BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Court of Justice of the European Communities (including Court of First Instance Decisions) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Court of Justice of the European Communities (including Court of First Instance Decisions) >> Atlantic Container Line & Ors v Commission (Competition) [2003] EUECJ T-214/98 (30 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/2003/T21498.html Cite as: [2003] EUECJ T-214/98 |
[New search] [Help]
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Third Chamber)
30 September 2003 (1)
(Competition - Liner conferences - Regulation (EEC) No 4056/86 - Block exemption - Individual exemption - Collective dominant position - Abuse - Service contracts - Accession to the conference - Alteration of the competition structure - Withdrawal of block exemption - Fines - Rights of the defence)
In Joined Cases T-191/98 and T-212/98 to T-214/98,
Atlantic Container Line AB, established in Gothenburg (Sweden),
Cho Yang Shipping Co. Ltd, established in Seoul (South Korea),
DSR-Senator Lines GmbH, established in Bremen (Germany),
Hanjin Shipping Co. Ltd, established in Seoul (South Korea),
Hapag-Lloyd AG, established in Hamburg (Germany),
Hyundai Merchant Marine Co. Ltd, established in Seoul (South Korea),
A.P. Møller-Mærsk Line, established in Copenhagen (Denmark),
Mediterranean Shipping Co. SA, established in Geneva (Switzerland),
Orient Overseas Container Line (UK) Ltd, established in London (United Kingdom),
Polish Ocean Lines (POL), established in Gdynia (Poland),
P & O Nedlloyd BV, established in London (United Kingdom),
Sea-Land Service Inc., established in Jersey City, New Jersey (United States of America),
Neptune Orient Lines Ltd, established in Singapore (Singapore),
Nippon Yusen Kaisha, established in Tokyo (Japan),
Transportación Marítima Mexicana SA de CV, established in Mexico City (Mexico),
Tecomar SA de CV, established in Mexico City (Mexico),
represented by J. Pheasant, N. Bromfield, M. Levitt, D. Waelbroeck, U. Zinsmeister, A. Bentley, C. Thomas, A. Nourry, M. Van Kerckhove, P. Ruttley and A. Merckx, lawyers, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
applicants,
v
Commission of the European Communities, represented by R. Lyal, acting as Agent, and J. Flynn, Barrister, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
defendant,
supported by
European Council of Transport Users ASBL, represented by M. Clough QC, Solicitor-Advocate, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
intervener,
APPLICATION for the annulment of Commission Decision 1999/243/EC of 16 September 1998 relating to a proceeding pursuant to Articles 85 and 86 of the EC Treaty (Case No IV/35.134 - Trans-Atlantic Conference Agreement) (OJ 1999 L 95, p. 1),
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (Third Chamber),
composed of: K. Lenaerts, President, J. Azizi and M. Jaeger, Judges,
Registrar: J. Plingers, Administrator,
having regard to the written procedure and further to the hearing on 26 and 27 March 2003,
gives the following
Legal background
(a) directly or indirectly fixing transport rates and conditions or any other trading conditions;
(b) limiting or controlling the supply of transport, markets, technical development or investment;
(c) sharing transport markets;
(d) applying dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;
(e) making the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of additional obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the provision of transport services.
Agreements, decisions and concerted practices of all or part of the members of one or more liner conferences are hereby exempted from the prohibition in Article 85(1) of the Treaty, subject to the condition imposed by Article 4 of this Regulation, when they have as their objective the fixing of rates and conditions of carriage, and, as the case may be, one or more of the following objectives:
(a) the coordination of shipping timetables, sailing dates or dates of calls;
(b) the determination of the frequency of sailings or calls;
(c) the coordination or allocation of sailings or calls among members of the conference;
(d) the regulation of the carrying capacity offered by each member;
(e) the allocation of cargo or revenue among members.
... provision should be made for block exemption of liner conferences; ... liner conferences have a stabilising effect, assuring shippers of reliable services; ... they contribute generally to providing adequate efficient scheduled maritime transport services and give fair consideration to the interests of users; ... such results cannot be obtained without the cooperation that shipping companies promote within conferences in relation to rates and, where appropriate, availability of capacity or allocation of cargo for shipment, and income; ... in most cases conferences continue to be subject to effective competition from both non-conference scheduled services and, in certain circumstances, from tramp services and from other modes of transport; ... the mobility of fleets, which is a characteristic feature of the structure of availability in the shipping field, subjects conferences to constant competition which they are unable as a rule to eliminate as far as a substantial proportion of the shipping services in question is concerned.
1. Breach of an obligation
Where the persons concerned are in breach of an obligation which, pursuant to Article 5, attaches to the exemption provided for in Article 3, the Commission may, in order to put an end to such breach and under the conditions laid down in Section II:
- address recommendations to the persons concerned;
- in the event of failure by such persons to observe those recommendations and depending upon the gravity of the breach concerned, adopt a decision that either prohibits them from carrying out or requires them to perform specific acts or, while withdrawing the benefit of the block exemption which they enjoyed, grants them an individual exemption according to Article 11(4) or withdraws the benefit of the block exemption which they enjoyed.
2. Effects incompatible with Article 85(3)
(a) Where, owing to special circumstances as described below, agreements, decisions and concerted practices which qualify for the exemption provided for in Articles 3 and 6 have nevertheless effects which are incompatible with the conditions laid down in Article 85(3) of the Treaty, the Commission, on receipt of a complaint or on its own initiative, under the conditions laid down in Section II, shall take the measures described in (c) below. The severity of these measures must be in proportion to the gravity of the situation.
(b) Special circumstances are, inter alia, created by:
(i) acts of conferences or a change of market conditions in a given trade resulting in the absence or elimination of actual or potential competition such as restrictive practices whereby the trade is not available to competition; or
(ii) acts of conferences which may prevent technical or economic progress or user participation in the benefits;
(iii) acts of third countries which:
- prevent the operation of outsiders in a trade,
- impose unfair tariffs on conference members,
- impose arrangements which otherwise impede technical or economic progress (cargo-sharing, limitations on types of vessels).
(c) (i) If actual or potential competition is absent or may be eliminated as a result of action by a third country, the Commission shall enter into consultations with the competent authorities of the third country concerned, followed if necessary by negotiations under directives to be given by the Council, in order to remedy the situation.
