C-246/00
Opinia rzecznika generalnegoTSUE2002-11-21CELEX: 62000CC0246ECLI:EU:C:2002:702
Analiza orzeczenia
Sekcja wygenerowana przez AI na podstawie treści orzeczenia — nie stanowi cytatu.
Zagadnienie prawne
Czy państwo członkowskie uchybia zobowiązaniom wynikającym z art. 1 ust. 2 dyrektywy 91/439/EWG w sprawie praw jazdy, wprowadzając obowiązkową procedurę rejestracji praw jazdy wydanych przez inne państwa członkowskie oraz obliczając okres ważności tych praw jazdy od daty ich wydania, a nie od daty osiedlenia się posiadacza w tym państwie?Ratio decidendi
Rzecznik Generalny uznał, że obowiązkowa procedura rejestracji praw jazdy wydanych w innych państwach członkowskich, stosowana przez Niderlandy, jest sprzeczna z zasadą wzajemnego uznawania praw jazdy określoną w art. 1 ust. 2 dyrektywy 91/439/EWG, która przewiduje uznawanie bez żadnych formalności. Procedura ta, ze względu na jej uciążliwość, wymóg przedstawienia dokumentów potwierdzających miejsce zamieszkania w państwie wydającym prawo jazdy oraz grożące sankcje karne, stanowi przeszkodę w swobodnym przepływie osób i jest nieproporcjonalna do celów bezpieczeństwa drogowego. Ponadto, obliczanie okresu ważności praw jazdy od daty ich wydania, a nie od daty osiedlenia się posiadacza w Niderlandach, znacząco ogranicza skuteczność zasady wzajemnego uznawania, prowadząc do sytuacji, w której wiele praw jazdy traci ważność krótko po przeniesieniu rezydencji, co zmusza do ich wymiany.Stan faktyczny
Komisja Europejska wniosła skargę przeciwko Królestwu Niderlandów, zarzucając mu naruszenie dyrektywy 91/439/EWG w sprawie praw jazdy. Niderlandy wprowadziły procedurę obowiązkowej rejestracji praw jazdy wydanych przez inne państwa członkowskie dla osób mieszkających w Niderlandach dłużej niż rok, a brak rejestracji skutkował utratą prawa do prowadzenia pojazdów. Ponadto, Niderlandy obliczały okres ważności tych praw jazdy od daty ich wydania, a nie od daty osiedlenia się posiadacza w Niderlandach. Komisja zarzuciła również niezgodność przepisów krajowych w zakresie minimalnego wieku dla prowadzenia pojazdów kategorii D oraz braku okresowych badań lekarskich dla kierowców grupy 2, choć te zarzuty nie były kwestionowane przez Niderlandy.Rozstrzygnięcie
Rzecznik Generalny zaproponował Trybunałowi:
1. Stwierdzenie, że Królestwo Niderlandów uchybiło zobowiązaniom wynikającym z art. 1 ust. 2 dyrektywy 91/439/EWG, przyjmując przepisy wymagające od posiadacza prawa jazdy wydanego przez inne państwo członkowskie zarejestrowania tego prawa jazdy w ciągu roku od osiedlenia się w Niderlandach, aby nadal korzystać z prawa do prowadzenia pojazdów w tym państwie.
2. Stwierdzenie, że Królestwo Niderlandów uchybiło zobowiązaniom wynikającym z art. 1 ust. 2 dyrektywy 91/439/EWG, przyjmując przepisy przewidujące, że okres ważności prawa jazdy rozpoczyna się od daty jego wydania.
3. Stwierdzenie, że Królestwo Niderlandów uchybiło zobowiązaniom wynikającym z dyrektywy 91/439/EWG, nie przyjmując przepisów prawnych i administracyjnych przewidzianych w art. 6 ust. 1 lit. c) i w pkt 4 załącznika III do tej dyrektywy, dotyczących, odpowiednio, minimalnego wieku do prowadzenia pojazdów oraz badań lekarskich.
4. Obciążenie Królestwa Niderlandów kosztami postępowania.Pełny tekst orzeczenia
OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
LÉGER
delivered on 21 November 2002 (1)
Case C-246/00
Commission of the European Communities
v
Kingdom of the Netherlands
supported by: Kingdom of Spain
((Failure by a Member State to fulfil its obligations – Directive 91/439/EEC on driving licences – Mutual recognition of driving licences – Registration procedure and calculation of the period of validity of driving licences issued by other Member States))
1. In the present proceedings, the Commission of the European Communities seeks a declaration that, by establishing a registration
procedure for driving licences
(2)
issued by other Member States and by calculating their period of validity as from the date on which they were issued, the
Kingdom of the Netherlands has failed to comply with its obligation of mutual recognition of licences under Article 1(2) of
Council Directive 91/439/EEC of 29 July 1991 on driving licences.
