JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Fourth Chamber, Extended
Composition)
11 December 2001 (1)
(Transparency - Public access to documents - Commission Decision
94/90/ECSC, EC, Euratom - Proceedings for failure to fulfil obligations
- Formal notice - Reasoned opinion - Exception relating to protection
of the public interest - Inspections and investigations - Court
proceedings - Authorship rule - Direct effect of Article 255
EC)
In Case T-191/99,
David Petrie , Victoria Jane Primhak and David
Verzoni , residing respectively in Verona, Naples and Bologna
(Italy),
Associazione lettori di lingua straniera in Italia, incorporating
Committee for the Defence of Foreign Lecturers (ALLS I/CDFL),
established in Verona,
represented by L. Picotti and C. Medernach, avocats, with
an address for service in Luxembourg,
applicants,
v
Commission of the European Communities, represented
by P. Stancanelli and U. Wölker, acting as Agents, with
an address for service in Luxembourg,
defendant,
APPLICATION for the annulment of the Commission decision of
20 July 1999 refusing access to documents relating to Infringement
Procedure No 96/2208 brought under Article 226 EC against the
Italian Republic and concerning the situation of foreign-language
lecturers employed in Italian universities,
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (Fourth Chamber, Extended Composition),
composed of: P. Mengozzi, President, R. García-Valdecasas,
V. Tiili, R.M. Moura Ramos and J.D. Cooke, Judges,
Registrar: J. Palacio González, Administrator,
having regard to the written procedure and further to the
hearing on 14 March 2001,
gives the following
Judgment
Legal framework
- 1.
- In the Final Act of the Treaty on European Union, signed
at Maastricht on 7 February 1992, the Member States incorporated
a declaration (Declaration No 17) on the right of access to information,
which states that:
'The Conference considers that transparency of the decision-making
process strengthens the democratic nature of the institutions
and the public's confidence inthe administration. The Conference
accordingly recommends that the Commission submit to the Council
no later than 1993 a report on measures designed to improve public
access to the information available to the institutions.
- 2.
- On 6 December 1993, the Council and the Commission approved
a Code of Conduct concerning public access to Council and Commission
Documents (OJ 1993 L 340, p. 41) ('the Code of Conduct), designed
to establish the principles governing access to the documents
held by them.
- 3.
- With a view to guaranteeing implementation of that Code,
the Commission, on 8 February 1994, adopted Decision 94/90/ECSC,
EC, Euratom on public access to Commission documents (OJ 1994
L 46, p. 58), Article 1 of which formally adopts the Code of
Conduct, the text of which is set out in the annex to that decision.
- 4.
- The Code of Conduct lays down the following general principle:
'The public will have the widest possible access to documents
held by the Commission and the Council.
- 5.
- The term 'document is defined as 'any written text, whatever
its medium, which contains existing data and is held by the Commission
or the Council.
- 6.
- Under the third paragraph of the section headed 'Processing
of initial applications, the Code of Conduct provides as follows
(the 'authorship rule):
'Where the document held by an institution was written by
a natural or legal person, a Member State, another Community
institution or body [or] any other national or international
body, the application must be sent direct to the author.
- 7.
- The matters which an institution may invoke in order to justify
refusal of an application for access to documents are set out
as follows under the heading of the Code of Conduct entitled
'Exceptions:
'The institutions will refuse access to any document where
disclosure could undermine:
- the protection of the public interest (public security,
international relations, monetary stability, court proceedings,
inspections and investigations),
...
They may also refuse access in order to protect the institution's
interest in the confidentiality of its proceedings.
- 8.
- On 4 March 1994 the Commission adopted a communication on
improved access to documents (OJ 1994 C 67, p. 5), setting out
details of the criteria for implementation of Decision 94/90.
That communication states that 'anyone may ... ask for access
to any unpublished Commission document, including preparatory
documents and other explanatory material. In regard to the exceptions
provided for under the Code of Conduct, the communication states:
'the Commission may take the view that access to a document should
be refused because its disclosure could undermine public and
private interests and the good functioning of the institution.
It further states in this regard: 'There is nothing automatic
about the exemptions, and each request for access to a document
will be considered on its own merits.
- 9.
- Under the Treaty of Amsterdam, which entered into force on
1 May 1999, the Member States incorporated a new article on access
to documents in the EC Treaty. Article 255 EC provides:
'1. Any citizen of the Union, and any natural or legal person
residing or having its registered office in a Member State, shall
have a right of access to European Parliament, Council and Commission
documents, subject to the principles and the conditions to be
defined in accordance with paragraphs 2 and 3.
2. General principles and limits on grounds of public or private
interest governing this right of access to documents shall be
determined by the Council, acting in accordance with the procedure
referred to in Article 251 within two years of the entry into
force of the Treaty of Amsterdam.
3. Each institution referred to above shall elaborate in its
own Rules of Procedure specific provisions regarding access to
its documents.
- 10.
