(2) 7 68 Komisja p. Włochom, Europeistyka II rok EPG, Ćwiczenia Dąbrowska-Kłosińska

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JUDGMENT OF 10. 12. 1968 — CASE 7/68
trade in the goods in question is hindered
by the pecuniary burden which it im­
poses on the price of the exported artic­
les.
4. The prohibitions or restrictions on im­
ports and exports referred to in Article 36
of the EEC Treaty are by nature clearly
distinguished from customs duties and
assimilated charges whereby the econ­
omic conditions of importation or ex­
portation are affected without restrict­
ing the freedom of decision of those
involved in commercial transactions.
Because such measures constitute an
exception to the fundamental, principle
of the elimination of all obstacles to the
free movement of goods between Mem­
ber States, they must be strictly con­
strued.
5. The prohibitions and restrictions re­
ferred to in Article 36 of the EEC Treaty
cannot justify the retention of measures,
such as customs duties or charges having
equivalent effect, which fall outside the
scope of the prohibitions referred to in
the chapter relating to the elimination of
quantitative restrictions between Mem­
ber States.
In order to avail themselves of Article 36,
Member States must observe the limita­
tions imposed by that provision both as
regards the objective to be obtained and
as regards the nature of the means used
to attain it. The levy of a tax on the
exportation of goods possessing artistic
or historic value is incompatible with the
provisions of the Treaty.
In Case 7/68
Commission of the European Communities , represented by its Legal Adviser,
Armando Toledano, acting as Agent, with an address for service in Luxembourg
at the offices of its Legal Adviser, Émile Reuter, 4 boulevard Royal,
applicant,
and
Italian Republic , represented by Adolfo Maresca, Minister plenipotentiary,
acting as Agent, assisted by Pietro Peronaci, Deputy State Advocate-General,
with an address for service in Luxembourg at the Italian Embassy,
defendant,
Application for a declaration that the Italian Republic has failed to fulfil the
obligations imposed on it by Article 16 of the Treaty establishing the European
Economic Community by continuing to levy, after 1 January 1962, the progressive
tax provided for by Law No 1089 of 1 January 1939 on exports to other Member
States of the Community of objects of artistic, historic, archaelogical or ethno­
graphic interest;
THE COURT
composed of: R. Lecourt, President, A. Trabucchi and J. Mertens de Wilmars,
424
COMMISSION v ITALY
Presidents of Chambers, A. M. Donner, W. Strauß, R. Monaco and P. Pescatore
(Rapporteur), Judges,
Advocate-General: J. Gand
Registrar: A.Van Houtte
gives the following
JUDGMENT
Issues of fact and of law
I — Facts
failed to fulfil the obligations imposed on it
by Article 16, and gave it a time-limit of
two months in which to abolish the disputed
tax on transactions with other Member
States. This time-limit was extended to 31
December 1965 after the Commission had
been informed by the Italian Government
that a parliamentary committee had been
set up with the task of studying a system of
protection which would take account of the
Commission's observations.
On 16 May 1966, the Commission, in reply
to a fresh request for an extension, informed
the Italian Government that it had already
granted an extension sufficient to allow for
the abolition of the tax in question, having
regard to the necessary parliamentary pro­
cedures, and that it reserved the right to
bring the matter before the Court of Justice
at the appropriate time.
A draft law by the Government to exempt
exports to Member States of the Com­
munities from payment of the tax was ap­
proved by the Italian Senate on 26 July 1967
and passed to the Chamber of Deputies.
The draft law lapsed on dissolution of the
Italian Parliament on 11 March 1968.
Meanwhile, the Commission had brought
proceedings before the Court of Justice by
an application lodged on 7 March 1968.
Italian Law No 1089 of 1 June 1939 on the
protection of articles of artistic or historic
interest (published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale,
8 August 1939, No 184) contains several
provisions relating to the exportation of
such articles; in particular, it provides,
according to the circumstances, for an
absolute prohibition on exportation (Art­
icle 35), the requirement of a licence (Article
36), a right of pre-emption vested in the
State (Article 39) and the imposition on
exportation of a progressive tax on the
value of the article ranging by successive
stages from 8 % to 30% (Articles 37).
