| |
This is a Thumbnail picture click to get original picture
Picture is copyright DBF. Source: Tidskrift
for Biavl Mai 1997. dbf@biavl.dk
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fifth Chamber)
3 December 1998 (1)
(Free movement of goods — Prohibition of quantitative
restrictions and measures having equivalent effect between Member States —
Derogation's — Protection of the health and life of animals —
Bees of the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee))
In Case C-67/97,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the
Kriminalret i Frederikshavn (Denmark) for a preliminary ruling in the criminal
proceedings before that court against
Ditlev Bluhme,
on the interpretation of Article 30 of the EC Treaty and Article 2 of
Council Directive 91/174/EEC of 25 March 1991 laying down zootechnical and
pedigree requirements for the marketing of pure-bred animals and amending
Directives 77/504/EEC and 90/425/EEC (OJ 1991 L 85, p. 37),
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of: J.-P. Puissochet, President of the Chamber, J.C. Moitinho de
Almeida, C. Gulmann, L. Sevó® (Rapporteur) and M. Wathelet, Judges,
Advocate General: N. Fennelly,
Registrar: H. von Holstein, Deputy Registrar,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
— Mr Bluhme, by Uffe Baller, of the Ųhus
Bar,
— the Danish Government, by Peter Biering,
Head of Division in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting as Agent,
— the Italian Government, by Professor
Umberto Leanza, Head of the Legal Service in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
acting as Agent, assisted by Francesca Quadri, Avvocato dello Stato,
— the Norwegian Government, by Jan
Bugge-Mahrt, Deputy Director General in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
acting as Agent,
— the Commission of the European Communities,
by Hans Stø¶¬b櫬 of its Legal Service, acting as Agent,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of Mr Bluhme, represented by Uffe
Baller, the Danish Government, represented by Jørgen Molde, Head of Division
at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting as Agent, the Italian Government,
represented by Francesca Quadri, and the Commission, represented by Hans Stø¶¬bæ« at
the hearing on 30 April 1998,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 16 June
1998,
gives the following
Judgment
- 1.
- By order of 3 July 1995, received at the Court on
17 February 1997, the Kriminalret i Frederikshavn (Criminal Court,
Frederikshavn) referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling under Article
177 of the EC Treaty a number of questions on the interpretation of Article
30 of the EC Treaty and Article 2 of Council Directive 91/174/EEC of 25
March 1991 laying down zootechnical and pedigree requirements for the
marketing of pure-bred animals and amending Directives 77/504/EEC and
90/425/EEC (OJ 1991 L 85, p. 37, hereinafter 'the Directive'˜).
- 2.
- The questions have been raised in criminal
proceedings brought against Ditlev Bluhme for infringement of Danish
legislation prohibiting the keeping on the island
of Læsø¸ of bees other than those of the subspecies Apis mellifera
mellifera (Læsø¸ brown bee).
- 3.
- Article 1 of the Directive provides:
'For the purposes of this Directive "pure-bred animal" shall
mean any animal for breeding covered by Annex II to the Treaty the trade in
which has not yet been the subject of more specific Community zootechnical
legislation and which is entered or registered in a register or pedigree
record kept by a recognised breeders' organisation or association.'
- 4.
- Article 2 of the Directive provides:
'Member States shall ensure that:
— the marketing of pure-bred animals and of
the semen, ova and embryos thereof is not prohibited, restricted or impeded
on zootechnical or pedigree grounds,
— in order to ensure that the requirement
provided for in the first indent is satisfied, the criteria for approval and
recognition of breeders' organisations or associations, the criteria for
entry or registration in pedigree records or registers, the criteria for
approval for reproduction of pure-bred animals and for the use of their
semen, ova and embryos, and the certificate to be required for their
marketing should be established in a non-discriminatory manner, with due
regard for the principles laid down by the organisation or association which
maintains the register or pedigree record of the breed in question.
Pending the implementation of detailed rules for application as provided
for in Article 6, national laws shall remain applicable with due regard for
the general provisions of the Treaty.‘
- 5.