- In addition, Article 1, second paragraph, EU provides:
'This Treaty marks a new stage in the process of creating
an ever closer union among the peoples of Europe, in which decisions
are taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to
the citizen.
- 11.
- On 30 May 2001 the European Parliament and the Council, pursuant
to Article 255(2) EC, adopted Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 regarding
public access to European Parliament, Council and Commission
documents (OJ 2001 L 145, p. 43).
Facts of the dispute
- 12.
- The applicants, who are natural persons, held posts as lecturer
of foreign mother tongue at a number of Italian universities.
This post was discontinued and replaced, in 1995, by that of
'assistant and mother tongue language expert. In the present
proceedings, Mr Petrie is acting on his own behalf and as the
legalrepresentative of the Associazione lettori di lingua straniera
in Italia, incorporating Committee for the Defence of Foreign
Lecturers (ALLSI/CDFL), a union organisation set up to represent
and protect the category of lecturers in question.
- 13.
- In its judgments in Case 33/88 Allué and Coonan
[1989] ECR 1591 and in Joined Cases C-259/91, C-331/91 and C-332/91
Allué and Others [1993] ECR I-4309, the Court of
Justice ruled that the continued and systematic use by Italian
universities of fixed-term contracts to meet ongoing needs in
language teaching was incompatible with Community law where such
a limit did not in principle exist in regard to other areas of
teaching. Notwithstanding those judgments and the subsequent
reform of foreign-language teaching in Italian universities,
the applicants take the view that discrimination against former
lecturers of foreign mother tongue still persists.
- 14.
- Following a number of complaints, the Commission opened infringement
proceedings under Article 226 EC against the Italian Republic.
It sent a letter of formal notice, dated 23 December 1996, to
the Italian Government. Subsequently, by reasoned opinion of
16 May 1997, the Commission requested that Government to set
out its views on the complaints raised. Following receipt of
the Italian Government's response, the Commission recast the
heads of complaint by way of a supplementary letter of formal
notice of 9 July 1998. On 28 January 1999 the Commission issued
a supplementary reasoned opinion. As a result of that procedure,
the Commission brought the matter before the Court of Justice
in June 1999.
- 15.
- As they considered that the situation presented to the Commission
did not reflect the true state of affairs, the applicants, with
a view to examining the content of the documents in the Commission's
possession relating to Infringement Procedure No 96/2208, requested,
by letter of 1 April 1999 addressed to the Commission's Directorate-General
'Employment, Industrial Relations and Social Affairs, access
to the following documents:
(a) telex No 1923/I.2/93 of 2 November 1993 from the Ministero
dell'Università e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica
(Italian Ministry responsible for Universities and for Scientific
and Technological Research) ('the MURST) to the rectors of Italian
universities concerning the suspension of all relations or activity
with lecturers following the judgment in Allué and
Others, cited above;
(b) letter of formal notice of 23 December 1996 opening Infringement
Procedure No 96/2208 and the documents attached thereto;
(c) letter of reply from the MURST to the Commission of 7
March 1997 (reference 562) and, if relevant, the attached documents;
(d) reasoned opinion of the Commission of 16 May 1997 concerning
Infringement Procedure No 96/2208 and related annexes;
(e) all of the documents relating to the activity of the MURST,
the Conference of Rectors, the Department of Community Policies
and of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in order to obtain the
other material requested by the Commission in its reasoned opinion
of 16 May 1997, which include, for example, requests for information,
counter-arguments or documents sent to the Italian universities
or other bodies or administrative authorities and the replies
received from these, together with a summary list;
(f) memorandum of July 1997 and/or 7 August or 21 August 1997
from the MURST to the Commission (through the intermediary of
the Office of the Italian Permanent Representative) and the attached
documents with the results of the previous investigation;
(g) memorandum of 12 September 1997 from the Department of
Community Policies to the Commission and related documents;
(h) communiqué of 19 and 20 December 1997 from
Ambassador Cavalchini to the MURST;
(i) the Commission's supplementary letter of formal notice
of 9 July 1998;
(l) memorandum of 7 August 1998 from the MURST to the Italian
universities and the list of the Italian universities to which
that memorandum was addressed;
(m) memoranda No 2599 of 10 August 1998 and No 3830 of 16
November 1998 from the MURST to the Commission;
(n) counter-arguments and documents sent by the Italian universities
in reply to the MURST's memorandum of 7 August 1998, and the
list thereof;
(o) memorandum of 10 December 1997 from the MURST to the Office
of the Italian Permanent Representative to the European Union;
(p) ministerial circulars interpreting Article 4 of Italian
Law No 236/95, in particular that of 7 August 1998 from the MURST
to the rectors of the Italian universities bearing the signature
of Under-Secretary Luciano Guerzoni;
(q) the Commission's supplementary reasoned opinion of 28
January 1999;
(r) any other document or measure not included in the above
list and relating to the investigations and requests for information
from the MURSTconcerning the Italian universities with regard
to the situation of lecturers and/or language assistants following
the judgment in Allué and Others and the entry
into force of Italian Law No 236/95, and in any event relating
to the Italian State's defence in the abovementioned infringement
procedure, including the reply, if any, to the reasoned opinion
referred to under (q).
- 16.
- By letter of 3 May 1999 the Commission refused access to
the aforementioned documents. The applicants thereupon confirmed
their request for access by letter of 3 June 1999.
- 17.
- After briefly extending, by letter of 2 July 1999, the period
for replying to that request, the Secretary-General of the Commission,
by decision of 20 July 1999, rejected the confirmative request
(hereinafter 'the decision or 'the contested decision). The decision
is drafted in the following terms:
'... I would first like to confirm that the documents mentioned
in your letter under references (a), (c), (e), (f), (g), (h),
(l), (m), (n) and (p) are not Commission documents, having been
provided by the Italian authorities. I therefore suggest that
you contact directly those authorities in order to obtain copies
of those documents. Even though the general principle in the
Code of Conduct concerning public access to Commission and Council
documents provides that the public will have the widest possible
access to documents held by the Commission and the Council, the
fifth paragraph of that Code states that where the document held
by an institution was written by a natural or legal person, a
Member State, another Community institution or body [or] any
other national or international body, the application must be
sent direct to the author.
Concerning the documents mentioned in your letter under references
(b), (d), (i) and (q), which are Commission documents, I regret
to inform you that, after detailed consideration of your request,
I am obliged to confirm the refusal by Mr [Larsson] in so far
as disclosure of those documents might adversely affect the protection
of the public interest and in particular the conduct of investigations
liable to result in the opening of the procedure under Article
226 EC (formerly Article 169 of the EC Treaty). The Code of Conduct
expressly provides for this exception.
It is vital that the Commission should be able to conduct
investigations into issues in which it has a direct interest
as guardian of the Treaties, while at the same time respecting
the intrinsic nature of such proceedings. Infringement investigations
call for genuine cooperation and an atmosphere of mutual trust
between the Commission and the Member State concerned so as to
enable those two parties to open discussions with a view to a
rapid resolution of the dispute.
This attitude is consistent with the judgment of the Court
of First Instance in Case T-105/95 WWF UK v Commission
[1997] ECR II-313, paragraph 63 of which statesthat: In this
regard, the Court considers that the confidentiality which the
Member States are entitled to expect of the Commission in such
circumstances warrants, under the heading of protection of the
public interest, a refusal of access to documents relating to
investigations which may lead to an infringement procedure, even
where a period of time has elapsed since the closure of the investigation.
Furthermore, disclosure of those documents, which concern
proceedings that are pending (Infringement Procedure No 96/2208
against Italy), could have an adverse effect on another public
interest referred to in the Code of Conduct, namely the proper
conduct of court proceedings. Such disclosure would be liable
to affect the interests of the parties involved and could adversely
impact on the specific rules governing submission of documents
in connection with those proceedings ...
Procedure and forms of order sought by the parties
- 18.
- By application lodged at the Court Registry on 25 August
1999, the applicants brought the present action.
- 19.
- The parties presented oral argument and replied to the questions
put by the Court at the hearing on 14 March 2001.
- 20.
- The applicants claim that the Court should:
- annul the Commission's decision contained in the letters
of 3 May 1999 and 20 July 1999 in so far as it refuses access
to the documents held by the Commission concerning Infringement
Procedure No 96/2208 brought under Article 226 EC against the
Italian Republic;
- declare that the applicants have a right of access to those
documents and order the Commission to allow such access;
- order the Commission to pay the costs.
- 21.
- The defendant claims that the Court should:
- primarily, declare the action inadmissible in its entirety
on grounds of absence of locus standi;
- in the alternative, dismiss as unfounded the application
for annulment of the contested decision;
- declare inadmissible the application for recognition of
the applicants' right of access to the documents in question
and the application for an order requiring the Commission to
allow such access;
- order the applicants to bear the costs.
- 22.
- At the hearing, the applicants withdrew their application
for annulment in so far as it relates to the decision contained
in the Commission's letter of 3 May 1999. They also withdrew
their application for a declaration that they have a right of
access to those documents and for an order requiring the Commission
to grant such access.
- 23.
- The applicants also sought leave at the hearing to place
on the case file the decision of 13 September 2000 taken by the
European Ombudsman, Mr Söderman, in relation to their complaint
No 161/99/IJH. The Court decided to place that document on the
file after hearing the defendant, which did not raise any objection
although maintaining that the document was irrelevant to the
resolution of the dispute.
Admissibility
- 24.
- The defendant submits that the applicants would appear already
to have possession of certain of the documents to which they
were refused access and that in any event they are aware of the
contents of the documents requested. The contested decision does
not therefore substantially affect the applicants' interests
because it does not significantly alter their legal position.
The applicants consequently lack locus standi.
- 25.
- The Commission's contention cannot be accepted.
- 26.
- As has been pointed out frequently in the case-law, it follows
from the overall scheme of Decision 94/90 that it is intended
to apply generally to requests for access to documents and that,
pursuant to that decision, any person may request access to any
unpublished Commission document and is not required to give a
reason for the request. It follows that any person refused access
to a document or to part of a document has, by virtue of that
very fact, established an interest in the annulment of the decision
refusing access (Case T-124/96 Interporc v Commission
[1998] ECR II-231, paragraph 48, ('Interporc I), and Case
T-174/95 Svenska Journalistförbundet v Council
[1998] ECR II-2289, paragraphs 65 to 67).
- 27.
- The action is accordingly admissible.
Substance
- 28.
- The applicants invoke three pleas in law in support of their
action. The first plea is based on infringement of Article 255(1)
EC and of Article 1, second paragraph, EU. The second plea is
based on breach of Decision 94/90. The third plea relates to
infringement of Article 253 EC.
The first plea in law: infringement of Article 255(1) EC
and of Article 1, second paragraph, EU
Arguments of the parties
- 29.
- The applicants note at the outset that Article 1, second
paragraph, EU and Article 255(1) EC reinforce the principle of
transparency, which, through the exercise of the rights to information
which it allows, constitutes an essential democratic basis for
achieving European integration through greater confidence of
citizens in the Community institutions and a greater closeness
of those institutions to citizens.
- 30.
- The applicants argue in this connection that no express limit
on the exercise of those rights is provided for in any specific
legal measure, with the exception of the Council's power to fix
such a limit, under the procedure set out in Article 251 EC (see
Article 255(2) EC), during the two years following the entry
into force of the Treaty of Amsterdam and the provision under
which each institution elaborates in its own Rules of Procedure
specific provisions regarding access to its documents (see Article
255(3) EC).
- 31.
- The applicants stress that the Treaty of Amsterdam is now
in force and that the principles which it sets out cannot be
deprived of their substance by the argument that, in the absence
of measures of application, they are not directly applicable.
The provision on the right of access, a right which is also set
out in Article 1 EU, must be understood as a provision containing
a substantive legal rule and requiring immediate application.
Consequently, in order to be regarded as being legal vis-à-vis
the higher norms of primary law, the existing Community provisions
must be construed in a manner consistent with those norms, even
if the latter are subsequent to those provisions. The Commission,
they contend, is therefore required to interpret Decision 94/90
in a manner consistent with the principles set out in Article
255 EC by giving preference to a restrictive interpretation of
the provisions that limit the right of access.
- 32.
- The defendant argues that, even after the entry into force
of the Treaty of Amsterdam, the right of access is a right which
may be subject to limitations. It points out that Article 255(2)
EC refers expressly to the limits which the legislature may impose
on grounds of public or private interest. The Commission contends
that Article 255 EC does not have direct effect inasmuch as it
does not involve a precise and unconditional obligation. The
applicants, it suggests, appear to be aware of this when they
state that what is important is that the Commission should interpret
Decision 94/90 in the light of the principle laid down in Article
255 EC. It points out that, in its application of Decision 94/90,
it has complied with the principle laid down in Article 255 EC,
even before that provision entered into force.
- 33.
- The defendant goes on to stress that the right of access
is not directly applicable since the European Parliament and
the Council still have to adopt provisions relating to general
principles and limits on that right. In this regard, the Treaty
lays down a period of two years from the entry into force of
the Treaty of Amsterdam, which period was to expire on 1 May
2001. Pending the adoption of a measure, the right of access
to documents of the institutions may be exercised only within
the framework of the existing rules. The referential legal framework,
therefore, is constituted by Decision 94/90.
Findings of the Court
- 34.
- Contrary to the applicants' contention, Article 1, second
paragraph, EU and Article 255 EC are not directly applicable.
In this regard, as is clear from the judgment in Case 26/62 Van
Gend en Loos [1963] ECR 1, the criteria for deciding whether
a Treaty provision is directly applicable are that the rule should
be clear and unconditional, in the sense that its implementation
must not be subject to any substantive condition, and that its
implementation must not depend on the adoption of subsequent
measures which either the Community institutions or the Member
States may take in the exercise of a discretionary power of assessment.
- 35.
- In this case, Article 1, second paragraph, EU is not clear
in the sense required by the case-law cited. It is likewise obvious
that Article 255 EC is, by virtue of paragraphs 2 and 3 thereof,
not unconditional and that its implementation is dependent on
the adoption of subsequent measures. The determination of general
principles and limits which, on grounds of public or private
interest, govern exercise of the right of access to documents
is a matter entrusted to the Council in the exercise of its legislative
discretion.
- 36.
- It follows that the entry into force of Article 1, second
paragraph, EU and Article 255 EC did not automatically render
inoperative the provisions contained in Decision 94/90.
- 37.
