State Liability Flashcards

1
Q

ORIGIN of State Liability

A

Francovich - for failure to implement a directive

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2
Q

First set of Rules for SL

A

Francovich
1) Directive confers rights for benefit of individual

2) content of right must be identifiable from directive
3) causal link between breach and damage

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3
Q

Justifications for ORIGIN of State Liability

A
  • rights to individuals
  • MS obligations under art.4(3) TFEU
  • form of due vigilance (if MS can enforce rights, then so can individuals)
  • effectiveness of EU law
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4
Q

EXPANSION OF SL: Legislative breach of treaty provisions

A

Factortame III, Brasserie du Peucheur

  • any legislation MS passes is subject to SL test
  • also laid down a new test (which in Dilenkofer they said was the same test)
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5
Q

NEW justifications for STATE LIABILITY (from Factortame)

A

Situated SL in context of treaty provisions on liability of EU institutions under art.340 TFEU (based on general principles common to MS)

  • this legitimised SL by deriving right from well-established principles of national legal orders rather than creation of CJEU
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6
Q

Factortame/Brasserie du Pecheur test for SL

A

1) Rule of law infringed must confer rights on individuals
2) breach must be sufficiently serious (test: manifest and grave disregard on limits of discretion)
3) direct causal link

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7
Q

Ex Parte British Telecommunications

A

UK implemented Directive wrongly

  • YES SL FOR incorrect implementation (otherwise MS can just implement directives how they wanted to)
  • NB. No liability on the facts, not sufficiently seriously enough (because the Directive was unclear so UK was bona fide)
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8
Q

State liability for executive state action in breach of treaty

A

ex. parte Hedley Lomas
- minister (administratively/executively) rejected export license which is against FMOG
- CJEU said YES executive decisions can impose state liability
- “Serious” test is more easily satisfied in non-legislative acts, less discretion so liability is “stricter”

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9
Q

“Sufficiently Serious”

A

para.56 of Factortame III/Brasserie du Pecheur
says to consider:

  • measure of discretion
  • clarity of rule breached
  • whether infringement was intentional
  • whether error of law is excusable
  • whether position taken by Community institution may have contributed towards omission
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10
Q

Factortame III and Francovich test test is the same

A

Dillenkofer

- francovich just didn’t include (2) “sufficiently serious” because non-implementation is in itself sufficiently serious

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11
Q

Judicial failure to comply with community obligations

A

SL expanded to this in Kobler (nb. on facts it wasn’t sufficiently serious enough)

Liability will only be incurred in “exceptional cases where the court has manifestly infringed the applicable law”

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12
Q

Tragetti del Mediterranean SPA v Italy

A

confirmed Kobler

  • italy tried to narrow the SL of courts by saying they should only be SL if “intentional fault and serious misconduct”
  • CJEU rejected saying that would render Kobler meaningless
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13
Q

Why is judicial SL a problem?

A
  • enforcement issues/displacement of precedent

- erodes relationship of national courts and EU (scared of liability)

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