CELEX: 61995CC0388
Language: en
Date: 1999-03-25 00:00:00
Title: Opinion of Mr Advocate General Saggio delivered on 25 March 1999. # Kingdom of Belgium v Kingdom of Spain. # Article 34 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 29 EC) - Regulation (EEC) No 823/87 - Quality wines produced in a specified region - Designations of origin - Obligation to bottle in the region of production - Justification - Consequences of an earlier judgment giving a preliminary ruling - Article 5 of the EC Treaty (now Article 10 EC). # Case C-388/95.

Important legal notice

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61995C0388

Opinion of Mr Advocate General Saggio delivered on 25 March 1999.  -  Kingdom of Belgium v Kingdom of Spain.  -  Article 34 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 29 EC) - Regulation (EEC) No 823/87 - Quality wines produced in a specified region - Designations of origin - Obligation to bottle in the region of production - Justification - Consequences of an earlier judgment giving a preliminary ruling - Article 5 of the EC Treaty (now Article 10 EC).  -  Case C-388/95.  

European Court reports 2000 Page I-03123

Opinion of the Advocate-General

1. By application lodged at the Court Registry on 13 December 1995, the Kingdom of Belgium brought an action under Article 170 of the EC Treaty for a declaration that, by maintaining in force Royal Decree no 157/1988 and in particular Article 19(1)(b) thereof, which requires Rioja wine to be bottled in the area of production, and thereby preventing it from being exported in bulk, the Kingdom of Spain has failed to fulfil its obligations under Article 34 of the EC Treaty as interpreted by the Court of Justice in its judgment in Case C-47/90 Delhaize v Promalvin (hereinafter Delhaize).The relevant Community provisions2. There are many sources of Community law on the wine sector that are relevant for the purposes of the present case. They will be considered when the time comes to examine the arguments of the parties as to substance. However, in view of its importance in the context of the dispute, mention should be made immediately of Council Regulation (EEC) No 823/87 of 16 March 1987 (hereinafter Regulation No 823/87), which provides a framework of uniform rules for the production and control of quality wines produced in specified regions (hereinafter quality wines psr or quality wines).Under Articles 1(2) and 15 of Regulation No 823/87 only wines which are covered by that regulation and by other specific or implementing regulations and which satisfy the provisions of national rules (rules governing production) may be designated by one of the recognised Community terms (such as the term quality wines p.s.r) or by a specific term traditionally used in the Member States to designate certain wines. In Spain, such traditional terms include the terms denominación de origen and denominación de origen calificada.As regards the production process in particular, Regulation No 823/87 (in conjunction with the national provisions expressly cited) identifies and lays down rules on a number of factors characterising the production of quality wines. Those factors include the demarcation of the area of production, production methods and techniques, and tests to determine the characteristics of such wines. The responsibility for specifying the production methods is left to the producer States. Thus Article 8(1) provides that the specific vinification and manufacturing methods used for obtaining quality wines psr shall be laid down for each of those wines by each producer Member State concerned. The twelfth recital in the preamble to that regulation states that as regards the development of the particular quality characteristics of each quality wine psr, Member States should be given a certain amount of freedom to specify the wine-making and preparation methods for each wine within the framework of the oenological practices permitted in the Community. Article 18 provides, in particular, that producer Member States may, taking into account fair and traditional practices, ... determine such other conditions of production as shall be obligatory for quality wines psr. That regulation also lays down, for each production method, certain minimum criteria that States are in any event required to observe.As regards the tests to which wines must be submitted, Article 13 of Regulation No 823/87 (as amended by Regulation No 2043/89) provides that producers shall be obliged to submit wines for which they are requesting the designation "quality wine psr" to an analytical and to an organoleptic test and specifies (a) that the analytical test shall at least measure the factors enabling the quality wine psr in question to be distinguished, as listed in Annex I and (b) that the organoleptic test shall relate to colour, clarity, smell and taste. The sixteenth recital in the preamble to that regulation explains that such tests have been laid down to encourage producers to keep a constant watch on the quality of quality wines psr, and in particular the development of their special characteristics. Article 16 provides that each Member State is to be responsible for the control and protection of quality wines. It should also be noted that Regulation No 2048/89, laying down general rules on controls in the wine sector, empowers the Commission to intervene in the sector in cooperation with the competent national authorities and establishes structures for collaboration between the various control authorities.The relevant national provisions3. Under Spanish Law No 25 of 2 December 1970 laying down the basic rules concerning vines, wines and spirits (hereinafter Law No 25/70), the term denominación de origen is to be applied to certain wines and a Governing Council (Consejo Regulador) established for each of them. The Governing Council is responsible for: (a) drawing up a draft regulation relating to the designation of origin for adoption by order of the Minister for Agriculture; (b) directing, supervising and controlling the production, manufacture and quality of wines bearing the designation denominación de origen; (c) promoting the image of the designation on the national market and on foreign markets; (d) taking action in respect of any improper use of the designation; and (e) recovering fines and implementing penalties imposed by virtue of that law. In the case of Rioja wine, the regulation drawn up by the Governing Council was adopted by Order of the Minister for Agriculture of 2 June 1976.4. Royal Decree No 157 of 22 February 1988 laid down the conditions for granting the designation denominación de origen calificada. In particular, Article 19(1) provides that in order