T-167/02
PostanowienieTSUE2003-03-21CELEX: 62002TO0167ECLI:EU:T:2003:81
Analiza orzeczenia
Sekcja wygenerowana przez AI na podstawie treści orzeczenia — nie stanowi cytatu.
Zagadnienie prawne
Czy przedsiębiorstwo produkujące pasze dla zwierząt jest indywidualnie dotknięte dyrektywą UE wprowadzającą obowiązek podawania dokładnych procentów wagowych składników pasz, w rozumieniu art. 230 akapit czwarty WE, jeśli twierdzi, że dyrektywa ujawni jego know-how i tajemnice handlowe?Ratio decidendi
Trybunał Pierwszej Instancji stwierdził, że skarżąca spółka nie jest indywidualnie dotknięta dyrektywą 2002/2/WE, ponieważ dyrektywa ta dotyczy jej jedynie w jej obiektywnym charakterze producenta pasz, w taki sam sposób jak każdego innego podmiotu gospodarczego działającego w tym sektorze. Fakt, że dyrektywa może mieć różne skutki dla różnych podmiotów, nie wystarcza do indywidualnego wyróżnienia skarżącego, jeśli jest stosowana na podstawie obiektywnie określonej sytuacji. Trybunał podkreślił, że system środków prawnych przewidziany w Traktacie WE jest kompletny i nie wymaga od sądu wspólnotowego badania i interpretowania krajowych przepisów proceduralnych w celu ustalenia dopuszczalności skargi o stwierdzenie nieważności.Stan faktyczny
Établissements Toulorge, francuskie przedsiębiorstwo zajmujące się rozwojem i produkcją złożonych pasz dla zwierząt hodowlanych, wniosło skargę o stwierdzenie nieważności dyrektywy 2002/2/WE. Dyrektywa ta zmieniła zasady etykietowania pasz, wprowadzając obowiązek podawania dokładnych procentów wagowych składników. Skarżący twierdził, że nowe przepisy ujawnią jego know-how i tajemnice handlowe, co poważnie wpłynie na jego działalność gospodarczą i zagrozi jego rentowności.Rozstrzygnięcie
1. Skarga zostaje odrzucona jako niedopuszczalna w zakresie, w jakim dotyczy stwierdzenia nieważności dyrektywy 2002/2/WE Parlamentu Europejskiego i Rady z dnia 28 stycznia 2002 r. zmieniającej dyrektywę Rady 79/373/EWG w sprawie obrotu mieszankami paszowymi i uchylającej dyrektywę Komisji 91/357/EWG.
2. Rozstrzygnięcie w przedmiocie żądań pozwanych, aby skarga w zakresie, w jakim dotyczy odszkodowania za rzekomo poniesioną szkodę, została uznana za niedopuszczalną, zostaje odroczone do wydania orzeczenia końcowego.
3. Koszty zastrzeżone.Pełny tekst orzeczenia
Case T-167/02
Établissements Toulorge
v
European Parliament and Council of the European Union
«(Action for annulment – Natural or legal persons – Acts of direct and individual concern to them – Directive 2002/2/EC – Inadmissibility – Action for damages)»
Order of the Court of First Instance (Fourth Chamber), 21 March 2003
Summary of the Order
1..
Actions for annulment – Natural or legal persons – Measures of direct and individual concern to them – Directive requiring the indication of the exact percentages by weight of the feed materials in animal feedingstuffs – Inadmissible
(Art. 230, fourth para., EC; European Parliament and Council Directive 2002/2)
2..
European Communities – Judicial review of the legality of measures of the institutions – Measures of general application – Need for natural or legal persons to have recourse to a plea of illegality or a reference for a preliminary ruling on validity – Obligation of the national courts to apply national procedural rules so as to allow challenges to the legality of Community
measures of general application – Availability of an action for annulment before the Community Courts in the event of an insurmountable obstacle at the level
of national procedural rules – Excluded
(Arts 234 EC, 241 EC and 230, fourth para., EC)
1.
