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Opinion of Mr Advocate General Jacobs delivered on 13 April 2000. # Commission of the European Communities v Hellenic Republic. # Failure of a State to fulfil obligations - Directive 95/59/EC - Article 9 - Minimum price - Manufactured tobacco. # Case C-216/98.

ECLI:EU:C:2000:204

61998CC0216

April 13, 2000
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Important legal notice

61998C0216

European Court reports 2000 Page I-08921

Opinion of the Advocate-General

The relevant legal provisions

4. First, there are rules concerning the structure, the level and the collection of excise duties on manufactured tobacco products. Those rules aim to ensure that excise duties levied on tobacco products in the Member States do not distort conditions of competition or impede the free movement of goods. Article 8 of the Directive provides that excise duties on cigarettes shall comprise two elements: a proportional duty calculated on the maximum retail price and a specific duty calculated per unit of the product. Under Article 16, the specific duty must not be less than 5% or more than 55% of the amount of the total tax burden levied on the cigarettes. Excise duties are, according to Article 10, in principle collected by means of tax stamps which are acquired by the manufacturers or importers from the relevant authorities in the Member State and fixed to the products prior to their sale at the retail level.

Manufacturers, or, where appropriate, their representatives or authorised agents in the Community and importers of tobacco from non-member countries shall be free to determine the maximum retail selling price for each of their products for each Member State for which the products in question are to be released for consumption.

The second [sub]paragraph may not, however, hinder implementation of national systems of legislation regarding the control of price levels or the observance of imposed prices, provided that they are compatible with Community legislation.

7. The third paragraph of Article 45 was amended by ministerial order No F 3/2 of 7 January 1997. Consequently, the retail price of manufactured tobacco must, with effect from 20 January 1997, be at least equal to the price of those products on 31 December 1996 increased by 9%.

Procedure and delimitation of the issues

10. According to the Court's settled case-law, the pre-litigation stage defines the subject-matter of an action for failure to fulfil Community law obligations. The Commission cannot subsequently extend the subject-matter, as that would undermine the Member State's opportunity to submit observations which is an essential procedural guarantee required by the Treaty. In this case, the Commission stated both in the letter of formal notice and in the reasoned opinion that although it had referred to Article 30 of the Treaty in its previous correspondence with the Greek Government, the present procedure was limited to the fiscal aspects of Law No 2127 and without prejudice to subsequent action which the Commission might take on the basis of Article 30. It follows, as the Greek Government rightly points out, that the allegation of a breach of Article 30 of the Treaty is inadmissible.

Summary of the arguments

11. The Commission advances two arguments in support of its allegation of a breach of Article 9 of the Directive.

12. It contends, first and foremost, that Article 9 of the Directive establishes a principle of free formation of retail prices of manufactured tobacco by the manufacturers or importers. The determination, by the authorities of a Member State, of legally binding maximum or minimum retail prices is contrary to that principle and thus to the Directive. The Commission refers to the purpose of the Directive as set out in its preamble and to the Court's case-law on Article 5 of Directive 72/464.

14. The Greek Government replies, essentially, that the wording of Article 9 of the Directive draws a distinction between minimum and maximum retail prices. Consequently, a Member State does not act contrary to the Directive where it imposes legally binding minimum prices on manufactured tobacco products.

15. It also denies that Law No 2217 creates legal uncertainty. While paragraph 1 of Article 45 lays down the general principle that the manufacturers and importers freely determine the retail price of manufactured tobacco, paragraph 3 merely restricts the scope of that principle. There is thus no contradiction between the two paragraphs.

17. The following questions need, in my view, to be considered.

(i) Is Article 45 of Law No 2127 contrary to the second subparagraph of Article 9(1) and thus prima facie in breach of the Directive?

(ii) Is Article 45 of Law No 2127 justified under the reservations in the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) of the Directive?

Is Article 45 of Law No 2127 contrary to the second subparagraph of Article 9(1) and thus prima facie in breach of the Directive?

18. The second subparagraph of Article 9(1) provides that manufacturers and importers shall be free to determine the maximum retail selling price for each of their products. According to the Greek Government, the reference in that wording to maximum prices, rather than prices, shows that the Directive is not intended to prohibit minimum retail prices.

19. That analysis is, in my view, incorrect since the wording of Article 9 must be interpreted in the light of the system and purpose of the Directive.

22. Moreover, the issue has already been decided by the Court's case-law. The Court has held that national rules which impose binding retail prices on manufactured tobacco products are contrary to Article 5(1) of Directive 72/464, which for the purpose of these proceedings is indistinguishable from Article 9(1) of the Directive. In Commission v France the Court of Justice examined the compatibility with Article 5(1) of French rules which authorised the administration to determine the retail prices of both domestic and imported tobacco products. The Court held that the power reserved to the French Government to fix prices is incompatible with Community law to the extent to which that power, by altering the selling price determined by the manufacturer or importer, allows the competitive relationship between imported tobacco and tobacco distributed by the national monopoly to be adversely affected.

23. The Court confirmed that interpretation of Article 5 in Commission v Belgium. That case concerned the Belgian authorities' refusal to deliver tax stamps to a tobacco importer showing lower prices than those laid down by a national price scale established in accordance with Article 5(2) (now Article 9(2) of the Directive). The Court held that that refusal amounted to the imposition of a minimum price on imported tobacco products which violated Article 30 of the Treaty (now Article 28 EC). It then continued:

It is clear, moreover, that the Belgian authorities also committed an error of law by disregarding the principle laid down by Article 5(1) of Directive 72/464 of 19 December 1972, according to which manufacturers and importers shall be free to determine the maximum retail selling price for each of their products.