- Article 6 of the Directive provides that the
detailed rules for application of the Directive are to be adopted in
accordance with the so-called 'committee‘ procedure. No such rules
have been adopted in relation to bees.
- 6.
- In Denmark, Article 14a of Law No 115 of 31 March
1982 on beekeeping (lov om biavl), introduced by Law No 267 of 6 May 1993,
authorises the Minister for Agriculture to enact provisions to protect
certain species of bee in certain areas defined by him, and in particular
provisions concerning the removal or destruction of swarms of bees regarded
as undesirable for protection reasons. Article 1 of Decision No 528 of 24
June 1993 on the keeping of bees on the island of L泸 (Bekendtgørelse
om biavl på Læsø hereinafter 'the Decision‘), which was
adopted pursuant to that enabling provision, prohibits the keeping on
L泸 and
certain neighbouring islands of nectar-gathering bees other than those of
the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (Læsø¸ brown bee).
- 7.
- The Decision also provides, in Article 2, for the
removal or destruction of those other swarms or the replacement of their
queen by one of the L泸 brown bee subspecies. Article 6 prohibits the
introduction onto L泸 or neighbouring islands of living domestic bees,
whatever their stage of development, or of reproductive material for
domestic bees. Finally, Article 7 of the Decision provides for full State
compensation in respect of any loss duly proved to have resulted from the
destruction of a swarm pursuant to the Decision.
- 8.
- Mr Bluhme, who is being prosecuted for keeping on
L泸 bees other than those of the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera
(L泸 brown bee), in breach of the Decision, argues inter alia that
Article 30 of the Treaty precludes the national legislation.
- 9.
- Taking the view that resolution of the dispute
before it depended on the interpretation of Community law, the Kriminalret
decided to stay the proceedings and to refer the following questions to the
Court:
'I Concerning the interpretation of Article 30 of
the EC Treaty:
(1) Can Article 30 be interpreted as meaning that
a Member State may, under certain circumstances, introduce rules prohibiting
the keeping — and consequently the importation — of all bees
other than bees belonging to the species Apis mellifera mellifera
(L泸 brown bee) with regard to a specific island in the country in
question, for example, an island of 114 km2, one half of which
consists of country villages and small ports, and is used for purposes of
tourism or agriculture, while the other half consists of uncultivated land,
that is to say, plantations, moorland, meadows, tidal meadows, beaches and
dunes, which had on 1 January 1997 a population of 2 365, and which is an
island on which opportunities for gainful activity are in general limited
but where beekeeping constitutes one of the few forms of gainful activity by
reason of the island's special flora and high proportion of uncultivated and
extensively used land?
(2) If a Member State can introduce such rules,
the Court is requested to describe in general the conditions governing those
rules and in particular to answer the following questions:
(a) Can a Member State
introduce such rules as described in (1) on the ground that the rules
concern solely such an island as described and that the effect of the rules
is therefore geographically limited?
(b) Can a Member State
introduce such rules as described in (1) if the reason for those rules lies
in the desire to protect the bee strain Apis
mellifera mellifera against eradication, an objective which, in the
Member State's opinion, can be attained by excluding all other bee strains
from the island in question?
In the criminal
proceedings underlying this order for reference, the accused:
— disputes
that there is at all any such bee strain as Apis mellifera mellifera
and submits that the bees at present to be found on L泸 are a mixture of
different bee strains;
— submits
that the brown bees to be found on L泸 are not unique but are found in
many parts of the world; and
— submits
that those bees are not threatened with eradication.
In its response, the
Court is therefore requested to indicate whether it is sufficient that the
Member State in question considers it appropriate or necessary to introduce
the rules as a step in preserving the bee population in question, or whether
it must be regarded as a further condition that the bee strain exists,
and/or that it is unique, and/or that it is threatened with eradication if
the import ban is not valid or cannot be enforced.
(c) If the grounds set out
in (a) or in (b) cannot make it lawful to introduce such rules, can a
combination of those grounds make it so lawful?
