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[ DEFINITION DES CLAUSES ABUSIVES ] [ COMMISSION DES CLAUSES ABUSIVES ] [ CONFLITS DE LOIS ] [ DIRECTIVE CLAUSES ABUSIVES ] [ UNCONSCIONABLE CLAUSES ] [ JURISDICTION CLAUSES ]
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
27 June 2000 (1)
(Directive 93/13/EEC - Unfair
terms in consumer contracts - Jurisdiction clause - Power of the
national court to examine of its own motion whether that clause is
unfair)
In Joined Cases C-240/98 to
C-244/98,
REFERENCE to the Court under
Article 177 of the EC Treaty (now Article 234 EC) by the Juzgado de
Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona, Spain, for a preliminary ruling in
the proceedings pending before that court between
Océano Grupo
Editorial SA andRocío
Murciano Quintero (C-240/98)
and between
Salvat Editores SA andJosé
M. Sánchez Alcón Prades (C-241/98),
José Luis Copano Badillo
(C-242/98),
Mohammed Berroane (C-243/98),
Emilio Viñas Feliu (C-244/98),
on the interpretation of
Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer
contracts (OJ 1993 L 95, p. 29),
THE COURT,
composed of: G.C. Rodríguez
Iglesias, President, L. Sevón (President of Chamber), P.J.G. Kapteyn,
C. Gulmann, J.-P. Puissochet, G. Hirsch, P. Jann (Rapporteur), H.
Ragnemalm, M. Wathelet, V. Skouris and F. Macken, Judges,
Advocate General: A.
Saggio,
Registrar: H.A. Rühl, Principal
Administrator,
after considering the written
observations submitted on behalf of:
-Océano Grupo Editorial
SA and Salvat Editores SA, by A. Estany Segalas, of the Barcelona Bar,
-the Spanish Government, by S. Ortíz
Vaamonde, Abogado del Estado, acting as Agent,
-the French Government, by K.
Rispal-Bellanger, Head of Subdirectorate in the Legal Directorate of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and R. Loosli-Surrans, Chargé de Mission
in that Directorate, acting as Agents,
-Commission of the European Communities, by
J.L. Iglesias Buhigues, Legal Adviser, and M. Desantes Real, a national
civil servant on secondment to the Commission's Legal Service, acting as
Agents,
having regard to the Report for
the Hearing,
after hearing the oral
observations of Océano Grupo Editorial SA, Salvat Editores SA, the
Spanish Government, the French Government and the Commission at the
hearing on 26 October 1999,
after hearing the Opinion of
the Advocate General at the sitting on 16 December 1999,
gives the following
Judgment
- 1.
- By orders of 31 March
1998 (C-240/98 and C-241/98) and 1 April 1998 (C-242/98, C-243/98 and
C244/98) received at the Court on 8 July 1998, the Juzgado de Primera
Instancia (Court of First Instance) No 35, Barcelona, referred to the
Court for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty (now
Article 234 EC) a question on the interpretation of Council Directive
93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts (OJ
1993 L 95, p. 29, 'the Directive).
- 2.
- The question was raised
in two sets of proceedings, between (i) Océano Grupo Editorial SA and
Ms Murciana Quintero and (ii) Salvat Editores SA and Mr Sánchez Alcón
Prades, Mr Copano Badillo, Mr Berroane and Mr Viñas Feliu. The
proceedings concerned the payment of sums due under contracts
concluded between the companies and the defendants in the main
proceedings for the sale on deferred payment terms of encyclopaedias.
The legal framework
Community law
- 3.
- The purpose of the
Directive is, according to Article 1(1), 'to approximate the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States
relating to unfair terms in contracts concluded between a seller or
supplier and a consumer.
- 4.
- Article 2 of the
Directive provides:
'For the purposes of
this Directive:
...
(b) consumer means any natural person who,
in contracts covered by this Directive, is acting for purposes which
are outside his trade, business or profession;
(c) seller or supplier means
any natural or legal person who, in contracts covered by this
Directive, is acting for purposes relating to his trade, business or
profession, whether publicly owned or privately owned.
- 5.
- Article 3(1) of the
Directive provides:
'A contractual term which has
not been individually negotiated shall be regarded as unfair if,
contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant
imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the
contract, to the detriment of the consumer.