If the special circumstances result in the absence or elimination of actual or potential competition contrary to Article 85(3)(b) of the Treaty the Commission shall withdraw the benefit of the block exemption. At the same time it shall rule on whether and, if so, under what additional conditions and obligations an individual exemption should be granted to the relevant conference agreement with a view, inter alia, to obtaining access to the market for non-conference lines.
(ii) If, as a result of special circumstances as set out in (b), there are effects other than those referred to in (i) hereof, the Commission shall take one or more of the measures described in paragraph 1.
1. The abuse of a dominant position within the meaning of Article 86 of the [EC] Treaty (now Article 82 EC) shall be prohibited, no prior decision to that effect being required.
2. Where the Commission, either on its own initiative or at the request of a Member State or of natural or legal persons claiming a legitimate interest, finds that in any particular case the conduct of conferences benefiting from the exemption laid down in Article 3 nevertheless has effects which are incompatible with Article 86 of the Treaty, it may withdraw the benefit of the block exemption and take, pursuant to Article 10, all appropriate measures for the purpose of bringing to an end infringements of Article 86 of the Treaty.
3. Before taking a decision under paragraph 2, the Commission may address to the conference concerned recommendations for termination of the infringement.
Acting on receipt of a complaint or on its own initiative, the Commission shall initiate procedures to terminate any infringement of the provisions of Articles 85(1) or 86 of the Treaty or to enforce Article 7 of this Regulation.
If the Commission, whether acting on a complaint received or on its own initiative, concludes that an agreement, decision or concerted practice satisfies the provisions both of Article 85(1) and of Article 85(3) of the Treaty, it shall issue a decision applying Article 85(3). Such decision shall indicate the date from which it is to take effect. This date may be prior to that of the decision.
2. The Commission may by decision impose on undertakings or associations of undertakings fines of from 1 000 to one million ECU, or a sum in excess thereof but not exceeding 10% of the turnover in the preceding business year of each of the undertakings participating in the infringement, where either intentionally or negligently:
(a) they infringe Article 85(1) or Article 86 of the Treaty, or do not comply with an obligation imposed under Article 7 of this Regulation;
(b) they commit a breach of any obligation imposed pursuant to Article 5 or to Article 13(1).
In fixing the amount of the fine, regard shall be had both to the gravity and to the duration of the infringement.
...
4. Decisions taken pursuant to paragraphs 1 and 2 shall not be of criminal law nature.
The fines provided for in paragraph 2(a) shall not be imposed in respect of acts taking place after notification to the Commission and before its Decision in application of Article 85(3) of the Treaty, provided they fall within the limits of the activity described in the notification.
However, this provision shall not have effect where the Commission has informed the undertakings concerned that after preliminary examination it is of the opinion that Article 85(1) of the Treaty applies and that application of Article 85(3) is not justified.
Facts
I - The Transatlantic Agreement (TAA)
II - The Trans-Atlantic Conference Agreement (TACA)
TACA notifications
Administrative procedure withdrawing immunity from fines
Administrative procedure for infringement of Articles 85 and 86 of the Treaty
The contested decision
I - The relevant provisions of the TACA
The collective fixing of transport rates
- the common tariff contains a matrix of prices for the carriage of cargo between defined points: 26 classes of cargo are defined and a rate is specified for each class (paragraph 13);
- the tariff is published by the TACA and is available to all shippers (paragraph 13);
- the conference tariff sets out a number of different rates: standard rates, time/volume rates (TVRs) and loyalty contract rates (paragraph 103);
- under US law, any member of a conference has the right to depart from the conference tariff in respect of a particular class of goods, provided that the other members of the conference are notified (paragraph 104).
Service contracts
- duration: under Article 14(2)(a) of the TACA, service contracts must be concluded for a maximum period of one calendar year; that period was subsequently increased to two and then three years (paragraphs 17(f) and 491);
- conditional clauses (or contingency clauses): under Article 14(2)(c) of the TACA, there is a prohibition on the inclusion in service contracts of any clause providing for a reduction in the rate payable under those service contracts by reference to terms agreed with other shippers under other arrangements (paragraphs 17(g) and 489);
- multiple contracts: under Article 14(2)(c) of the TACA, none of the parties to it may participate, individually or with any other party to the TACA, in more than one service contract at a time with any particular shipper in respect of cargo to be carried on the trade (paragraphs 17(f) and 493);
- the level of liquidated damages for non-performance of the contract: under Article 14(2)(d) of the TACA, the TACA parties agree on the level of liquidated damages included in service contracts entered into by them (paragraph 495); according to the contested decision, the level of liquidated damages has been set by the TACA parties at USD 250 per Twenty Foot Equivalent Unit (TEU) (paragraph 226);
- confidentiality: the contested decision states that the TACA parties require the disclosure to each other of the terms of all service contracts to which they are party and make this information available to carriers which become party to the TACA (paragraph 496).
32 On 9 March 1995, the TACA parties informed the Commission that the FMC [the US Federal Maritime Commission] had imposed a further condition on the TACA parties. This condition required the TACA parties to amend the TACA so as to allow the various signatories to enter into 1996 service contracts without having received the approval of the other TACA parties, provided that those contracts complied with the provisions of Article 14(2) of the TACA.
Remuneration of freight forwarders
II - The definition of the relevant market
The relevant market for maritime transport services is described at paragraphs 60 to 75. The geographic market [consists] of the area in which the maritime transport services defined above are marketed, that is, in this case, the catchment areas of the ports in northern Europe. Such a geographic market is commensurate with the scope of the TACA's inland tariff and constitutes a substantial part of the common market.
III - Legal assessment
Application of Article 85 of the Treaty
- the price agreement between the parties relating to maritime transport (paragraphs 379 and 380);
- the price agreement between the parties relating to inland transport services supplied within the territory of the Community to shippers in combination with other services as part of an intermodal transport operation for the carriage of containerised cargo (carrier haulage services) between northern Europe and the United States of America (paragraphs 379 and 380);
- the agreement between the parties as to the conditions under which they may enter into service contracts with shippers (paragraphs 379, 380 and 442 to 448); and
- the agreement between the parties relating to the fixing of maximum levels of freight forwarder compensation (paragraphs 379, 380 and 505 to 508).