(3)
The Commission also seeks a declaration that the Kingdom of the Netherlands has failed to comply with its obligations by
adopting legislation which is not in accordance with that envisaged by the said directive, concerning both the minimum age
conditions and medical checks.
I ─ The relevant legislation
A ─
Community law
2. A first step towards the harmonisation of driving licences was taken with the adoption of the First Council Directive 80/1263/EEC.
(4)
This directive was intended to contribute towards the improvement of road traffic safety and to facilitate the movement
of persons settling in a Member State other than that in which they passed their driving test, or moving within the European
Economic Community. To that end, Directive 80/1263 harmonised certain national rules, notably those concerning the classification of vehicles
into categories, the national systems for issuing licences and the conditions for the validity of licences. The directive
established a Community model licence as well as a system for the mutual recognition of such licences, and provided for the
exchange of licences by holders transferring their residence or place of employment from one Member State to another.
3. Directive 80/1263 was repealed by Directive 91/439, which represented a new stage in the harmonisation of national provisions,
in particular with reference to the conditions governing the issue of licences and to vehicle categories. Thus, Article 6
of Directive 91/439 sets down minimum age conditions for the issue of driving licences according to relevant vehicle categories.
Further, Article 7 of the directive states that the issue of licences is conditional on the applicant having passed certain
tests and meeting medical standards, as well as having normal residence
(5)
in the territory of the Member State issuing the licence or providing evidence that he has been studying there for at least
six months.
4. In addition, Directive 91/439 removes the obligation to exchange licences provided for by Directive 80/1263 where the holder
transfers his normal residence to another Member State, because it had become an obstacle to the free movement of persons
in the light of the progress made towards European integration.
(6)
The directive however allows the exchange of licences under certain defined circumstances.
(7)
5. Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439 lays down the principle that
driving licences issued by Member States shall be mutually recognised. Article 1(3) provides that where the holder of a licence takes up normal residence in a Member State other than that which
issued the licence, the host Member State may apply its national rules on tax, medical checks and the period of validity of
the licences to the holder of the licence, and may enter on the licence any information essential for administrating it. Similarly, Article 8(2) of Directive 91/439 provides, subject to observance of the principle of territoriality of criminal
and police laws, that the host Member State may apply its national provisions on the restriction, suspension, withdrawal or
cancellation of the right to drive to the holder of a driving licence issued by another Member State and, if necessary, exchange
the licence for that purpose.
6. The directive was amended on several occasions and in particular by Directive 96/47/EC.
(8)
Directive 96/47 afforded Member States the possibility of issuing licences according to a model, set down in Annex I B to
that directive and different from the model provided for in Annex I to Directive 91/439. Member States can therefore choose
to comply with the traditional model drawn up on paper, or the more advanced model issued on a polycarbonate card similar
to that used for bank and credit cards.
B ─
National legislation
7. The main provisions in the Netherlands concerning driving licences are contained in the Wegenverkeerswet (Law on Road Traffic)
(9)
and in the Rijbewijs (the regulation implementing the WVW).
(10)
8. Article 107(1) of the WVW states that the driver of a vehicle must hold a licence issued by the Netherlands authorities.
9. Furthermore, Article 108(1)(h) of the WVW lays down specific rules in favour of drivers who hold a licence issued by another
Member State where they are resident in the Netherlands. The obligation to hold a Netherlands licence to drive on national
territory does not apply to these drivers for a certain period, which varies according to whether or not the holder has registered
his licence in the Netherlands. Where the licence has been registered, the length of the period corresponds to the duration
of the validity of the licence in the Netherlands. Where the licence has not been registered, the duration of the period is
one year after the individual concerned has settled in the Netherlands.
10. For the purposes of Article 109(1) of the WVW, licences are valid in the Netherlands during:
─
10 years from the date of issue when, on the date of issue, the holder was under 60 years old;
─
the period until the date on which the holder is 70 years old when, on the date of issue, the holder was over 60 and under
65 years old;
─
five years from the date of issue when, on the date of issue, the holder was 65 years old.
11. The Netherlands procedure for the registration of licences takes place in the following manner.
(11)
The holder of the licence must first of all complete a form, attach a number of documents to it
(12)
and send it to the mayor of the municipality where he is registered. The mayor must then send it in his turn to a public
body which is responsible for the centralised registration of licences on a register set up for that purpose. That body subsequently
checks the identity of the applicant, usually by calling on him to attend in person at its premises, and ensures the validity
of the licence as well as that the conditions required for registration are satisfied. At the same time, it determines the
period of recognition, in the Netherlands, of the registered licence.