- 6.
- Article 3(3) of the
Directive refers to the Annex to the Directive which is to contain an
'indicative and non-exhaustive list of the terms which may be regarded
as unfair. Paragraph 1 of the Annex refers to 'Terms which have the
object or effect of:
...
(q) excluding or hindering the consumer's
right to take legal action or exercise any other legal remedy ...
- 7.
- Under Article 6(1) of
the Directive:
'Member States shall lay down
that unfair terms used in a contract concluded with a consumer by a
seller or supplier shall, as provided for under their national law,
not be binding on the consumer and that the contract shall continue to
bind the parties upon those terms if it is capable of continuing in
existence without the unfair terms.
- 8.
- Article 7 of the
Directive provides:
'1. Member States shall
ensure that, in the interests of consumers and of competitors,
adequate and effective means exist to prevent the continued use of
unfair terms in contracts concluded with consumers by sellers or
suppliers.
2. The means referred to in
paragraph 1 shall include provisions whereby persons or organisations,
having a legitimate interest under national law in protecting
consumers, may take action according to the national law concerned
before the courts or before competent administrative bodies for a
decision as to whether contractual terms drawn up for general use are
unfair, so that they can apply appropriate and effective means to
prevent the continued use of such terms.
- 9.
- Article 10(1) of the
Directive provides that Member States are to bring into force the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with the
Directive no later than 31 December 1994.
National law
- 10.
- Under Spanish law
consumers were initially protected against unfair terms inserted in
contracts by sellers and suppliers by the Ley General 26/1984, de 19
de julio, para la Defensa de los Consumidores y Usuarios (General Law
No 26/1984 of 19 July 1984 for the Protection of Consumers and Users, Boletín
Oficial del Estado No 176, of 24 July 1984, 'Law No 26/1984).
- 11.
- Article 10(1)(c) of Law
No 26/1984 provides that terms, conditions or clauses which apply
generally in relation to the sale or promotion of products or services
must be consistent with the requirement of good faith and must
maintain a proper balance between the rights and obligations of the
parties, which in any event precludes the use of unfair terms. By
virtue of Article 10(4) of Law No 26/1984, unfair terms, which are
defined as terms adversely affecting the consumer in a
disproportionate or inequitable manner or causing an imbalance in the
parties' rights and obligations to the detriment of the consumer, are
automatically void.
- 12.
- The Directive was fully
transposed by Ley 7/1998, de 13 de abril, sobre Condiciones Generales
de la Contratación (Law No 7/1998 of 13 April 1998 on General
Contractual Conditions, Boletín Oficial del Estado No 89 of 14
April 1998, 'Law No 7/1998).
- 13.
- Article 8 of Law No
7/1998 provides that general conditions which, to the detriment of a
party to the contract, infringe the provisions of the Law and, in
particular, unfair general conditions in consumer contracts within the
meaning of Law No 26/1984 are automatically void.
- 14.
- Law No 7/1998
supplements Law No 26/1984 by adding, in particular, Article 10a,
paragraph 1 of which substantially reproduces Article 3(1) of the
Directive, and an additional provision which essentially sets out the
list in the Annex to the Directive of terms which may be regarded as
unfair, while indicating that the provision is minimal in character.
Under paragraph 27 of the additional provision, a term of a contract
expressly conferring jurisdiction on a court or tribunal other than
that corresponding to the consumer's domicile or the place of
performance of the contract is regarded as unfair.
The main proceedings and
the question submitted for a preliminary ruling
- 15.
- Between 4 May 1995 and
16 October 1996, each of the defendants in the main proceedings, all
of whom are resident in Spain, entered into a contract for the
purchase by instalments of an encyclopaedia for personal use. The
plaintiffs in the main proceedings are the sellers of the
encyclopaedias.
- 16.
- The contracts contained
a term conferring jurisdiction on the courts in Barcelona (Spain), a
city in which none of the defendants in the main proceedings is
domiciled but where the plaintiffs in those proceedings have their
principal place of business.
- 17.