- The applicants' argument that Decision 94/90 must be construed
in accordance with the principles set out in Article 255 EC cannot
be accepted. Because Article 255 EC does not lay down an unconditional
obligation, the Commission could not, in advance of a determination
by the Community legislature of the principles and limits to
govern application of the article, deduce from it criteria for
interpreting the provisions of Decision 94/90 that limit the
right of access to documents.
- 38.
- It follows that the applicants' plea alleging failure to
comply with Article 255(1) EC and Article 1, second paragraph,
EU must be rejected as being unfounded.
The second plea in law: breach of Decision 94/90
The documents originating with the Italian authorities
- Arguments of the parties
- 39.
- The applicants note that Decision 94/90 refers to 'documents
held by the Commission and that the term 'document is defined
in the Code of Conduct as 'any written text, whatever its medium,
which contains existing data and is held by the Commission or
the Council. Access to documents thus relates not only to documents
originating with Community bodies or drawn up by them but also
to all documents which they hold.
- 40.
- They argue that Decision 94/90 amounts to nothing more than
a measure of self-regulation which the Commission has imposed
on itself, in the absence of ad hoc norms, in order to
guarantee transparency of the acts of that institution. The rules
contained in that decision must not be given a restrictive interpretation
confined to a pre-determined category of documents. Were they
to be given such an interpretation, the two main purposes served
by document access, namely improved transparency of decisions
and reinforcement of public confidence in Community administration,
would not be achieved.
- 41.
- The applicants point out that the authorship rule constitutes
a considerable restriction on the principle of transparency,
since it excludes entirely from the right of access documents
drawn up by third parties but held and used by the Commission
solely by virtue of its functions. Referring to the judgment
of the Court of Justice in Joined Cases C-174/98 P and C-189/98
P Netherlands and Van der Wal v Commission [2000]
ECR I-1, the applicants submit that the Court of Justice has
confirmed the need to interpret strictly those provisions of
Decision 94/90 that limit the right of access. They add that
the restrictive interpretation of the authorship rule obliges
the Commission to check the content of the documents requested
and the national rules on disclosure in order to determine whether
those documents may or may not be disclosed under national law.
- 42.
- The applicants further point out that, in their decisions,
Community bodies use not only their own documents but also documents
originating with other bodies or persons. For that reason, the
transparency of the decision-making process and public confidence
in Community administration can be guaranteed only if all documents
forming the basis of the decisions taken by those Community bodies
are brought to the knowledge of the persons concerned.
- 43.
- Finally, the applicants take the view that the institution
must always balance the complainants' interest in the transparency
of the decision-making process and the interest of the authors
of the documents sought. They point out in this connection that
their request for access was rejected by the Italian authorities
and express the opinion that document access must be guaranteed
independently at Community level, irrespective of any dispute
which the persons concerned may have with their Member State.
- 44.
- The defendant argues that the distinction which the applicants
criticise is based on an express provision of Decision 94/90,
under which documents drafted by a person external to the Commission
are not subject to the system provided for by that decision and
any request for such documents must be made to their author.
- 45.
- With regard to the applicants' claims seeking to challenge
the legality of the authorship rule, the Commission takes the
view that these assertions are inadmissible since the provision
in issue is one of general scope which is not of direct and individual
concern to the applicants. The Commission further contends that
the authorship rule constitutes a limitation of the general principle
of transparency expressly recognised by the case-law. It stresses
that neither the wording nor the systematic reading of Article
255 EC reveals that that provision also concerns documents held
by the Commission but drafted by third parties. Consequently,
the authorship rule does not oblige the Commission to guarantee
a balance between the conflicting interests involved.
- 46.
- The Commission adds that the restrictive interpretation of
this rule is limited to those cases in which doubt exists as
to the identity of the author of the document in question.
- Findings of the Court
- 47.
- In the light of the judgment of the Court of Justice in Case
C-58/94 Netherlands v Council [1996] ECR I-2169,
paragraph 37, the Court has ruled that the authorship rule may
be applied so long as there is no higher rule of law which prohibits
the Commission, in Decision 94/90, excluding from the scope of
the Code of Conduct documents of which it is not the author (Case
T-123/99 JT's Corporation v Commission [2000] ECR
II-3269, paragraph 53).
- 48.
- So far as Article 255 EC is concerned, that article does
not oblige the Community legislature to permit, without any limitation,
public access to the documents held by the institutions. On the
contrary, that article expressly provides that the legislature
must determine the principles and limits governing exercise of
the right of access to those documents.
- 49.
- This conclusion is not vitiated by the fact that, as the
applicants correctly point out, the Community institutions, when
adopting decisions, make use of documents originating with third
parties, given that the transparency of the decision-making process
and the confidence of citizens in Community administration can
be assured by adequate reasoning of those decisions. The restrictions
on access to documents originating with third parties and held
by the institutions have no bearing on the duty imposed on those
institutions under Article 253 EC to provide adequate reasoning
for their decisions. Adequate reasoning means that, basing itself
on a document originating with a third party, the institution
must explain the content ofthat document in that decision and
justify that document's choice as a basis for that decision.
- 50.
- Consequently, as it is common ground that the documents requested
were drawn up by the Italian authorities, the Court holds that
the Commission did not err in law in taking the view that it
was not under an obligation to grant access to those documents.
The documents drawn up by the Commission
- 51.
- The documents at issue here are letters of formal notice
and reasoned opinions drawn up within the context of proceedings
instituted against the Italian Republic under Article 226 EC.
- Arguments of the parties
- 52.
- The applicants point out that an unduly strict interpretation
of the exception based on protection of the public interest risks
rendering nugatory the principal objectives of Community policy
on document access.
- 53.
- They note that the initial pre-litigation phase in infringement
proceedings is an investigation phase which has an appreciable
bearing on any litigation phase which might follow. This is so
because, in the first place, following the hearing of the State
involved, the Commission may discontinue proceedings by taking
the view that the infringement of Community obligations has not
been established and, second, because, in order to be able to
guarantee the right to a fair hearing, the action brought by
the Commission before the Court of Justice may not relate to
heads of complaint that were not raised during the initial phase.
- 54.
- The procedure designed to establish the facts must consequently
respect the audi alteram partem principle, this being
understood as the possibility for all parties directly concerned
or adversely affected by the alleged breaches of Community law
to intervene during those proceedings. The applicants state that
infringement proceedings are always verification procedures designed
to impose a public sanction on a State in respect of facts which,
in the particular case, are not secret and are of direct concern
to them.
- 55.
- From this the applicants conclude that the documents relating
to the Article 226 EC infringement proceedings cannot all be
covered by the exception based on protection of the public interest
and that, in any event, they cannot be covered by that exception
indiscriminately or without specific reasons being provided for
each document.
- 56.
- The applicants note that the defendant's proposed interpretation
of the exception based on protection of the public interest rests
on an absolute presumption of genuine cooperation and confidentiality
in the relations between a Member State and the Commission. The
presumption of genuine cooperation on the part of the Italian
Republic is patently contradicted by the findings in favour of
partial discontinuation made by Italian courts in the context
of criminal proceedings brought as a result of a complaint made
by one of the applicants and in which those courts appear to
have formed the view that the MURST and its senior officials
had been responsible for the false declarations which the Italian
State sent to the Commission.
- 57.
- The applicants take the view that the presumption of genuine
cooperation and confidentiality may at most relate to the measures
preparatory to the Commission's decision whether or not to open
infringement proceedings. Referring to the Commission's press
release of 16 December 1997, the applicants contend that this
presumption cannot be relied on if the request for the documents
is made in cases in which the decision to open infringement proceedings
has already been adopted and made public. The publicity, they
argue, will have removed any need for confidentiality.
- 58.
- The defendant points out that protection of the public interest
is included among the first category of exceptions and is for
that reason binding in nature. That being so, the Commission
is not under any obligation to balance the various interests
in issue before refusing access.
- 59.
- Citing the Court's judgment in Case T-105/95 WWF UK
v Commission [1997] ECR II-313 ('WWF), which established
that documents relating to an investigation into a possible breach
of Community law by a Member State capable of resulting in the
bringing of infringement proceedings under Article 226 EC come
within the exception based on protection of the public interest,
in order not to affect adversely the proper conduct of the infringement
proceedings, in particular its purpose, which is to allow the
Member State to comply voluntarily with the Treaty requirements
or to justify its position, the Commission argues that the four
documents which it drew up are documents relating to an investigation
which could lead to proceedings for failure to fulfil obligations.
The documents in question are letters of formal notice and reasoned
opinions which essentially give an account of the result of the
investigations and inspections carried out by the Commission
and the contacts between it and the Italian Republic. For that
reason, the corresponding requirement of confidentiality applies
to those documents. Given that the four documents in question
relate to an investigation phase which might result in proceedings
for failure to fulfil obligations, and thus come within one of
the cases contemplated by the exception based on protection of
the public interest, the Commission claims that it was entitled
to refuse the applicants access to those documents in the contested
decision.
- 60.
- The Commission states that the exception based on protection
of the public interest is also relevant for a separate reason.
It points out that the documents in question were drafted for
purposes of court proceedings, an action having been brought
in June 1999 against the Italian Republic in connection with
Infringement Procedure No 96/2208. Those documents therefore
come within the definition of 'pleadings or other documents lodged
which constitute a category of documents covered by the exception
based on protection of the public interest.
- 61.
- The Commission also challenges the applicants' argument that
persons who lodge complaints with it regarding alleged infringements
of Community law by Member States ought to be entitled to take
part in the proceedings for failure to fulfil obligations.
- 62.
