CELEX: 62010TN0564
Language: en
Date: 2010-12-15 00:00:00
Title: Case T-564/10: Action brought on 15 December 2010 — Quimitécnica.com and de Mello v Commission

19.2.2011   
            
            
               EN
            
            
               Official Journal of the European Union
            
            
               C 55/25
            
         Action brought on 15 December 2010 — Quimitécnica.com and de Mello v Commission
   (Case T-564/10)
   2011/C 55/46
   Language of the case: Portuguese
   
      Parties
   
   
      Applicants: Quimitécnica.com — Comércio e Indústria Química, SA (Lordelo, Portugal) and José de Mello — Sociedade Gestora de Participações Sociais, SA (Lisbon, Portugal) (represented by: J. Calheiros, lawyer)
   
      Defendant: European Commission
   
      Form of order sought
   
   The applicants claim that the General Court should
   
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               partially annul, in accordance with Article 264 of the TFEU, the Commission Decision, adopted by its accounting officer by letter dated 8 October 2010, with the reference BUDG/C5/MG s737983, in so far as it requires the financial guarantee to be provided by a bank with long-term ‘AA’ rating;
            
         
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               order the Commission to pay the costs.
            
         
      Pleas in law and main arguments
   
   In support of their application, the applicants allege:
   1.   
         First plea, regarding breach of essential formalities — failure to state reasons for the Decision adopted on 8 October 2010.
      
   
   Based on this plea, the applicants claim that:
   
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               Under Article 296 of the TFEU all acts, including decisions, must state the reasons on which they are based. The Decision adopted on 8 October 2010 does not state any reasons for the rating requirement of the bank issuing the guarantee.
            
         
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               Considering the level of rating required, there should be such a statement of reasons. The requirement to state reasons is even greater in this case, where a discretionary, and not a circumscribed, power is being exercised.
            
         
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               Furthermore, the Decision does not invoke any Community rule (even internal) on which such a requirement could be based. As the Decision lacks a statement of reasons it should, in this part, be annulled.
            
         2.   
         Second plea, regarding breach of the Treaty — the principle of proportionality.
      
   
   Based on this plea, the applicants claim that:
   
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               Under Article 85 of Regulation (EC, EURATOM) No 2342/2002, to allow additional time for payment, ‘in order to safeguard the Community's rights, the debtor [is to lodge] a financial guarantee covering the debt outstanding in both the principal sum and the interest, which is accepted by the institution’s accounting officer.’ The interests that that guarantee is intended to protect, therefore, are the Community’s rights, in this case the right to receive the amounts due.
            
         
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               A first demand guarantee, along the lines of the model required by the Commission, issued by a credit institution, constitutes a proper and appropriate means of ensuring payment of the amounts due. Thus, the whole Portuguese legal system (and, in general, that of the other countries of the European Union) accepts the provision of a bank guarantee for the most diverse purposes, including to suspend the execution of judicial decisions.
            
         
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               In the present case, the guarantee proposed by the applicants (and not accepted by the Commission) would be issued by the Banco Comercial Português, S.A., a credit institution having its head office in the European Union, subject to the rules of supervision and consolidation defined by the Community institutions. Thus, there seems to be no justification, in order to defend the Community’s rights, for ruling out the possibility of the guarantee being issued by the said bank and requiring it to be issued by a bank with long-term ‘AA’ rating.
            
         
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               Furthermore, the public is aware of the current situation in which the ratings of Portuguese banks have been recently affected by the change in the rating of the Portuguese Republic. Thus, at the moment, there is no bank based in Portugal that fulfils the rating criteria (long-term ‘AA’) required in the Commission Decision.
            
         
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               Accordingly, the Commission Decision therefore does not fulfil the criterion of necessity (which constitutes an important dimension of the principle of proportionality) since, of the possible measures, the Commission opted for the one that, in the current circumstances, is most prejudicial to the interests of the applicants.
            
         
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               Thus, there is a clear lack of proportionality between the requirement imposed by the Commission (guarantee issued by a European bank with long-term ‘AA’ rating) and the objective sought (protection of the right of the Commission to receipt of the amounts), so that the Decision of the Commission should, in this part, be annulled.