In so far as the rules it contains, and in particular the obligation to indicate the exact percentages by weight of the feed
materials in compound feedingstuffs for animals, are stated in a general way, apply to objectively determined situations and
have legal effects for categories of person contemplated in a general and abstract manner, namely manufacturers, packers,
importers, sellers and distributors of those feedingstuffs, Directive 2002/2 on the circulation of compound feedingstuffs
concerns an animal food undertaking whose main activity is the development and research of compound feedingstuffs for production
animals only in its objective capacity as a manufacturer of such feedingstuffs and does not adversely affect any specific
right held by it on the basis of alleged protection under Community law of know-how and business secrets, with the result
that the Directive is not of individual concern to it within the meaning of Article 230 EC. see paras 50-57
2.
The Treaty, in Articles 230 and 241, on the one hand, and in Article 234, on the other, established a complete system of legal
remedies and procedures designed to permit the Court of Justice to review the legality of measures adopted by the institutions.
Under that system natural and legal persons, who, by reason of the conditions of admissibility laid down in the fourth paragraph
of Article 230 EC, cannot contest directly Community measures of general application, may, depending on the circumstances,
plead the illegality of those measures either as an incidental plea under Article 241 EC before the Community court or before
the national courts and cause the latter, which do not have jurisdiction themselves to declare those measures illegal, to
request the Court of Justice to give a preliminary ruling. Apart from the fact that it is for the Member States to provide for a system of remedies and procedures guaranteeing observance
of the right to effective judicial protection, an interpretation of the rules for admissibility laid down in Article 230 EC,
to the effect that an action for annulment should be declared admissible where it is shown following an examination by the
Community judicature of the particular national procedural rules, that those rules do not allow an individual to bring proceedings
to contest the validity of the Community measure, is not acceptable. Indeed, such an interpretation would require the Community
Court, in each individual case, to examine and interpret national procedural law, which would go beyond its jurisdiction when
reviewing the legality of Community measures. That assessment must be accepted
a fortiori where it is not alleged that there are no legal remedies before the national courts making it possible to challenge the validity
of a directive. see paras 65-66
ORDER OF THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Fourth Chamber)
21 March 2003 (1)
((Action for annulment – Natural or legal persons – Acts of direct and individual concern to them – Directive 2002/2/EC – Inadmissibility – Action for damages))
In Case T-167/02,
Établissements Toulorge, established in Bricquebec (France), represented by D. Waelbroeck and D. Brinckmann, lawyers
applicant,
v
European Parliament, represented by C. Pennera and E. Waldherr, acting as Agents, with an address for service in Luxembourg,andCouncil of the European Union, represented by I. Díez Parra and F.P. Ruggeri Laderchi, acting as Agents,
defendants,
supported byFederal Republic of Germany, represented by W.-D. Plessing and M. Lumma, acting as Agents,and byCommission of the European Communities, represented by A. Bordes, acting as Agent, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
interveners,
APPLICATION for annulment of Directive 2002/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 January 2002 amending
Council Directive 79/373/EEC on the circulation of compound feedingstuffs and repealing Commission Directive 91/357/EEC (OJ
2002 L 63, p. 23) and for compensation for the damage allegedly suffered,
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (Fourth Chamber),
composed of: V. Tiili, President, P. Mengozzi and M. Vilaras, Judges,
Registrar: H. Jung,
makes the following
Order
On 28 January 2002, the Parliament and the Council adopted Directive 2002/2/EC amending Council Directive 79/373/EEC on the
circulation of compound feedingstuffs and repealing Commission Directive 91/357/EEC (OJ 2002 L 63, p. 23;
Directive 2002/2 or
the contested directive).
As regards labelling, Council Directive 79/373/EEC of 2 April 1979 on the marketing of compound feedingstuffs (OJ 1979 L 86,
p. 30) provided for a flexible declaration confined to the indication of the feed materials without stating their quantity
in feedingstuffs for production animals, while retaining the possibility of declaring categories of feed materials instead
of declaring the feed materials themselves (recital 3 in the preamble to Directive 2002/2).
It is mentioned in recital 4 in the preamble to Directive 2002/2 that the bovine spongiform encephalopathy and dioxin crises
have demonstrated the inadequacy of those provisions and the need for more detailed qualitative and quantitative information
on the composition of compound feedingstuffs for production animals. It is stated in recital 5 in that preamble that detailed
quantitative information may help to ensure that potentially contaminated feed materials can be traced to specific batches,
which will be beneficial to public health and avoid the destruction of products which do not present a significant risk to
public health.
