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IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The source of this judgment is the web site of the Court of Justice of the European Communities. The information in this database has been provided free of charge and is subject to a Court of Justice of the European Communities disclaimer and a copyright notice. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fifth Chamber)
17 July 1997(1)
(Customs duties - Methods of administrative cooperation - Procedures for
verifying EUR.1 certificates - Post-clearance recovery of customs duties -
Person responsible for the customs debt)
In Case C-97/95,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Tribunal
Tributário de Segunda Instância (Portugal) for a preliminary ruling in the
proceedings pending before that court between
Pascoal & Filhos Ld²
and
Fazenda Pública
on the interpretation of Council Decision 86/283/EEC of 30 June 1986 on the
association of the overseas countries and territories with the European Economic
Community (OJ 1986 L 175, p. 1) and Council Regulation (EEC) No 2913/92 of
12 October 1992 establishing the Community Customs Code (OJ 1992 L 302, p. 1),
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of: J.C. Moitinho de Almeida, President of the Chamber, L. Sevón,
D.A.O. Edward (Rapporteur), P. Jann and M. Wathelet, Judges,
Advocate General: G. Cosmas,
Registrar: R. Grass,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- Pascoal & Filhos Ld², by Adriano Garção Soares, of the Oporto Bar;
- the Portuguese Government, by Luis Fernandes, Director of the Legal
Service in the European Communities General Directorate of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, and Maria Luisa Duarte, Legal Adviser in that service,
acting as Agents;
- the French Government, by Catherine de Salins, Head of Sub-Directorate
in the Legal Directorate of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Claude
Chavance, Foreign Affairs Secretary in that directorate, acting as Agents;
- the Council of the European Union, by Amadeu Lopes Sabino, Legal
Adviser, acting as Agent;
- the Commission of the European Communities, by Francisco de Sousa
Fialho, of its Legal Service, acting as Agent,
having regard to the report of the Judge-Rapporteur,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 14 November
1996,
gives the following
Judgment
- By order of 29 November 1994, received at the Court on 27 March 1995, the
Tribunal Tributário de Segunda Instância (Fiscal Court of Second Instance)
referred for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty seven
questions on the interpretation of Council Decision 86/283/EEC of 30 June 1986
on the association of the overseas countries and territories with the European
Economic Community (OJ 1986 L 175, p. 1) and Council Regulation (EEC)
No 2913/92 of 12 October 1992 establishing the Community Customs Code (OJ
1992 L 302, p. 1, hereinafter 'the Customs Code').
- Those questions have arisen in a dispute between Pascoal & Filhos Ld², a company
established under Portuguese law (hereinafter 'Pascoal'), and the Fazenda Pública
(Public Exchequer) concerning post-clearance recovery of customs duties on
imports of cod.
The Community rules
- Pursuant to Article 70(1) of Decision 86/283, fishery products originating in
Greenland are to be imported into the European Community free of customs
duties.
- Article 6(1)(a) of Annex II to that decision (hereinafter 'Annex II') provides that
evidence of products' originating status is given by presentation to the customs
authorities of the Member State of importation of an EUR.1 movement certificate
(hereinafter 'EUR.1 certificate').
- Under Article 10(1) of Annex II, it is for the exporter to request, under his own
responsibility, the customs authorities of the country of exportation to issue the
EUR.1 certificate. Article 10(2) requires the exporter to submit with his request
any appropriate supporting document proving that the goods to be exported are
such as to qualify for the issue of that certificate.
- According to Article 8(1) of Annex II, the customs authorities of the country of
exportation are to issue the EUR.1 certificate if the goods to which it relates can
be considered as products originating in the overseas country concerned. In order
to determine whether that is so, those authorities may, under Article 8(2), call for
any documentary evidence or carry out any check which they consider appropriate.
- Article 25(1) of Annex II provides that, in cases where the customs authorities of
the Member State of importation have reasonable doubt as to the authenticity of
an EUR.1 certificate or the accuracy of the information regarding the true origin
of the goods in question, they are to request the customs authorities of the country
of exportation to carry out subsequent verification of the certificate concerned.