- The purchasers of the
encyclopaedias did not pay the sums due on the agreed dates, and,
between 25 July and 19 December 1997, the sellers brought actions ('juicio
de cognición - a summary procedure available only for actions
involving limited amounts of money) in the Juzgado de Primera
Instancia No 35 de Barcelona to obtain an order that the defendants in
the main proceedings should pay the sums due.
- 18.
- Notice of the claims was
not served on the defendants since the national court had doubts as to
whether it had jurisdiction over the actions in question. The national
court points out that on several occasions the Tribunal Supremo (Supreme
Court) has held jurisdiction clauses of the kind at issue in these
proceedings to be unfair. However, according to the court making the
reference, the decisions of the national courts are inconsistent on
the question of whether the court may, in proceedings concerning
consumer protection, determine of its own motion whether an unfair
term is void.
- 19.
- In those circumstances
the Juzgado de Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona took the view that
an interpretation of the Directive was necessary to enable it to reach
a decision in the proceedings before it. It decided to stay the
proceedings and to refer to the Court of Justice for a preliminary
ruling the following question, which is identically worded in the five
orders for reference:
'Is the scope of the
consumer protection provided by Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April
1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts such that the national
court may determine of its own motion whether a term of a contract is
unfair when making its preliminary assessment as to whether a claim
should be allowed to proceed before the ordinary courts?
- 20.
- By order of the
President of the Court of Justice of 20 July 1998, the five cases
C-240/98 to C-244/98 were joined for the purposes of the written and
oral procedure and the judgment.
- 21.
- First, it should be
noted that, where a term of the kind at issue in the main proceedings
has been included in a contract concluded between a consumer and a
seller or supplier within the meaning of the Directive without being
individually negotiated, it satisfies all the criteria enabling it to
be classed as unfair for the purposes of the Directive.
- 22.
- A term of this kind, the
purpose of which is to confer jurisdiction in respect of all disputes
arising under the contract on the court in the territorial
jurisdiction of which the seller or supplier has his principal place
of business, obliges the consumer to submit to the exclusive
jurisdiction of a court which may be a long way from his domicile.
This may make it difficult for him to enter an appearance. In the case
of disputes concerning limited amounts of money, the costs relating to
the consumer's entering an appearance could be a deterrent and cause
him to forgo any legal remedy or defence. Such a term thus falls
within the category of terms which have the object or effect of
excluding or hindering the consumer's right to take legal action, a
category referred to in subparagraph (q) of paragraph 1 of the Annex
to the Directive.
- 23.
- By contrast, the term
enables the seller or supplier to deal with all the litigation
relating to his trade, business or profession in the court in the
jurisdiction of which he has his principal place of business. This
makes it easier for the seller or supplier to arrange to enter an
appearance and makes it less onerous for him to do so.
- 24.
- It follows that where a
jurisdiction clause is included, without being individually negotiated,
in a contract between a consumer and a seller or supplier within the
meaning of the Directive and where it confers exclusive jurisdiction
on a court in the territorial jurisdiction of which the seller or
supplier has his principal place of business, it must be regarded as
unfair within the meaning of Article 3 of the Directive in so far as
it causes, contrary to the requirement of good faith, a significant
imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the
contract, to the detriment of the consumer.
- 25.
- As to the question of
whether a court seised of a dispute concerning a contract between a
seller or supplier and a consumer may determine of its own motion
whether a term of the contract is unfair, it should be noted that the
system of protection introduced by the Directive is based on the idea
that the consumer is in a weak position vis-à-vis the seller or
supplier, as regards both his bargaining power and his level of
knowledge. This leads to the consumer agreeing to terms drawn up in
advance by the seller or supplier without being able to influence the
content of the terms.
- 26.
- The aim of Article 6 of
the Directive, which requires Member States to lay down that unfair
terms are not binding on the consumer, would not be achieved if the
consumer were himself obliged to raise the unfair nature of such terms.
In disputes where the amounts involved are often limited, the lawyers'
fees may be higher than the amount at stake, which may deter the
consumer from contesting the application of an unfair term. While it
is the case that, in a number of Member States, procedural rules
enable individuals to defend themselves in such proceedings, there is
a real risk that the consumer, particularly because of ignorance of
the law, will not challenge the term pleaded against him on the
grounds that it is unfair. It follows that effective protection of the
consumer may be attained only if the national court acknowledges that
it has power to evaluate terms of this kind of its own motion.