Accordingly, Article 5(1)(l) of Directive 79/373, as amended by Article 1 of Directive 2002/2, provides: 1. Member States shall prescribe that compound feedingstuffs may not be marketed unless the particulars listed below, which
shall be clearly visible, legible and indelible and for which the manufacturer, packer, importer, seller or distributor established
within the Community shall be held responsible, are shown, in a space provided for that purpose, on the packaging on the container
or on a label attached thereto:...
(l)
in the case of compound feedingstuffs other than those intended for pets, the indication
the exact percentages by weight of feed materials used in this feedingstuff may be obtained from: ... (name or trade name, address or registered office, telephone number and e-mail address of the person responsible for the
particulars referred to in this paragraph). This information shall be provided at the customer's request.
Article 1 of Directive 2002/2 also provides that Article 5c of Directive 79/373 is to be amended as follows:
1.
All feed materials used in the compound feedingstuff shall be listed by their specific names.
2.
The listing of feed materials for feedingstuffs shall be subject to the following rules:
(a)
compound feedingstuffs intended for animals other than pets:
(i)
listing of feed materials for feedingstuffs with an indication, in descending order, of the percentages by weight present
in the compound feedingstuff;
(ii)
as regards the above percentages, a tolerance of ±15% of the declared value shall be permitted;
...
Article 3 of Directive 2002/2 provides: 1. Member States shall adopt and publish not later than 6 March 2003, the laws, regulations and administrative provisions
necessary to comply with this directive. They shall forthwith inform the Commission thereof. They shall apply these measures as from 6 November 2003 ...
Facts and procedure
The applicant is an animal food undertaking whose main activity is the development and manufacture of compound feedingstuffs
for production animals. It claims to have, as a result of considerable research and development work, a highly specialised
knowledge of animal nutrition, enabling it to manufacture very specific compound feedingstuffs and thus to extend its business.
It claims, in essence, that the contested directive introduces new labelling rules for compound feedingstuffs which will have
the effect of disclosing its know-how and business secrets, thereby seriously affecting its economic activities and even threatening
its viability.
By application lodged at the Court Registry on 30 May 2002, the applicant brought the present action.
By separate documents lodged at the Court Registry on 16 August and 30 September 2002, the Parliament and the Council raised
pleas of inadmissibility under Article 114 of the Rules of Procedure of the Court of First Instance. The applicant lodged
its observations on those pleas on 18 November 2002.
By documents lodged at the Court Registry on 10 and 11 September 2002, the Federal Republic of Germany and the Commission
applied for leave to intervene in these proceedings in support of the forms of order sought by the defendants. By order of
2 October 2002, the President of the Fourth Chamber of the Court of First Instance allowed that intervention. The Commission
and the Federal Republic of Germany lodged their statements on 29 October and 11 November 2002.
Forms of order sought
In its application, the applicant claims that the Court should:
─
annul Directive 2002/2;
annul Directive 2002/2;
─
declare the non-contractual liability of the Community, as represented by the defendants, and order them to make good any
damage suffered as a consequence of Directive 2002/2;
declare the non-contractual liability of the Community, as represented by the defendants, and order them to make good any
damage suffered as a consequence of Directive 2002/2;
─
order the parties to produce, within a reasonable period after the Court of First Instance delivers its decision, exact figures
to quantify the damage which the parties have agreed or, or in the absence of such agreement,
additional submissions containing such exact figures;
order the parties to produce, within a reasonable period after the Court of First Instance delivers its decision, exact figures
to quantify the damage which the parties have agreed or, or in the absence of such agreement,
additional submissions containing such exact figures;
─
order the defendants to pay the costs.
order the defendants to pay the costs.
In their plea of inadmissibility, the defendants contend that the Court should:
─
dismiss the application in its entirety as inadmissible;
dismiss the application in its entirety as inadmissible;
─
order the applicant to pay the costs.
order the applicant to pay the costs.
In its observations on the pleas of inadmissibility, the applicant claims that the Court should:
─
dismiss the pleas of inadmissibility or, at least, reserve a decision on admissibility for the final judgment and declare
those pleas unfounded in the judgment on the merits;
dismiss the pleas of inadmissibility or, at least, reserve a decision on admissibility for the final judgment and declare
those pleas unfounded in the judgment on the merits;
─
order the defendants to pay the costs.
order the defendants to pay the costs.