Application of Article 86 of the Treaty
Fines
The operative part
The undertakings listed in Annex I have infringed the provisions of Article 85(1) of the EC Treaty, Article 53(1) of the EEA Agreement and Article 2 of Regulation (EEC) No 1017/68 by agreeing prices for inland transport services supplied within the territory of the European Community to shippers in combination with other services as part of a multimodal transport operation for the carriage of containerised cargo between northern Europe and the United States of America. The conditions of Article 85(3) of the EC Treaty, Article 53(3) of the EEA Agreement and of Article 5 of Regulation (EEC) No 1017/68 are not fulfilled.
The undertakings listed in Annex I have infringed the provisions of Article 85(1) of the EC Treaty and Article 53(1) of the EEA Agreement by fixing the amounts, levels or rates of brokerage and freight forwarder remuneration, the terms and conditions for the payment of such sums and the designation of persons eligible to act as brokers. The conditions of Article 85(3) of the EC Treaty and Article 53(3) of the EEA Agreement are not fulfilled.
The undertakings listed in Annex I have infringed the provisions of Article 85(1) of the EC Treaty and Article 53(1) of the EEA Agreement by agreeing the terms and conditions on and under which they may enter into service contracts with shippers. The conditions of Article 85(3) of the EC Treaty and Article 53(3) of the EEA Agreement are not fulfilled.
The undertakings listed in Annex I are hereby required to put an end forthwith to the infringements referred to in Articles 1, 2 and 3 and are hereby required to refrain in future from any agreement or concerted practice having the same or a similar object or effect to the agreements referred to in Articles 1, 2 and 3.
The undertakings listed in Annex I have infringed the provisions of Article 86 of the EC Treaty and Article 54 of the EEA Agreement by altering the competitive structure of the market so as to reinforce the dominant position of the Transatlantic Conference Agreement.
The undertakings listed in Annex I have infringed the provisions of Article 86 of the EC Treaty and Article 54 of the EEA Agreement by placing restrictions on the availability and contents of service contracts.
The undertakings listed in Annex I are hereby required to put an end forthwith to the infringements referred to in Articles 5 and 6 and are hereby required to refrain in future from any action having the same or a similar object or effect to the infringements referred to in Articles 5 and 6.
In respect of the infringement of the provisions of Article 86 of the EC Treaty and Article 54 of the EEA Agreement referred to in Articles 5 and 6, the following fines are imposed:
A.P. Møller-Mærsk Line ECU 27 500 000
Atlantic Container Line AB ECU 6 880 000
Hapag Lloyd Container Linie GmbH ECU 20 630 000
P&O Nedlloyd Container Line Limited ECU 41 260 000
Sea-Land Service, Inc. ECU 27 500 000
Mediterranean Shipping Co. ECU 13 750 000
Orient Overseas Container Line (UK) Ltd ECU 20 630 000
Polish Ocean Lines ECU 6 880 000
DSR-Senator Lines ECU 13 750 000
Cho Yang Shipping Co., Ltd ECU 13 750 000
Neptune Orient Lines Ltd ECU 13 750 000
Nippon Yusen Kaisha ECU 20 630 000
Transportación Marítima Mexicana SA de
CV/Tecomar SA de CV ECU 6 880 000
Hanjin Shipping Co. Ltd ECU 20 630 000
Hyundai Merchant Marine Co. Ltd ECU 18 560 000
The undertakings listed in Annex I are hereby required, within a period of two months of the date of notification of this decision, to inform customers with whom they have concluded joint service contracts that those customers are entitled to renegotiate the terms of those contracts or to terminate them forthwith.
The fines imposed under Article 8 shall be paid, in ECU, within three months of the date of notification of this Decision, into bank account No 310-0933000-43 of the European Commission, Banque Bruxelles Lambert, Agence Européenne, Rond-Point Schuman 5, B-1040 Brussels.
After expiry of that period, interest shall be automatically payable on the fine at the rate charged by the European Central Bank for transactions in ECU on the first working day of the month in which this Decision is adopted, plus 3.5 percentage points, namely 7.5%.
This Decision is addressed to the undertakings listed in Annex I.
This Decision shall be enforceable pursuant to Article 192 of the EC Treaty.
Procedure
Forms of order sought
- annul the contested decision;
- in the alternative, annul or reduce the fines imposed by Article 8 of the contested decision;
- order the Commission to pay the costs;
- order the Commission to pay the costs incurred by each applicant in providing a bank guarantee in lieu of payment of the fines pending judgment by the Court.
- dismiss the application;
- order the applicants to pay the costs.
Law
I - The pleas alleging infringement of the rights of the defence
Part one: infringement of the right to be heard
A - The plea alleging that the statement of objections is unlawful because it is premature
1. Arguments of the parties
- the statement of objections did not state all of the factual matters regarded by the Commission as relevant to its appraisal of the TACA notification;
- the legal assessment in the statement of objections was not based on all of the factual matters regarded by the Commission as relevant to its appraisal of the notification;
- the statement of objections cannot be regarded as reflecting the Commission's position on the notification and its compatibility with Community law;
- the applicants could not effectively exercise the rights of the defence by replying to the statement of objections.
2. Findings of the Court
B - The pleas alleging the presence of new allegations of fact or law in the contested decision
1. The purportedly new allegations of fact or law concerning the second abuse
(a) Arguments of the parties
- Hanjin's letter to the TACA of 19 August 1994 requesting that it be provided with relevant conference documents and statistics (paragraphs 229 and 563);
- the minutes of the meeting of the TACA directors (TACA PWSC meeting No 95/8) on which the Commission bases the allegation that the applicants allowed Hyundai immediate access to conference service contracts (paragraphs 230 and 564);
- the letter from the Chairman of the TACA to Hanjin dated 30 January 1996 (paragraphs 292 and 561);
- the briefing paper of 15 February 1996 in which the secretariat of the conference suggests that the Chairman should encourage and persuade all carriers to collectively find a way to enable Hanjin to build up a market share consistent with its slot capacity in the trade (paragraphs 239 and 564).