- In accordance with Article 25(3), the results of this verification are to be notified
to the customs authorities of the Member State of importation. Those results must
be such as to make it possible to determine whether the disputed EUR.1 certificate
applies to the goods actually exported and whether those goods can in fact qualify
for application of the preferential arrangements.
- Article 2(1) of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1697/79 of 24 July 1979 on the post-clearance recovery of import duties or export duties which have not been required
of the person liable for payment on goods entered for a customs procedure
involving the obligation to pay such duties (OJ 1979 L 197, p. 1) states that, where
the competent authorities of a Member State find that all or part of the amount
of import duties legally due has not been required of the person liable for payment,
they shall take action to recover the duties not collected.
- According to Article 2(a) of Council Directive 79/623/EEC of 25 June 1979 on the
harmonization of provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action
relating to customs debt (OJ 1979 L 179, p. 31), a customs debt on importation is
incurred by the placing of goods liable to import duties in free circulation in the
customs territory of the Community. Article 3(a) of that directive provides that the
moment when a customs debt on imports is incurred is deemed to be that, inter
alia, when the competent authorities accept the entry of the goods for free
circulation.
- With effect from 1 January 1989, Directive 79/623 was repealed by Council
Regulation (EEC) No 2144/87 of 13 July 1987 on customs debt (OJ 1987 L 201,
p. 15), which, however, reintroduced, in Articles 2(1)(a) and 3(a), the same
provisions as those contained in Articles 2(a) and 3(a) of Directive 79/623.
- Finally, Regulation No 2144/87 was repealed by the Customs Code, which came
into force on 22 October 1992 and has been applicable since 1 January
- Article 201 of that Code provides as follows:
'1. A customs debt on importation shall be incurred through:
(a) the release for free circulation of goods liable to import duties, or
(b) the placing of such goods under the temporary importation procedure with
partial relief from import duties.
2. A customs debt shall be incurred at the time of acceptance of the customs
declaration in question.
3. The debtor shall be the declarant. In the event of indirect representation,
the person on whose behalf the customs declaration is made shall also be a debtor.
Where a customs declaration in respect of one of the procedures referred to in
paragraph 1 is drawn up on the basis of information which leads to all or part of
the duties legally owed not being collected, the persons who provided the
information required to draw up the declaration and who knew, or who ought
reasonably to have known, that such information was false, may also be considered
debtors in accordance with the national provisions in force.'
The dispute in the main proceedings
- Pascoal imported four consignments of cod into Portugal, two in 1988 and two in
1989. Each of those consignments was accompanied by an EUR.1 certificate
attesting that the goods originated in Greenland. The Portuguese customs
authorities accordingly allowed all of the consignments to be imported without
payment of customs duties.
- However, they requested the Greenland authorities to carry out, in collaboration
with the Commission, subsequent verification of the four EUR.1 certificates
submitted at the time of importation.
- Following that verification, the Greenland authorities and the Commission drew up
a joint report (hereinafter 'the mission report'), which includes the following
conclusion regarding the four EUR.1 certificates at issue:
'... it has been established ... that the quantities of Greenland fresh codfish
delivered for further processing on board of the concerned factory ships are not
sufficient, according to the communicated processing yield, in order to obtain the
quantities of finished products which have been imported into the EEC with the
... movement certificates [at issue]'.
- On the basis of that report, the Greenland authorities sent to the Portuguese
authorities a communication (hereinafter 'the communication') worded as follows:
'As control examinations - carried out in collaboration with representatives from
EEC Commission - have proved that some goods certificates issued on EUR.1 in
Greenland do not comply with the regulations laid down in OLT-Agreement's
[decision 86/283] annex n. II regarding attainment of status of origin, you are kindly
asked to arrange that the following goods certificates are revoked and cancelled.'
The mission report on which this communication was based was not forwarded to
the Portuguese authorities.
- Taking the view that they were bound by this communication, and without seeking
to establish the true origin of the goods, the Portuguese authorities issued four
post-clearance recovery notices, for a total amount of ESC 61 709 940, against
Pascoal, in whose name the import declaration had been made. Those notices
were issued before the Portuguese authorities had received a copy of the mission
report.
- As soon as it became aware of the communication, Pascoal examined the
Portuguese authorities' file regarding those notices. The mission report was not at
that time included in the file. According to the national court, Pascoal only became
aware of the contents of the report when the statement of defence was lodged
during the proceedings at second instance; furthermore, the company had always
acted in good faith and in compliance with the rules in force.
- Believing that the notices were vitiated by defective reasoning and had been
unlawfully issued, Pascoal brought an action seeking their annulment before the
Tribunal Fiscal Aduaneiro (Customs Court), Oporto. That court, however, took
the view that, even considered independently of the mission report, the
communication constituted an adequate statement of reasons and that the
Portuguese authorities had acted lawfully.
- Pascoal thereupon appealed to the Tribunal Tributário de Segunda Instância.
Since it was uncertain as to the proper construction of certain provisions of
Community law, that court decided to stay proceedings and refer the following
seven questions to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
'(1) Does the responsibility of the exporter, referred to in Article 10(1) of Annex
II to Council Decision 86/283/EEC of 30 June 1986, extend to customs
duties resulting from the cancellation of EUR.1 movement certificates
issued on the basis of false information as to the origin of the goods?
(2) What is the meaning and scope of the adverb "also" used in the second
subparagraph of Article 201(3) of the Community Customs Code, in
particular where the national customs law provides that responsibility for
payment of the duties due in respect of the goods involved in the
infringement attaches exclusively to the person who committed the customs
infringement?
(3) May the rule expressed in the judgment of the Court of Justice of the
European Communities of 7 December 1993 in Case C-12/92 Huygen and
Others ([1993] ECR I-6381), published at pages 5 and 6 of Proceedings of the
Court of Justice No 35/93, although relating to the Free Trade Agreement
between the EEC and Austria, apply to the circumstances of this case,
which concerns the interpretation and application of Council Decision
86/283/EEC?
(4) What is the meaning, purport and scope of the results of the verification
referred to by Article 25(3) of Annex II to Council Decision 86/283/EEC?
(5) May a procedure for post-clearance recovery in the Member State of
importation be commenced and completed before the results of the
verification are communicated by the customs authorities in the exporting
country to the customs authorities in the importing country and without the
importer being aware of the results of the verification?
(6) Does the levying on an importer acting in good faith of the duties payable
on goods in respect of which an exporter has committed a customs offence,
in which the importer was in no way involved, infringe the principles of
justice, prohibition of enrichment at the expense of others, proportionality,
legal certainty and good faith?
(7) Since the customs authorities in the country of exportation neglected to
carry out a prior inspection of the exporter's warehouses before issuing the
EUR.1 movement certificates, and since the Portuguese importer cannot
remedy the situation arising from such negligence, does that situation not
constitute a case of force majeure for the importer, precluding post-clearance recovery from it?'
- It is appropriate to begin by examining the second question; following that, the
third, fourth and fifth questions will be answered jointly, then the first question, the
sixth question, and finally the seventh.
The second question
- The second question posed by the national court concerns the interpretation of the
second subparagraph of Article 201(3) of the Customs Code. The Tribunal
Tributário de Segunda Instância takes the view that, even though it was not yet in
force when the four consignments in question were imported, the Customs Code
is relevant for the resolution of the dispute in the main proceedings since it re-enacts the legislation previously in force.
- Referring to the judgment in Case C-343/90 Lourenço Dias v Director da Alfândega
do Porto [1992] ECR I-4673, the Portuguese Government submits that the Court
does not have jurisdiction to answer this question in view of the fact that the
Customs Code was not applicable when the facts which gave rise to the dispute in
the main proceedings occurred.
- The Commission considers that the second question is inadmissible on the same
grounds.
- Suffice it to note that although the Customs Code re-enacted in large measure the
Community legislation in force before it was adopted, the second subparagraph of
Article 201(3), to which the second question relates, is a new provision. Since the
last of the four disputed import declarations was made on 25 July 1989, the
interpretation of that provision requested by the national court has no connection
with the facts or subject-matter of the dispute.