24. Finally, in Commission v Italy the Court held that a provision of Italian law which authorised the administration of that State to determine the retail prices with regard to the maximum prices suggested to it by the manufacturers and importers was in breach of Article 5(1) of Directive 72/464 since it created uncertainty about the right of those manufacturers and importers to determine freely the maximum retail prices.

25. It follows that the Commission's interpretation of the Directive is correct: Article 9(1) establishes a principle of free formation of retail prices by manufacturers and importers which is, subject to the reservations in the third subparagraph of that provision, incompatible with the authorities of a Member State having power to set minimum prices or other binding retail prices.

26. Article 45 of Law No 2127 authorises the Greek Minister for Economic Affairs to impose binding minimum retail prices on manufactured tobacco products. The existence of that power is per se a breach of the principle of free formation of retail selling prices enshrined in Article 9(1) of the Directive.

27. That conclusion is not, as the Greek Government contends, contradicted by the legislative history of the Directive. During the process leading to the adoption of Directive 92/78 which amended Directive 72/464, the Economic and Social Committee suggested that the phrase maximum prices in Article 5(1) be changed to prices to make it clear that the Directive applied also to national minimum price legislations. The fact that the Community legislator did not adopt that proposal does not suggest that minimum prices fall outside Article 9(1). On the contrary, it suggests that the Community legislator took the view that the proposed amendment was not necessary since it was sufficiently clear from the system and purpose of the Directive, and the Court's rulings in the cases mentioned above, that Article 9(1) does indeed apply to minimum prices.

28. It should be added that the minimum prices laid down in accordance with Law No 2127 may, contrary to the Greek Government's assertions, jeopardise the aims of the Directive. According to information contained in the Commission's application, the Greek minimum prices are set in accordance with the following criteria: from December 1995, at which time the Directive entered into force, to 19 January 1997 the minimum prices were at least equivalent to the retail prices on 1 December 1993 increased by 20%; since 20 January 1997 the minimum prices have been at least equivalent to the retail prices on 31 December 1996 increased by 9%. Those levels appear quite high and one can therefore not exclude the possibility that the minimum prices have prevented some importers from reflecting lower cost prices in their retail prices. The minimum prices laid down in accordance with Article 45 may thus have distorted the conditions of competition between domestic and imported tobacco products and restricted the free movement of goods. Moreover, there is no upper limit, in the wording of Article 45 of Law No 2127, on the level of the minimum prices which may be determined by the Greek Minister for Economic Affairs. The Minister may therefore at any time raise the minimum prices to such a high level that the conditions of competition are indeed distorted.

29. I conclude, on those grounds, that Article 45 of Law No 2127 is contrary to the second subparagraph of Article 9(1) of the Directive and thus prima facie in breach of the Directive.

30. In the light of the foregoing, it is not necessary for me to express an opinion on the Commission's allegation of a breach of the requirement of legal certainty in the implementation of the Directive.

Is Article 45 of Law No 2127 justified under the reservations in the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) of the Directive?

31. The Greek Government contends that Article 45 of Law No 2127 falls within the reservations listed in the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) of the Directive. It claims, in support of that contention, that minimum prices are necessary to protect the fiscal interests of the Greek State and to protect public health from the dangers of smoking. In that regard, it emphasises that the fight against tobacco abuse is a lawful aim under Community law; that the Commission has encouraged the Member States to take action in this area; and that the need for action is pertinent given the high levels of tobacco consumption in Greece.

32. It may be recalled that the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) refers to national systems of legislation regarding the control of price levels or the observance of imposed prices. Measures designed to protect public health or the fiscal interests of the Member State do not, in my view, fall within those terms.

33. That view is confirmed by the Court's case-law on Article 5(1) of Directive 72/464. In Commission v France the Court ruled that the reservations in the third subparagraph must be interpreted in such a way as to reconcile their content with the rule of the free determination of selling prices by the manufacturer or importer .... As regards control of price levels, the Court held that that expression covers only national legislation of a general nature intended to check the increase in prices. As regards observance of imposed prices, the Court held that that expression must be read in the light of the mechanism for determination of retail prices laid down in the second subparagraph of Article 9(1). The expression must be understood as referring to a price which, once determined by the manufacturer or importer and approved by the public authority, is compulsory as a maximum price and must be observed at all stages of the distribution network, up to the sale to the consumer. The purpose of that mechanism is, as explained above, to prevent manufacturers and importers from undervaluing their products at the time they acquire the tax labels and pay excise duty on the tobacco products.

34. It follows that the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) does not authorise the Member States to depart from the principle of free price formation, laid down in the second subparagraph, in order to protect either their fiscal interests or public health. The Greek Government's contention that Law No 2127 is justified under the third subparagraph of Article 9(1) should therefore not be upheld.

35. That does not mean, however, that Greece cannot protect its fiscal interests and public health under the Directive. As the Commission rightly points out, Greece is free to determine the total level of taxation on manufactured tobacco products under Article 16 of the Directive. It can therefore protect those interests by an increase in the level of taxation. The fear expressed by the Greek Government, that manufacturers and importers might counteract tax increases by reducing their profit margins, is unfounded. Taking into account the large tax element in the selling price of manufactured tobacco products, the profit made by manufacturers, importers and retailers is relatively small. The retail selling price therefore reflects the level of taxation and the Greek authorities may, in any event, respond to reductions in the profit margins by raising further the level of taxation.

Conclusion

36. On the basis of the above considerations, I am of the opinion that the Court should:

(1) declare that the Hellenic Republic has failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 9 of Council Directive 95/59/EC of 27 November 1995 on taxes other than turnover taxes which affect the consumption of manufactured tobacco;

(2) order the Hellenic Republic to pay the costs.

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