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IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The source of this judgment is the web site of the Court of Justice of the European Communities. The information in this database has been provided free of charge and is subject to a Court of Justice of the European Communities disclaimer and a copyright notice. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fourth Chamber)
25 September 1997(1)
(Free movement of goods - Community transit - Proof of the Community status
of goods)
In Case C-237/96,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Cour
d'Appel, Mons (Belgium), for a preliminary ruling in the criminal proceedings
pending before that court against
Eddy Amelynck and Others
and
Transports Amelynck SPRL, party liable at civil law,
on the interpretation and validity of Council Regulation (EEC) No 222/77 of
13 December 1976 on Community transit (OJ 1977 L 38, p. 1) and Commission
Regulation (EEC) No 223/77 of 22 December 1976 on provisions for the
implementation of the Community transit procedure and for certain simplifications
of that procedure (OJ 1977 L 38, p. 20),
THE COURT (Fourth Chamber),
composed of: J.L. Murray, President of the Chamber, C.N. Kakouris (Rapporteur)
and P.J.G. Kapteyn, Judges,
Advocate General: C.O. Lenz,
Registrar: L. Hewlett, Administrator,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- Messrs Rinaldi, Boeki and Laznicka, defendants in the main proceedings,
by Robert Himpler, of the Crainhem Bar,
- Messrs Poznantek, Leidensdorf, Flaks, Ak, Bromberg and Suffys, and
Ms Cornet and Ms Szczekacz, defendants in the main proceedings, by Marc
Baltus, of the Brussels Bar,
- Mr Scapardini, defendant in the main proceedings, by Huguette Remy-Libert, of the Brussels Bar,
- the Belgian Government, by Jan Devadder, General Adviser in the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, External Trade and Cooperation with Developing
Countries, acting as Agent,
- the German Government, by Ernst Röder, Ministerialrat in the Federal
Ministry of Economic Affairs, acting as Agent,
- the Council of the European Union, by Maria Cristina Giorgi, Adviser in
the Legal Service, acting as Agent,
- the Commission of the European Communities, by Michel Nolin, of the
Legal Service, acting as Agent,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of the Belgian Minister for Financial Affairs,
represented by Bernhard van de Walle de Ghelcke, of the Brussels Bar; Messrs
Poznantek, Leidensdorf, Flaks, Ak, Bromberg and Suffys, and Ms Cornet and
Ms Szczekacz, represented by Marc Baltus; Mr Scapardini, represented by
Huguette Remy-Libert; the Council, represented by Maria Cristina Giorgi; and the
Commission, represented by Michel Nolin, at the hearing on 25 June 1997,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 26 June 1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By judgment of 28 June 1996, received at the Court on 9 July 1996, the Cour
d'Appel (Court of Appeal), Mons, referred for a preliminary ruling under Article
177 of the EC Treaty a question concerning the interpretation and validity of
Council Regulation (EEC) No 222/77 of 13 December 1976 on Community transit
(OJ 1977 L 38, p. 1) and Commission Regulation (EEC) No 223/77 of
22 December 1976 on provisions for the implementation of the Community transit
procedure and for certain simplifications of that procedure (OJ 1977 L 38, p. 20).
- That question was raised in the context of criminal proceedings instituted in 1991
by the Belgian Minister for Financial Affairs against Mr Eddy Amelynck, a customs
official, and 29 other persons charged with transporting into Belgium and there
holding, during the period from October 1984 to March 1985, ready-to-wear
garments imported from France but of unknown origin, without producing the
documents required for the entry of those goods into Belgium.
- The proceedings brought against those charged resulted from an investigation
conducted jointly by the Belgian customs and excise authorities and the French
national directorate for customs investigations (hereinafter 'the DNED'). In the
course of that investigation, the DNED had notified the Belgian authorities, by
telex of 13 March 1985, of the following findings which it had made subsequent to
searches carried out at the homes of certain of the accused:
'1. Exportation as contraband of garments (of French origin; destination:
Belgium, in particular Brussels); estimated value: FF 5 000 000 over a period not
subject to prescription;
2. Importation as contraband of other garments from Belgium (of Spanish
origin) intended for various customers in Paris; estimated value: FF 2 000 000.'
- As a result of those findings, the Belgian Minister for Financial Affairs instituted
criminal proceedings against the accused before the Tribunal Correctionnel
(Criminal Court), Tournai, and demanded payment of customs duties in respect of
those imports, on the ground that, failing production of the T2 or T2 L documents
provided for under Regulations No 222/77 and No 223/77 respectively, the
regulations which were applicable at the material time, the accused were not in a
position to demonstrate that the goods which had entered Belgium were of
Community origin.