(b) Findings of the Court
(1) The change of case in relation to the second abuse in the contested decision
Paragraphs 107 to 115 above demonstrate the ways in which the TACA has taken steps to neutralise potential competition. The steps in question include the accession of new parties, the agreement of the TACA parties to allow dual rate service contracts and the fact that the former structured TAA members did not compete for certain service contracts with NVOCCs. The Commission considers that such behaviour, which was not disclosed in the application for individual exemption, has damaged the competitive structure of the market and amounts to an abuse of a dominant position. The Commission considers that the purpose of the members of the TACA was to eliminate price competition by damaging the structure of the market and limiting the supply of transport. It should be noted in this context that an undertaking in a dominant position has a special responsibility not to allow its conduct to impair genuine undistorted competition.
108 The Commission's general observations on the mobility of fleets, and the contestability of the liner shipping markets, are set out below at paragraphs 126 to 168. Nevertheless, it is possible to demonstrate that in the case of the TACA, potential competition in the form of mobility of fleets is unlikely to be effective. A chronology of TACA party membership shows that every significant potential competitor that has entered the transatlantic trade since the inception of the TAA has done so by joining the TAA/TACA.
Version I (28/8/92) - 11 lines Version II (12/3/93) - 12 lines
ACL NYK
Hapag Lloyd
P&O Version III (31/3/93) - 13 lines
Nedlloyd NOL
Sealand
Mærsk Version IV (7/4/93) - 15 lines
MSC TMM
OOCL Tecomar
POL
DSR-Senator Version V (26/8/94) - 16 lines
Cho Yang Hanjin
Version VI (31/8/95) - 17 lines
Hyundai
109 It is especially significant that not one of the four Asian carriers which has entered the trade since 1992 (NYK, NOL, Hanjin and Hyundai) has done so as an independent carrier operating in competition to the TACA parties. Furthermore, various arrangements with TACA parties have allowed each of these carriers to enter and obtain a foothold in the market without facing the competition normally to be expected in such circumstances.
110 In particular, Hanjin and Hyundai have been able to enter the market on a slot charter basis without having had to make any investment in vessels for the trade. The TAA/TACA had argued that these carriers were significant potential competitors to the TAA/TACA: in fact the TAA has been able to ensure that they did not enter the transatlantic trade as independent lines but as parties to the TACA. It was reported in Lloyd's List on 11 September 1995 that Hyundai, as part of its arrangements to enter the trade on a slot charter basis, agreed not to introduce its own tonnage on the trade for a three year period.
111 This is not intended to suggest that entry to a particular trade on the basis of slot charter arrangements without putting actual tonnage in place is necessarily anticompetitive. The question here is whether any benefits of such cooperation are accompanied by changes in the structure of the market such as the elimination of potential competition.
112 This ability to neutralise potential competition has come about in part by the practice of the TACA to offer shippers service contracts which contain a dual rate price structure and by the fact that the majority of the TACA parties do not compete to participate in service contracts with NVOCCs (see paragraphs 88 to 93 above). In relation to dual rate tariffs and the elimination of competition, this has substantially the same effects as those described in the TAA decision at paragraphs 341 to 343.
(2) The documentary evidence relied upon in support of the second abuse recorded in the contested decision
- the PWSC 95/8 minutes are cited to show that the immediate access to service contracts was a powerful inducement to Hyundai to enter the transatlantic trade as a TACA member (paragraphs 230 and 564 of the contested decision);
- Hanjin's letter of 19 August 1994 is cited to show that the disclosure of confidential information was a powerful inducement to Hanjin to enter the transatlantic trade as a TACA party and not as an independent carrier (paragraphs 229 and 563 of the contested decision);
- the TACA letter of 30 January 1996 is cited to show that the TACA intended to help potential competitors to enter the market as TACA members (paragraphs 292, 561 and 562) and
- the TACA briefing paper of 15 February 1996 is cited to show that the TACA's willingness to enable Hanjin to build up a market share consistent with its slot capacity in the trade reduced the commercial risks inherent in the entry to a new market and, accordingly, was a factor inducing Hanjin to enter the transatlantic trade as a TACA party (paragraphs 239 and 564 of the contested decision).
2. The purportedly new allegations of fact or law other than those relating to the second abuse
(a) Preliminary observations
(b) The new allegations of fact or law concerning the lawfulness of joint service contracts, the fact that the TACA parties held a collective position and the fact that that position was a dominant one
(1) Arguments of the parties
(2) Findings of the Court
(i) The allegations concerning the lawfulness of joint service contracts
(ii) The allegations that the TACA parties held a collective position
(iii) The allegations concerning the dominant nature of the TACA parties' position
In the TAA decision, the Commission found that containerised cargo travelling between the United States and Northern Europe via Canadian ports (the Canadian Gateway) formed part of the same market as the direct trade. The Commission continues to hold that view.
(c) The new allegations of fact and law arising from the applicants' responses to certain requests for information after the statement of objections was issued
(1) Arguments of the parties
(2) Findings of the Court
(i) The admissibility of the plea
(ii) The substance of the plea
The request for information of 22 May 1996
The request for information of 11 July 1996
The requests for information of 17 July and 8 August 1996
The request for information of 12 September 1996
The request for information of 8 November 1996
The request for information of 12 February 1997
The request for information of 13 February 1997
The request for information of 15 May 1997
The request for information of 19 June 1997
The request for information of 2 October 1997
(d) Conclusion
Part two: infringement of the right of access to the file
A - Preliminary observations
B - The plea alleging failure to disclose the minutes of the meetings between the Commission and the complainants
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
C - The plea alleging failure to disclose the minutes or any other record of a meeting between the member of the Commission responsible for competition matters and the ESC
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
D - The plea alleging that the file is incomplete
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
Part three: infringement of the principles of sound administration, objectivity and impartiality
A - The conduct of the administrative procedure
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
(a) The prematurity of the statement of objections
(b) The drafting of the contested decision
As I understand it, the relevant Directorate is now drafting the proposed decision in the TACA case and the normal procedure will apply.