12. Article 177(1) of the WVW provides that driving without a licence, or driving with a licence which has expired or a licence
which does not satisfy the statutory requirements, is liable to criminal penalties, namely a term of imprisonment of two months
or a fine.
II ─ The pre-litigation procedure
13. The Kingdom of the Netherlands, by letters dated 22 March 1994 and 25 October 1995, sent the Commission a number of draft
texts of laws and regulations which were intended to transpose Directive 91/439. Although the Commission expressed a number
of criticisms regarding the draft texts, the drafts led to the adoption of the WVW and the implementing regulation.
14. Following an exchange of letters between the Netherlands authorities and the Commission, the Commission formally requested,
on 17 June 1997, that the authorities submit their observations on the abovementioned texts to it.
15. The Commission was not convinced by the observations submitted by the Kingdom of the Netherlands in response to its letter
of formal notice, and on 7 December 1998 sent it a reasoned opinion.
III ─ The application
16. The Commission initiated the present proceedings by application lodged at the Court Registry on 20 June 2000. The Commission
has set out four grounds of complaint against the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
17. First, the Commission contends that the licence registration procedure in the Netherlands, where it is applicable to holders
of licences issued by other Member States, is contrary to the principle of the mutual recognition of licences laid down in
Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439.
18. Second, according to the Commission, this principle also precludes the use of the date of issue of licences issued by other
Member States as the starting point for the duration of their validity in the Netherlands.
19. Third, the Commission points out that the minimum age provided for by the Netherlands rules for driving category D vehicles
does not correspond with that envisaged by Article 6(1)(c) of Directive 91/439.
20. Finally, the Commission states that the Netherlands rules do not provide for a periodical medical examination for group 2
drivers, contrary to what is required by point 4 of Annex III to Directive 91/439.
21. The two last grounds of complaint are not disputed by the Kingdom of the Netherlands. I therefore limit my Opinion to the
two first grounds of complaint, and propose, for the remainder, to uphold the application.
A ─
The first ground of complaint, regarding the licence registration procedure
1. The parties' arguments
22. The Commission points out that the licences issued by a Member State to persons residing in the Netherlands for over a year
are not recognised unless they have been registered during that period. These individuals are therefore systematically obliged
to register their licence within the prescribed period in order to continue to be entitled to drive on the territory of that
Member State. Furthermore, the Commission observes that the registration formalities in the Netherlands are almost as cumbersome
as those prescribed for the exchange of licences, whereas Directive 91/439 expressly prohibits Member States from establishing
such a procedure in their mutual relations.
23. This situation is incompatible with the principle of the mutual recognition of licences laid down in Article 1(2) of Directive
91/439. After one year of residence in the Netherlands, the recognition of licences issued by another Member State is no longer
automatic, but is dependent on various registration formalities being satisfied.
24. Moreover, the disputed procedure cannot be justified by Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439 which states that where the holder
of a licence takes up normal residence in a Member State other than that which issued the licence, the host Member State may
apply its national rules on tax, medical checks and the period of validity of the licence to the holder of the licence, and
may enter on the licence any information which is essential for administrating it. According to the Commission, these provisions
must be interpreted strictly as they provide for an exception to the mutual recognition of licences. The Commission notes
that even before the entry into force of Directive 80/1263 the Court held, in its judgment in the
Choquet case of 28 November 1978,
(13)
that restrictions on the right to drive a vehicle in the Community under a licence issued by another Member State are only
acceptable, in the light of the Treaty rules regarding the free movement of persons, if they can be reasonably related to
the requirements of road safety. This is not the case here.
25. The Commission adds that the criminal penalties incurred in the Netherlands in the event of infringement of the disputed procedure
do not satisfy the condition of proportionality laid down by the Court in its judgment of 29 February 1996 in
Skanavi and Chryssanthakopoulos .
(14)
26. The Netherlands Government, for its part, points out that there is no registration system common to the Community or coordinated
between the Member States. The introduction of a national registration system is therefore essential in order to ensure the
validity of licences submitted during road traffic controls, in conformity with the objectives of road safety and the combat
against fraud pursued by Directive 91/439.
27. Only such a system enables the police to check on the spot the conformity of the licences presented with the registered data,
in particular as concerns the period of validity and the existence of penalties liable to affect them adversely. Moreover,
immediate consultation of the registered information is essential in order to check the validity of licences issued before
the entry into force of Directive 91/439, as these licences do not conform to a uniform model which is easily identifiable.