- By judgment of 9 February 1993, the Tribunal Correctionnel found that the
criminal proceedings were time-barred, but took the view that the facts complained
of had been established and accordingly ordered 28 of the accused to pay customs
duties plus default interest.
- Twenty of those so ordered argued that the customs duties claimed were not
payable on the ground that the goods were, in their view, of Community origin.
They accordingly appealed against that decision to the court in Mons, relying, as
proof of the goods' origin, on the telex sent by the DNED on 13 March 1985,
which referred to the goods as being of French origin.
- The Cour d'Appel, Mons, faced with, on the one hand, the argument of the
accused and, on the other, that of the Belgian Ministry of Financial Affairs, which
argued that production of the T2 or T2 L document alone was the exclusive way
to establish the Community status of the goods, decided to stay the proceedings and
refer the following question to the Court for a preliminary ruling:
'Do Community Regulations No 222/77 and No 223/77, laying down the rule that,
save where otherwise provided, proof that goods originate in the Community may
be provided only by transit document T2 or T2 L, comply with Articles 9 and 10
of the EEC Treaty and are they compatible with Articles 37(2) and 39(2) of
Regulation No 222/77 which provide that the findings of the competent authorities
of a Member State are to have the same force [in other Member States] as findings
of the competent authorities of each of those Member States?'
- In view of its wording and content, the question must be divided into two.
The first question
- In the first question, the national court is asking whether the rule laid down in
Regulations No 222/77 and No 223/77 to the effect that, save as otherwise
provided, proof of the Community status of goods may be provided only by means
of transit documents T2 or T2 L is consistent with Articles 9 and 10 of the EC
Treaty.
- In this regard, Regulation No 222/77 sets out two procedures for Community
transit. The first, referred to as the 'procedure for external Community transit',
applies essentially, according to Article 1(2) of that regulation, to goods which do
not satisfy the conditions laid down in Articles 9 and 10 of the Treaty, that is to say,
goods which come from non-member countries and are not in free circulation in
the Community. The second, referred to as the 'procedure for internal Community
transit', applies essentially, according to Article 1(3) of Regulation No 222/77, to
goods which do satisfy the conditions laid down in Articles 9 and 10 of the Treaty,
that is to say, goods which originate in the Member States or are in free circulation
in the Community, known as 'Community goods'.
- In accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation No 222/77, goods carried under the
procedure for external Community transit must be covered by a declaration made
on a T1 form.
- With regard to internal Community transit, Article 39 of Regulation No 222/77
makes provision for proof relating to this type of transit, laying down in paragraph
(1) that all goods to be carried under this transit procedure must be covered by a
declaration made on a T2 form.
- Since Regulation No 222/77 envisages cases in which the Community transit system
is not obligatory, Community goods which are not carried under the procedure for
internal Community transit are covered by Regulation No 223/77, which provides
in Article 1(8), as a method of proof, for the issue of document T2 L, the content
of which corresponds to document T2 for internal Community transit.
- Furthermore, Article 9 of Regulation No 222/77 provides as follows: 'Where, in the
cases provided for in this regulation, the provisions of the Treaty establishing the
European Economic Community which relate to free movement of goods are only
applied on presentation of an internal Community transit document issued to
establish the Community status of the goods, the party concerned may, for any valid
reason, obtain that document subsequently from the competent authorities of the
Member State of departure.' A similar provision, Article 71 of the implementing
regulation, Regulation No 223/77, also provides that document T2 L may be issued
retroactively.
- As the Court stated in its judgment in Case C-117/88 Trend-Moden Textilhandel v
Hauptzollamt Emmerich [1990] ECR I-631, paragraph 19, Articles 9 and 10 of the
Treaty are silent as to the means of proof and the burden of proof of the
Community status of goods and leave it to secondary Community legislation to
settle those matters.
- With regard to those means of proof, Regulations No 222/77 and No 223/77 lay
down the rule that the Community status of goods may be proved only by means
of document T2 or document T2 L, subject to specified exceptions (see Trend-Moden Textilhandel, cited above, paragraph 14, and Case C-83/89 Openbaar
Ministerie and Minister van Financiën v Houben [1990] ECR I-1161, paragraph 17).
- As regards the burden of proof, it follows from the provisions of Regulation
No 222/77 that the applications to obtain those documents, the declarations
required, the other formalities to be completed, the submission of those documents
to the competent authorities and the proper performance of transit operations are
matters which in general are the responsibility of the parties concerned or their
representatives (Articles 11(a), 12(3) and 13). Those provisions, which feature in
Title II of Regulation No 222/77 dealing with external Community transit, are also
applicable to internal Community transit by virtue of Article 39(2) of Regulation
No 222/77, which states that, save as otherwise provided in Articles 40 and 41, the
provisions of Title II are to apply mutatis mutandis to the procedure for internal
Community transit. The corresponding provisions in Regulation No 223/77 also
apply to document T2 L.