- In those circumstances, there is no need to reply to the second question.
The third, fourth and fifth questions (commencement of proceedings for recovery
on the basis of the results of the verification)
- It is common ground that, following subsequent verification of the EUR.1
certificates, the Greenland authorities sent the Portuguese authorities only the
communication in which they stated that the certificates had been improperly issued
and should therefore be cancelled. Subsequently, without having received the
mission report, without having requested the Greenland authorities to set out in
more detail the grounds justifying such cancellation, and without seeking to
determine the true origin of the goods, the Portuguese authorities instituted
recovery proceedings against Pascoal. The national court takes the view that,
before bringing such an action, the customs authorities of the State of importation
ought to have taken 'all necessary steps to establish the true origin of the goods'.
If they were still in doubt as to the true origin of the goods, they should not have
proceeded to an assessment of the customs duties now in dispute.
- In these circumstances, the point of the third, fourth and fifth questions raised by
the national court is, first, whether a communication addressed to the authorities
of the State of importation by the authorities of the State of exportation on
completion of subsequent verification of an EUR.1 certificate, in which the latter
authorities merely confirm that the certificate in question was improperly issued
and should therefore be cancelled, without setting out in detail the grounds
justifying such cancellation, can be regarded as 'results of ... verification' within the
meaning of Article 25(3) of Annex II and, second, whether the authorities of the
State of importation are entitled to bring proceedings to recover the unpaid
customs duties on the basis of such a communication alone, without seeking to
establish the true origin of the imported goods.
- On the first point, Article 25(3) of Annex II must be interpreted in the light of the
system of administrative cooperation of which it forms a part.
- According to that system, traders wishing to benefit from preferential customs
arrangements are required to show to the competent authorities that their goods
are, by reason of their origin, entitled to be imported into the European
Community exempt from customs duties. As Article 6(1) of Annex II provides,
evidence of products' originating status is supplied by an EUR.1 certificate. The
main purpose of the subsequent verification procedure is to check whether the
statement of origin in a certificate which has been issued is correct (Huygen, cited
above, paragraph 16).
- In its judgments in Case 218/83 Les Rapides Savoyards and Others v Directeur
Général des Douanes et Droits Indirects [1984] ECR 3105, Huygen and Others, cited
above, Case C-432/92 Anastasiou and Others [1994] ECR I-3087, and in Joined
Cases C-153/94 and C-204/94 Faroe Seafood and Others [1996] ECR I-2465, the
Court interpreted the provisions of administrative cooperation schemes similar to
the one at issue in the present case. Those judgments concerned, respectively, the
Agreement on free trade between the European Economic Community and the
Swiss Confederation, signed in Brussels on 22 July 1972 (OJ, English Special
Edition 1972 (31 December), p. 191), the Agreement on free trade between the
European Economic Community and the Republic of Austria, signed in Brussels
on 22 July 1972 (OJ, English Special Edition 1972 (31 December), p. 4), the
Agreement of 19 December 1972 establishing an Association between the
European Economic Community and the Republic of Cyprus (OJ 1973 L 133, p. 2),
and Commission Regulation (EEC) No 3184/74 of 6 December 1974 concerning
the definition of the concept of 'originating products' and methods of
administrative cooperation for the application of the customs procedure applicable
to certain products originating in and coming from the Faroe Islands (OJ 1974
L 344, p. 1).
- It follows from that case-law that determination of the origin of goods is based on
an allocation of responsibilities as between the authorities of the exporting country
and those of the importing country, origin being established by the authorities of
the exporting country, if necessary at the request of the authorities of the importing
country, and the proper working of that system being monitored jointly by the
authorities concerned on both sides. That system is justified by the fact that the
authorities of the exporting country are in the best position to verify directly the
facts which determine origin (Faroe Seafood, cited above, paragraph 19).
- In the same judgments, the Court also considered that that mechanism can function
only if the customs authorities of the importing country accept the determinations
legally made by the authorities of the exporting country (Faroe Seafood,
paragraph 20).
