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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Court of Justice of the European Communities (including Court of First Instance Decisions) >> Toshiba Corporation and Others [2012] EUECJ C1710_O (14 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/2012/C1710_O.html Cite as: [2012] EUECJ C1710_O |
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B – National law 17. The relevant provision of Czech law is Article 3(1) and (2) of the Law on the Protection of Competition. That provision applied until 30 June 2001 in the version of Law No 63/1991 Sb. (11) and from 1 July 2001 in the version of Law No 143/2001 Sb. (12) Both the earlier and the later versions of that provision contain essentially the same prohibition of cartel agreements, which is also laid down at EU level in Article 101 TFEU (formerly Article 81 EC). III – Facts, administrative procedure and dispute in the main proceedings 18. This case concerns an international cartel on the market for gas insulated switchgear (13) in which a number of well-known European and Japanese undertakings in the electrical engineering sector participated for different periods between 1988 and 2004. Both the European Commission and the Czech competition authority dealt with certain aspects of this case in 2006 and 2007 and each imposed fines on the undertakings concerned, (14) although the Czech competition authority did so only under national antitrust law and only in relation to a period prior to the Czech Republic’s accession to the European Union on 1 May 2004. Administrative procedure at European level 19. On 20 April 2006, the European Commission initiated proceedings for the imposition of a fine on the basis of Article 81 EC and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement in conjunction with Regulation No 1/2003. (15) Those proceedings, which had been preceded by a leniency application (16) and investigations carried out at the premises of several members of the cartel in 2004, (17) were directed against a total of 20 legal persons, including the Toshiba Corporation and 15 other claimants in the main proceedings. 20. In its Decision of 24 January 2007 concluding the proceedings (18) (‘the Commission Decision’), the Commission states that, from 15 April 1988 until 11 May 2004, (19) the aforementioned cartel committed a single and continuous infringement of Article 81 EC and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement in which the individual members of the cartel participated for differing periods of time. According to the Commission’s findings, this was a complex cartel operated worldwide (except in the USA and Canada), including in the European Union and the European Economic Area, (20) under which the participating undertakings, inter alia, exchanged sensitive market information, shared markets, (21) fixed prices and terminated collaboration with non-cartel members. 21. With the exception of one undertaking, (22) which benefited from the Commission’s leniency programme, all the parties to the proceedings, including all the claimants in the main proceedings, received fines amounting in total to more than EUR 750 million. (23) The highest individual fine, EUR 396 million, was imposed on the German company Siemens AG. 22. In so far as is relevant to this case, the General Court of the European Union recently upheld for the most part the Commission Decision of 24 January 2007. (24) Administrative procedure at national level 23. On the basis of the same cartel, the Czech competition authority, on 2 August 2006, initiated its own proceedings against the same participants for infringement of the Czech Law on the Protection of Competition. On 9 February 2007, it issued an initial decision (25) against which the claimants lodged an administrative appeal with the competition authority itself. Following that objection, the chairperson of the Czech competition authority then amended the original decision by decision of 26 April 2007. (26) 24. In the appeal decision of 26 April 2007, the competition authority held that the undertakings concerned had concluded a cartel agreement applicable to the territory of the Czech Republic. In so doing, they had, in their capacity as competitors, infringed the Czech Law on the Protection of Competition in the period up to 3 May 2004. (27) With the exception of one undertaking, (28) which qualified for the national leniency programme, fines were imposed on all the undertakings affected by the proceedings. (29) Proceedings before the Czech courts 25. The claimants in the main proceedings brought an action against the decision of the Czech competition authority before the Regional Court, Brno. (30) They claimed, inter alia, that the Czech competition authority had misrepresented the duration of the cartel, intentionally shifting its termination to the period before the Czech Republic’s accession to the European Union so as to be able to apply the Czech Law on the Protection of Competition. Pursuant to Article 11(6) of Regulation No 1/2003, the Czech competition authority was no longer competent to conduct the proceedings at national level because the Commission had already initiated proceedings at European level in that case. The proceedings at national level infringe the prohibition against prosecution and punishment for the same cause of action (ne bis in idem). 