EUR-Lex & EU Commission AI-Powered Semantic Search Engine
Modern Legal
  • Query in any language with multilingual search
  • Access EUR-Lex and EU Commission case law
  • See relevant paragraphs highlighted instantly
Start free trial

Similar Documents

Explore similar documents to your case.

We Found Similar Cases for You

Sign up for free to view them and see the most relevant paragraphs highlighted.

Opinion of Mr Advocate General Alber delivered on 13 December 2001. # Commission of the European Communities v Kingdom of Belgium. # Failure by a Member State to fulfil its obligations - Directive 98/18/EC - Transport by sea - Safety rules and standards for passenger ships. # Case C-140/01.

ECLI:EU:C:2001:706

62001CC0140

December 13, 2001
With Google you find a lot.
With us you find everything. Try it now!

I imagine what I want to write in my case, I write it in the search engine and I get exactly what I wanted. Thank you!

Valentina R., lawyer

Important legal notice

62001C0140

European Court reports 2002 Page I-02105

Opinion of the Advocate-General

The Commission is bringing the present infringement proceedings against the Kingdom of Belgium for belated or incomplete transposition of Council Directive 98/18/EC of 17 March 1998 on safety rules and standards for passenger ships. It claims that the Kingdom of Belgium has failed to fulfil its obligations under the directive and under the EC Treaty.

Article 14 of the directive provides that Member States are to bring into force the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with this directive not later than 1 July 1998. Since no measures transposing the directive were communicated to the Commission by that date, or even thereafter, it sent a letter of formal notice dated 11 August 1999 to the Belgian Government. In its reply of 27 September 1999 the Belgium Government transmitted the Royal Decree of 12 November 1981 which covered a proportion of the matters dealt with by Directive 98/18. The adoption of a further Royal Decree transposing the directive was notified. On 7 September 2000 the Commission delivered a reasoned opinion in response to which the Belgian Government notified it, by letter of 17 October 2000, of the adoption of the decree in December 2000. When the action, which was registered at the Court on 28 March 2001, was brought on 27 March 2001, the Commission had still not been notified of the complete transposition of the directive.

The Commission claims that the Court should:

(1)declare that, by failing to notify the laws, regulations and administrative measures necessary in order to comply with Council Directive 98/18/EC of 17 March 1998 on safety rules and standards for passenger ships, alternatively to adopt the measures necessary in order to comply therewith, the Kingdom of Belgium has failed to fulfil its obligations under the said directive and under the EC Treaty;

(2)order the Belgian Government to pay the costs.

In the pre-litigation procedure and in the proceedings before the Court the Belgian Government referred both to the Royal Decree of 12 November 1981 and a Royal Decree of 9 December 1998 by which the directive had been transposed at least in part. However, both in the pre-litigation procedure and in the proceedings before the Court the Belgian Government conceded that Directive 98/18 had been transposed only partially and that work was under way on a Royal Decree transposing the directive in full.

The Court has consistently held that the material time for the purpose of determining whether a Member State has failed to fulfil its obligations is the end of the period laid down in the reasoned opinion. In any event, when the two-month period which was laid down in the reasoned opinion of 7 September 2000, and which began to run on notification of the letter containing the opinion, expired, the notified Royal Decree had still not been enacted.

The Court has also consistently held that practices or circumstances in the legal system of a Member State cannot justify failure to comply with obligations and time-limits laid down in Community directives or, consequently, the belated or incomplete transposition of a directive. Since Directive 98/18 had not been transposed completely into national law by the end of the period laid down in the reasoned opinion, the Kingdom of Belgium failed to fulfil its obligations under Community law.

The Member State's obligation to transpose the directive arises, firstly, from the directive directly, and, secondly, from the third paragraph of Article 249 EC, read in conjunction with Article 10 EC. Since the Kingdom of Belgium has accordingly failed to fulfil its obligations under Community law, I propose that judgment be given against it in the terms sought in the application.

The decision on costs should be given in accordance with Article 69(2) of the Rules of Procedure.

I propose that the Court should:

(1)declare that, by failing to adopt, within the prescribed period, the laws, regulations and administrative measures necessary in order to comply fully with Council Directive 98/18/EC of 17 March 1998 on safety rules and standards for passenger ships, the Kingdom of Belgium has failed to fulfil its obligations under the said directive and under the EC Treaty.

(2)order the Kingdom of Belgium to pay the costs.

EurLex Case Law

AI-Powered Case Law Search

Query in any language with multilingual search
Access EUR-Lex and EU Commission case law
See relevant paragraphs highlighted instantly

Get Instant Answers to Your Legal Questions

Cancel your subscription anytime, no questions asked.Start 14-Day Free Trial

At Modern Legal, we’re building the world’s best search engine for legal professionals. Access EU and global case law with AI-powered precision, saving you time and delivering relevant insights instantly.

Contact Us

Tivolska cesta 48, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia