CELEX: 62017CN0416
Language: en
Date: 2017-07-10 00:00:00
Title: Case C-416/17: Action brought on 10 July 2017 — European Commission v French Republic

4.9.2017   
            
            
               EN
            
            
               Official Journal of the European Union
            
            
               C 293/22
            
         Action brought on 10 July 2017 — European Commission v French Republic
   (Case C-416/17)
   (2017/C 293/27)
   Language of the case: French
   
      Parties
   
   
      Applicant: European Commission (represented by: J.-F. Brakeland and W. Roels, acting as Agents)
   
      Defendant: French Republic
   
      Form of order sought
   
   The applicant claims that the Court should:
   
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               declare that, in maintaining the effects of the provisions aimed at eliminating double economic taxation of the dividends that allow a parent company to set off against the advance payment, for which it is liable when it redistributes to its shareholders dividends paid by its subsidiaries, the tax credit applied to the distribution of those dividends if they come from a subsidiary established in France, but not to offer that option if those dividends originate from a subsidiary established in another Member State, since, in that case, that legislation does not give entitlement to a tax credit applied to the distribution of those dividends by that subsidiary in so far as, according to the case-law of the Conseil d’État, applications are granted for reimbursement of advance payments made in breach of EU law within the meaning of the judgment of the Court in Case C-310/09 Accor
                   (1), subject to the following three restrictions:
               
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                           the right to reimbursement of the advance payment illegally made is restricted by the refusal to take into account taxation suffered by sub-subsidiaries established outside France;
                        
                     
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                           the right to reimbursement of the advance payment illegally made is restricted by disproportionate evidentiary requirements;
                        
                     
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                           the right to reimbursement of the advance payment illegally made is restricted by limiting the tax credit to the amount of the dividend redistributed in France which comes from a subsidiary established outside France, and whereas the Conseil d’État, administrative court adjudicating at last instance, established those restrictions without asking the Court of Justice for the purposes of determining the compatibility of those restrictions with EU law,
                        
                     the French Republic has failed to fulfil its obligations under the principles of equivalence and effectiveness and in accordance with Articles 49, 63 and the third paragraph of Article 267 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union
            
         
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               order the French Republic to pay the costs.
            
         
      Pleas in law and main arguments
   
   The European Commission complains that France, through the settled case-law of the Conseil d’État, its highest administrative court, refused to give full effect to the judgment of the Court of Justice in Case C-310/09, Ministre du Budget, des Comptes publics et de la Fonction publique v Accor SA, in particular in imposing restrictions contrary to EU law for the reimbursement of a tax unduly levied, namely withholding tax.
   In its judgment in Accor, handed down following a preliminary question, the Court of Justice found that the French tax rules seeking to eliminate economic double taxation of dividends maintained discrimination in respect of taxation of dividends which have their source in other EU Member States. The taxes which the Court has found to be contrary to EU law must thus be reimbursed.
   The Commission considers that France is not complying with the judgment of the Court of Justice on three specific points:
   
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               it does not take into account taxes already paid by non-French sub-subsidiaries;
            
         
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               it maintains, in order to limit the right to reimbursement of the companies concerned, requirements regarding the evidence to be provided, not observing the criteria laid down by the Court of Justice;
            
         
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               it limits in an absolute manner the tax credit system to a third of the dividend redistributed by a non-French subsidiary.
            
         These violations are moreover due to the fact that the Conseil d’État failed to comply with its obligation to refer a question to the Court of Justice pursuant to Article 267 TFEU.
   
      (1)  Judgment of the Court (First Chamber) of 15 September 2011 in Case C-310/09, Ministre du Budget, des Comptes publics et de la Fonction publique v Accor SA, EU:C:2011:581.