Surprise, Surprise! CJEU dismisses Italian and Spanish challenges on enhanced cooperation procedure
The AmeriKat hiding under the hat she does not have to eat... |
As predicted - and, thankfully so, as she recently publicly stated she would eat a hat live on CIPA's webcast if she was wrong - the Court of Justice of the European Union has this morning dismissed the Italian and Spanish complaints. The AmeriKat had spent the past 40 minutes summarizing the joy that are the inner workings of EU law when, of course, Curia finally published their Press Release on the decision. So instead of subject readers with her more legalese summary, please find below the statement from Curia:
"Enhanced cooperation is aimed at furthering the objectives of the EU, protecting its interests and reinforcing its integration process. A decision authorising enhanced cooperation is to be adopted by the Council as a last resort, when it has established that the objectives of such cooperation cannot be attained within a reasonable period by the EU as a whole. The decision is adopted by the Council on a proposal from the Commission and after obtaining the consent of the Parliament.
By a decision adopted in 2011, the Council authorised enhanced cooperation, with a view to creating the single European patent, between 25 Member States (out of the 27 in the EU), Spain and Italy having refused to participate. The aim of that cooperation is also to set up centralised EU-wide authorisation, coordination and supervision arrangements.
Spain and Italy requested the Court of Justice to annul the Council’s decision, maintaining that it was invalid for several reasons.
The Court has observed, first of all, that the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) authorises the EU, in the context of the internal market, to create European intellectual property rights. Furthermore, the competence to adopt the language arrangements for those rights is closely bound up with their creation. As a result, those competences that fall within the sphere of the functioning of the internal market come within the ambit of competences shared between the EU and the Member States. The non-exclusiveness of those competences means that the Council is competent to authorise that enhanced cooperation.
In their actions, Spain and Italy claimed that the Council, by authorising that enhanced cooperation, circumvented the requirement of unanimity and brushed aside those two Member States’ objections to the Commission’s proposal on the language arrangements for the single European patent. Examining this argument, the Court stressed that nothing forbids the Member States to establish between themselves enhanced cooperation within the ambit of those competences of the EU that must, in accordance with the Treaties, be exercised unanimously. On the contrary, it follows from the TFEU that, when the conditions laid down in the Treaties have been satisfied, those powers may be used in enhanced cooperation and that, in that case, provided that the Council has not decided to act by qualified majority, it is the votes of only those Member States taking part that constitute unanimity. Consequently, the Council’s decision to authorise enhanced cooperation, having found that the single European patent and its language arrangements could not be established by the EU as a whole within a reasonable period, by no means constitutes circumvention of the requirement of unanimity or exclusion of those Member States that did not join in making requests for enhanced cooperation, but rather, having regard to its being impossible to reach common arrangements for the whole EU within a reasonable period, contributes to the process of integration.
Next, the Court considered Spain and Italy’s argument based on the provision of the Treaty on European Union under which the Council may not authorise enhanced cooperation except ‘as a last resort, when it has established that the objectives of such cooperation cannot be attained within a reasonable period by the EU as a whole.’ In this regard, the Court emphasised that the EU’s interests and the process of integration would, quite clearly, not be protected if all fruitless negotiations could lead to one or more instances of enhanced cooperation, to the detriment of the search for a compromise enabling the adoption of legislation for the EU as a whole. However, in this case it has been shown that the Council did carefully and impartially ascertain whether the condition of ‘last resort’ had been met.
In this connection the Council took into consideration the fact that the legislative process undertaken with a view to the establishing of a unitary patent at EU level was begun during the year 2000 and carried out in several stages. It is apparent too that a considerable number of different language arrangements for the unitary patent were discussed among all the Member States within the Council and that none of those arrangements found support capable of leading to the adoption at EU level of a full ‘legislative package’ relating to that patent.
The Court has held to be unfounded Spain and Italy’s argument that the protection conferred by that unitary patent would not be advantageous in terms of uniformity, and so of integration, compared to the situation created by the operation of the rules laid down by the EPC . European patents granted in accordance with the rules of the EPC do not confer uniform protection in the Contracting States to that convention but rather, in every one of those States, guarantee protection whose extent is defined by national law. In contrast, the single European patent contemplated by the contested decision would confer uniform protection in the territory of all the Member States taking part in the enhanced cooperation. Furthermore, contrary to what has been claimed, the contested decision does not damage the internal market or the economic, social and territorial cohesion of the EU. What is more, according to the Court, the contested decision does not prejudice any competence, right or obligation of those Member States not participating in this enhanced cooperation. While it is, admittedly, essential for enhanced cooperation not to lead to the adoption of measures that might prevent the non-participating Member States from exercising their competences and rights or shouldering their obligations, it is, in contrast, permissible for those taking part in this cooperation to prescribe rules with which those non-participating States would not agree if they did take part in it. The prescription of such rules does not, in any case, render ineffective the opportunity for non-participating Member States of joining in the enhanced cooperation in future."All in all, this decision is not a surprise. Given the political momentum that has seen the birth of two Regulations and the signature of the Unified Patent Court Agreement which is presently awaiting ratification, it would have been an extraordinary turn of events of the Court had a volte-face and declared the Council's decisions authorizing the use of enhanced cooperation procedure a breach of EU law. But all is not over, as some people will declare, as there is still the fresh referral from Spain (see here) that could still derail the Regulations themselves. But, the AmeriKat, now weary with all of these challenges, thinks again that she is pretty safe in promising that she will eat a hat (note the lack of specifying what that hat is made of) live on a CIPA webcast if anything comes from that decision.