In their statements in intervention, the interveners contend that the Court should:
─
dismiss the application as inadmissible;
dismiss the application as inadmissible;
─
order the applicant to pay the costs.
order the applicant to pay the costs.
Law
Under Article 114(1) of the Rules of Procedure, if a party so requests, the Court may decide the question of inadmissibility
as a preliminary issue. By virtue of Article 114(3), the remainder of the proceedings are to be oral, unless the Court otherwise
decides. In the present case, the Court is of the view that it is sufficiently well informed by the documents before it to
give a ruling on the claims submitted by the defendants without initiating the oral procedure.
It is necessary, first of all, to examine the admissibility of the application in so far as it seeks the annulment of the
contested directive.
The nature of the contested act
Arguments of the parties
The defendants, supported by the interveners, claim that the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC does not mention a directive
but only a decision addressed to a natural or legal person and a decision which,
although in the form of a regulation or a decision addressed to another person, is of direct and individual concern to the
former.
In those circumstances, it is necessary to determine, as the Court of Justice did in its order in Case C-10/95 P
Asocarne v
Council [1995] ECR I-4149, whether Directive 2002/2 is in fact of general application. According to the defendants, Directive 2002/2
is indeed a legislative measure, because it applies in a general and abstract manner to objectively determined situations,
and not a
disguised decision.
This application for annulment should therefore be declared inadmissible by the mere fact that the form and content of the
directive coincide and it is unnecessary to decide whether the applicant is directly and individually concerned by the contested
directive.
The applicant points out that, although Article 230 EC does not deal expressly with the admissibility of actions for annulment
brought against a directive, it is nevertheless clear from the case-law that the legislative nature of a measure, including
in the case of a directive, does not prevent an individual from contesting the measure, if he is at all directly and individually
concerned by it (judgment in Case T-135/96
UEAPME v
Council [1998] ECR II-2335), which is the position in the present case.
It therefore challenges the defendants' analysis of the case-law, according to which an action brought by an individual against
a directive is, as a matter of principle, precluded, unless, on account of its specific provisions, the directive resembles
an individual decision.
Findings of the Court
Under the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC,
[a]ny natural or legal person may ... institute proceedings against a decision addressed to that person or against a decision
which, although in the form of a regulation or a decision addressed to another person, is of direct and individual concern
to the former.
Although the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC makes no express provision regarding the admissibility of actions brought
by natural or legal persons for annulment of a directive, it is clear from the case-law that that fact in itself is not sufficient
to render such actions inadmissible (judgment in
UEAPME v
Council, cited above, paragraph 63, and order in Case T-223/01
Japan Tobacco and JT International v
Parliament and Council [2002] ECR II-0000, paragraph 28). It should also be pointed out that the Community institutions cannot, merely by means
of their choice of legal instrument, deprive individuals of the judicial protection which is afforded them by that provision
of the Treaty (order in
Japan Tobacco and JT International v
Parliament and Council, cited above, paragraph 28). It is therefore necessary to establish whether the contested directive is not a decision of
direct and individual concern to the applicant, within the meaning of the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC.
In the present case, the parties agree that the contested directive is indeed of a legislative character. The rules which
it contains, particularly the duty to state the exact percentages by weight of the feed materials used in the feedingstuffs
intended for production animals, are stated generally, apply to objectively determined situations and have legal effects for
categories of persons envisaged in a general and abstract manner, namely the manufacturers, packers, importers, sellers and
distributors of compound animal feedingstuffs.
However, the fact that the contested measure is legislative in character and is not a decision within the meaning of Article
249 EC is not, in itself, enough to preclude the applicant from bringing an action for its annulment.
In some circumstances, even a legislative measure applying to all the economic operators concerned may be of direct and individual
concern to some of them (judgments in Case C-358/89
Extramet Industrie v
Council [1991] ECR I-2501, paragraph 13, and Case C-309/89
Codorniu v
Council [1994] ECR I-1853, paragraph 19; and order in
Japan Tobacco and JT International v
Parliament and Council, cited above, paragraph 29).
It follows that the plea of inadmissibility based on the legislative nature of the contested measure must be rejected and
it is therefore necessary to ascertain whether the applicant is individually and directly concerned by the contested directive.