to qualify for that designation: (a) a wine must be marketed exclusively after being bottled in the cellars from which it originates (bodegas de origen); (b) the quantity and quality of the product must have been monitored by the Governing Council from its production to its release onto the market; and (c) the cellar from which the wine originates must affix numbered labels or seals to the containers in which it is placed. Under the transitional provisions of the decree, condition (a) is to apply to wines exported from Spanish territory after a period of five years from the date on which the decree was published, that is with effect from 24 February 1993.5. On 8 September 1988, the Governing Council for Rioja wine issued circular No 17/88, in which it stated that it had gradually increased the proportion of Rioja wine sold in bottles and reduced the proportion sold in bulk. As regards exports, it reported that sales in bulk accounted for 5% of total annual turnover. It therefore decided to stop bulk exports altogether, not only to protect the image and reputation of the wine but to enable it to qualify for the designation denominación de origen calificada. Rioja wine was granted that designation by Ministerial Order of 3 April 1991. The new regulation on the Denominación de Origen Calificada Rioja and its Governing Council was annexed to the order. As regards, in particular, the obligation to bottle the wine and the conditions governing its movement, that regulation adds little to the rules governing Rioja wines of designated origin, expressly requiring that they be bottled in the area of origin.The judgment in Delhaize6. In the context of a dispute between a Belgian company, Delhaize, and two other companies, Promalvin, registered in Belgium, and Bodegas Unidas SA, registered in Spain, arising from those two companies' failure to fulfil a contract to supply a bulk consignment of Rioja wine to Delhaize to be bottled in Belgium by that company, the court before which the case was brought asked the Court, pursuant to Article 177 of the Treaty, whether the Spanish legislation - in particular Royal Decree No 157/88 - on the production and marketing of quality wines, which required wines to be bottled in the region of production, constituted a measure having an effect equivalent to a restriction on exports within the meaning of Article 34 of the Treaty.7. In reply to that question, the Court ruled that national provisions applicable to wine of designated origin which limit the quantity of wine that may be exported in bulk but otherwise permit sales of wine in bulk within the region of production constitute measures having equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction on exports which are prohibited by Article 34 of the EC Treaty.8. On the issue, not covered by the question but raised by the Spanish Government in the course of the procedure, of whether the contested rules could be regarded as justified within the meaning of Article 36 of the Treaty and specifically on grounds of the protection of industrial and commercial property, the Court observed that it is for each Member State to define, within the terms of Council Regulation (EEC) No 823/87, cited above, the conditions applicable to the use of a name or geographical area within its territory as a registered designation of origin for wine from that area. The Court added that in so far as those conditions constitute one of the measures referred to by Article 34 of the Treaty, they are not justified on grounds of the protection of industrial and commercial property within the meaning of Article 36 of the Treaty unless they are needed in order to ensure that the registered designation of origin fulfils its specific function. It also stated that the specific function of a registered designation of origin is to guarantee that the product bearing it comes from a specified geographical area and displays certain particular characteristics and that consequently, the requirement that the wine be bottled in the region of production, in so far as it constitutes a condition for the use of the name of that region as a registered designation of origin, would be justified by the concern to ensure that that designation of origin fulfilled its specific function if bottling in the region of production endowed the wine originating in that region with particular characteristics, of such a kind as to give it individual character, or if bottling in the region of production were essential in order to preserve essential characteristics acquired by that wine (paragraphs 16, 17 and 18 of the judgment).9. Essentially, the Court held that Article 34 precludes national rules requiring quality wines to be bottled in the area of production in so far as such rules prevent the export of such wines in bulk, but recognised at the same time that under Article 36 such rules could nevertheless be regarded as justified if the bottling requirement served to guarantee that the product came from a specified geographical area and displayed certain particular characteristics. The Court added that, in that particular case, it had not been shown that the bottling of the wine in question [Rioja] in the region of production was ... essential in order to maintain the specific characteristics acquired by it (paragraph 19 of the judgment).10. Nor did the Court consider that the national rules at issue could be justified in Community law on the basis of Article 18 of Regulation No 823/87, cited above, under which the Member States may lay down additional or more stringent conditions of movement than those laid down in the regulation for quality wines. According to the Court, that article cannot be interpreted as authorising the Member States to impose conditions contrary to the Treaty rules on the movement of goods (paragraph 26 of the judgment).Substance11. In its application, the Belgian Government claims that Spain is in breach of Articles 34 and 5 of the Treaty because the Spanish legislation at issue is contrary to Community law on the free movement of goods and that Spain has also failed to adopt the necessary measures to comply with the judgment in Delhaize.12. In order to ascertain whether the Spanish Government has in fact failed to fulfil its obligations as claimed, it must first be determined whether the relevant Spanish legislation is contrary to the Community provisions on the free movement of goods, in particular Article 34 of the Treaty, and Article 18 of Regulation No 823/87, cited above, and, if so, whether that legislation is justified under Article 36 of the Treaty. It will also have to be ascertained whether, in requiring that Rioja wine be bottled in the region of