- As the Court held in paragraph 20 of Trend-Moden Textilhandel, those rules are
justified by the need to facilitate the movement of goods within the Community,
which is one of the basic principles of the common market. Providing those on
whom the burden of proof normally falls with a standard and simple means of
proving the Community status of goods, combined with the possibility of producing
such proof even after the frontier has been crossed, is consistent with that purpose
and cannot therefore be regarded as contrary to Articles 9 and 10 of the Treaty.
- In the light of the foregoing, the answer to the first question must be that the rule
laid down in Regulations No 222/77 and No 223/77 to the effect that, save as
otherwise provided, proof of the Community status of goods may be provided only
by means of transit documents T2 or T2 L is consistent with Articles 9 and 10 of
the Treaty.
The second question
- In the second question, the national court is in substance asking whether,
irrespective of the answer to the first question, Article 37(2) of Regulation
No 222/77 allows proof of the Community status of goods to be provided, apart
from by documents T2 or T2 L, also by means of 'the findings of the competent
authorities of a Member State made when inspections are carried out under the
Community transit procedure'.
- Article 37(2) of Regulation No 222/77, which deals with the external Community
transit procedure but which by virtue of Article 39(2) of the same regulation is also
applicable to the internal Community transit procedure, provides that the findings
of the competent authorities of a Member State made when inspections are carried
out under the Community transit procedure are to have the same force in other
Member States as findings of the competent authorities of each of those Member
States.
- While it does not rule out the possibility that findings of the competent authority
of a Member State may relate to the Community status of goods, Article 37(2)
cannot constitute a derogation from the abovementioned rule that, save as
otherwise provided, proof of the Community status of goods may be provided only
by means of document T2 or document T2 L.
- Apart from the exceptions expressly provided for by Regulation No 222/77, such
as, in particular, carriage by air (Article 45), carriage by pipeline (Article 46), along
with that of goods contained in travellers' luggage (Article 49), findings of this kind
made by the authorities of a Member State cannot be used as proof of the
Community status of goods, since this would lead to the reintroduction of the
simultaneous application of national administrative procedures which those rules,
as is clear from the ninth recital in the preamble to the regulation, are designed
precisely to avoid. The view that these findings may replace documents T2 or T2 L
would therefore run counter to the purpose served by the rules in question, which,
as the Court pointed out in paragraph 16 of Trend-Moden Textilhandel, cited above,
is to facilitate the transport of goods within the Community by simplifying and
standardizing the formalities to be carried out when internal frontiers are crossed.
- This interpretation is, moreover, corroborated by Article 9 of Regulation No 222/77
and Article 71 of Regulation No 223/77, which provide for the retroactive issue of
document T2 and document T2 L respectively. As the Court pointed out in Trend-Moden Textilhandel, paragraph 15, those provisions incorporate the Community
legislature's intention to exclude other means of proof while at the same time
facilitating the task of the party concerned.
- In addition, Article 37(2) of Regulation No 222/77 requires that the findings of the
competent authorities of the Member States be made during inspections of goods
being transported under the Community transit procedure, whether external or
internal. It follows that the probative value of those findings is conditional on the
goods in question, such as those in the main proceedings, qualifying for the internal
Community transit procedure. That cannot, however, be the case with regard to
goods that are not accompanied by declarations made on forms T2 or T2 L.
- In view of all the foregoing considerations, the answer to the second question must
be that Article 37(2) of Regulation No 222/77 does not allow proof of the
Community status of goods to be provided by means of the findings of the
competent authorities of a Member State made when inspections are carried out
under the Community transit procedure.
Costs
- The costs incurred by the Belgian and German Governments, as well as by the
Council of the European Union and the Commission of the European
Communities, 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
proceedings pending before the national court, the decision on costs is a matter for
that court.
On those grounds,THE COURT (Fourth Chamber),
in answer to the question referred to it by the Cour d'Appel, Mons, by judgment
of 28 June 1996, hereby rules:
- The rule laid down in Council Regulation (EEC) No 222/77 of 13 December
1976 on Community transit and Commission Regulation (EEC) No 223/77
of 22 December 1976 on provisions for the implementation of the
Community transit procedure and for certain simplifications of that
procedure to the effect that, save as otherwise provided, proof of the
Community status of goods may be provided only by means of transit
documents T2 or T2 L is consistent with Articles 9 and 10 of the EC
Treaty.
- Article 37(2) of Regulation No 222/77 does not allow proof of the
Community status of goods to be provided by means of the findings of the
competent authorities of a Member State made when inspections are
carried out under the Community transit procedure.
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 25 September 1997.
R. Grass
J.L. Murray
Registrar
President of the Fourth Chamber
1: Language of the case: French.
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