- The purpose of the 'results of the verification', within the meaning of Article 25(3)
of Annex II, is to allow the authorities of the Member State of importation to
determine whether the disputed EUR.1 certificate applies to the goods actually
exported and whether the goods can in fact qualify for the application of the
preferential arrangements. Article 25(3) does not imply any obligation on the part
of the authorities of the State of exportation to justify to the importer their
conclusions concerning the validity of the certificate.
- A communication such as that referred to by the question submitted may
accordingly be described as 'results of the verification' within the meaning of
Article 25(3) of Annex II.
- On the second point, Article 2(1) of Regulation No 1697/79 provides that, where
the competent authorities of the State of importation find that all or part of the
amount legally due has not been required of the person liable for payment, they
shall take action to recover the import duties not collected.
- Where the competent authorities of the State of exportation declare, following
subsequent verification, that an EUR.1 certificate does not apply to the goods
actually exported, that is sufficient to enable the authorities of the State of
importation to hold that duties legally due have not been required and
consequently institute proceedings to recover them. Nothing in the rules obliges
the latter authorities to establish the accuracy of the results of the verification or
the true origin of the goods.
- It is true that the system of administrative cooperation incorporates a mechanism
for regulating differences arising between the authorities of exporting States and
those of importing States, provided for in the second subparagraph of Article 25(3)
of Annex II. However, the authorities of the State of importation may always rely
on the results of the verification alone, without being obliged to have recourse to
that mechanism.
- As to the fact that the action for recovery was brought before the person liable
became aware of the reasons for the cancellation of the EUR.1 certificate, it is
sufficient to note that the onus of providing proof as to the origin of the goods rests
with the traders concerned.
- While that proof is, in principle, provided by the EUR.1 certificate, the person
liable cannot entertain a legitimate expectation with regard to the validity of such
a certificate by virtue of the fact that it was initially accepted by the customs
authorities of a Member State, since such initial acceptance does not prevent
subsequent checks from being carried out (see, to this effect, Faroe Seafood,
paragraph 93).
- It cannot therefore be argued that, by presenting an EUR.1 certificate, the person
liable has provided adequate proof that the goods in question came from the
country indicated, such that the authorities of the State of importation would, if
necessary, have to prove the contrary.
- In the light of those considerations, the answer to the third, fourth and fifth
questions must be, first, that a communication addressed to the authorities of the
State of importation by the authorities of the State of exportation following
subsequent verification of an EUR.1 certificate, in which the latter merely confirm
that the certificate in question was improperly issued and must therefore be
cancelled, without setting out in detail the reasons justifying cancellation, must be
regarded as 'results of ... verification' within the meaning of Article 25(3) of Annex
II, and, second, that the authorities of the State of importation are entitled to bring
an action for recovery of the uncollected customs duties on the basis of such a
communication alone, without seeking to establish the true origin of the goods
imported.
The first question (responsibility of the exporter under Article 10(1) of Annex II)
- The point of the first question is whether the responsibility of the exporter, as
referred to in Article 10(1) of Annex II, extends to customs duties which prove to
be due in respect of the importation into the European Community of goods which
are the subject of an EUR.1 certificate where the latter has been issued on the
basis of false information supplied by the exporter as to the origin of the goods and
has been cancelled following subsequent verification.
- Article 10 of Annex II makes the exporter responsible for submitting the request
for the EUR.1 certificate, along with, where relevant, any appropriate supporting
document proving that the goods to be exported are such as to qualify for the issue
of the certificate requested.
- That article, however, concerns only the procedure for obtaining the EUR.1
certificate and is not intended to identify the person required to pay any customs
debt which may be due in the State of importation.
- Under the Community legislation in force when the goods in question were
imported, the creation of the customs debt at the time of importation into the
European Community did not depend on the request made by the exporter but
resulted from the declaration of release of the goods into free circulation. The
person required to pay the customs debt was therefore the person in whose name
that declaration had been made.