Further, a registration system makes it possible to record information essential for the administration of licences, without
being confronted with the problem of the physical impossibility of entering such information on licences which are in the
form of a polycarbonate card.
28. In other words, the registration system in question is the only way for the host Member State effectively to apply the national
provisions concerning the period of validity of licences and penalties to holders of licences issued by another Member State,
in conformity with Article 1(3) and Article 8(2) of Directive 91/439.
29. Furthermore, the Netherlands Government contends that the principle of mutual recognition is limited to prohibiting procedures
for exchanging licences, but not registration procedures. This interpretation is confirmed by the declaration made by the
Council and the Commission when Directive 91/439 was adopted, and recorded in the minutes.
(15)
Moreover, a licence issued by a Member State remains valid and recognised in the Netherlands, even though it has not been
registered. The absence of registration has the sole consequence that the licence in question no longer allows its holder
to drive on Netherlands territory.
30. Finally, the Netherlands Government asserts that since 1990 criminal penalties have no longer been applied to drivers holding
a licence that has not been registered. Moreover, the national rules in question have been amended in order to replace the
criminal penalties with administrative ones. These new rules should enter into force at the beginning of the year 2003.
31. The Spanish Government, intervening in support of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, also considers that the obligation of registration
is compatible with the principle of mutual recognition and is justified by Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439.
32. In support of this contention, the Spanish Government states that the application of national provisions regarding the renewal
of licences necessarily implies that the host State is aware of the existence of the licences issued by another Member State
and used on its territory. It adds that the registration of a driver's history is essential in order to apply an appropriate
penalty to him, as its determination depends most often on whether or not the driver has already been found guilty of an offence.
Finally, the Spanish Government considers that simple traffic controls on the public highway are not sufficient to ensure
the application of the relevant national provisions of the host Member State, as holders of licences issued by another Member
State do not necessarily respond to police questioning and may, as a result, avoid all control of their licence's validity.
2. Assessment
33. The Commission does not in general call into question the actual principle of registering licences issued by another Member
State. This point was clearly stressed in its written observations on the Spanish Government's statement in intervention,
(16)
and then at the hearing.
34. It is the specific character of the registration procedure in the Netherlands which is in dispute in the present case.
(17)
This procedure is criticised in several respects, on account of its mandatory and systematic nature, the cumbersome administrative
formalities which it involves and the seriousness of the penalties which are related to it.
35. The present application raises two questions in turn. The first is to determine whether the registration procedure in the
Netherlands is compatible with the principle of mutual recognition of licences laid down in Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439.
If it is not compatible, it will then be necessary to consider whether this procedure can be justified by Article 1(3) of
the said directive.
(a) The compatibility of the registration procedure with the principle of the mutual recognition of licences laid down in Article
1(2) of Directive 91/439
36. The Netherlands Government contends that a licence issued by a Member State is valid and recognised in the Netherlands, even
though it has not been registered. The sole consequence of not registering a licence is that the licence no longer enables
its holder to drive in the Netherlands. I have some difficulty, as does the Commission, in following the reasoning of the
Netherlands Government. It appears to me that under the national rules in question, a licence issued by a Member State is
no longer valid and recognised in the Netherlands where it has not been registered within the prescribed period.
37. As the Commission points out, it seems that the Netherlands rules effectively subject the continued recognition, in the Netherlands,
of licences issued by another Member State beyond a one-year residence period to the fulfilment of registration formalities.
38. Such national rules appear more restrictive than the wording of Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439 indicates, which states that
[d]riving licences issued by Member States shall be mutually recognised. This provision uses a general formula in favour of the mutual recognition of licences, without subjecting it to the fulfilment
of any particular conditions. The Court noted this in its judgment in the abovementioned
Skanavi and Chryssanthakopoulos case, stating that Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439 provides for the mutual recognition, without any formality, of licences
issued by the Member States.
(18)
In its judgment in
Awoyemi ,
(19)
the Court added that this provision imposes a precise and unconditional obligation to recognise licences following the Community
model and that the Member States to which Directive 91/439 is addressed are not to enjoy any margin of discretion as to the
methods to be adopted in order to comply with this requirement. The Court came to the conclusion that Article 1(2) of Directive
91/439 had direct effect.
39. In this respect, Directive 91/439 can be distinguished clearly from Directive 80/1263, which it repealed. Article 8(1) of
Directive 80/1263 provided that, at the end of one year of normal residence in a Member State other than that which issued
the licence, the continued recognition of the licence was subject to the exchange of the licence. No condition of this kind
is provided for by Directive 91/439. Indeed, the Community legislature took care to exclude expressly, in the preamble to
the directive, this condition of exchanging licences.