- 27.
- Moreover, as the
Advocate General pointed out in paragraph 24 of his Opinion, the
system of protection laid down by the Directive is based on the notion
that the imbalance between the consumer and the seller or supplier may
only be corrected by positive action unconnected with the actual
parties to the contract. That is why Article 7 of the Directive,
paragraph 1 of which requires Member States to implement adequate and
effective means to prevent the continued use of unfair terms,
specifies in paragraph 2 that those means are to include allowing
authorised consumer associations to take action in order to obtain a
decision as to whether contractual terms drawn up for general use are
unfair and, if need be, to have them prohibited, even if they have not
been used in specific contracts.
- 28.
- As the French Government
has pointed out, it is hardly conceivable that, in a system requiring
the implementation of specific group actions of a preventive nature
intended to put a stop to unfair terms detrimental to consumers'
interests, a court hearing a dispute on a specific contract containing
an unfair term should not be able to set aside application of the
relevant term solely because the consumer has not raised the fact that
it is unfair. On the contrary, the court's power to determine of its
own motion whether a term is unfair must be regarded as constituting a
proper means both of achieving the result sought by Article 6 of the
Directive, namely, preventing an individual consumer from being bound
by an unfair term, and of contributing to achieving the aim of Article
7, since if the court undertakes such an examination, that may act as
a deterrent and contribute to preventing unfair terms in contracts
concluded between consumers and sellers or suppliers.
- 29.
- It follows from the
above that the protection provided for consumers by the Directive
entails the national court being able to determine of its own motion
whether a term of a contract before it is unfair when making its
preliminary assessment as to whether a claim should be allowed to
proceed before the national courts.
- 30.
- As regards the position
where a directive has not been transposed, it must be noted that it is
settled case-law (Case C-106/89 Marleasing v La Comercial
Internacional de Alimentación [1990] ECR I-4135, paragraph 8,
Case C-334/92 Wagner Miret v Fondo de Garantía Salarial
[1993] ECR I-6911, paragraph 20, and Case C-91/92 Faccini Dori
v Recreb [1994] ECR I-3325, paragraph 26) that, when applying
national law, whether adopted before or after the directive, the
national court called upon to interpret that law must do so, as far as
possible, in the light of the wording and purpose of the directive so
as to achieve the result pursued by the directive and thereby comply
with the third paragraph of Article 189 of the EC Treaty (now the
third paragraph of Article 249 EC).
- 31.
- Since the court making
the reference is seised of a case falling within the scope of the
Directive and the facts giving rise to the case postdate the expiry of
the period allowed for transposing the Directive, it therefore falls
to that court, when it applies the provisions of national law outlined
in paragraphs 10 and 11 above which were in force at the material
time, to interpret them, as far as possible, in accordance with the
Directive and in such a way that they are applied of the court's own
motion.
- 32.
- It is apparent from the
above considerations that the national court is obliged, when it
applies national law provisions predating or postdating the said
Directive, to interpret those provisions, so far as possible, in the
light of the wording and purpose of the Directive. The requirement for
an interpretation in conformity with the Directive requires the
national court, in particular, to favour the interpretation that would
allow it to decline of its own motion the jurisdiction conferred on it
by virtue of an unfair term.
Costs
- 33.
- The costs incurred by
the Spanish and French Governments and by the Commission, 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 Juzgado de Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona
by orders of 31 March and 1 April 1998, hereby rules:
1. The protection provided
for consumers by Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair
terms in consumer contracts entails the national court being able to
determine of its own motion whether a term of a contract before it is
unfair when making its preliminary assessment as to whether a claim
should be allowed to proceed before the national courts.
2. The national
court is obliged, when it applies national law provisions predating or
postdating the said Directive, to interpret those provisions, so far
as possible, in the light of the wording and purpose of the Directive.
The requirement for an interpretation in conformity with the Directive
requires the national court, in particular, to favour the
interpretation that would allow it to decline of its own motion the
jurisdiction conferred on it by virtue of an unfair term.
| Rodríguez
Iglesias Sevón
Kapteyn
Gulmann
Puissochet
Hirsch Jann
Ragnemalm
Wathelet Skouris
Macken
|
Delivered in open court in
Luxembourg on 27 June 2000.
