CELEX: 62010CN0110
Language: en
Date: 2010-03-01 00:00:00
Title: Case C-110/10 P: Appeal brought on 1 March 2010 by Solvay SA against the judgment delivered by the General Court (Sixth Chamber) on 17 December 2009 in Case T-58/01 Solvay v Commission

19.6.2010   
            
            
               EN
            
            
               Official Journal of the European Union
            
            
               C 161/16
            
         
      Appeal brought on 1 March 2010 by Solvay SA against the judgment delivered by the General Court (Sixth Chamber) on 17 December 2009 in Case T-58/01 Solvay v Commission
      (Case C-110/10 P)
      (2010/C 161/22)
      Language of the case: French
      
         Parties
      
      
         Appellant: Solvay SA (represented by: P.-A. Foriers, R. Jafferali, F. Louis, A. Vallery, avocats)
      
         Other party to the proceedings: European Commission
      
         Form of order sought
      
      
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                  Join the present action to the appeal brought by the appellant against the judgment of the General Court of 17 December 2009 in Case T-57/01;
               
            
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                  set aside the judgment delivered on 17 December 2009;
               
            
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                  therefore, re-examine the action in respect of the points that were annulled and annul the Commission’s decision of 13 December 2000 in its entirety;
               
            
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                  cancel the fine of EUR 2.25 million or, failing that, reduce that fine by a very substantial amount in order to compensate the appellant for the serious damage it suffered on account of the extraordinary length of the proceedings;
               
            
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                  order the Commission to pay the costs of the appeal proceedings and the costs of the proceedings before the General Court.
               
            
         Pleas in law and main arguments
      
      The appellant submits three pleas in support of its appeal.
      By way of its first plea, which comprises five parts, the appellant claims infringement of the right to be tried within a reasonable time. Solvay criticises, in particular, that the General Court did not undertake a comprehensive assessment of the duration, including both the administrative and the judicial phase of the proceedings (first part), (ii) did not take into account the duration of proceedings before the General Court (second part), (iii) made sanctions for exceeding a reasonable time subject to proof of concrete infringement of the appellant’s procedural rights even though the two principles are separate and distinct (third part), (iv) found that no such infringement existed in the present case (fourth part), (v) misinterpreted the facts of the case in that the General Court took the view that the appellant waived its right to seek, by way of an alternative plea, a reduction in the fine because the reasonable time was exceeded (fifth part), even though the appellant expressly sought the cancellation or, at least, a reduction of the fine on those grounds.
      By its second plea, which comprises five parts, the appellant claims that the General Court infringed its procedural rights in so far as it required the appellant to show that the documents which the Commission lost could have been useful for its defence (first part). Indeed, it cannot be automatically ruled out, without some sort of provisional examination of the file, that the documents in question might have influenced the Commission’s decision (second and third part). Further, the appellant criticises the General Court for holding, in the judgment under appeal, that the appellant did not show that the documents that disappeared might have been useful for its defence on the grounds that the appellant did not raise a plea before the General Court to contest the existence of the agreement, which it could have done even without access to the file, even though the appellant had submitted that plea before the Commission and the content of the lost documents can no longer be determined by anyone (fourth part). Finally, the appellant criticises the General Court for not having shown any interest in the lost documents on the ground that it had already rejected the appellant’s substantive plea as regards the lack of effect on trade between Member States, even though it did not know the content of the lost documents and could not therefore exclude that they might have allowed the appellant to present either additional or even entirely new arguments, both substantive and relating to the amount of the fine or the regularity of the procedure (fifth part).
      By its third and last plea, the appellant claims infringement of its right to be heard following the annulment by the General Court of a first decision imposing a fine on the appellant but prior to the adoption, by the Commission, of the contested decision. Indeed, the judgment under appeal does not respond to its action for annulment and refuses to acknowledge that the Commission is under an obligation to hear the undertaking at issue where an earlier judgment of the General Court finds procedural irregularity which affected the preparatory measures.