The locus standi of the applicant
Arguments of the parties
The defendants and the interveners consider that the applicant is not individually concerned by the contested directive.
As regards, in particular, the applicant's arguments based on the principle of effective judicial protection, the Parliament
states that the interpretation of that principle cannot have the effect of setting aside the application of the conditions
contained in the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC, according to which a natural or legal person may bring an action for
annulment against a measure of general application only if it is directly and individually concerned by it (judgment in Case
C-50/00 P
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council [2002] ECR I-6677, paragraph 44).
The Council states that, even if the Court of Justice, in the abovementioned judgment, had followed the approach suggested
by Advocate General Jacobs in his Opinion concerning the admissibility of actions brought against regulations, the extension
of that approach to directives would, in point of fact, reduce certainty and the legal protection of individuals. They could
no longer wait until they knew the implementing measures and thus assess the applicable rules, overall and in detail, before
contesting them before the national courts, because, if they did not bring an action before the Community court within the
strict time-limits laid down in Article 230 EC, a possible question on the validity of the directive could no longer be referred
for a preliminary ruling in accordance with the judgment in Case C-188/92
TWD [1994] ECR I-833.
The applicant claims that it fulfils the condition of individual interest, as interpreted by the Court of First Instance in
Case T-177/01
Jégo-Quéré v
Commission [2002] ECR II-2365, paragraph 51.
Accordingly, there is no doubt that the applicant's legal position is affected in a manner which is both definite and immediate,
within the meaning of the abovementioned judgment, by the contested directive. Indeed, the indication of the exact percentages
by weight of the feed materials in the feedingstuffs introduced by that measure would deprive the applicant of its rights
over its know-how and its business secrets, which would also adversely affect its right freely to exercise its economic activity.
In reply to the Parliament's argument that the Court of Justice, in its judgment in
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council, cited above, confirmed the traditional case-law on individual interest, from which the judgment in
Jégo-Quéré v
Commission, cited above, departed, the applicant claims that the Court of Justice did not expressly reject the reasoning of the Court
of First Instance. In actual fact, the Court of Justice did not give a clear ruling on the meaning to be given to the condition
of individual interest, since the applicant's arguments concerning the right to an effective remedy invited it purely and
simply to set aside the aforementioned condition. That is not the applicant's approach in the present case.
In any event, the action is admissible even in the light of the case-law prior to the judgment in
Jégo-Quéré v
Commission.
Firstly, the applicant maintains, referring to the judgment in
Codorniu v
Council, cited above, that it is individually concerned by Directive 2002/2 since the directive denies it specific rights, namely
the rights relating to know-how and business secrets. Those rights, which are protected in the legal systems of the Member
States and by the
GATT-TRIPS rules, are specific, because, in the very words used by the Court of Justice in Case 53/85
AKZO Chemie v
Commission [1986] ECR 1965, paragraphs 28 and 29, they are afforded
very special protection in Community law.
Community law thus recognises that know-how is an essential feature of competition and that an undertaking granting, for example,
a licence on its know-how to another undertaking deserves judicial protection against the disclosure of that know-how which
is fully comparable to protection of a patent (Case 161/84
Pronuptia [1986] ECR 353, paragraph 16; Article 5(b) of Commission Regulation (EC) No 2790/1999 of 22 December 1999 on the application
of Article 81(3) of the Treaty to categories of vertical agreements and concerted practices (OJ 1999 L 336, p. 21) and Article
2(1) of Commission Regulation (EC) No 240/96 of 31 January 1996 on the application of Article [81](3) of the Treaty to certain
categories of technology transfer agreements (OJ 1996 L 31, p. 2)).
The applicant points out that the protection of business secrets is expressly referred to in Article 287 EC and has been confirmed
repeatedly by the Community legislature and the Court of Justice.
Furthermore, the Commission has acknowledged the specific nature of the rights in question and the Parliament, in the present
case, does not dispute that the information which the applicant will have to reveal is substantial and secret.
The mere fact that the applicant is not the only undertaking affected by the contested directive, as the Parliament points
out in support of its plea of inadmissibility, is completely irrelevant to the extent that the rights it invokes are not general
but specific, that is to say, different from those of its competitors (Case C-390/95 P
Antillean Rice Mills and Others [1999] ECR I-769, paragraph 67 et seq.; Case T-435/93
ASPEC and Others v
Commission [1995] ECR II-1281, and
Jégo Quéré v
Commission, cited above, paragraph 51). This is the position in the present case, because the applicant's know-how has been obtained
through continuous research into animal nutrition.