R. Grass
G.C. Rodríguez Iglesias
Registrar
President
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
27 June 2000 (1)
(Directive 93/13/EEC - Unfair
terms in consumer contracts - Jurisdiction clause - Power of the
national court to examine of its own motion whether that clause is
unfair)
In Joined Cases C-240/98 to
C-244/98,
REFERENCE to the Court under
Article 177 of the EC Treaty (now Article 234 EC) by the Juzgado de
Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona, Spain, for a preliminary ruling in
the proceedings pending before that court between
Océano Grupo
Editorial SA andRocío
Murciano Quintero (C-240/98)
and between
Salvat Editores SA andJosé
M. Sánchez Alcón Prades (C-241/98),
José Luis Copano Badillo
(C-242/98),
Mohammed Berroane (C-243/98),
Emilio Viñas Feliu (C-244/98),
on the interpretation of
Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer
contracts (OJ 1993 L 95, p. 29),
THE COURT,
composed of: G.C. Rodríguez
Iglesias, President, L. Sevón (President of Chamber), P.J.G. Kapteyn,
C. Gulmann, J.-P. Puissochet, G. Hirsch, P. Jann (Rapporteur), H.
Ragnemalm, M. Wathelet, V. Skouris and F. Macken, Judges,
Advocate General: A.
Saggio,
Registrar: H.A. Rühl, Principal
Administrator,
after considering the written
observations submitted on behalf of:
-Océano Grupo Editorial
SA and Salvat Editores SA, by A. Estany Segalas, of the Barcelona Bar,
-the Spanish Government, by S. Ortíz
Vaamonde, Abogado del Estado, acting as Agent,
-the French Government, by K.
Rispal-Bellanger, Head of Subdirectorate in the Legal Directorate of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and R. Loosli-Surrans, Chargé de Mission
in that Directorate, acting as Agents,
-Commission of the European Communities, by
J.L. Iglesias Buhigues, Legal Adviser, and M. Desantes Real, a national
civil servant on secondment to the Commission's Legal Service, acting as
Agents,
having regard to the Report for
the Hearing,
after hearing the oral
observations of Océano Grupo Editorial SA, Salvat Editores SA, the
Spanish Government, the French Government and the Commission at the
hearing on 26 October 1999,
after hearing the Opinion of
the Advocate General at the sitting on 16 December 1999,
gives the following
Judgment
- 1.
- By orders of 31 March
1998 (C-240/98 and C-241/98) and 1 April 1998 (C-242/98, C-243/98 and
C244/98) received at the Court on 8 July 1998, the Juzgado de Primera
Instancia (Court of First Instance) No 35, Barcelona, referred to the
Court for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty (now
Article 234 EC) a question on the interpretation of Council Directive
93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts (OJ
1993 L 95, p. 29, 'the Directive).
- 2.
- The question was raised
in two sets of proceedings, between (i) Océano Grupo Editorial SA and
Ms Murciana Quintero and (ii) Salvat Editores SA and Mr Sánchez Alcón
Prades, Mr Copano Badillo, Mr Berroane and Mr Viñas Feliu. The
proceedings concerned the payment of sums due under contracts
concluded between the companies and the defendants in the main
proceedings for the sale on deferred payment terms of encyclopaedias.
The legal framework
Community law
- 3.
- The purpose of the
Directive is, according to Article 1(1), 'to approximate the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States
relating to unfair terms in contracts concluded between a seller or
supplier and a consumer.
- 4.
- Article 2 of the
Directive provides:
'For the purposes of
this Directive:
...
(b) consumer means any natural person who,
in contracts covered by this Directive, is acting for purposes which
are outside his trade, business or profession;
(c) seller or supplier means
any natural or legal person who, in contracts covered by this
Directive, is acting for purposes relating to his trade, business or
profession, whether publicly owned or privately owned.
- 5.
- Article 3(1) of the
Directive provides:
'A contractual term which has
not been individually negotiated shall be regarded as unfair if,
contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant
imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the
contract, to the detriment of the consumer.
- 6.