26. By judgment of 25 June 2008, (31) the Regional Court, Brno, annulled both the appeal decision of the Czech competition authority of 26 April 2007 and its original decision of 9 February 2007. The Regional Court also assumed that the conduct of the claimants which was under examination had represented a continuous administrative infringement which – as the Commission itself established – had lasted until 11 May 2004. Since the Commission had already implemented proceedings under Article 81 EC with respect to the same ‘worldwide’ cartel and had adopted a decision finding the parties to it ‘guilty of the offence’, any further proceedings in the same case infringed the ne bis in idem principle. Furthermore, in accordance with the first sentence of Article 11(6) of Regulation No 1/2003, the Czech competition authority had been relieved of its competence to deal with those proceedings under Article 81 EC. 27. Indeed, in the view of the Regional Court, it would be inconsistent with the uniform application of competition law if the Czech competition authority were to retain competence in respect of the period up to 1 May 2004 even after 1 May 2004 and were able to apply the Czech Law on the Protection of Competition retroactively. The prohibition on cartel agreements set out in that law is substantively the same as that provided for in Article 81 EC. The relevant provision of the Czech Law on the Protection of Competition was formulated with a view to approximating the Czech legislation to the corresponding European law ahead of the Czech Republic’s accession to the European Union. 28. However, the Czech competition authority brought an appeal in cassation before the Supreme Administrative Court of the Czech Republic (32) against the judgment delivered at first instance by the Regional Court, Brno. It considers that it continues to be competent to take action against the conduct in which the claimants in the main proceedings engaged up to the date of the Czech Republic’s accession, since the Commission was not able to prosecute infringements relating to the Czech Republic before that date. In its view, the fact that an international cartel is punished under more than one head of jurisdiction does not constitute an infringement of the ne bis in idem principle. The Commission and the Czech competition authority were dealing with territorially different effects of that conduct. Furthermore, the case-law in Walt Wilhelm (33) allows EU competition law and domestic competition law to be applied in parallel. 29. By judgment of 10 April 2009, (34) the Supreme Administrative Court set aside the judgment of the Regional Court, Brno. In the opinion of the Supreme Administrative Court, the Regional Court wrongly found that the participation in the cartel by the undertakings in question constituted a continuous practice. Before the Czech Republic’s accession to the European Union, the cartel operated on Czech territory fell exclusively within national competence and could be prosecuted exclusively under national law. The date of accession and the associated change of jurisdiction represented a break in the course of events. Although the claimants did not formally bring to an end the infringement which they had committed in the Czech Republic prior to the date of accession, the Supreme Administrative Court considers that that infringement must be regarded as having been terminated. From a formal point of view, the conduct engaged in after the date of accession is a separate infringement, an infringement under EU law, which falls within the shared competence of the domestic competition authority and the Commission, the Commission’s competence taking precedence in law (Article 11(6) of Regulation No 1/2003). 30. The proceedings are now pending once again before the Regional Court, Brno, the referring court, to which the case was referred back for a further decision. Although, under national law, (35) the Regional Court is bound by the legal opinion of the Supreme Administrative Court, it considers that some clarification is necessary on certain points of EU law relating, on the one hand, to the Czech Republic’s accession to the European Union on 1 May 2004 and, on the other hand, to the entry into force of Regulation No 1/2003. Effectively, then, the reference for a preliminary ruling to the Court of Justice of the European Union is also concerned with the differences of opinion as to the substance of the case that exist between the Regional Court and the Supreme Administrative Court. IV – Reference for a preliminary ruling and procedure before the Court 31. By order of 11 December 2009, (36) received at the Court on 13 January 2010, the Regional Court, Brno referred the following questions to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:The source of this judgment is the Europa web site. The information on this site is subject to a Disclaimer and a Copyright notice and rules related to Personal data protection. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/2012/C1710_O.html