40. In my view, although ─ contrary to the situation as regards the exchange of licences ─ Directive 91/439 does not specifically
exclude registration procedures, such as that in the Netherlands, it nevertheless excludes them implicitly and necessarily.
A number of factors point in this direction.
41. Firstly, the formalities required for registration are almost as cumbersome as those provided for regarding the exchange of
a licence. It is true that, as the Netherlands Government pointed out, the procedure in question can be completed without
expense or delay, unlike the situation for the exchange of a licence. However, it should be borne in mind that numerous documents
are required at registration, something which necessitates the prior completion of various administrative steps in addition
to the registration itself, which generally entails a journey to the competent departments following receipt of a notice to
attend.
42. Secondly, it is important to note that the Netherlands rules require probative documents to be submitted, on application for
registration, attesting that the holder of the licence has resided at least 185 days in the Member State which issued it or
has been enrolled in a school or university there for at least six months.This requirement is not acceptable, because it falls within the scope of a control which duplicates that which has necessarily
been carried out on this point by the authorities issuing the licence, in accordance with Article 7(2) of Directive 91/439.
This specific formality is contrary to the very spirit of the system established by the directive, which defines common rules
for issuing licences and gives the issuing Member State exclusive competence to ensure that the rules are complied with. This
analysis may be compared to that which the Court adopted regarding a number of restrictions to the freedoms guaranteed by
the Treaty.
(20)
43. Thirdly, the Netherlands legislation provides that driving with a non-registered licence is punishable by criminal penalties,
namely a term of imprisonment of two months or a fine. It is of little importance that the legislation providing for such
severe penalties has been repealed by new legislation, for which as yet there are no implementing measures, or that the legislation
in question is not in fact implemented by reason of a mere administrative practice. It is settled case-law that whether or
not a Member State has failed to fulfil its obligations must be determined by reference to the situation prevailing in the
Member State at the end of the period laid down in the reasoned opinion and that the Court cannot take into account any subsequent
changes.
(21)
The failure to adopt measures, during this period, enabling the new national legislation invoked to be implemented is liable
to engender doubts incompatible with the principle of legal certainty since such a situation does not enable the beneficiaries
of the principle of mutual recognition of licences, laid down in Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439, a provision having direct
effect, to ascertain easily the full extent of their rights.
(22)
Furthermore, according to settled case-law, the incompatibility of national legislation with provisions of the Treaty, even
provisions which are directly applicable, can be finally eliminated only by means of national provisions of a binding nature
which have the same legal force as those which must be amended. It follows that mere administrative practices, which by their
nature are alterable at will by the authorities and are not given appropriate publicity, cannot be regarded as constituting
proper fulfilment of the Treaty obligations.
(23)
44. It follows that Directive 91/439 necessarily intended to preclude the establishment of a licence registration system, such
as that existing in the Netherlands.
45. Contrary to what the Netherlands Government maintains, the contested declaration does not cast doubt on this conclusion. The
Court has consistently held that a declaration recorded in the minutes of the Council meeting during which secondary legislation
has been adopted cannot be admitted for the purpose of interpreting that law where no reference is made to the content of
the declaration in the wording of the provision in question and where the declaration therefore has no legal significance.
(24)
That is the case here. Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439, to which the contested declaration refers, does not include any
provision which relates to
the registration of information concerning driving licences. The only procedure mentioned is the entering of certain information on the licence. The use of this procedure is limited
to information which is indispensable for administrating the licence. Its purpose and modalities are specified in point 4
of Annex I to Directive 91/439 and point 4 of Annex Ia to Directive 96/47. These provisions are designed to limit the circumstances
in which the host Member State may enter information on a licence. This logic is not echoed in the contested declaration because
the declaration deals with, generally, the registration of information concerning licences without restricting the nature
and use of the data to be registered.
46. All the same, should the Court consider that the content of the contested declaration find expression in Article 1(2) of Directive
91/439, it must be pointed out that such a declaration does not necessarily authorise Member States to set up any system of
licence registration whatsoever, in particular such as that existing in the Netherlands. While it may be accepted that a Member
State may set up a registration system, with limited formalities and without penalties, for example, for statistical purposes,
it is difficult to see how the system in the Netherlands could be accepted, in light of its conflict with the principle of
mutual recognition.
47. As the registration procedure in the Netherlands is, in my opinion, contrary to the principle of mutual recognition laid down
in Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439, the relevant question is therefore whether this procedure can be justified by Article
1(3) of the directive.