(c) The threats of fines
B - The assessment of the facts, evidence and relevant questions
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
C - The assessment of the fines
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
D - Conclusion on the third part
Conclusion on the pleas alleging infringement of the rights of the defence
II - The pleas alleging that there is no infringement of Article 85 of the Treaty and of Article 2 of Regulation No 1017/68 and various failures to state reasons in that regard
Part one: the assessments made in the contested decision concerning the price-fixing agreement for inland transport
Part two: the assessments in the contested decision concerning the rules relating to service contracts
A - The TACA parties' conference service contract authority
1. The block exemption under Article 3 of Regulation No 4056/86
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
2. Individual exemption under Article 85(3) of the Treaty
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
B - The TACA rules on service contracts
1. The rules as to the content of conference service contracts
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
2. The rules on the availability and content of individual service contracts
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
3. The prohibition of independent action on service contracts
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
Part three: the assessments in the contested decision in relation to the rules on the remuneration of freight forwarders
A - Arguments of the parties
- the only intermediary services provided by freight forwarders in the situation under consideration are those supplied by them to their clients (the shippers), whose agent they are;
- the contested decision contains no description of the services that freight forwarders supposedly provide for lines and does not explain how those services differ from those provided to the shippers;
- the contested decision does not identify the contractual or other relationship between the lines and the freight forwarders under which such services are supposed to be provided for the lines, since there is in fact no separate contract for such services and the only contractual relationship between the freight forwarder and the line is the one in which, in continental Europe, the freight forwarder acts as principal in relation to the contract of carriage with the line concerned.
B - Findings of the Court
Conclusion on the pleas alleging that there is no infringement of Article 85 of the Treaty and of Article 2 of Regulation No 1017/68 and various failures to state reasons in that regard
III - Pleas alleging absence of infringement of Article 86 of the Treaty and various failures to state reasons in that regard
Preliminary observation on the admissibility of these pleas
Part one: the absence of a dominant position held collectively by the TACA parties
A - Pleas alleging incorrect assessment of the economic links between the TACA parties
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
B - Pleas alleging errors of assessment concerning internal competition between the parties to the TACA
1. Application in the contested decision of the wrong legal test
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
2. Pleas alleging incorrect assessment of internal price and non-price competition
(a) Arguments of the parties
In relation to full container load (FCL) cargo, however, some TACA parties have elected, as part of their overall corporate business policy, planning, marketing and investment strategy, not to maintain large sales forces and/or extensive agency networks to solicit cargo from the numerically great number of small and medium-sized proprietary shippers of FCL cargo. As a consequence, such carriers tend to utilise and depend to a greater extent upon the [NVOCCs] to solicit and aggregate significant volumes of FCL cargo. In distinction to such TACA parties, others have elected to maintain, and bear the fixed costs of, extensive internal sales forces, customer service functions and agency networks. These carriers tend to deal to a much greater extent directly with FCL proprietary shippers and therefore tend to view NVOCCs as competitive and rival carriers (since they too are competing for proprietary shipper FCL cargo).
(b) Findings of the Court
(1) Internal price competition
(2) Internal non-price competition
(3) The specific arguments put forward by the applicant in Case T-213/98
(4) Conclusion on the extent of internal competition
3. Pleas alleging failure to state reasons
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
C - Conclusion on the first part
Part two: the dominant nature of the position held by the TACA parties
A - Definition of the relevant market
1. The relevant market for services
(a) The relevant transport services
(1) Arguments of the parties
(2) Findings of the Court
(i) Demand-side substitution
Air transport services
Break bulk shipping
In this context, it is not important that certain commodities may still travel by either means: the essential question for determining demand substitutability is whether the choice of mode is made on the basis of the characteristics of the mode. Thus, the fact that some steel products may travel by bulk and others by container does not show that the two modes are substitutable, since it does not take into account the diverse nature (and value) of steel products [or] the delivery requirements of customers.
NVOCCs
Consideration of the cumulative effect of sources of competition
(ii) Supply-side substitution
(b) Geographical scope of the services in question
(1) Arguments of the parties
(2) Findings of the Court
- the fact that the TACA parties which are also VSA parties operate two to three round-trip rail shuttles a week between Milan and Rotterdam (paragraph 80);
- the fact that, according to the Drewry report (Global Container Markets, London, 1996), even for Europe/Far East services, Mediterranean ports do not appear to be substitutable (paragraph 82);
- the fact that, for certain categories of goods, the TACA parties may limit the effect of marginal competition from other means of transport by offering lower prices without affecting prices generally (paragraph 83).
(c) Conclusion on the relevant market for services
2. The relevant geographic market
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
3. Conclusion on the definition of the relevant market
B - The existence of a dominant position on the relevant market
1. The market share held by the TACA parties
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
- the fact that the TACA maintains a discriminatory price structure, since the Commission considers at paragraphs 534 to 537 that the system of pricing differentiated, in particular, according to the value of the products or quantities, the purpose of which is to maximise revenues, is normally found only in market situations where one or more undertakings has a substantial degree of market power;
- the limited possibilities for customers to switch to other providers, since the Commission considers that that situation is the consequence of the capacities held by the TACA (paragraph 539), the existence of service contracts (paragraph 540), the price leadership of the TACA (paragraphs 541 and 548), the role of follower of competitors on prices (paragraphs 541 and 544), the TACA's capacity to impose regular, albeit modest, price increases during the relevant period (paragraph 543) and the substantial barriers to entry on the trade (paragraphs 545 to 547).
2. Effective external competition
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
(1) The number of competitors of the TACA parties and the increase in their market share
(2) The rate of increase in the volume of freight carried by the TACA's competitors
(3) The effective competition from Evergreen and Lykes
(4) The TACA's leadership in pricing matters and the role of follower played by the independent competitors
(5) Competition from the Canadian Gateway
(6) Conclusion on effective external competition
3. Potential competition
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
(1) The costs of market entry
(2) Recent non-TACA entries to the relevant market
(3) Service contracts
(4) Conclusion on potential competition
4. Internal competition within the TACA
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
5. The development of rates on the trade in question
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
(1) The proportion represented by freight carried at the ordinary rates compared with freight carried under TVRs and service contracts
This system of differentiated pricing, the purpose of which is to maximise revenues, is normally only found in market situations where one or more undertakings has a substantial degree of market power. In transport markets where there was no significant concentration of market power, the transport price would probably be fixed by reference to the type of service on offer and not by reference to the goods transported, on the basis of the actual costs in line with market forces.