II Concerning Council Directive 91/174/EEC of 25
March 1991 laying down zootechnical and pedigree requirements for the
marketing of pure-bred animals and amending Directives 77/504/EEC and
90/425/EEC:
(1) Under what circumstances can a bee be a
pure-bred animal within the meaning attached to those words by Article 2 of
Directive 91/174? Is a golden bee, for example, a pure-bred animal?
(2) What constitutes a zootechnical ground
(Article 2)?
(3) What constitutes a pedigree ground (Article
2)?
(4) Must Directive 91/174 be understood as meaning
that a Member State may, notwithstanding the Directive, ban the importation
onto an island such as that described in Question 1 of Part I and the
existence there of all bees other than bees belonging to the strain Apis
mellifera mellifera?
If a Member State can do so under certain
conditions, the Court is requested to set out those conditions.‘
Part II of the questions
- 10.
- By its questions the national court is essentially
asking the Court to give an interpretation of Article 1 and the first
paragraph of Article 2 of the Directive.
- 11.
- It should however be pointed out that, as the
Danish Government and the Commission have rightly observed, no detailed
rules for applying the Directive in relation to bees have been adopted under
the procedure provided for by Article 6 of the Directive.
- 12.
- Therefore, pursuant to the second paragraph of
Article 2 of the Directive, national laws remain applicable, subject,
however, to due regard for the general provisions of the Treaty.
- 13.
- It is therefore in relation to Articles 30 and 36
of the EC Treaty that legislation such as that at issue in the main
proceedings must be examined.
Part I of the questions
- 14.
- By its questions the national court is essentially
asking whether national legislation prohibiting the keeping of any species
of bee on an island such as L泸 other than the subspecies Apis
mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee) constitutes a measure having
equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction within the meaning of
Article 30 of the Treaty and whether, if that is the case, such legislation
may be justified on the ground of the protection of the health and life of
animals.
Existence of a measure having equivalent effect
- 15.
- Mr Bluhme and the Commission consider that a
prohibition on the keeping on the island of L泸 of bees other than those
belonging to the L泸 brown species involves a prohibition on
importation, and thus constitutes a measure having equivalent effect
contrary to Article 30 of the Treaty. Mr Bluhme considers that the
legislation at issue in the main proceedings effectively precludes the
importation onto the island of L泸 of bees from Member States. The
Commission adds in that respect that Article 30 also applies to measures
that concern only part of the territory of a Member State.
- 16.
- The Danish, Italian and Norwegian Governments, on
the other hand, maintain that the establishment of pure breeding areas for a
given species in a delimited geographical area within a Member State does
not affect trade between Member States. The Danish and Norwegian Governments
further maintain that the prohibition on importing onto the island of
L泸 bees other than L泸 brown bees
does not constitute discrimination in respect of bees originating in
other Member States, is not intended to regulate trade between Member
States, and has effects on trade that are too hypothetical and uncertain to
be regarded as a measure likely to obstruct it.
- 17.
- The Danish Government also argues that, since the
national legislation does not concern the access of bees as goods to the
Danish market, but merely regulates the conditions under which bees may be
kept within that Member State, it falls outside the scope of Article 30 of
the Treaty.
- 18.
- On that point, the Court observes that its
case-law has long established that all measures capable of hindering
intra-Community trade, whether directly or indirectly, actually or
potentially, constitute measures having an effect equivalent to quantitative
restrictions (Case 8/74 Procureur du Roi v Dassonville [1974]
ECR 837, paragraph 5).
- 19.
- In so far as Article 6 of the legislative measure
at issue in the main proceedings involves a general prohibition on the
importation onto L泸 and neighbouring islands of living bees and
reproductive material for domestic bees, it also prohibits their importation
from other Member States, so that it is capable of hindering intra-Community
trade. It therefore constitutes a measure having an effect equivalent to a
quantitative restriction.
- 20.