- The answer to the first question must therefore be that the responsibility of the
exporter, as referred to in Article 10(1) of Annex II, does not extend to customs
duties which prove to be due in respect of the importation into the European
Community of goods which are the subject of an EUR.1 certificate, even where the
latter was issued on the basis of false information supplied by the exporter as to the
origin of the goods and was cancelled following subsequent verification.
The sixth question (general principles)
- The sixth question rests on the assumption that the exporter is liable for the
customs debt by reason of his fraudulent application for an EUR.1 certificate and
that, if the importer were to pay that debt, he would, to his own financial
detriment, be paying the debt of a third party, which would be contrary to the
principles of justice, prohibition of enrichment at the expense of others,
proportionality, legal certainty and good faith.
- This assumption is incorrect. As the Court noted in paragraph 46 of this judgment,
the person required to pay the customs debt is the person in whose name the
import declaration was made. Unless that person is also the exporter - which is
not the case here - the latter cannot be regarded as liable for the debt.
- That being so, it is necessary to examine whether, in circumstances such as those
in the main proceedings in this case, the obligation placed on the importer to pay
the customs debt is consistent with the general principles of law which the Court
must uphold.
- In its order for reference, the national court expresses the view that it would be
contrary to the 'principle of justice', recognized in Portuguese law, to impose on
an importer customs duties 'which should lawfully be paid by other persons'.
- It is not necessary to determine whether this principle is one of the general
principles of Community law, since an importer becomes liable for the customs
debt only if he has made the import declaration. That being so, he personally
assumes the obligation to pay the debt, which does not therefore rest on a third
party.
- The national court also takes the view that the exporter, as the party responsible
for the customs offence, would be unjustly enriched if the importer were to pay the
customs debt.
- However, if the obligation to pay the customs debt rests on the importer, a third
party cannot be enriched solely because the importer has paid that debt.
Nevertheless, that payment may give rise to an obligation on the part of the
exporter or another person towards the importer, legally distinct from the
importer's customs obligation, under which the latter may recover the amount
which he has paid to the customs authorities.
- Nor does the fact of imposing payment of the customs debt on the person who
declared the goods, even if he is an importer acting in good faith, constitute an
infringement of the principle of proportionality (see, to this effect, Faroe Seafood,
paragraph 114).
- With regard to the principle of legal certainty, suffice it to note that the
responsibility of the person liable to pay the customs debt is based on a clearly
defined legal situation which thus enables every trader to be aware of the risks
inherent in the market. This situation must be treated as coming within the
circumstances on the basis of which an importer such as Pascoal concluded the
contract in question.
- The fact that an importer has been acting in good faith does not release him from
his liability to pay the customs debt where it is he who has declared the imported
goods (see, to this effect, Case 827/79 Amministrazione delle Finanze v Acampora
[1980] ECR 3731, paragraph 8). If it did, the importer would have an incentive to
refrain from verifying the accuracy of the information which the exporter provided
to the authorities of the State of exportation and the exporter's good faith, which
would give rise to abuse.
- It should be added that, taking account of the information in the case-file, the fact
of requiring an importer who has acted in good faith, like Pascoal, to pay the
outstanding duties on goods in respect of which the exporter has committed a
customs offence does not offend against any general principle of law.
- Admittedly, the possibility of verifying the EUR.1 certificate following importation,
without the importer being given prior warning, may cause him difficulties where,
in good faith, he has imported goods benefiting from preferential tariffs in reliance
on certificates which are incorrect or were falsified without his knowledge. It must,
however, be pointed out, first, that the European Community cannot be made to
bear the adverse consequences of the wrongful acts of suppliers of importers,
second, that the importer may seek compensation from the perpetrator of the
fraud, and, finally, that, in calculating the benefits from trade in goods likely to
obtain tariff preferences, a prudent trader aware of the rules must assess the risks
inherent in the market which he is considering and accept them as normal trade
risks (see, to this effect, Acampora, cited above, paragraph 8).
- As the Court pointed out in Faroe Seafood, at paragraph 114, it is the responsibility
of traders to make the necessary arrangements in their contractual relations in
order to guard against the risks of an action for post-clearance recovery.