production, Spain has failed to fulfil its obligations under Community law as interpreted in the judgment in Delhaize.The infringement of Article 3413. The Belgian Government, supported by Denmark, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Finland, considers that the Spanish Government is in breach of Article 34 of the Treaty as interpreted in Delhaize because it has neither repealed nor amended Royal Decree No 157/88 and in particular Article 19(1)(b) thereof, which requires as one of the conditions for allowing a wine to bear a designation of origin that it be bottled in a cellar situated in the area of production. As it is common ground that there has to date been no change either in the Community regulations or in the Spanish legislation referred to by the Court in the judgment in Delhaize, the applicant claims that the Court's reasoning is still completely valid and the Court therefore has no alternative in the present case but to confirm that the Spanish legislation is incompatible with Community law.14. The Spanish Government contends on the contrary that its legislation is consistent with Article 34 of the Treaty inasmuch as it does not restrict the export of quality wine in bulk but merely prohibits any improper and uncontrolled use of designations of origin. In effect, the Spanish Government says, wine produced in the Rioja region could be freely exported in bulk to places outside the area of production and bottled there even though, in that case, it could not be marketed under the Rioja designation of origin.15. That argument is not convincing. It is sufficient in this connection to observe that the Court has already stated, in Delhaize, that national rules such as those under consideration have the specific effect of restricting exports of wine in bulk and, in particular, of procuring a special advantage for bottling undertakings situated in the region of production (paragraph 14 of the judgment).16. Moreover, the Spanish Government's argument that even within the area of production the sale of wine in bulk is allowed only between cellars registered with the Governing Council and only with express permission has no bearing on whether or not there has been a breach of Article 34, since it is still absolutely impossible for producers to export in bulk anywhere outside national territory. Permission may in fact be granted only for the sale (and consequently the transport) of wines in bulk within the area of production. Consequently, as the Advocate General pointed out in Delhaize, differences in treatment arise in so far as it is possible for wine producers within the area of production to sell wine that has not yet been bottled while such wine cannot be sold outside that area (point 29 of the Opinion). Moreover, whilst it is undoubtedly true that Article 18 allows States to include in their legislation provisions that may lead to restrictions on the movement of wines within the Community, those restrictions may not, as the Court stated in its 1992 judgment in Delhaize, be as comprehensive as those contained in the Spanish legislation, which effectively amount to a ban on bulk exports of quality wine and are thus clearly contrary to the EC Treaty rules on the movement of goods.17. In short, the Court's interpretation of the relationship between the Spanish legislation and Article 34 of the Treaty in Delhaize must be confirmed without more ado, since nothing has occurred in fact or in law to justify a change of view.18. Lastly, there is clearly no substance in the Spanish Government's argument, likewise intended to show that its legislation on quality wines is consistent with Community law, that the judgment in Delhaize did not declare that the Spanish rules were unlawful, since it was concerned only with the Community rules on the subject and also, more generally, with all the Member States' provisions on quality wines. It is sufficient in this connection to observe that, contrary to what the Agent for the Spanish Government says, the judgment in Delhaize takes specific account of the Spanish legislation on quality wines and states expressly that it is incompatible with the Community legal order.19. It only remains, therefore, to note that the Spanish legislation at issue is contrary to Article 34 of the EC Treaty in so far as it has the effect of specifically restricting the flow of exports of Rioja wine and leading to unequal treatment of domestic trade and export trade, to the detriment of trade with other Member States and the disadvantage of bottling undertakings situated in other countries.The application of Article 36 of the Treaty20. It should be remembered, first of all, that the Court stated in Delhaize that the requirement that the wine be bottled in the region of production, in so far as it constitutes a condition for the use of the name of that region as a registered designation of origin, would be justified by the concern to ensure that that designation of origin fulfilled its specific function. However, according to the Court, that applies only if bottling in the region of production endowed the wine ... with particular characteristics, of such a kind as to give it individual character, or if bottling in the region of production were essential in order to preserve essential characteristics acquired by that wine. Proceeding from that general premiss, the Court nevertheless concluded on that occasion that in the particular case of wine produced in the Rioja region the conditions for the application of Article 36 were not satisfied, since it had not been shown that the bottling of the wine in question [Rioja] in the region of production was an operation which endowed it with particular characteristics or was essential in order to maintain the specific characteristics acquired by it.21. It therefore remains to be determined whether that has been shown in the present case. To do so, it will be necessary to ascertain in the light of the evidence produced in the course of the procedure whether the requirement that Rioja wine be bottled in the region of production is justified, under Article 36 of the Treaty, on grounds of the protection of industrial and commercial property and, in particular, by the concern to ensure that the Rioja designation of origin fulfils its function.22. On that question, which is of central importance in the context of the present dispute, the parties are divided. The wine-importing States, that is to say Belgium and all the States that have intervened on its behalf (Denmark, the Netherlands, Finland and the United Kingdom), have expressed the view that bottling in loco is not an operation that is necessary to ensure the quality of the wine and protect its