(2) The increase in the rates charged by the TACA parties
6. Conclusion on the pleas relating to the existence of a dominant position on the relevant market
C - Conclusion on the second part
Part three: no abuse
A - The first abuse: placing restrictions on the availability and content of service contracts
1. Objective justification of the practices constituting the first abuse
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
- the outright prohibition of individual service contracts in 1994 and 1995 (paragraphs 554 and 557) and, where they were authorised with effect from 1996, the application of certain terms and conditions collectively agreed by the TACA (paragraphs 554 to 556) and the mutual disclosure of their terms (paragraph 552);
- the application in conference service contracts of certain terms collectively agreed by the TACA (paragraphs 554 to 556).
(1) Justifications on the basis of the necessity of certain of the practices in question
(2) Justifications based on the conformity of certain practices in question with standard practice in the maritime transport sector
(3) Justifications based on the conformity of some of the practices in question with US law
... the proposed settlement agreement ... is approved on the condition that the TACA agreement is amended by adding a new Article 14.4 reading as follows:
...
Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 14.3 any Party, either individually or jointly with another Party or Parties, may enter into an individual Contract with any shipper or shipper's association for the transportation of cargo within the trade; provided that such Contract [must]:
(i) commence no sooner than January 1, 1996, and terminate on or before December 31, 1996 ...
(ii) comply with the Contract Guidelines contained in Article 14.2(a) - (h).
2. The statement of reasons in the contested decision with regard to the first abuse
(a) Arguments of the parties
(b) Findings of the Court
The importance to shippers of service contracts is examined in some detail in recitals (122) to (126) and recitals (472) to (476). The TACA parties have an agreement between themselves to impose a number of restrictions on the contents of the service contracts and, in the past, have agreed that they will not enter into individual service contracts. One of the purposes of imposing these restrictions has been to prevent price competition (see recital (479)). These restrictions are more fully described in recitals (487) to (502).
3. Conclusion on the first abuse
B - The second abuse: the abusive alteration of the competitive structure of the market
1. The evidence for the practices constituting the second abuse
(a) Arguments of the parties
(1) Preliminary observations
(2) The measures specifically addressed to Hanjin and Hyundai
(3) The general measures addressed to all potential competitors
(i) Dual-rate service contracts
(ii) Service contracts with NVOCCs
(b) Findings of the Court
Each of these acts would have constituted inducements to potential competitors to enter the transatlantic trade, not as independent carriers but as parties to the TACA. In so far as the existence of potential competition may have worked as a restraint on the TACA's market power (theory of contestable markets), the elimination of this source of competition would have worked in two ways: the elimination of potential competition and the anticipatory elimination of actual competition. The Commission considers that such behaviour, which was not disclosed in the Application for Exemption, has damaged the competitive structure of the market and amounted to an abuse of the TACA parties' collective dominant position in 1994, 1995 and 1996.
(1) The specific measures to induce Hanjin and Hyundai
(i) The obligations under US law
(ii) Evidence of the measures addressed to Hanjin and Hyundai
Hanjin's accession to the TACA
As I have said to every line concerned trying to enter the market, please come and talk to me and we will do everything we can to help you succeed with that goal.
1 Encourage Hanjin, giving the assurance that other Carriers are similarly being encouraged, to bring commercial problems to the table for joint discussion and collective resolution. In this way, [independent action] becomes a tool of last resort rather than one of first action.
2 Encourage and persuade all Carriers to collectively find a way to enable Hanjin to build up a market share consistent with its slot capacity in the trade, which does not have a negative knock-on effect.
3 If [independent actions] continue to be required, Hanjin should be encouraged to find ways and means [of] structuring them on a narrower basis, thus minimising the fall-out effect, and to separately indicate Inlands and Accessorial Charges.
4 Indicate to Hanjin that if it persists with [independent actions], it will only add pressure on other Carriers who are competing at the same service level, and are concentrating on the same market segments, to do the same by stepping up their activity. This will lead to a complete collapse of TACA's Tariff.
Hyundai's accession to the TACA
(2) The general measures to induce potential competitors
(i) Dual-rate service contracts
... it is ... apparent from a review of TACA's 1995 service contracts that a significant number (approximately one third) contain a dual-rate structure whereby the former unstructured members of the TAA charge lower rates within the same service contract than the former structured members of the TAA. The reduction varies between USD 50 and USD 100 per TEU although in at least one case it is as much as USD 150. These dual-rate structures are also found in TACA's 1996 and 1997 service contracts.
(ii) Service contracts with NVOCCs
... all NVOCC issues are very delicate and sensitive. This can be handled properly only with full harmony within TACA, collectively, without any individualism, as any independence may totally destroy this part of the market, so carefully built by the group throughout the years ... We therefore kindly ask you to settle this problem with POL in the spirit of avoiding mutual competition within TACA ....
It is apparent from a review of TACA's 1995 service contracts that a very large number of service contracts with NVOCCs have been entered into only by those TACA parties which were formerly unstructured members of the TAA. These lines were the former independent, non-conference lines operating on the transatlantic routes.
(3) Conclusion on the evidence for the measures constituting the second abuse
IV - The pleas alleging failure to comply with the procedural requirements laid down by Regulation No 4056/86
Arguments of the parties
Findings of the Court
... under service contracts the rate is not part of the standard published tariff but is determined more or less ad hoc by the bargaining process between supplier and consumer. The result of that bargaining process is that shippers shipping goods of the same description do not necessarily pay the same service contract rate as one another. Service contract rates are different from tariff rates but do not differ uniformly. This means that although each TACA party may be charging the same rate to a shipper, different shippers (of the same category of goods) are paying different rates ....