In January 1960, the Commission asked the
Italian Republic to abolish the tax as
regards the other Member States by the end
of the first stage of the transitional period,
that is to say, before 1 January 1962, since
it considered that the tax had an effect
equivalent to a customs duty on exportation
and so was contrary to Article 16 of the
EEC Treaty. After a prolonged exchange of
correspondence, the Commission by letter
of 25 February 1964 set in motion the pro­
cedure laid down by Article 169 of the EEC
Treaty and called on the Italian Govern­
ment to submit its observations on the
alleged violation of the Treaty by the
Italian Republic. The observations did not
satisfy the Commission, which then by
letter of 24 July 1964 delivered the reasoned
opinion provided for by the first paragraph
of Article 169 of the Treaty.
The Commission stated its reasons for
declaring that the Italian Republic had
II — Conclusions of the parties
The
applicant
claims that the Court should:
— declare that the Italian Republic has
failed to fulfil the obligations imposed on
it by Article 16 of the Treaty establishing
425
JUDGMENT OF 10. 12. 1968 — CASE 7/68
the EEC by continuing to levy against
other Member States after 1 January
1962 the progressive tax provided for by
Article 37 of Law No 1089 of 1 June
1939:
— order the defendent to pay costs.
disregarding the practical difficulties facing
the Italian Republic in the present case.
The
applicant
points out that the Italian
Government does not deny that Article 169
of the Treaty allows the applicant to decide
when to commence proceedings in the
Court after the State concerned has not
responded to the Commission's reasoned
opinion within the period laid down; in the
present instance the application was made
nearly four years after communication of
the reasoned opinion, and more than eight
years after the first approaches had been
made to the defendant.
Article 155 of the Treaty states that the
Commission shall ensure that the provisions
of the Treaty are applied, and it was there­
fore both entitled and bound, in view of the
length of time which had already passed and
the lapse of the Government's draft law
owing to the dissolution of the Parliament,
to have to bring the matter before the Court
at the time when it did so.
The
defendant
contends that the Court
should:
— dismiss the application by the Commis­
sion;
— order it to pay the costs.
III — Procedure
The written procedure followed the normal
course.
After hearing the report of the Judge-
Rapporteur and the views of the Advocate-
General, the Court decided to open the oral
procedure without any preparatory in­
quiry.
The oral submissions of the parties were
made at the hearing on 3 October 1968.
During the hearing the defendant replied to
certain questions put to it by the Judge-
Rapporteur.
The Advocate-General delivered his opin­
ion at the hearing on 23 October 1968.
B —
The substance of the case
1. Scope of the disputed tax
The
defendant
observes that the Law of 1
June 1939 applies only to a specific category
of goods which cannot be equated with con­
sumer goods or articles of general use, and
which are not therefore subject to the pro­
visions of the Treaty applicable to ordinary
merchandise.
The
applicant
replies that, whilst the goods
which are taxed are works of art, they are
the subject of commercial transactions and
are, therefore, subject to the provisions of
the Treaty.
IV — Submissions and arguments
of the parties
The submissions and arguments of the
parties may be summarized as follows:
A —
Admissibility
The
defendant
complains that the Commis­
sion lodged its application a few days prior
to the dissolution of the Italian Parliament,
at a time when it was known for certain that
this was imminent; but it makes no formal
plea of inadmissibility.
The Commission should have seen that it
was advisable to defer the commencement
of proceedings which only legislation could
resolve in the way which it desired. In not
doing so, it failed to comply with Article 2
of the Treaty, prohibiting any measure
capable of giving rise to an imbalance which
might prejudice the harmonious develop­
ment of the activities of Member States, by
2. The classification of the disputed tax
having regard to Article 16 of the Treaty
The
applicant
asserts that the disputed tax is
applied exclusively to articles exported; it
therefore concludes that it is a tax having an
effect equivalent to customs duties on ex­
ports. As such it ought to have been abol­
ished, as far as other Member States were
concerned, under Article 16 of the Treaty,
as from 1 January 1962.
Relying on the case-law of the Court, the
applicant claims that in considering the
426
COMMISSION v ITALY
question of charges having an effect equiv­
alent to customs duties it is the effect, not
the purpose, of the measure which should
be taken into account. The effect of customs
duties on exports is to increase the cost of
the exported products and thereby restrict
them; that is, equally, the primary effect of
the disputed tax, which influences the export
of the goods taxed by its effect on their cost.
The
defendant
maintains that the distinction
drawn by the Commission between the
'purpose' and the 'effect' of the tax is not
justified in the present instance; the two
closely coincide. The disputed tax has a
legitimate aim : to ensure the protection and
maintenance of the national artistic, his­
toric and archaeological heritage in the
national territory. Consequently, it says,
the tax is in no way of a fiscal nature; in any
event its contribution to the budget is in­
significant.