- That conclusion is not altered by the fact that
the measure in question applies to only part of the national territory (on
this point, see Joined Cases C-1/90 and C-176/90 Aragonesa de Publicidad
and Publiví¡¼/i> v Departamento de Sanidad [1991] ECR I-4151,
paragraph 24; Joined Cases C-277/91, C-318/91 and C-319/91 Ligur Carni and
Others [1993] ECR I-6621, paragraph 37).
- 21.
- Moreover, contrary to the Danish Government's
argument that the prohibition on keeping certain bees on the island of
L泸 must be regarded as a regulation on selling arrangements within
the meaning of the judgment in Joined Cases C-267/91 and C-268/91 Keck and
Mithouard [1993] ECR I-6097, this Court finds, on the contrary, that the
legislation in question concerns the intrinsic characteristics of the
bees. In those circumstances, its application to the facts of the case
cannot be a matter of a selling arrangement within the meaning of the
judgment in Keck and Mithouard (Case C-368/95 Familiapress v Heinrich
Bauer Verlag [1997] ECR I-3689, paragraph 11).
- 22.
- Finally, as the Advocate General points out at
point 19 of his Opinion, since the Decision prohibits the importation of
bees from other Member States onto a part of Danish territory, it has a
direct and immediate impact on trade, and not effects too uncertain and
too indirect for the obligation which it lays down not to be capable of
being regarded as being of such a kind as to hinder trade between Member
States.
- 23.
- It follows that a legislative measure
prohibiting the keeping on an island such as L泸 of any species of bee
other than the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee)
constitutes a measure having an effect equivalent to a quantitative
restriction within the meaning of Article 30 of the Treaty.
Justification for legislation such as that at issue in the main
proceedings
- 24.
- Mr Bluhme argues that the legislation in
question cannot be justified on any ground, especially since, in his
submission, there is no subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown
bee) that is genetically distinct and unique to the island of L泸.
Moreover, since such legislation does not fall within the scope of health
policy, he submits that it cannot be justified under Council Directive
92/65/EEC of 13 July 1992 laying down animal health requirements governing
trade in and imports into the Community of animals, semen, ova and embryos
not subject to animal health requirements laid down in specific Community
rules referred to in Annex A (I) to Directive 90/425/EEC (OJ 1992 L 268,
p. 54).
- 25.
- The Danish Government considers that, should the
Court regard the prohibition laid down by the Decision as a measure having
an effect equivalent to a quantitative restriction, it is a measure
applying to bees indiscriminately whatever their State of provenance which
is justified by the aim of protecting biological diversity, such aim being
recognised, inter alia, by Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on
the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora (OJ 1992
L 206, p. 7) and by the Convention on Biological Diversity signed at Rio
de Janeiro on 5 June 1992, approved on behalf of the European Community by
Council Decision 93/626/EEC of 25 October 1993 (OJ 1993 L 309, p. 1;
hereinafter 'the Rio Convention‘). The Danish Government goes on to
explain that the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee)
is disappearing and can be preserved only on the island of L泸, so
that the measure adopted is necessary to prevent the disappearance of the
species and is proportionate to the aim pursued. Moreover, the Decision
does not affect the possibility of carrying on bee-keeping on the island
but merely regulates the species of bee which may be used.
- 26.
- The Danish Government concludes by referring to
numerous scientific studies establishing the particular nature of that
subspecies of bee in relation to others.
- 27.
- As its main argument, the Norwegian Government
submits that the Danish legislation is justified on environmental
protection grounds in accordance with Article 30 of the Treaty and the
judgment in Case 120/78 REWE-Zentral v Bundesmonopolverwaltung fü² Branntwein
[1979] ECR 649 ('Cassis de Dijon‘), paragraph 8.
- 28.
- In the alternative, like the Italian Government
and the Commission, it considers that the preservation of a rare and
threatened species falls within the protection of the health and life of
animals referred to in Article 36 of the Treaty.
- 29.
- In the Norwegian Government's submission, the
establishment of pure breeding areas is the only means of preserving the
L泸 brown bee.
- 30.
- The Commission maintains that the same ground of
justification should be upheld if the species were not rare and
threatened, but it was desirable on scientific grounds to breed a pure
strain.