- With regard to the argument that the exception based on protection
of the public interest should no longer be applied where the
Member State has acted in bad faith in infringement proceedings,
the Commission submits that there is no justification for this
presumed limit in the purpose served by that exception and that
the relevant case-law does not recognise it either. The obligation
of confidentiality is imposed on the Commission and operates
in favour of the State concerned, irrespective of how that State
has conducted itself during the infringement proceedings. The
Commission argues that, contrary to what the applicants contend,
it has not been established that the conduct of the Italian Republic
in Infringement Procedure No 96/2208 was motivated by bad faith
and marked by impropriety. Regarding the issue of the publicity
given to its intention to bring infringement proceedings before
the Court of Justice, the Commission states that, in the press
release, the positions taken by the parties were not revealed
in detail and there was therefore no breach in relation to the
openness of the dialogue with the State in question. The fact
that dialogue continued even after publication of the press release,
it argues, provides evidence in this regard.
- 63.
- The Commission adds that even the bringing of an action does
not remove the requirement of confidentiality. It takes the view
that the need to guarantee confidentiality even after an investigation
has been terminated applies a fortiori in the case where
an action has been brought. It argues that the reason providing
justification for the requirement of confidentiality, namely
the possibility for the Member State concerned to comply with
the requirements of Community law or, where relevant, to justify
its position in order to avoid a finding that it has failed to
meet its obligations, remains valid throughout the entire court
proceedings.
- Findings of the Court
- 64.
- Decision 94/90 is a measure conferring on citizens a right
of access to documents held by the Commission (see, in particular,
WWF, cited in paragraph 59 above, paragraph 55, and Interporc
I, cited in paragraph 26 above, paragraph 46). Its objective
is to give effect to the principle of the widest possible access
for citizensto information with a view to strengthening the democratic
character of the institutions and the trust of the public in
the administration (Svenska Journalistförbundet v
Council, cited in paragraph 26 above, paragraph 66).
- 65.
- However, two categories of exceptions to the general principle
that citizens are to have access to Commission documents are
set out in the Code of Conduct adopted by the Commission in its
Decision 94/90. The first category, which includes the exception
relied on by the Commission in the present case, is worded in
mandatory terms and provides that 'the institutions will refuse
access to any document where disclosure could undermine [inter
alia] the protection of the public interest (public security,
international relations, monetary stability, court proceedings,
inspections and investigations).
- 66.
- The exceptions to document access fall to be interpreted
and applied restrictively so as not to frustrate application
of the general principle of giving the public 'the widest possible
access to documents held by the Commission (Case T-309/97 Bavarian
Lager v Commission [1999] ECR II-3217, paragraph 39
and the case-law there cited).
- 67.
- In the contested decision, the Commission states that disclosure
of the letters of formal notice and the reasoned opinions 'might
adversely affect the protection of the public interest and in
particular the conduct of investigations liable to result in
the opening of the procedure under Article 226 EC (ex Article
169 of the EC Treaty). In this connection, it refers expressly
to the fact that 'infringement investigations call for genuine
cooperation and an atmosphere of mutual trust between the Commission
and the Member State concerned so as to enable those two parties
to open discussions with a view to a rapid resolution of the
dispute. The Commission adds that 'disclosure of those documents,
which concern proceedings that are pending ..., could have an
adverse effect on another public interest referred to in the
Code of Conduct, namely the proper conduct of court proceedings.
Such disclosure would be liable to affect the interests of the
parties involved and could adversely impact on the specific rules
governing submission of documents in connection with those proceedings.
- 68.
- In the present case, the documents requested are letters
of formal notice and reasoned opinions drawn up in connection
with investigations and inspections carried out by the Commission.
As the Court pointed out in paragraph 63 of its judgment in WWF
(cited above in paragraph 59), the Member States are entitled
to expect the Commission to guarantee confidentiality during
investigations which might lead to an infringement procedure.
This requirement of confidentiality remains even after the matter
has been brought before the Court of Justice, on the ground that
it cannot be ruled out that the discussions between the Commission
and the Member State in question regarding the latter's voluntary
compliance with the Treaty requirements may continue during the
court proceedings and up to the delivery of the judgment of the
Court of Justice. The preservation of thatobjective, namely an
amicable resolution of the dispute between the Commission and
the Member State concerned before the Court of Justice has delivered
judgment, justifies refusal of access to the letters of formal
notice and reasoned opinions drawn up in connection with the
Article 226 EC proceedings on the ground of protection of the
public interest relating to inspections, investigations and court
proceedings, which comes within the first category of exceptions
in Decision 94/90.
- 69.
- The Commission was thus justified in refusing to disclose
the documents in question on the ground that such disclosure
might adversely affect the public interest.
- 70.
- So far as concerns the applicants' argument that proceedings
under Article 226 EC seeking to establish the facts relating
to the infringements of Community law complained of must respect
the audi alteram partem principle, it must be noted that
individuals are not party to proceedings concerning failure to
fulfil obligations and for that reason cannot invoke rights to
a fair hearing involving application of the audi alteram partem
principle.