- Article 3(3) of the
Directive refers to the Annex to the Directive which is to contain an
'indicative and non-exhaustive list of the terms which may be regarded
as unfair. Paragraph 1 of the Annex refers to 'Terms which have the
object or effect of:
...
(q) excluding or hindering the consumer's
right to take legal action or exercise any other legal remedy ...
- 7.
- Under Article 6(1) of
the Directive:
'Member States shall lay down
that unfair terms used in a contract concluded with a consumer by a
seller or supplier shall, as provided for under their national law,
not be binding on the consumer and that the contract shall continue to
bind the parties upon those terms if it is capable of continuing in
existence without the unfair terms.
- 8.
- Article 7 of the
Directive provides:
'1. Member States shall
ensure that, in the interests of consumers and of competitors,
adequate and effective means exist to prevent the continued use of
unfair terms in contracts concluded with consumers by sellers or
suppliers.
2. The means referred to in
paragraph 1 shall include provisions whereby persons or organisations,
having a legitimate interest under national law in protecting
consumers, may take action according to the national law concerned
before the courts or before competent administrative bodies for a
decision as to whether contractual terms drawn up for general use are
unfair, so that they can apply appropriate and effective means to
prevent the continued use of such terms.
- 9.
- Article 10(1) of the
Directive provides that Member States are to bring into force the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with the
Directive no later than 31 December 1994.
National law
- 10.
- Under Spanish law
consumers were initially protected against unfair terms inserted in
contracts by sellers and suppliers by the Ley General 26/1984, de 19
de julio, para la Defensa de los Consumidores y Usuarios (General Law
No 26/1984 of 19 July 1984 for the Protection of Consumers and Users, Boletín
Oficial del Estado No 176, of 24 July 1984, 'Law No 26/1984).
- 11.
- Article 10(1)(c) of Law
No 26/1984 provides that terms, conditions or clauses which apply
generally in relation to the sale or promotion of products or services
must be consistent with the requirement of good faith and must
maintain a proper balance between the rights and obligations of the
parties, which in any event precludes the use of unfair terms. By
virtue of Article 10(4) of Law No 26/1984, unfair terms, which are
defined as terms adversely affecting the consumer in a
disproportionate or inequitable manner or causing an imbalance in the
parties' rights and obligations to the detriment of the consumer, are
automatically void.
- 12.
- The Directive was fully
transposed by Ley 7/1998, de 13 de abril, sobre Condiciones Generales
de la Contratación (Law No 7/1998 of 13 April 1998 on General
Contractual Conditions, Boletín Oficial del Estado No 89 of 14
April 1998, 'Law No 7/1998).
- 13.
- Article 8 of Law No
7/1998 provides that general conditions which, to the detriment of a
party to the contract, infringe the provisions of the Law and, in
particular, unfair general conditions in consumer contracts within the
meaning of Law No 26/1984 are automatically void.
- 14.
- Law No 7/1998
supplements Law No 26/1984 by adding, in particular, Article 10a,
paragraph 1 of which substantially reproduces Article 3(1) of the
Directive, and an additional provision which essentially sets out the
list in the Annex to the Directive of terms which may be regarded as
unfair, while indicating that the provision is minimal in character.
Under paragraph 27 of the additional provision, a term of a contract
expressly conferring jurisdiction on a court or tribunal other than
that corresponding to the consumer's domicile or the place of
performance of the contract is regarded as unfair.
The main proceedings and
the question submitted for a preliminary ruling
- 15.
- Between 4 May 1995 and
16 October 1996, each of the defendants in the main proceedings, all
of whom are resident in Spain, entered into a contract for the
purchase by instalments of an encyclopaedia for personal use. The
plaintiffs in the main proceedings are the sellers of the
encyclopaedias.
- 16.
- The contracts contained
a term conferring jurisdiction on the courts in Barcelona (Spain), a
city in which none of the defendants in the main proceedings is
domiciled but where the plaintiffs in those proceedings have their
principal place of business.
- 17.
- The purchasers of the
encyclopaedias did not pay the sums due on the agreed dates, and,
between 25 July and 19 December 1997, the sellers brought actions ('juicio
de cognición - a summary procedure available only for actions
involving limited amounts of money) in the Juzgado de Primera
Instancia No 35 de Barcelona to obtain an order that the defendants in
the main proceedings should pay the sums due.