(b) Whether the registration procedure is justifiable under Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439
(i) The application of the national provisions of the host Member State concerning the period of validity of licences
48. In the abovementioned judgment in
Canal Satélite Digital , the Court held that when a directive does not contain provisions relating to the administrative rules implementing the obligations
on Member States under that directive, Member States may provide for an administrative procedure for that purpose, but they
must at all times respect the fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Treaty.
(25)
49. In my view, this case-law may be transposed to the present case for the application of the rights which are granted to the
host Member State under Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439. That directive does not provide for an administrative procedure,
allowing the Kingdom of the Netherlands to apply its national provisions concerning the period of validity of licences to
holders of licences issued by another Member State. Neither Article 1(3) of nor point 4 of Annex I to Directive 91/439 provides
that the period of validity of licences may be entered on the licence as information essential for its administration. The
Kingdom of the Netherlands is therefore entitled to establish an administrative procedure to apply the right granted to it
by Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439, that is, to apply its national provisions concerning the period of validity of licences.
However, in so doing, it must observe the fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Treaty. The conformity of the Netherlands
registration procedure on this point should therefore be considered.
50.
In
Kraus ,
(26)
the Court held that
Articles 48 and 52 [of the Treaty] preclude any national measure ... where that measure, even though it is applicable without
discrimination on grounds of nationality, is liable to hamper or to render less attractive the exercise by Community nationals
... of fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Treaty. The Court reiterated that
[t]he situation would be different only if such a measure pursued a legitimate objective compatible with the Treaty and was
justified by pressing reasons of public interest ..., application of the national rules in question [must] be appropriate
for ensuring attainment of the objective they pursue and not ... go beyond what is necessary for that purpose.
(27)
51. In my opinion, the registration procedure in the Netherlands falls within the scope of this category of restrictive national
measures. In the abovementioned judgment in
Skanavi and Chryssanthakopoulous ,
(28)
the Court pointed out that
rules relating to the issue and mutual recognition of driving licences by the Member States exert an influence, both direct
and indirect, on the exercise of the rights guaranteed by the provisions of the Treaty relating to freedom of movement for
workers, to freedom of establishment and to the freedom to provide services. In that regard, the Court stated that
[i]n view of the importance of individual means of transport, possession of a driving licence duly recognised by the host
State may affect the actual pursuit by persons subject to Community law of a large number of occupations for employed or self-employed
persons and, more generally, freedom of movement.
(29)
In the light of these general points, the cumbersomeness of the Netherlands registration procedure and the penalties attaching
to it, the national procedure is liable to hamper or to render less attractive the exercise by Community nationals of the
freedom of establishment or of the freedom of movement.
52. This restrictive national measure, which is applicable without distinction to Netherlands nationals and nationals of other
Member States, is indeed justified by imperative requirements related to road safety.
(30)
However, in my opinion, the measure is disproportionate, because it goes beyond what is necessary for that purpose. A number
of factors point to this conclusion.
53. Firstly, the host Member State may apply correctly its national provisions on the period of validity of licences at road checks,
without it being necessary to adopt a registration system such as that existing in the Netherlands. Where such checks are
carried out, the police are in a reasonable position to calculate themselves the period of validity of the licences which
are presented to them. It is sufficient, as Netherlands law now stands, for them to add 10 years on to the date of issue of
the licence, which is mandatorily indicated on the licences drawn up in accordance with the Community model.
54. Contrary to what the Netherlands Government maintains, this situation is applicable both as regards licences drawn up on paper
and as regards those issued on a polycarbonate card. The date of issue is cited in point 2 of Annex I to Directive 91/439
as part of the mandatory information which should appear on a licence (for licences drawn up on paper) and point 2 of Annex
Ia to Directive 96/47 (for licences issued on a polycarbonate card). It is therefore not indispensable, at road checks, to
consult a register in order to find out the period of validity of a licence and to ensure compliance with the relevant national
rules.
55. Admittedly, this is not necessarily the case for all licences, and more specifically for those which were issued before 1
January 1986, that is to say before the expiry of the period allowed for transposition of Directive 80/1263, which established
a Community model licence on which the date of issue had to be mentioned.
(31)
However, the absence of such mentions on licences issued before 1 January 1986 cannot justify an obligation to register
all licences, without distinguishing between those issued before and after 1 January 1986.
56. Secondly, I am not convinced that, in order to apply its provisions on the period of the validity of licences, the host Member
State would be forced to impose a registration procedure in order to record that information systematically and to ensure
that holders renew their licences within the necessary time-limits.