The applicant maintains, secondly, that it is also individually concerned, within the meaning of the judgment in
Extramet Industrie v
Council, cited above, since, as a small or medium-sized undertaking (SMU), it risks being gravely affected by the contested directive,
because its economic activity depends, to a large extent, on the protection afforded to its know-how. Directive 2002/2 would
deprive the applicant of what is, is practice, its main competitive asset and the essential added value of its activity, while
giving a significant competitive advantage to the applicant's rivals and, in particular, to the large manufacturers of compound
feedingstuffs.
It states that the Court has repeatedly noted the interest of undertakings in their business secrets not being revealed and
the extremely serious damage which could result from the unlawful disclosure of documents to a competitor (
AKZO Chemie v
Commission, cited above, paragraphs 28 and 29). In general, it is clear from the case-law that, in order to assess the admissibility
of an action, account is taken of the significance of the effect of the measure in question, and not only its purpose, or
merely the obligation to take account of specific rights.
The applicant points out that its situation is unique compared with that of many other mixers. There are, more and more frequently
in the sector concerned, situations of
vertical integration, from the breeder to the abattoir, via food production. In that case, the interest in not revealing know-how disappears because
the integrated undertaking is both supplier and its own customer. The applicant infers that the harm it suffers is therefore
very specific.
Referring to the judgment in
Jégo-Quéré v
Commission and to the Opinion delivered by Advocate General Jacobs in
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council, the applicant maintains, thirdly, that only a direct action before the Court of First Instance will offer it adequate judicial
protection. It considers that the Court of First Instance was right to hold, in the aforementioned judgment, that the procedures
provided for in Article 234 EC, on the one hand, and Article 235 EC and the second paragraph of Article 288 EC, on the other,
can no longer be regarded ─ in the light of Articles 6 and 13 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR), signed in Rome on 4 November 1950, and of Article 47 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights
of the European Union, proclaimed in Nice on 7 December 2000 (OJ 2000 C 364, p. 1) ─ as guaranteeing persons the right to
an effective remedy enabling them to contest the legality of Community measures of general application which directly affect
their legal situation.
In that regard, the argument relating to the protection of legal certainty, as set out in the aforementioned Opinion, applies
a fortiori in the case of a directive whose transposition by the Member States may vary considerably in time. Such a situation justifies
the need for a centralised and immediate review of legality in order to prevent effects which are harmful, and in the present
case irreparable, as a result of the application of the measure in question.
The applicant considers that the defendants are wrong to maintain that the judgment in
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council, cited above, shows the irrelevance of its argument based on the principle of effective judicial protection. In that judgment
the Court of Justice acknowledges the right to such protection, enshrined in Articles 6 and 13 of the ECHR, and that the condition
of individual interest ─ which, it is not disputed, must be fulfilled in this case ─ must be interpreted in the light of the
principle of effective judicial protection by taking into account the various circumstances which differentiate an applicant.
In response to the Council's argument concerning the impact which the admissibility of the present action would have on the
possibility of raising questions on the validity of the contested directive before the national courts as a result of the
solution adopted in the judgment in
TWD, the applicant claims that that judgment concerned an individual decision and that that solution is not applicable to acts
of general application and, in particular, to directives (Case C-408/95
Eurotunnel and Others [1997] ECR I-6315).
Findings of the Court
It should be pointed out that, according to the case-law, natural or legal persons can claim to be individually concerned
by a measure only if it affects them by reason of certain attributes peculiar to them or by reason of a factual situation
which differentiates them from all other persons and, accordingly, distinguishes them individually in the same way as an addressee
(judgment in Case 25/62
Plaumann v
Commission [1963] ECR 95, 107, and judgment in
UEAPME v
Council, cited above, paragraph 69).
That condition for the admissibility of an action brought by a natural or legal person has also been recalled recently by
the Court of Justice in identical wording to that referred to in paragraph 48 above (
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores, cited above, paragraph 36).