reputation. The wine-producing and exporting States (Spain, Italy and Portugal), on the contrary, have maintained that bottling in loco is essential to achieve those objectives. The Commission has taken the same view, thus departing from the position it took in the proceedings for a preliminary ruling in Delhaize.In particular, the Spanish Government contends that the requirement that wines bearing the designation denominación de origen calificada be bottled in the place of production is justified essentially on two grounds: first, because exporting Rioja wine in bulk to other States involves transport in containers over considerable distances, with the result that the specific characteristics of the wine might be altered; second, because the circulation of wine of inferior quality bearing the designation denominación de origen calificada which properly applies to wine bottled in the area of origin, could damage the reputation of the product in question.23. That said, in order to determine whether in the present case the restrictions on the movement of Rioja wine resulting from the requirement that it be bottled in the region of production can be justified within the meaning of Article 36 of the Treaty, it is necessary, first, to ascertain whether in fact bottling outside the area of production has (or could have) effects on the quality of the product and then to consider whether those effects could damage the reputation of Rioja wine producers holding industrial and commercial property rights which may be protected under Article 36 of the Treaty. The first point involves technical considerations and the opinions of the experts consulted by both sides must therefore be taken into account; the second point concerns the reputation of the wine and consideration must therefore be given to the interests represented by the designation of origin and the instruments the Community legal order provides to protect those interests.(a) The effects of bottling non in loco on the quality of wine24. As regards the effects of bottling operations on the quality of wine, the experts all consider that those operations do not consist of merely filling empty bottles but usually involve, before the wine is actually decanted, a number of complex oenological procedures (filtration, clarification, cold treatment, and so on) which, if not properly conducted may impair the quality and alter the characteristics of the wine.As the Commission expert, Professor Alain Bertrand, explained at the hearing, such operations are even more complex and consequently require special equipment and expert staff when appropriate procedures have to be employed to correct any deoxidation the wine may have suffered as a result of being transported for hundreds of kilometres in containers and such procedures may alter the colour, flavour and aroma of the product. The Commission expert therefore said he was convinced à titre personnel, après trente années de recherche en oenologie, que, sans qu'il soit possible de le démontrer de manière irréfutable, les caractères intrinsèques d'un vin d'une appellation donnée seraient certainement mieux préservés si les raisins étaient acheminés au lieu d'élaboration finale du vin, sans transport du vin avant la mise en bouteilles. He said that, in any event, it was not absolutely impossible for the specific characteristics of the wine to be preserved even if the wine was bottled outside the area of production but for that to happen it would have to be transported under perfect conditions and all the operations before and during bottling would have to be performed properly. In that connection, Professor Bertrand said during the oral procedure that lorsque le vin est pompé dans la citerne de transport, il est oxydé, immanquablement. Lorsque ce transport s'effectue pendant une longue période, une partie de cette oxygène est consommée par le vin, la moitié, environ, pendant deux ou trois jours, surtout si la température est un peu élevée. Lorsqu'il est pompé de nouveau pour être déchargé dans les récipients du négociant éleveur, il est de nouveau oxydé. Entre-temps, se créent ... des peroxydes qui créent des transformations beaucoup plus nuisibles au vin que le simple pompage une fois, qui a lieu lors de la mise en bouteilles.25. The United Kingdom expert's opinion on the subject is, in substance, virtually the same as Professor Bertrand's. He maintains in his report that when wine is bottled outside the area of production the quality of the wine may still be guaranteed if special technical precautions are taken during transport, in particular if insulated containers are used which maintain low temperatures. He observes that, in any case, the risk of oxidation when wine is moved outside the area of production is also present when it is moved within that area, so that even in that case certain technical rules will have to be observed and the same measures will have to be taken during pumping operations if the risk is to be avoided (or at least reduced).26. It is therefore clear from the experts' statements reported above that transporting wine in bulk alters, or may alter, the product - as regards aroma, flavour and colour - and that those disadvantages may be avoided if certain technical rules are observed during transport. Finally, it is clear that bottling operations are technically complex and may, if not properly performed, have an appreciable effect on the quality and characteristics of the wine.27. That being so, the only effective way to provide producers and consumers with guarantees as to the quality of a product bottled by a purchaser in a country other than the country in which it is produced is to submit bottling operations to systematic controls in the country where they are carried out. It now remains to be seen whether, and if so what, arrangements are allowed or imposed by the relevant Community provisions to control the quality of wine and detect any alterations in wine transported in bulk.28. As I have already pointed out, under Article 13 of Regulation No 823/87 producers are required to carry out a number of analytical and organoleptic tests for their wines to be designated as quality wines psr but only producers are required to carry out those tests and the regulation does not state when they are to be carried out. The Commission observed in this connection during the oral procedure that in wine-producing States such tests have to be carried out before and after bottling.In addition, Regulation No 2048/89, cited above, laying down general rules on controls in the wine sector, provides for a number of controls to be carried out at the various stages of production and marketing. In order to prevent infringements of