V - The plea alleging failure to state reasons in respect of the failure to have regard to US law
Arguments of the parties
Findings of the Court
VI - The pleas concerning the amount of the fines and various failures to state reasons in that regard
Part one: immunity from fines
A - Arguments of the parties
B - Findings of the Court
1. The scope of the immunity provided for by Regulation No 4056/86
2. The application of the immunity from fines to the first abuse
Part two: calculation of the fines
A - The method adopted by the Commission to determine the amount of the fines
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
(a) The principle of individual assessment
(b) The principles of equal treatment and proportionality
(c) The principle of the protection of legitimate expectations
(d) Conclusion on the method adopted by the Commission to determine the amount of the fines
B - The assessment of the mitigating circumstances
1. Arguments of the parties
2. Findings of the Court
VII - The plea alleging infringement of the second paragraph of Article 215 of the Treaty
Arguments of the parties
Findings of the Court
Costs
On those grounds,
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Third Chamber),
hereby:
1. Annuls Article 5 of Commission Decision 1999/243/EC of 16 September 1998 relating to a proceeding pursuant to Articles 85 and 86 of the EC Treaty (Case No IV/35.134 - Trans-Atlantic Conference Agreement);
2. Annuls Article 6 of Decision 1999/243 in so far as it applies to mutual disclosure by the applicants of the availability and content of their individual service contracts;
3. Annuls Article 7 of Decision 1999/243 to the extent required by the annulment of Articles 5 and 6;
4. Annuls Article 8 of Decision 1999/243;
5. Dismisses the remainder of the applications;
6. Orders the applicants and the Commission each to bear their own costs;
7. Orders the European Council of Transport Users ASBL to bear its own costs.
Lenaerts
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 30 September 2003.
H. Jung K. Lenaerts
Registrar President
Legal background II - 3
Facts II - 9
I - The Transatlantic Agreement (TAA) II - 9
II - The Trans-Atlantic Conference Agreement (TACA) II - 11
TACA notifications II - 11
Administrative procedure withdrawing immunity from fines II - 12
Administrative procedure for infringement of Articles 85 and 86 of the Treaty II - 13
The contested decision II - 14
I - The relevant provisions of the TACA II - 14
The collective fixing of transport rates II - 14
Service contracts II - 14
Remuneration of freight forwarders II - 16
II - The definition of the relevant market II - 16
III - Legal assessment II - 17
Application of Article 85 of the Treaty II - 17
Application of Article 86 of the Treaty II - 18
Fines II - 18
The operative part II - 18
Procedure II - 21
Forms of order sought II - 23
Law II - 23
I - The pleas alleging infringement of the rights of the defence II - 24
Part one: infringement of the right to be heard II - 24
A - The plea alleging that the statement of objections is unlawful because it is premature II - 25
1. Arguments of the parties II - 25
2. Findings of the Court II - 27
B - The pleas alleging the presence of new allegations of fact or law in the contested decision II - 30
1. The purportedly new allegations of fact or law concerning the second abuse II - 30
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 30
(b) Findings of the Court II - 33
(1) The change of case in relation to the second abuse in the contested decision II - 33
(2) The documentary evidence relied upon in support of the second abuse recorded in the contested decision II - 40
2. The purportedly new allegations of fact or law other than those relating to the second abuse II - 47
(a) Preliminary observations II - 47
(b) The new allegations of fact or law concerning the lawfulness of joint service contracts, the fact that the TACA parties held a collective position and the fact that that position was a dominant one II - 49
(1) Arguments of the parties II - 49
(2) Findings of the Court II - 50
(i) The allegations concerning the lawfulness of joint service contracts II - 50
(ii) The allegations that the TACA parties held a collective position II - 53
(iii) The allegations concerning the dominant nature of the TACA parties' position II - 57
(c) The new allegations of fact and law arising from the applicants' responses to certain requests for information after the statement of objections was issued II - 60
(1) Arguments of the parties II - 60
(2) Findings of the Court II - 60
(i) The admissibility of the plea II - 61
(ii) The substance of the plea II - 63
The request for information of 22 May 1996 II - 64
The request for information of 11 July 1996 II - 64
The requests for information of 17 July and 8 August 1996 II - 67
The request for information of 12 September 1996 II - 67
The request for information of 8 November 1996 II - 68
The request for information of 12 February 1997 II - 68
The request for information of 13 February 1997 II - 69
The request for information of 15 May 1997 II - 69
The request for information of 19 June 1997 II - 70
The request for information of 2 October 1997 II - 70
(d) Conclusion II - 70
Part two: infringement of the right of access to the file II - 70
A - Preliminary observations II - 71
B - The plea alleging failure to disclose the minutes of the meetings between the Commission and the complainants II - 73
1. Arguments of the parties II - 73
2. Findings of the Court II - 74
C - The plea alleging failure to disclose the minutes or any other record of a meeting between the member of the Commission responsible for competition matters and the ESC II - 76
1. Arguments of the parties II - 76
2. Findings of the Court II - 79
D - The plea alleging that the file is incomplete II - 84
1. Arguments of the parties II - 84
2. Findings of the Court II - 85
Part three: infringement of the principles of sound administration, objectivity and impartiality II - 85
A - The conduct of the administrative procedure II - 86
1. Arguments of the parties II - 86
2. Findings of the Court II - 86
(a) The prematurity of the statement of objections II - 87
(b) The drafting of the contested decision II - 91
(c) The threats of fines II - 92
B - The assessment of the facts, evidence and relevant questions II - 95
1. Arguments of the parties II - 95
2. Findings of the Court II - 97
C - The assessment of the fines II - 98
1. Arguments of the parties II - 98
2. Findings of the Court II - 98
D - Conclusion on the third part II - 99
Conclusion on the pleas alleging infringement of the rights of the defence II - 100
II - The pleas alleging that there is no infringement of Article 85 of the Treaty and of Article 2 of Regulation No 1017/68 and various failures to state reasons in that regard II - 100
Part one: the assessments made in the contested decision concerning the price-fixing agreement for inland transport II - 100
Part two: the assessments in the contested decision concerning the rules relating to service contracts II - 101
A - The TACA parties' conference service contract authority II - 101
1. The block exemption under Article 3 of Regulation No 4056/86 II - 101
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 101
(b) Findings of the Court II - 103
2. Individual exemption under Article 85(3) of the Treaty II - 106
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 106
(b) Findings of the Court II - 106
B - The TACA rules on service contracts II - 107
1. The rules as to the content of conference service contracts II - 107
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 107
(b) Findings of the Court II - 108
2. The rules on the availability and content of individual service contracts II - 110
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 110
(b) Findings of the Court II - 111
3. The prohibition of independent action on service contracts II - 112
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 112