- 18.
- Notice of the claims was
not served on the defendants since the national court had doubts as to
whether it had jurisdiction over the actions in question. The national
court points out that on several occasions the Tribunal Supremo (Supreme
Court) has held jurisdiction clauses of the kind at issue in these
proceedings to be unfair. However, according to the court making the
reference, the decisions of the national courts are inconsistent on
the question of whether the court may, in proceedings concerning
consumer protection, determine of its own motion whether an unfair
term is void.
- 19.
- In those circumstances
the Juzgado de Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona took the view that
an interpretation of the Directive was necessary to enable it to reach
a decision in the proceedings before it. It decided to stay the
proceedings and to refer to the Court of Justice for a preliminary
ruling the following question, which is identically worded in the five
orders for reference:
'Is the scope of the
consumer protection provided by Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April
1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts such that the national
court may determine of its own motion whether a term of a contract is
unfair when making its preliminary assessment as to whether a claim
should be allowed to proceed before the ordinary courts?
- 20.
- By order of the
President of the Court of Justice of 20 July 1998, the five cases
C-240/98 to C-244/98 were joined for the purposes of the written and
oral procedure and the judgment.
- 21.
- First, it should be
noted that, where a term of the kind at issue in the main proceedings
has been included in a contract concluded between a consumer and a
seller or supplier within the meaning of the Directive without being
individually negotiated, it satisfies all the criteria enabling it to
be classed as unfair for the purposes of the Directive.
- 22.
- A term of this kind, the
purpose of which is to confer jurisdiction in respect of all disputes
arising under the contract on the court in the territorial
jurisdiction of which the seller or supplier has his principal place
of business, obliges the consumer to submit to the exclusive
jurisdiction of a court which may be a long way from his domicile.
This may make it difficult for him to enter an appearance. In the case
of disputes concerning limited amounts of money, the costs relating to
the consumer's entering an appearance could be a deterrent and cause
him to forgo any legal remedy or defence. Such a term thus falls
within the category of terms which have the object or effect of
excluding or hindering the consumer's right to take legal action, a
category referred to in subparagraph (q) of paragraph 1 of the Annex
to the Directive.
- 23.
- By contrast, the term
enables the seller or supplier to deal with all the litigation
relating to his trade, business or profession in the court in the
jurisdiction of which he has his principal place of business. This
makes it easier for the seller or supplier to arrange to enter an
appearance and makes it less onerous for him to do so.
- 24.
- It follows that where a
jurisdiction clause is included, without being individually negotiated,
in a contract between a consumer and a seller or supplier within the
meaning of the Directive and where it confers exclusive jurisdiction
on a court in the territorial jurisdiction of which the seller or
supplier has his principal place of business, it must be regarded as
unfair within the meaning of Article 3 of the Directive in so far as
it causes, contrary to the requirement of good faith, a significant
imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the
contract, to the detriment of the consumer.
- 25.
- As to the question of
whether a court seised of a dispute concerning a contract between a
seller or supplier and a consumer may determine of its own motion
whether a term of the contract is unfair, it should be noted that the
system of protection introduced by the Directive is based on the idea
that the consumer is in a weak position vis-à-vis the seller or
supplier, as regards both his bargaining power and his level of
knowledge. This leads to the consumer agreeing to terms drawn up in
advance by the seller or supplier without being able to influence the
content of the terms.
- 26.
- The aim of Article 6 of
the Directive, which requires Member States to lay down that unfair
terms are not binding on the consumer, would not be achieved if the
consumer were himself obliged to raise the unfair nature of such terms.
In disputes where the amounts involved are often limited, the lawyers'
fees may be higher than the amount at stake, which may deter the
consumer from contesting the application of an unfair term. While it
is the case that, in a number of Member States, procedural rules
enable individuals to defend themselves in such proceedings, there is
a real risk that the consumer, particularly because of ignorance of
the law, will not challenge the term pleaded against him on the
grounds that it is unfair. It follows that effective protection of the
consumer may be attained only if the national court acknowledges that
it has power to evaluate terms of this kind of its own motion.
- 27.