- 71.
- With regard to the applicants' assertion that any infringement
by a Member State of its obligation of genuine cooperation in
the course of infringement proceedings removes the requirement
of confidentiality, it must first of all be noted that the applicants
have not established that the Member State in question has acted
in bad faith. Further, as the Commission has stressed in its
written pleadings, it is the Commission which bears the obligation
of confidentiality and that obligation cannot be affected by
the alleged conduct of a Member State.
- 72.
- It follows from all of the foregoing that the second plea
in law must also be rejected.
The third plea in law: infringement of Article 253 EC
Arguments of the parties
- 73.
- The applicants take the view that the summary grounds set
out by the Commission as general justification for its refusal
to grant access to the documents in question lack any legal basis
and reflect the fact that infringement proceedings are conducted
under conditions of absolute secrecy. The applicants point out
in this regard that, according to settled case-law, the reasons
given for refusing access must be sufficient and must involve
a balance between the conflicting interests.
- 74.
- In the present case, the grounds given for the contested
decision amount to mere general and abstract mentions of the
applicable provisions, without any reference to actual and specific
circumstances and without any distinction being drawn between
the documents according to the category of exception within which
they might fall. Further, before refusing access to the documents
drafted by the ItalianState, the Commission ought to have checked
in order to ascertain whether those documents could or could
not have been disclosed under national legislation.
- 75.
- The Commission states that, for compliance with Article 253
EC, it is sufficient that the decision refusing access to documents
should contain specific grounds for refusal by document category.
It adds that the grounds based on application of the authorship
rule, used as justification for refusing to grant access to the
documents drawn up by the Italian authorities, which are regarded
as belonging to one single and identical category, are clear,
detailed and quite specific. As for the documents which it itself
drafted, the Commission submits that the decision sets out in
a clear and appropriate manner the reasons why those documents
come under the exception based on protection of the public interest.
Common grounds, it argues, are adequate in view of the fact that
the documents have the same characteristics and thus belong to
one single identical category.
Findings of the Court
- 76.
- So far as the documents drawn up by the Italian authorities
are concerned, these were the subject of individual examination
and there was an identical reason, in the case of each of them,
for prohibiting their disclosure. It is thus logical that the
contested decision should contain a statement of reasons for
refusal of access that is common to all of those documents.
- 77.
- The Commission has given reasons for the contested decision
by referring to the authorship rule and stating that, under that
rule, the applicants' request had no basis because the documents
sought had been written by a third party. Such a statement of
reasons is sufficiently clear to enable interested parties to
understand why the Commission did not forward to them the documents
in question and to enable the Court to exercise its power to
review the legality of the contested decision (JT's Corporation
v Commission, cited above in paragraph 47, at paragraph
67).
- 78.
- So far as the documents drafted by the Commission are concerned,
it follows from the use of the verb 'could, in the present conditional,
that in order to demonstrate that the disclosure of particular
documents 'could undermine protection of the public interest,
the Commission is obliged to consider in respect of each requested
document whether, in the light of the information available to
it, disclosure is in fact likely to undermine one of the facets
of public interest protected by the first category of exceptions
(Svenska Journalistförbundet v Council, cited
in paragraph 26 above, paragraph 112 and the case-law there cited).
- 79.
- As the Court pointed out in its judgment in WWF (cited
in paragraph 59 above, at paragraph 64), the Commission is not
entitled to confine itself to invoking the possible opening of
an infringement procedure as justification, under the headingof
protecting the public interest, for refusing access to the entirety
of the documents identified in a request made by a citizen. The
Court took the view that the Commission is required to indicate,
at the very least by reference to categories of documents, the
reasons why it considers that the documents detailed in the request
which it received are related to the possible opening of an infringement
procedure, by indicating to which subject-matter the documents
relate and particularly whether they involve inspections or investigations
relating to a possible procedure for infringement of Community
law.
- 80.
- In the present case, the unavoidable conclusion is that the
Commission did carry out such an examination. As is clear from
paragraph 67 above, the Commission indicated in the contested
decision the reasons why it formed the view that disclosure of
the letters of formal notice and the reasoned opinions would
have an adverse effect on the public interest.
- 81.
- In the light of the foregoing, the third plea in law must
also be rejected, and the action must therefore be dismissed
in its entirety.
Costs
- 82.
- Under Article 87(2) of the Rules of Procedure, the unsuccessful
party must be ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied
for by the successful party. Since the applicants have been unsuccessful,
they must be ordered to pay their own costs together with those
of the defendant, in accordance with the form of order sought
by the latter.
On those grounds,
THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Fourth Chamber, Extended Composition),
hereby:
1. Dismisses the action;
2. Orders the applicants to pay the defendant's costs in
addition to their own costs.
|
Mengozzi
García-Valdecasas
Tiili
Moura Ramos Cooke |
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 11 December 2001.
H. Jung
P. Mengozzi
Registrar
President