(b) Findings of the Court II - 112
Part three: the assessments in the contested decision in relation to the rules on the remuneration of freight forwarders II - 113
A - Arguments of the parties II - 113
B - Findings of the Court II - 115
Conclusion on the pleas alleging that there is no infringement of Article 85 of the Treaty and of Article 2 of Regulation No 1017/68 and various failures to state reasons in that regard II - 118
III - Pleas alleging absence of infringement of Article 86 of the Treaty and various failures to state reasons in that regard II - 118
Preliminary observation on the admissibility of these pleas II - 119
Part one: the absence of a dominant position held collectively by the TACA parties II - 119
A - Pleas alleging incorrect assessment of the economic links between the TACA parties II - 119
1. Arguments of the parties II - 119
2. Findings of the Court II - 121
B - Pleas alleging errors of assessment concerning internal competition between the parties to the TACA II - 130
1. Application in the contested decision of the wrong legal test II - 130
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 130
(b) Findings of the Court II - 132
2. Pleas alleging incorrect assessment of internal price and non-price competition II - 134
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 134
(b) Findings of the Court II - 144
(1) Internal price competition II - 144
(2) Internal non-price competition II - 147
(3) The specific arguments put forward by the applicant in Case T-213/98 II - 150
(4) Conclusion on the extent of internal competition II - 151
3. Pleas alleging failure to state reasons II - 152
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 152
(b) Findings of the Court II - 152
C - Conclusion on the first part II - 156
Part two: the dominant nature of the position held by the TACA parties II - 156
A - Definition of the relevant market II - 156
1. The relevant market for services II - 156
(a) The relevant transport services II - 157
(1) Arguments of the parties II - 157
(2) Findings of the Court II - 161
(i) Demand-side substitution II - 162
Air transport services II - 162
Break bulk shipping II - 163
NVOCCs II - 168
Consideration of the cumulative effect of sources of competition II - 168
(ii) Supply-side substitution II - 169
(b) Geographical scope of the services in question II - 172
(1) Arguments of the parties II - 172
(2) Findings of the Court II - 174
(c) Conclusion on the relevant market for services II - 179
2. The relevant geographic market II - 180
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 180
(b) Findings of the Court II - 180
3. Conclusion on the definition of the relevant market II - 181
B - The existence of a dominant position on the relevant market II - 181
1. The market share held by the TACA parties II - 181
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 181
(b) Findings of the Court II - 184
2. Effective external competition II - 190
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 190
(b) Findings of the Court II - 192
(1) The number of competitors of the TACA parties and the increase in their market share II - 193
(2) The rate of increase in the volume of freight carried by the TACA's competitors II - 194
(3) The effective competition from Evergreen and Lykes II - 195
(4) The TACA's leadership in pricing matters and the role of follower played by the independent competitors II - 197
(5) Competition from the Canadian Gateway II - 198
(6) Conclusion on effective external competition II - 200
3. Potential competition II - 201
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 201
(b) Findings of the Court II - 203
(1) The costs of market entry II - 204
(2) Recent non-TACA entries to the relevant market II - 205
(3) Service contracts II - 207
(4) Conclusion on potential competition II - 208
4. Internal competition within the TACA II - 208
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 208
(b) Findings of the Court II - 208
5. The development of rates on the trade in question II - 209
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 209
(b) Findings of the Court II - 213
(1) The proportion represented by freight carried at the ordinary rates compared with freight carried under TVRs and service contracts II - 213
(2) The increase in the rates charged by the TACA parties II - 216
6. Conclusion on the pleas relating to the existence of a dominant position on the relevant market II - 218
C - Conclusion on the second part II - 218
Part three: no abuse II - 218
A - The first abuse: placing restrictions on the availability and content of service contracts II - 218
1. Objective justification of the practices constituting the first abuse II - 218
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 218
(b) Findings of the Court II - 222
(1) Justifications on the basis of the necessity of certain of the practices in question II - 223
(2) Justifications based on the conformity of certain practices in question with standard practice in the maritime transport sector II - 225
(3) Justifications based on the conformity of some of the practices in question with US law II - 226
2. The statement of reasons in the contested decision with regard to the first abuse II - 232
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 232
(b) Findings of the Court II - 234
3. Conclusion on the first abuse II - 237
B - The second abuse: the abusive alteration of the competitive structure of the market II - 237
1. The evidence for the practices constituting the second abuse II - 238
(a) Arguments of the parties II - 238
(1) Preliminary observations II - 238
(2) The measures specifically addressed to Hanjin and Hyundai II - 241
(3) The general measures addressed to all potential competitors II - 247
(i) Dual-rate service contracts II - 247
(ii) Service contracts with NVOCCs II - 249
(b) Findings of the Court II - 250
(1) The specific measures to induce Hanjin and Hyundai II - 251
(i) The obligations under US law II - 251
(ii) Evidence of the measures addressed to Hanjin and Hyundai II - 253
Hanjin's accession to the TACA II - 253
Hyundai's accession to the TACA II - 260
(2) The general measures to induce potential competitors II - 263
(i) Dual-rate service contracts II - 263
(ii) Service contracts with NVOCCs II - 267
(3) Conclusion on the evidence for the measures constituting the second abuse II - 270
IV - The pleas alleging failure to comply with the procedural requirements laid down by Regulation No 4056/86 II - 270
Arguments of the parties II - 270
Findings of the Court II - 271
V - The plea alleging failure to state reasons in respect of the failure to have regard to US law II - 273
Arguments of the parties II - 273
Findings of the Court II - 275
VI - The pleas concerning the amount of the fines and various failures to state reasons in that regard II - 278
Part one: immunity from fines II - 279
A - Arguments of the parties II - 279
B - Findings of the Court II - 282
1. The scope of the immunity provided for by Regulation No 4056/86 II - 284
2. The application of the immunity from fines to the first abuse II - 289
Part two: calculation of the fines II - 290
A - The method adopted by the Commission to determine the amount of the fines II - 290
1. Arguments of the parties II - 290
2. Findings of the Court II - 296
(a) The principle of individual assessment II - 297
(b) The principles of equal treatment and proportionality II - 302
(c) The principle of the protection of legitimate expectations II - 305
(d) Conclusion on the method adopted by the Commission to determine the amount of the fines II - 307
B - The assessment of the mitigating circumstances II - 308
1. Arguments of the parties II - 308
2. Findings of the Court II - 312
VII - The plea alleging infringement of the second paragraph of Article 215 of the Treaty II - 319
Arguments of the parties II - 319
Findings of the Court II - 319
Costs II - 321
1: Language of the case: English.