- It follows that the fact of requiring an importer who has acted in good faith to pay
customs duties payable on the importation of goods in respect of which the
exporter has committed a customs offence, where the importer has played no part
in that offence, is not contrary to the general principles of law which the Court is
required to uphold.
The seventh question (negligence on the part of the authorities of the State of
exportation)
- The point of the seventh question is whether the fact that the authorities of the
State of exportation issued an EUR.1 certificate pursuant to Decision 86/283
without having carried out any prior check to determine the true origin of the
goods in question constitutes a case of force majeure preventing post-clearance
recovery of customs duties owed by an importer who has acted in good faith.
- The case of force majeure is not provided for in Decision 86/283. In the absence
of specific provisions, this concept must be understood as covering abnormal and
unforeseeable circumstances beyond the control of the trader concerned, whose
consequences could not have been avoided despite the exercise of all due care, so
that conduct of the public authorities may, according to the circumstances,
constitute a case of force majeure (Huygen, cited above, paragraph 31).
- According to Article 8(2) of Annex II, in order to verify the origin of goods, the
authorities of the State of exportation 'have the right to call for any documentary
evidence or to carry out any check which they consider appropriate'.
- It follows that the authorities of the State of exportation are entitled, but not
obliged, to carry out such a prior check and that they may, if they consider it
appropriate, be satisfied with the information which the exporter has provided in
his request.
- In those circumstances, the fact that those authorities decided, in a specific case,
not to exercise that option cannot preclude post-clearance recovery of a customs
debt which subsequently proves to be due. Such a situation cannot be described
as constituting force majeure, since it is neither abnormal nor unforeseeable.
- The answer to the seventh question must therefore be that the fact that the
authorities of the State of exportation issued an EUR.1 certificate pursuant to
Decision 86/283 without having carried out any prior check to determine the true
origin of the goods in question does not constitute a case of force majeure
preventing post-clearance recovery of customs duties owed by an importer who has
acted in good faith.
Costs
- The costs incurred by the Portuguese and French Governments, the Council of the
European Union and the Commission of the European Communities, which have
submitted observations to the Court, are not recoverable. Since these proceedings
are, for the parties to the main proceedings, a step in the action pending before the
national court, the decision on costs is a matter for that court.
On those grounds,THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
in answer to the questions referred to it by the Tribunal Tributário de Segunda
Instância by order of 29 November 1994, hereby rules:
- A communication addressed to the authorities of the State of importation
by the authorities of the State of exportation following subsequent
verification of an EUR.1 movement certificate, in which the latter merely
confirm that the certificate in question was improperly issued and must
therefore be cancelled, without setting out in detail the reasons justifying
cancellation, must be regarded as 'results of ... verification' within the
meaning of Article 25(3) of Annex II to Council Decision 86/283/EEC of
30 June 1986 on the association of the overseas countries and territories
with the European Economic Community. The authorities of the State of
importation are entitled to bring an action for recovery of the uncollected
customs duties on the basis of such a communication alone, without
seeking to establish the true origin of the goods imported.
- The responsibility of the exporter, as referred to in Article 10(1) of
Annex II to Decision 86/283, does not extend to customs duties which prove
to be due in respect of the importation into the European Community of
goods which are the subject of an EUR.1 movement certificate, even where
the latter was issued on the basis of false information supplied by the
exporter as to the origin of the goods and was cancelled following
subsequent verification.
- The fact of requiring an importer who has acted in good faith to pay
customs duties payable on the importation of goods in respect of which the
exporter has committed a customs offence, where the importer has played
no part in that offence, is not contrary to the general principles of law
which the Court is required to uphold.
- The fact that the authorities of the State of exportation issued an EUR.1
movement certificate pursuant to Decision 86/283 without having carried
out any prior check to determine the true origin of the goods in question
does not constitute a case of force majeure preventing post-clearance
recovery of customs duties owed by an importer who has acted in good
faith.
Moitinho de AlmeidaSevón
Edward
Jann Wathelet
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 17 July 1997.
R. Grass
J.C. Moitinho de Almeida
Registrar
President of the Fifth Chamber
1: Language of the case: Portuguese.
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/1997/C9795.html