(ii) The entering of information on the licence essential for administrating it
57. According to the Netherlands Government, the establishment of a registration system is technically necessary because of the
impossibility of entering information on licences issued on a polycarbonate card. This however is not the case. Point 3 of
Annex Ia to Directive 96/47 envisages the possibility of entering information on licences issued on a polycarbonate card,
as does point 4 of Annex I to Directive 91/439 for licences drawn up on paper. As a result, information such as serious offences
committed on the territory of the host Member State may be entered on all types of licence. I think, as does the Commission,
that this information may usefully be entered when the infringement is formally recorded, or when the penalty is imposed,
without its being absolutely necessary to adopt a registration procedure such as that in the Netherlands.
58. It follows from all the considerations set out above that the licence registration procedure in the Netherlands is contrary
to the principle of mutual recognition laid down in Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439 and cannot be justified by Article 1(3)
of that directive. I therefore propose that the Court uphold this complaint.
B ─
The second ground of complaint, regarding the calculation of the period of validity of licences
1. The arguments of the parties
59. The Commission points out that the Netherlands authorities use, as a starting point, the date on which the licence was issued,
and not the date on which the holder of the licence settled in the Netherlands, when applying the national rules concerning
the period of validity of licences. Accordingly, the principle of mutual recognition remains a dead letter for numerous holders
of licences issued by Member States other than the Netherlands. This is the case, in particular, for holders of licences issued
more than nine years before they settled in the Netherlands and who are at least 60 years old. These holders cannot register
their licences within the prescribed one-year time-limit, as the period of validity of their licence, 10 years in the Netherlands,
will have expired. They are therefore obliged to exchange their licence.
(32)
60. The Netherlands Government states that Directive 91/439 allows a host Member State to apply its national provisions concerning
the period of validity of licences without specifying the date which should be used as a starting point. It adds that the
starting point used in the Netherlands applies both to Netherlands licences and to those issued by other Member States, which
ensures that holders are treated equally. On this point, the Netherlands Government contends, in essence, that the adoption
of different starting points to calculate the period of validity of a licence in the Netherlands, according to whether the
licence has been issued by its national authorities (from the date of issue) or by another Member State (from the date on
which the holder settled in the Netherlands), would bring about
reverse discrimination as the holders of licences issued in the Netherlands would be in an adverse situation as compared to that of holders of licences
issued by another Member State. Furthermore, rules according to which the period of validity of licences issued by another
Member State begins to run from the date of issue of the licence, and not from the date on which the holder settled in the
Netherlands, are dictated by imperative requirements of effective control, road safety and the best possible method of enabling
fraud.
2. Assessment
61. I think, as does the Commission, that the effectiveness of the principle of mutual recognition laid down in Article 1(2) of
Directive 91/439 precludes the adoption of national rules, such as those in the Netherlands, according to which the period
of validity of licences issued by another Member State begins to run from the date of issue of the licence, and not from the
date on which the holder settled in the Netherlands. It is apparent from various factors, notably statistical, put forward
by the Commission, that the rules in question have the effect of limiting significantly the application of the principle of
the mutual recognition of licences.
62. I do not agree, as this case stands, with the objection put forward by the Netherlands Government in order to contest the
Commission's arguments on this point. The Court has held that situations such as
reverse discrimination are not taken into account by Community law. They must be resolved in the context of the internal legal system of the Member
State concerned.
(33)
63. Moreover, contrary to what the Netherlands Government maintains, the rules in question appear disproportionate in comparison
with the objectives of a best possible campaign against fraud and of road safety, on which the government relies in order
to restrict the free movement of persons.
64. I therefore propose that the Court uphold this complaint.
IV ─ Conclusion
65. In the light of the foregoing, I propose that the Court:
(1) declare that, by adopting rules which require that the holder of a driving licence issued by another Member State register
his licence, within a year of his taking up residence in the Netherlands, in order to continue to enjoy the right to drive
in that State, the Kingdom of the Netherlands has failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 1(2) of Council Directive
91/439/EEC of 29 July 1991 on driving licences;
(2) declare that, by adopting rules which provide that the period of validity of a licence starts to run from its date of issue,
the Kingdom of the Netherlands has failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 1(2) of Directive 91/439;
(3) declare that, by not adopting the legal and administrative provisions envisaged by Article 6(1)(c) and by point 4 of Annex
III to Directive 91/439, concerning, on the one hand, the minimum age for driving and, on the other hand, medical checks,
the Kingdom of the Netherlands has failed to fulfil its obligations under the said directive, and
(4) order the Kingdom of the Netherlands to pay the costs.