the wine rules, the regulation empowers officials of the Commission to intervene in this sector in cooperation with the authorities instructed by the Member States to carry out controls in the wine sector (Article 1(1)). Article 8 of that regulation also provides for various forms of horizontal cooperation between the national control authorities, specifying that at the reasoned request of the competent authority of a Member State, the corresponding authority of the State in which the wine to be controlled is situated shall perform or take the necessary steps to perform special surveillance or controls enabling the desired objectives to be achieved (Article 8(2)). The applicant authority in agreement with the requested authority may also send its own officials to the Member State where the wine is, to obtain information relating to the application of the rules in the wine sector or to control activities (Article 8(4) and (5)). In that context, the said officials may request the competent authority of another Member State to collect samples which they may hold for analysis (Articles 12 and 13).Controls on wine placed on the market outside the Member State in which it is produced are also provided for in Council Regulation No 2392/89 laying down general rules for the description and presentation of wines and grape musts. Article 42 of that regulation provides that for the purposes of the monitoring and control of products to which this Regulation applies, the competent authorities may, with due regard to the general rules of procedure adopted by each Member State, require the bottler or a person who has been involved in distribution and who is indicated either in the description or on the presentation of those products to furnish proof of the accuracy of the information used in the description or the presentation concerning the nature, identity, quality, composition, origin or provenance of the product concerned or of the products used in its production. The request for proof may be made by the competent authority of the Member State of establishment of the bottler or by the competent authority of another Member State. In that case, the authority is required to provide the competent authority of the country of establishment of the bottler ... with all the information necessary to enable the latter authority to require such proof .... If the competent authorities find that such proof is not provided, the information in question shall be regarded as not complying with this Regulation.Lastly, Regulation No 2238/93 on the accompanying documents for the carriage of wine products and the relevant records to be kept contains a number of uniform rules on the documentation required for the transport of wine products within Community territory. Article 3(1) of that regulation provides that persons who carry out or cause to be carried out a carriage operation involving a wine product must complete on their own responsibility a document which must accompany the carriage and which is called the accompanying document. That document shall be regarded as attesting the designation of origin of quality wines psr or the provenance of table wines entitled to a geographical ascription when those indications are validated by the competent authority by means of its stamp, the date and the signature of the person responsible, as appropriate Article 7(1)(c). Additional information is required for the transport of wine products in bulk (Article 3(4)) which, as such, are more susceptible to fraudulent practices than are labelled, bottled products (sixth recital in the preamble).29. As regards national legislation on the subject, it is clear from the information supplied by the parties that some Member States expressly lay down when and how controls on quality wines are to be carried out. The Spanish legislation, in particular, provides that quality wines must be submitted to organoleptic and analytical tests (Article 10(2) of Royal Decree No 157/1988). In the case of Rioja wine, it is also provided that the Governing Council must carry out quality controls batch by batch before granting the designation denominación de origen calificada (Article 15 of the Ministerial Order of 3 April 1991). As a result, the controls on wines transported within national territory are strict and much more detailed than on wine transported abroad in bulk. It was also clear from the statements made by the parties during the oral procedure that not all the Member States had made provision for systematic controls on the quality of imported wine. Belgium was a case in point. The Belgian Government representative himself acknowledged that the controls generally carried out on wines sold in national territory were those laid down in Regulation No 2238/93 on the carriage of wines and that they related only to accounts and quantities, and to the aspect covered by the generic term health: thus the controls were not concerned at all with the oenological characteristics of the product and could not therefore provide producers and consumers with any guarantee as to the quality of the wine.30. Consequently, apart from the controls which producer States are required to carry out under Article 13 of Regulation No 823/87, it is possible that wine exported to another Member State may not be submitted to any other quality controls before it is sold to the final consumer. It must therefore be concluded that, as Community law now stands, the authorities of the importing State are not obliged to carry out appropriate general controls on the quality of wine imported in bulk and bottled in that State but merely have the option of doing so.31. The question arises at this point whether bottling in the region of production is still the only true guarantee that, when it reaches the consumer, quality wine has its specific characteristics or at least that those characteristics have not suffered any alteration during bottling. There is no doubt that performing bottling operations in the region of production is important in order to ensure that the wine has the qualities and characteristics associated with its origin. One has only to remember that, as the Spanish Government has pointed out, when the wine is bottled at the place of production it does not have to be submitted to the complex procedures that must on the contrary be employed to remedy the alterations that occur when it is exported. Moreover, even when it is transported within the region of production, not only does the risk of alteration to the wine appear to be less likely because the distance between the place where it is produced and the place where it is bottled is less (in the Rioja region, according to information supplied