The disputed provision in the Law of 1 June
1939 did not, therefore, create a charge
having an effect equivalent to customs
duties, but a measure which, by making the
export of articles of special interest more
difficult, pursued the legitimate end of safe­
guarding the national heritage of which they
are part.
The
applicant
replies that in the first place
customs duties and equivalent charges on
export are prohibited by Article 16 in any
form, and in the second place protection of
the national heritage can be ensured—under
the 1939 Law itself—by other and more
effective means than a progressive tax.
Lastly, the
defendant
observes that the dis­
puted charge has a limited effect and cannot
be said to be a complete obstacle to export­
ation. In any case a number of the Treaty
provisions reveal a preference for this kind
of measure, which is least disturbing to the
operation of the Common Market.
The
applicant
considers that it need only
confine its comments to stating that in the
present case a Member State has retained
its capability to restrict certain exports by
means of a legal instrument contrary to the
Treaty.
3. Legality of the disputed tax under Article
36 of the Treaty
The
defendant
contends that the purpose,
scope and effect of the disputed tax bring it
more within the province of the Treaty
provisions concerning quantitative restric­
tions than those on charges having an effect
equivalent to customs duties on exports.
Article 36 permits restrictions on exports
which are justified, as in the present case, on
grounds of the protection of national treas­
ures possessing artistic, historic or archae­
ological value, and which do not constitute
a means of arbitrary discrimination or a
disguised restriction on trade between
Member States.
The Commission is wrong in adopting a
purely formalistic interpretation of the
Treaty and its action is particularly inap­
propriate as applied to a legislative provi­
sion made long before the Treaty came into
existence. The Treaty authorizes restrictive
measures designed to protect the artistic
heritage of Member States; this must be
borne in mind in examining the 1939 Law
and deciding that it does not conflict with
the objectives of the Treaty.
The
applicant
replies that the Treaty im­
poses separate and distinct rules on customs
and charges having equivalent effect, on the
one hand, and on quantitative restrictions
and measures having equivalent effect, on
the other. Article 36, which appears in the
Chapter dealing with quantitative restric­
tions, is a saving provision and should be
interpreted strictly; it cannot apply by
analogy in the sphere of charges having an
effect equivalent to a customs duty on
exports.
Grounds of judgment
The Commission has brought before the Court, under Article 169 of the Treaty
an application for a declaration that the Italian Republic by continuing after 1
January 1962 to levy the progressive tax provided for in Article 37 of Law
427
JUDGMENT OF 10. 12. 1968 — CASE 7/68
No 1089 of 1 June 1939 on the export to other Member States of the Community of
articles having an artistic, historic, archaeological or ethnographic value, has failed
to fulfil the obligations imposed on it by Article 16 of the Treaty establishing the
EEC.
A — Admissibility
The defendant, questioning the admissibility of the application, submits that the
Commission, by bringing the matter before the Court at a time when the Italian
Parliament, which had before it a draft law for the purpose of amending the pro­
vision in dispute, was on the point of being dissolved, disregarded the obligation
imposed upon the Community institutions under Article 2 of the Treaty to 'pro­
mote throughout the Community a harmonious development of economic activ­
ities'.
It is for the Commission, under Article 169 of the Treaty, to judge at what time it
shall bring an action before the Court; the considerations which determine its
choice of time cannot affect the admissibility of the action, which follows only
objective rules.
In the present case, the action of the Commission was in any case preceded by a
prolonged exchange of views with the Italian Government, begun before the expiry
of the second stage of the transitional period, to try to persuade the competent
authorities in the Republic to do what was necessary to amend the provisions
criticized by the Commission.
The action is therefore admissible.
B — The substance of the case
1.
The scope of the disputed tax
By basing its action on Article 16 of the Treaty, the Commission considers that
articles of an artistic, historic, archaeological or ethnographic nature, which are
the subject of the the Italian Law of 1 June 1939, No 1089, fall under the provisions
relating to the customs union. This point of view is disputed by the defendant,
which considers that the articles in question cannot be assimilated to 'consumer
goods or articles of general use' and are not therefore subject to the provisions of
the Treaty which apply to 'ordinary merchandise'; for that reason they are excluded
from the application of Article 16 of the Treaty.
Under Article 9 of the Treaty the Community is based on a customs union 'which
shall cover all trade in goods'. By goods, within the meaning of that provision,
there must be understood products which can be valued in money and which are
capable, as such, of forming the subject of commercial transactions.
428
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