In the present case, the parties agree that the rules contained in the contested directive, in particular the obligation to
indicate the exact percentages by weight of the feed materials in feedingstuffs are stated in a general way, apply to objectively
determined situations and have legal effects for categories of person contemplated in a general and abstract manner, namely
manufacturers, packers, importers, sellers and distributors of compound animal feedingstuffs.
It follows that Directive 2002/2 concerns the applicant only in its objective capacity as a manufacturer of such feedingstuffs,
in the same way as any other economic operator active in that sector.
That conclusion is not invalidated by the applicant's arguments alleging that the rights it claims to have, and which it would
be denied by the contested directive, are specific.
First of all, it should be pointed out that the alleged existence of
very special protection in Community law, or even in the national legal systems or other rules, for an undertaking's know-how and business secrets
does not distinguish the applicant individually from all the other feed manufacturers concerned by the contested directive,
who could equally invoke that protection for their own benefit.
In that regard, the situation giving rise to the judgment in
Codorniu v
Commission, cited above, is clearly different from that of this case. Unlike this case, that judgment concerned an applicant undertaking
which was prevented, by a legislative provision governing the use of a designation, from using the graphic trade mark which
it had registered and used for a long time before the adoption of the contested regulation, so that it was distinguished from
all the other economic operators.
It should also be pointed out that it is clear from the applicant's own pleadings that the most important competitive element
for
feed manufacturers is the
recipe of their product, which is based on formulae using their knowledge and know-how concerning the nutritional needs of animals,
and that Directive 2002/2 would have the effect of revealing the basic know-how and business secrets
of the manufacturers of compound feedingstuffs, including the applicant.
In that context, the applicant's claim that it has specific rights, different from those of its competitors, since its know-how
has been acquired by its continuous research into animal nutrition, is completely irrelevant to the requirement of individual
interest.
Indeed, the fact that the applicant manufactures compound feedingstuffs from formulae which are peculiar to it, doing exactly
what its competitors do, does not in any way show that it is in a specific position in relation to any other manufacturer
of the products in question. All manufacturers of compound animal feedingstuffs will ─ should the case arise ─ be affected
in the same way by the contested directive, since each of them makes its products from its own
recipes and on the basis of its own know-how.
Nor is the conclusion stated in paragraph 51 above called into question by the applicant's argument that its economic activities
will be seriously affected by Directive 2002/2, within the meaning of the judgment in
Extramet Industrie v
Council, cited above.
In that judgment, which concerns an anti-dumping regulation, the Court of Justice considered that the applicant undertaking,
acting as an independent importer, was individually concerned by the contested measure owing to exceptional circumstances.
Thus, the applicant had established, first, that it was the largest importer of the product forming the subject-matter of
the anti-dumping measure and, at the same time, the end-user of the product and, secondly, that its business activities depended
to a very large extent on its imports and, thirdly, that those activities were seriously affected by the regulation in question
by reason of the limited number of manufacturers of the product concerned and of the difficulties which it encountered in
obtaining supplies from the sole Community producer, which, moreover, was its main competitor for the processed product.
In the present case, even if Directive 2002/2 might affect the applicant's situation, it has not adduced evidence of circumstances
to support the conclusion that the harm allegedly suffered distinguishes it individually from all the other manufacturers
of compound feedingstuffs, which are concerned by the directive in the same way as itself.
Accordingly, unless the intention is to indicate that the applicant is seriously affected by Directive 2002/2 because it is
the only producer of compound animal feedingstuffs not in a vertical integration structure, which is not established, the
argument referred to in paragraph 43 above is irrelevant since, far from being unique, the applicant's situation is shared
by all manufacturers of compound feedingstuffs which, like the applicant, are not also meat breeders and producers (see, by
analogy, order in Case T-39/98
Sadam Zuccherifici and Others v
Council [1998] ECR II-4207, paragraph 22).
Similarly, the fact that the applicant may be particularly affected as an SMU is not enough to distinguish it individually
within the meaning of Article 230 EC, since there are, as the Parliament rightly points out, many operators affected in the
same way by Directive 2002/2.
It should also be pointed out that the fact that a legislative measure may have specific effects which differ according to
the various persons to which it applies is not such as to differentiate the applicant from all the other operators concerned,
where that measure is applied on the basis of an objectively determined situation (Case T-138/98
ACAV and Others v
Council [2000] ECR II-341, paragraph 66), which is unquestionably the position in this case.