by the defendant State and not contested by the other parties, the maximum distance is 100 kilometres), but any alteration to the wine would in any case be detected by the strict controls to which the product is submitted before it is granted the designation denominación de origen calificada Rioja. It remains to be seen whether such a situation justifies the requirement that wine be bottled exclusively in the region of production as a condition for it to be designated a quality wine. The answer can only be that it does, for the following reasons. It must in point of fact be considered that, since there is a real risk that the quality and characteristics of the wine may be altered if it is transported over considerable distances and bottled in a region other than the region of production and above all since the Community provisions do not require appropriate controls of the product in the country where it is bottled and such controls are in any case not carried out in an appropriate manner in all countries, the producer State, in order to protect its own quality wines, must be free to decide that the designation of quality wine will be granted only to wines produced and bottled exclusively in the area where it is certain that all the operations in that connection have been properly performed, as may reasonably be supposed to be the case when those operations take place in the area of production under the control of the producers, that is to say the traders primarily interested in guaranteeing the quality of the product. That conclusion does not appear to be inconsistent with the Court's decision in Bagli Pennacchiotti with regard to the requirement imposed by the national legislature that the operations in connection with the vinification of quality wines be carried out in the area of origin. In the judgment in that case, Regulation No 823/87 was interpreted as requiring all operations concerning, or storage of, products in the course of vinification which have not yet become quality wine psr or quality sparkling wine psr to be carried out within the specified region of production.32. It might appear that the Court took a different view in its judgment in Delhaize, a view that is inconsistent with the analysis now proposed, but on closer examination it is clear that the inconsistency is only apparent. In fact, as we have already seen, the Court confined itself in that judgment to considering the case in the light of the facts submitted by the parties on that occasion. But the situation is different now. The documents in the case contain a considerable and consistent body of technical evidence regarding the effect of transport and bottling operations on the quality of wine and specific facts about the controls that are carried out - notably in Belgium - when it is bottled in the place where it is imported: that evidence and those facts clearly lead to a different conclusion in the present case from the conclusion reached in the specific context of the earlier preliminary ruling procedure.(b) The effects of bottling non in loco on the reputation of quality wines33. In justification of the measures restricting the export of Rioja wine, the Spanish Government cites the risk that the quality of the product may be altered as a result of being transported in containers over long distances - the aspect of the dispute that I have just been considering - and also contends that the circulation of a wine that bears the designation denominación de origen calificada Rioja but has been bottled outside the area of origin and consequently does not exhibit the specific characteristics of traditional Rioja wine bearing that designation would damage the reputation that wine now enjoys. The defendant State points out that Rioja wine is intended for a particular clientele and cannot therefore be released onto the market without an assurance that the traditional production procedure has been followed, ending with bottling in the area of origin. The purpose of the Spanish legislation is therefore to protect the reputation of the Rioja designation and consequently the associated industrial and commercial property rights of producers in the Rioja area.The other parties in the case do not deny that Rioja wine has a particular reputation among consumers but they have advanced various arguments to show that bottling in an area other than the area of production has nothing to do with that reputation. The Belgian Government argues that that reputation is based not only on the quality the wine has acquired as a result of careful observance of specific rules on production, which are stricter than the rules governing the production of table wines, but also on the excellent work done by dealers who have invested time and money over a long period in promoting knowledge and appreciation of the wine among consumers. The United Kingdom submits that the reputation of Rioja wine was established at a time when it was exported in bulk and that the name Rioja is consequently associated with wine that comes from the Rioja region but is not necessarily bottled there.34. The reference to the reputation of Rioja wine developed by the Spanish Government in its defence draws attention to a specific interest attaching to certain characteristics of the product, which are only partly protected by the provisions of Community law on designations of origin and the instruments available to ensure their exclusive use. I shall therefore now consider, first, what the reputation of the product at issue actually is, then whether and to what extent Community secondary legislation is appropriate for the purpose of ensuring respect for the reputation of Rioja quality wine and, lastly, to what extent the contested national legislation may be justified within the meaning of Article 36 of the Treaty inasmuch as it affords a measure of protection to the Rioja designation of origin.35. As regards the first aspect, there can in my view be no doubt that Rioja is a wine intended for members of the public who are particularly demanding in respect of the quality and integrity of the product. The designation denominación de origen calificada is used to designate high-quality wines in cases where all stages of production and bottling are carried out under the direction and control of the producer. This is confirmed by the strict rules producers are required to observe in order to be allowed to use the designation. I note, in this connection, that according to information supplied by the Commission only 10% of the quality wines exported in the European Community are subject to the requirement that they be bottled in the area of production. So, given the reputation of those wines, it