- Moreover, as the
Advocate General pointed out in paragraph 24 of his Opinion, the
system of protection laid down by the Directive is based on the notion
that the imbalance between the consumer and the seller or supplier may
only be corrected by positive action unconnected with the actual
parties to the contract. That is why Article 7 of the Directive,
paragraph 1 of which requires Member States to implement adequate and
effective means to prevent the continued use of unfair terms,
specifies in paragraph 2 that those means are to include allowing
authorised consumer associations to take action in order to obtain a
decision as to whether contractual terms drawn up for general use are
unfair and, if need be, to have them prohibited, even if they have not
been used in specific contracts.
- 28.
- As the French Government
has pointed out, it is hardly conceivable that, in a system requiring
the implementation of specific group actions of a preventive nature
intended to put a stop to unfair terms detrimental to consumers'
interests, a court hearing a dispute on a specific contract containing
an unfair term should not be able to set aside application of the
relevant term solely because the consumer has not raised the fact that
it is unfair. On the contrary, the court's power to determine of its
own motion whether a term is unfair must be regarded as constituting a
proper means both of achieving the result sought by Article 6 of the
Directive, namely, preventing an individual consumer from being bound
by an unfair term, and of contributing to achieving the aim of Article
7, since if the court undertakes such an examination, that may act as
a deterrent and contribute to preventing unfair terms in contracts
concluded between consumers and sellers or suppliers.
- 29.
- It follows from the
above that the protection provided for consumers by the Directive
entails the national court being able to determine of its own motion
whether a term of a contract before it is unfair when making its
preliminary assessment as to whether a claim should be allowed to
proceed before the national courts.
- 30.
- As regards the position
where a directive has not been transposed, it must be noted that it is
settled case-law (Case C-106/89 Marleasing v La Comercial
Internacional de Alimentación [1990] ECR I-4135, paragraph 8,
Case C-334/92 Wagner Miret v Fondo de Garantía Salarial
[1993] ECR I-6911, paragraph 20, and Case C-91/92 Faccini Dori
v Recreb [1994] ECR I-3325, paragraph 26) that, when applying
national law, whether adopted before or after the directive, the
national court called upon to interpret that law must do so, as far as
possible, in the light of the wording and purpose of the directive so
as to achieve the result pursued by the directive and thereby comply
with the third paragraph of Article 189 of the EC Treaty (now the
third paragraph of Article 249 EC).
- 31.
- Since the court making
the reference is seised of a case falling within the scope of the
Directive and the facts giving rise to the case postdate the expiry of
the period allowed for transposing the Directive, it therefore falls
to that court, when it applies the provisions of national law outlined
in paragraphs 10 and 11 above which were in force at the material
time, to interpret them, as far as possible, in accordance with the
Directive and in such a way that they are applied of the court's own
motion.
- 32.
- It is apparent from the
above considerations that the national court is obliged, when it
applies national law provisions predating or postdating the said
Directive, to interpret those provisions, so far as possible, in the
light of the wording and purpose of the Directive. The requirement for
an interpretation in conformity with the Directive requires the
national court, in particular, to favour the interpretation that would
allow it to decline of its own motion the jurisdiction conferred on it
by virtue of an unfair term.
Costs
- 33.
- The costs incurred by
the Spanish and French Governments and by the Commission, 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 Juzgado de Primera Instancia No 35 de Barcelona
by orders of 31 March and 1 April 1998, hereby rules:
1. The protection provided
for consumers by Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair
terms in consumer contracts entails the national court being able to
determine of its own motion whether a term of a contract before it is
unfair when making its preliminary assessment as to whether a claim
should be allowed to proceed before the national courts.
2. The national
court is obliged, when it applies national law provisions predating or
postdating the said Directive, to interpret those provisions, so far
as possible, in the light of the wording and purpose of the Directive.
The requirement for an interpretation in conformity with the Directive
requires the national court, in particular, to favour the
interpretation that would allow it to decline of its own motion the
jurisdiction conferred on it by virtue of an unfair term.
| Rodríguez
Iglesias Sevón
Kapteyn
Gulmann
Puissochet
Hirsch Jann
Ragnemalm
Wathelet Skouris
Macken
|
Delivered in open court in
Luxembourg on 27 June 2000.
R. Grass
G.C. Rodríguez Iglesias
Registrar
President
| |
|