy)
The EU Article Provision had to be:
➢ Sufficiently clear and precise
➢ Unconditional
➢ Leave no room for the exercise of discretion in implementation on the part of member
states or community institutions
Ratti Test
➢ Time for it to be implemented must have lapsed from the date of the claim, otherwise
ce
state can still implement it
Direct Effect
➢ When provisions of EU law which are directly effective give rise to rights or obligations
which individuals may enforce before their national courts
Vertical Direct Effect (Van Duyn/ Marshall)
A
➢ Individuals can enforce rights against the State or a State body
➢ Vertical DE could only be applied if it is against a state body or an emanation of a state
■ Foster amended by Farrell definition of emanation of state - 1 + 2/3
1. Has the body been delegated a public interest task
2. Is the body under state control (Griffin/ Doughty)
3. Does the body has special powers for carrying out its functions (NUT)
➨ If yes, individuals can rely on EU directive in national courts
➨ If no, consider indirect effect
Horizontal Direct Effect (Faccini Dori)
➢ An individual bringing an action against an individual
, - ‘Individual’ includes businesses as well as individual human beings
➨ If yes, individuals can rely on EU directive in national courts
Indirect Effect
➢ Whereby national courts of the member states of the EU are required to interpret
national law in line with provisions of EU law (Article 288 TFEU)
Von Colson
- In conclusion, it was held that it falls on the courts to interpret national law in such a way
as to ensure that the objectives of the Directive are achieved.
Implementing vs Non-Implementing Legislation
Implementing Legislation
L
- National Legislation passed to comply with EU directive but poorly (Von Colson)
Non-Implementing Legislation
- National Legislation which existed before EU directive thus not passed to implement
directive (Marleasing)
Purposive Approach
GD
Purposive Approach vs Clear Conflict
- Add words in to national law (Webb, Von Colson)
Clear Conflict
- Cannot reconcile national law and directive if clear conflict (Wagner Miret)
➨ If Yes, Individuals could rely on national law through EU directive in national courts
➨ If no, can open a separate claim and sue the state for liability
ce
State Liability
- MS liable to compensate individuals if it fails to comply with EU law
Under the Francovich criteria, EU MSs could be liable to pay compensation to individuals who
suffered a loss by reason of the Member State's failure to transpose an EU directive into
national law.
A
The decision in Francovich v Italian State developed the principle of State Liability for a breach
of EU Law.
Francovich Criteria
1) The Directive confers rights on individuals
2) The content of those rights is identifiable from the Directive
3) There is a causal link between the failure to implement the directive and the damage
Factortame (No.4) Added
➢ Was the breach ‘sufficiently serious’?
➨ If yes, state liability