cannot be precluded that the distinctive sign by which they are known and, in the present case, the designation of origin appearing on the label affixed to the bottles may be equally susceptible to damage. As the designation of origin is intended not only to show where the wine comes from but also to protect the reputation a particular product has acquired on the market, the right to retain that reputation, advanced by the defendant State, must be regarded as being entitled to protection under the Community legal order.The Spanish Government makes essentially the same point when it maintains that a designation of origin has two principal aims: (a) to guarantee that the product from a particular geographical area has certain specific characteristics and meets the requirements as to quality laid down by the public authorities, and (b) by recognising the exclusive right conferred by the designation, to prevent producers from other areas from using the designation and taking advantage of the reputation associated with it. The Commission adds that the function of a designation of origin, which is to guarantee the origin and quality of a product, cannot be fully effective unless the industrial property right of the person entitled to use the designation is itself protected. That right, according to the Commission, is identified with the commercial assets of the holder of the designation of origin and therefore with his reputation.In my view, those arguments, to the effect that a designation of origin is an instrument designed to protect the reputation of a product and is therefore itself entitled to protection, are well founded. The reputation of a product cannot in fact be dissociated from the fame and prestige of the distinctive sign that is one of the marks by which that product is identified on the market and one way of protecting that reputation is to protect the distinctive sign. I note that, on the subject of trade-marks - which, like designations of origin, are a distinctive sign of the product - the Court stated as long ago as 1978 in its judgment in Hoffmann-La Roche that in relation to trade-marks, the specific subject-matter is in particular to guarantee to the proprietor of the trade-mark that he has the exclusive right to use that trade-mark ... and therefore to protect him against competitors wishing to take advantage of the status and reputation of the trade-mark by selling products illegally bearing that trade-mark (paragraph 7). There can be no doubt that the producers of a wine bearing a designation of origin are entitled to similar protection in respect of the reputation of their product. In its judgment in Exportur too, the Court held that the reputation of a distinctive sign was important and was entitled to protection. It ruled that geographical names [which, like designations of origin, are registered distinctive signs within the meaning of Regulation No 2081/92] used for products which cannot be shown to derive a particular flavour from the land and which have not been produced in accordance with quality requirements and manufacturing standards laid down by an act of public authority ... may nevertheless enjoy a high reputation amongst consumers and constitute for producers established in the places to which they refer an essential means of attracting custom. The Court consequently concluded that geographical names are therefore entitled to protection. Similarly, in its judgment on méthode champenoise, the Court held that in order to achieve the objective of protecting registered designations or indications of geographical origin it is essential that the producer should not derive advantage, for his own product, from a reputation established for a similar product by producers from a different region.36. The applicant State claims that, to avoid damaging the reputation of Rioja wine, it is sufficient to state on the label that the wine was bottled in a region other than the region of production. I cannot share that view. As the Spanish and Italian Governments point out, such a statement would have the opposite of the desired effect, in that it would ultimately damage the reputation of the product. This adverse effect appears to be unavoidable in the case of goods such as Rioja wine which have particular characteristics and are produced with due regard to a great number of requirements laid down in specific rules. Indeed, as the Italian Government observes, the consumer might be led to suppose that the wine was not Rioja with the designation denominación de origen calificada or at least that it was of inferior quality - as already explained - and in this way, contrary to the general rule that products bearing a designation of origin must be specific and unique, two separate markets might gradually be created, one for Rioja with the designation denominación de origen calificada which is produced and bottled in the same region and one for Rioja also bearing the designation denominación de origen calificada which undergoes operations that differ from the normal production process and is subject to controls that are less rigorous than the controls on wine bottled in the area of origin. In support of this view I note that, in the judgment in Exportur cited above, the Court held that a label mentioning the actual place of origin or provenance of a product in accordance with Directive 97/112 on labelling would not suffice to protect a geographical name which enjoys a high reputation, even if such indications serve to distinguish the product in question from products traditionally associated with a certain geographical name. Similarly, in its judgment in Bristol-Myers Squibb concerning the repackaging of a pharmaceutical product by a person other than the owner of the trade-mark, the Court confirmed that the trade-mark owner is entitled to oppose repackaging by a third party if the presentation of the repackaged product may damage the reputation of the trade-mark and its owner (paragraph 75), even if the person who carried out the repackaging is indicated on the packaging.37. As regards the last aspect of my analysis, namely whether the Community legal order contains specific provisions on methods of protecting the reputation of designations of origin of quality wines, it must be observed that the provisions on the subject do not cover cases like the present one. Regulation No 823/87 on quality wines psr, cited above, only sets out the conditions that must be satisfied for wine to be regarded as a quality wine and does not lay down any rules on the sort of improper use of designations of origin that might arise in the present case. Even Regulation No 2081/92, a general regulation on geographical