–
Original language: French.
–
Hereinafter the
licences.
–
OJ 1991 L 237, p. 1.
–
Council directive of 4 December 1980 on the introduction of a Community driving licence (OJ 1980 L 375, p. 1).
–
The term
normal residence is defined in Article 9 of Directive 91/439 as meaning the place where a person usually lives, that is for at least
185 days in each calendar year, because of personal and occupational ties, or, in the case of a person with no occupational
ties, because of personal ties which show close links between that person and the place where he is living.
–
Recitals 1 and 9.
–
Point 4 of Annex I to Directive 91/439 states that the host Member State may indicate information essential for administrative
purposes on the licence issued by another Member State such as serious offences committed in its territory, provided that
it also enters this type of information in the licences which it issues and that there is a space available for that purpose.
–
Council directive of 23 July 1996 (OJ 1996 L 235, p. 1).
–
Law of 21 April 1994 (
Staatsblad 1994 No 475), subsequently amended by the Law of 24 May 1996 (
Staatsblad 1996 No 276) (hereinafter the
WVW).
–
Decree of 30 May 1996 (
Staatsblad 1996 No 277), amended by the Decree of 18 June 1996 (
Staatsblad 1996 No 326).
–
This procedure is set out in Article 109(2) to (5) of the WVW, and Articles 10 and 11 of the regulation implementing the WVW.
–
It is necessary to provide a certified photocopy of the licence for which registration is sought, a certified copy (dated
a maximum of six months before the application) containing information concerning the applicant from the population register
on which he is enrolled, as well as documents' attestation, notably that the applicant has resided in the country which issued
the relevant licence for at least 185 days and that the licence is still valid on the date on which the application for registration
was submitted.
–
Case 16/78 [1978] ECR 2293.
–
Case C-193/94 [1996] ECR I-929.
–
Declaration concerning Article 1(3) of Directive 91/439:
The Council and the Commission recognise that the present Directive does not prevent the Member States from registering the
information regarding licences issued by another Member State when the holders of such licences take up normal residence on
their territory (hereinafter the
contested declaration).
–
Points 21 and 22.
–
The Commission has also initiated infringement proceedings against the Kingdom of Spain, notably on account of a mandatory
and systematic licence registration system, in Case C-195/02
Commission v
Spain , pending before the Court.
–
Paragraph 26.
–
Case C-230/97 [1998] ECR I-6781, paragraphs 41 to 43.
–
For a recent example, see Case C-390/99
Canal Satélite Digital [2002] ECR I-607, paragraph 36.
–
See, in particular, Case C-200/88
Commission v
Greece [1990] ECR I-4299 and Case C-133/94
Commission v
Belgium [1996] ECR I-2323.
–
Compare the judgment in Case C-197/96
Commission v
France [1997] ECR I-1489, paragraph 15 and the judgment in Case C-185/96
Commission v
Greece [1998] ECR I-6601, paragraph 30.
–
See, notably, Case C-334/94
Commission v
France [1996] ECR I-1307, paragraph 30.
–
See Case C-292/89
Antonissen [1991] ECR I-745, paragraph 18; Joined Cases C-197/94 and C-252/94
Bautiaa and
Société française maritime [1996] ECR I-505, paragraph 51; and Case C-329/95
VAG Sverige [1997] ECR I-2675, paragraph 23.
–
Paragraphs 27 and 28.
–
Case C-19/92 [1993] ECR I-1663, paragraph 32.
–
Ibid.
–
Paragraph 23. See also
Choquet , cited above, paragraph 4.
–
. Skanavi and Chryssanthakopoulous , cited above, paragraph 23.
–
The Court has held, on a line of decisions, that protection of road safety is an overriding requirement. See Case C-55/93
Van Schaik [1994] ECR I-4837, paragraph 19 and Case C-314/98
Snellers [2000] ECR I-8633, paragraph 55.
–
As of today, over 80 different models of driving licences are still in circulation in the European Economic Area, most of
which were issued before the transposition of Directive 91/439 (see the Commission's interpretative Notice 2002/C 77/03 on
the issuing of driving licences in the European Community (OJ 2002 C 77, p. 5)). It is not known how far the licences issued
before 1 January 1986 are considered in this assessment.
–
A similar situation led to questions being submitted by a Netherlands court concerning the compatibility of the rules at issue
with Article 1(1) and (2) of Directive 91/439 and the Treaty provisions on the freedom of movement, in Case C-253/01
Krüger , pending before the Court.
–
See Joined Cases C-64/96 and C-65/96
Uecker and Jacquet [1997] ECR I-3171.
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