Finally, the applicant's claim that, in the judgments of the Court of Justice in Case 11/82
Piraiki-Patraiki v
Commission [1985] ECR 207, Case C-152/88
Sofrimport v
Commission [1990] ECR I-2477, and
Antillean Rice Mills and Others, cited above, there was no examination of whether the applicants were in a unique position, is based on a misinterpretation
of those judgments. It should be noted that, in each of those cases, the Court determined whether the parties concerned had
adduced proof of the existence of certain particular qualities or a factual situation differentiating them in relation to
any other person and, therefore, distinguishing them individually in the same way as an addressee. It then concluded that
that was indeed the case for each of the applicants since a provision of higher-ranking law required the author of the legislative
measure in question to take into consideration their situation specifically in relation to that of any other person concerned
by that measure.
As regards the applicant's arguments based on the right to effective judicial protection, it need only be pointed out, as
the Court stated in
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v Council, cited above, that the EC Treaty, in Articles 230 and 241, on the one hand, and in Article 234, on the other, established
a complete system of legal remedies and procedures designed to permit the Court of Justice to review the legality of measures
adopted by the institutions (see also Case 294/83
Les Verts v
Parliament [1986] ECR 1339, paragraph 23). Under that system natural and legal persons, who, by reason of the conditions of admissibility
laid down in the fourth paragraph of Article 230 EC, cannot contest directly Community measures of general application, may,
depending on the circumstances, plead the illegality of those measures either as an incidental plea under Article 241 EC before
the Community court or before the national courts and cause the latter, which do not have jurisdiction themselves to declare
those measures illegal (judgment of the Court of Justice in Case 314/85
Foto-Frost [1987] ECR 4199, paragraph 20) to request the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling(
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council, cited above, paragraph 40).
Apart from the fact that it is for the Member States to provide for a system of remedies and procedures guaranteeing observance
of the right to effective judicial protection, the Court of Justice has also held that an interpretation of the rules on admissibility
laid down in Article 230 EC, to the effect that an action for annulment should be declared admissible where it is shown, following
an examination by the Community judicature of the particular national procedural rules, that those rules do not allow an individual
to bring proceedings to contest the validity of the Community measure at issue, is not acceptable. Indeed,
such an interpretation would require the Community Court, in each individual case, to examine and interpret national procedural
law. That would go beyond its jurisdiction when reviewing the legality of Community measures (
Unión de Pequeños Agricultores v
Council, cited above, paragraph 43). That assessment must be accepted
a fortiori where it is not alleged, as in the present case, that there are no legal remedies before the national courts making it possible
to challenge the validity of the directive at issue (see to that effect order of the President of the Court of First Instance
in Case T-155/02 R
VVG International and Others v
Commission [2002] ECR II-3239, paragraph 39).
In those circumstances, the applicant's arguments based on the right to effective judicial protection, including the considerations
regarding the requirement of legal certainty put forward in that connection, must be rejected.
It is apparent from all these considerations that the applicant cannot be regarded as individually concerned by the directive
at issue. Since it does not satisfy one of the conditions for admissibility laid down by the fourth paragraph of Article 230
EC, it is not necessary to consider the argument put forward by the defendants and the interveners that the applicant is not
directly concerned by the directive.
It follows that the application, in so far as it seeks annulment of Directive 2002/2, must be dismissed as inadmissible.
On the other hand, a decision on the claims submitted by the defendants that the application, in so far as it seeks compensation
for damage allegedly suffered, should be declared inadmissible must be reserved for the final judgment.
On those grounds,
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Fourth Chamber)
hereby orders:
1.
The application is dismissed as inadmissible in so far as it seeks annulment of Directive 2002/2/EC of the European Parliament
and of the Council of 28 January 2002 amending Council Directive 79/373/EEC on the circulation of compound feedingstuffs and
repealing Commission Directive 91/357/EEC.
2.
A decision on the claims submitted by the defendants, that the application, in so far as it seeks compensation for damage
allegedly suffered, should be declared inadmissible is reserved for the final judgment.
3.
Costs are reserved.
Luxembourg, 21 March 2003.
H. Jung
V. Tiili
Registrar
President
–
Language of the case: French.
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