indications and designations of origin for agricultural products and foodstuffs - which does not purport to apply to the wine sector (see the second subparagraph of Article 1(1)) - does not contain specific provisions on damage to reputations caused by failure to comply with the rules on production and packaging, merely identifying in Article 13(1) instances of the use of names by unauthorised persons and taking no account of a case such as the present one, which is characterised by the fact that the product is submitted to operations performed by a person other than the proprietor of the name before it is sold to the final consumer. Even if such operations were allowed by the undertaking exporting the wine, they could alter the quality of the product and consequently damage its reputation.38. In those circumstances, given the characteristics of the product in question, the reputation it has acquired on the market and the fact that Community secondary legislation contains no specific provisions to protect quality wine against intervention by undertakings other than the producers before it is sold to the final consumer, national rules such as the Spanish rules at issue in the present case may be regarded as consistent with Community law on grounds of the protection of one of the general interests covered by Article 36, namely the interest in the correct use of a designation of origin constituting industrial and commercial property of producers in the Rioja area. That interpretation is supported by the recent Gorgonzola judgment, in which the Court held that Articles 30 and 36 of the Treaty do not preclude the application of non-Community rules on the protection of indications of provenance and designations of origin and that a fortiori they do not preclude Member States from taking the measures necessary for the protection of names registered in accordance with Regulation No 2081/92, including designations of origin.39. In conclusion, given the reputation of Rioja wine and the damage it would suffer were the designation denominación de origen calificada to be used for wine not bottled in the area of origin and given the fact that Community law contains no specific provisions to protect against situations such as the situation at issue in this case, the Spanish legislation, which requires that wine bearing the designation denominación de origen calificada be bottled in loco and is consequently a measure having equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction on exports within the meaning of Article 34 of the Treaty, must be regarded as justified under Article 36 on the ground that it is designed to protect industrial and commercial property, in this case the right to exclusive use of the designation denominación de origen calificada Rioja and the associated right to preserve the reputation of the product.Infringement of Article 5 of the EC Treaty40. As regards the claim that Spain is in breach of Article 5 of the Treaty, the Belgian Government claims that, by failing to take the necessary measures to comply with Article 34 of the Treaty as interpreted by the Court in the judgment in Delhaize, the defendant State has disregarded the principle of cooperation incumbent on it by virtue of Article 5 of the EC Treaty.Clearly, where the Court has delivered an interpretative judgment to the effect that certain national legislation is incompatible with Community law, every Member State is required to take all the necessary measures to bring its own law into line with the Community legal order in accordance with the indications given in that judgment.In the present case, the applicant State claims that the Court should declare that, by not taking appropriate measures to remedy the incompatibility between Community law and national law identified in the grounds and the operative part of the judgment in Delhaize, Spain has failed to fulfil its obligations. In order to determine whether that incompatibility still exists, account must be taken of the interpretation of Community law given in the preliminary ruling and all the elements of fact and law which were not examined in the previous case but are relevant for the purpose of reaching a decision on the substance in the present one. That said, in view of the fact that the Court's ruling in 1992 was based on the information supplied by the parties and was confined to the aspects of law raised in the question referred by the national court, in considering the present action brought under Article 170 of the EC Treaty to determine whether a Member State has failed to fulfil its obligations, the Community Court must take account of all the information supplied and all the arguments advanced by the parties, even if this is the first time that it has been called upon to consider that information and those arguments. If new elements have been presented that were not presented in the course of the procedure for a preliminary ruling, the Community Court may after examining them and assessing them in their entirety reach the conclusion that the alleged conflict between the Community and national legal orders does not exist.In the present case, since - as I have already shown - the Spanish legislation, although embodying a measure having equivalent effect to a restriction on exports, is nevertheless to be regarded as justified under Article 36 of the Treaty on the ground that it is designed to protect industrial and commercial property, there is no incompatibility between the Community legal order and the Spanish provisions, which require that wine bearing the designation denominación de origen calificada Rioja be bottled in loco, and the claim that the Kingdom of Spain has failed to fulfil its obligations under Community law, including its obligations under Article 5 of the Treaty, is consequently unfounded.Costs41. Under Article 69(2) of the Rules of Procedure, the unsuccessful party is to be ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied for in the successful party's pleadings. In the present case, the Kingdom of Spain has asked for the Kingdom of Belgium to be ordered to pay the costs. Since the Kingdom of Belgium has been unsuccessful, it must be ordered to pay the costs incurred by the Kingdom of Spain that are recoverable under Article 73 of the Rules of Procedure.Under Article 69(4) of the Rules of Procedure, the Commission and the intervening States must bear their own costs.Conclusion42. In the light of the foregoing considerations, I therefore suggest that the Court:(1) dismiss the action brought by the Kingdom of Belgium;(2) order the Kingdom of Belgium to pay the costs incurred by the Kingdom of Spain;(3) order the interveners to bear their own costs.