- 31.
- On the question of the existence of a
disappearing subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee), the
Commission considers that this is an evidential matter which is therefore
one for the national court to determine. It maintains that the prohibition
should not extend to the keeping of brown bees of the species Apis
mellifera mellifera from other Member States or from non-member countries
in the absence of a valid reason to justify such a restriction, and points
out that such a prohibition must not constitute a means of arbitrary
discrimination or be aimed at protecting certain occupational interests.
- 32.
- The Italian Government states that there are
several subspecies of Apis mellifera mellifera, identifiable as strains
and within the latter as ecotypes, representing the result of a natural
process of adaptation to environmental conditions and various territories.
- 33.
- On this question, the Court considers that
measures to preserve an indigenous animal population with distinct
characteristics contribute to the maintenance of biodiversity by ensuring
the survival of the population concerned. By so doing, they are aimed at
protecting the life of those animals and are capable of being justified
under Article 36 of the Treaty.
- 34.
- From the point of view of such conservation of
biodiversity, it is immaterial whether the object of protection is a
separate subspecies, a distinct strain within any given species or merely
a local colony, so long as the populations in question have
characteristics distinguishing them from others and are therefore judged
worthy of protection either to shelter them from a risk of extinction that
is more or less imminent, or, even in the absence of such risk, on account
of a scientific or other interest in preserving the pure population at the
location concerned.
- 35.
- It does, however, have to be determined whether
the national legislation was necessary and proportionate in relation to
its aim of protection, or whether it would have been possible to achieve
the same result by less stringent measures (Case 124/81 Commission v
United Kingdom [1983] ECR 203, paragraph 16).
- 36.
- Conservation of biodiversity through the
establishment of areas in which a population enjoys special protection,
which is a method recognised in the Rio Convention, especially Article 8a
thereof, is already put into practice in Community law [in particular, by
means of the special protection areas provided for in Council
Directive 79/409/EEC of 2 April 1979 on the conservation of wild birds
(OJ 1979 L 103, p. 1), or the special conservation areas provided for in
Directive 92/43].
- 37.
- As for the threat of the disappearance of the
L泸 brown bee, it is undoubtedly genuine in the event of mating with
golden bees by reason of the recessive nature of the genes of the brown
bee. The establishment by the national legislation of a protection area
within which the keeping of bees other than L泸 brown bees is
prohibited, for the purpose of ensuring the survival of the latter,
therefore constitutes an appropriate measure in relation to the aim
pursued.
- 38.
- The answer to be given must therefore be that a
national legislative measure prohibiting the keeping on an island such as
L泸 of any species of bee other than the subspecies Apis mellifera
mellifera (L泸 brown bee) must be regarded as justified, under Article
36 of the Treaty, on the ground of the protection of the health and life
of animals.
Costs
- 39.
- The costs incurred by the Danish, Italian and
Norwegian Governments and by the Commission, 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 proceedings
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 Kriminalret i
Frederikshavn by order of 3 July 1995, hereby rules:
1. A national legislative measure prohibiting
the keeping on an island such as L泸 of any species of bee other than
the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee) constitutes a
measure having an effect equivalent to a quantitative restriction within
the meaning of Article 30 of the EC Treaty.
2. A national legislative measure prohibiting
the keeping on an island such as L泸 of any species of bee other than
the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera (L泸 brown bee) must be
regarded as justified, under Article 36 of the Treaty, on the ground of
the protection of the health and life of animals.
Puissochet Moitinho de Almeida
Gulmann
Sevó®
Wathelet |
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 3 December 1998.
R. Grass
J.-P. Puissochet
Registrar
President of the Fifth Chamber
1: Language of the case: Danish.
Bidata and Pollendata are
trademarks of Apimo Biavl. All other products mentioned are
registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective companies.
Questions or problems regarding this web site
should be directed to apimo@apimo.dk
Copyright © februar, 2010 Apimo Biavl.
All rights reserved.
Last modified: lørdag februar 27, 2010.
|