CELEX: 62005CJ0447
Language: en
Date: 2007-03-08
Title: Judgment of the Court (Fourth Chamber) of 8 March 2007.#Thomson Multimedia Sales Europe (C-447/05) and Vestel France (C-448/05) v Administration des douanes et droits indirects.#Reference for a preliminary ruling: Cour d'appel de Paris - France.#Community Customs Code - Implementing measures - Regulation (EEC) No 2454/93 - Annex 11 - Non-preferential origin of goods - Television receivers - Concept of substantial processing or working - Criterion of added value - Validity.#Joined cases C-447/05 and C-448/05.

Joined Cases C-447/05 and C-448/05
      Thomson Multimedia Sales Europe
      and
      Vestel France 
      v
      Administration des douanes et droits indirects
      (Reference for a preliminary ruling from the cour d’appel de Paris)
      (Community Customs Code – Implementing measures – Regulation (EEC) No 2454/93 – Annex 11 – Non-preferential origin of goods – Television receivers – Concept of substantial processing or working – Criterion of added value – Validity)
      Judgment of the Court (Fourth Chamber), 8 March 2007 
      Summary of the Judgment
      Origin of goods – Determination – Substantial process or operation – Assembly operation
      (Council Regulation No 2913/92, Arts 24 and 249; Commission Regulation No 2454/93, Annex 11)
      The operation of assembling various parts amounts to a substantial working or processing operation, capable of being regarded
         as conferring origin, where it represents, from a technical point of view and having regard to the definition of the goods
         in question, the decisive production stage during which the use to which the component parts are to be put becomes definite
         and the goods in question are given their specific qualities.
      
      However, in view of the variety of operations which may be described as assembly, there are situations where consideration
         on the basis of technical criteria may not be decisive in determining the origin of goods. In such cases it is necessary to
         take account of the value added by the assembly as an ancillary criterion.
      
      In that regard, the onus is on the Commission, within the framework of its discretion to adopt the measures required for the
         implementation of the Community Customs Code and in particular those relating to the origin of goods, to adopt provisions
         of a general nature which, with a view to ensuring legal certainty, take into account the overall situation of an industrial
         sector on a long‑term basis and which, consequently, will not be called into question by the specific situation at a given
         time of one particular undertaking within that sector.
      
      Thus, the account taken by the Commission of the wide variety of operations covered by the concept of assembly throughout
         the industrial sector concerned may justify reliance being placed on the criterion of added value. 
      
      (see paras 26-27, 36-37, operative part)
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fourth Chamber)
      8 March 2007 *(1)
      
      (Community Customs Code – Implementing measures – Regulation (EEC) No 2454/93 – Annex 11 – Non-preferential origin of goods – Television receivers – Concept of substantial processing or working – Criterion of added value – Validity)
      In Joined Cases C-447/05 and C-448/05,
      REFERENCES for a preliminary ruling under Article 234 EC from the Cour d’appel de Paris (France), made by decisions of 18
         November 2005, received at the Court on 16 December 2005, in the proceedings
      
      Thomson Multimedia Sales Europe      (C-447/05),
      
      Vestel France      (C-448/05)
      
      v
      Administration des douanes et droits indirects,
      
      THE COURT (Fourth Chamber),
      composed of K. Lenaerts, President of the Chamber, E. Juhász, R. Silva de Lapuerta, G. Arestis and J. Malenovský (Rapporteur),
         Judges,
      
      Advocate General: P. Mengozzi,
      Registrar: J. Swedenborg, Administrator,
      having regard to the written procedure and further to the hearing on 29 November 2006,
      after considering the observations submitted on behalf of:
      –       Thomson Multimedia Sales Europe, by F. Goguel, avocat, 
      –       Vestel France, by F. Goguel, avocat, and P. de Baere, advocaat,
      –       the French Government, by G. de Bergues and G. Le Bras, acting as Agents,
      –       the Italian Government, by I.M. Braguglia, acting as Agent, assisted by G. Albenzio, avvocato dello Stato,
      –       the United Kingdom Government, by C. White and K. Beal, acting as Agents,
      –       the Commission of the European Communities, by X. Lewis and J. Hottiaux, acting as Agents,
      having decided, after hearing the Advocate General, to proceed to judgment without an Opinion,
      gives the following
      Judgment
      1       The present references for a preliminary ruling concern the validity of the provisions in column three, under heading 8528
         of the Combined Nomenclature, set out in Annex 11 to Commission Regulation (EEC) No 2454/93 of 2 July 1993 laying down provisions for the implementation of Council Regulation (EEC) No 2913/92 establishing the Community Customs Code (OJ 1993 L 253, p. 1, ‘the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93’).
      
      2       The references have been made in the context of proceedings relating to the origin of television receivers, as determined
         by the Administration française des douanes et droits indirects (the French Authority responsible for Customs and Indirect
         Taxes, ‘the Customs Authority’) in binding information on non-preferential origin (‘BOIs’) issued in 2003 at the request of
         the companies Thomson Sales Europe, formerly Thomson Multimedia Sales Europe (‘Thomson’), and Vestel France (‘Vestel’).
      
       Legal context
       The Community Customs Code
      3       Article 24 in Section 1, entitled ‘Non-preferential origin’, of Chapter 2 of Title II of Council Regulation (EEC) No 2913/92 of 12 October 1992 establishing the Community Customs Code (OJ 1992 L 302, p. 1, ‘the Community Customs Code’) provides:
      ‘Goods whose production involved more than one country shall be deemed to originate in the country where they underwent their
         last, substantial, economically justified processing or working in an undertaking equipped for that purpose and resulting
         in the manufacture of a new product or representing an important stage of manufacture.’
      
      4       Article 249 of the Community Customs Code provides that the Commission of the European Communities is to adopt the measures
         required for the implementation of that code.
      
       Regulation No 2454/93
      5       Pursuant to the first paragraph of Article 39 of Regulation No 2454/93:
      ‘In the case of products obtained which are listed in Annex 11, the working or processing referred to in column three of the
         Annex shall be regarded as a process or operation conferring origin under Article 24 of the [Community Customs] Code.’
      
      6       Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 provides:
      
               
               
               CN code
            
            
               
               
               Description of products
            
            
               Working or processing carried out on non‑originating materials that confers the status of originating products
            
         
               (1)
            
            
               (2)
            
            
               (3)
            
         
               …
               ex 8528
            
            
               …
               Television receivers, (excluding videotuners, television projection equipment and video monitors), whether or not combined,
                  in the same housing, with radio-broadcast receivers or sound recording or reproducing apparatus, but not with videorecording
                  or reproducing apparatus
               
            
            
               …
               Manufacture where the increase in value acquired as a result of assembly operations and, if applicable, the incorporation
                  of parts originating in the country of assembly represents at least 45% of the ex-works price of the products 
               
               When the 45% rule is not met, the apparatus shall be treated as originating in the country of origin of parts whose ex-works
                  price represents more than 35% of the ex-works price of the apparatus
               
               When the 35% rule is met in two countries, the apparatus shall be treated as originating in the country of origin of parts
                  representing the greater percentage value
               
            
          The disputes in the main proceedings and the questions referred for a preliminary ruling
       Case C‑447/05
      
      7       Thomson markets in France television receivers manufactured in Poland from parts originating in Poland and other countries.
         The cathode ray tube, originating in Korea, represents 42.43% of the ex-works price of a television receiver. The components
         of the television receivers which originate in Poland and the manufacturing operations carried out in that country represent
         31.49% of the ex-works price.
      
      8       At the request of Thomson, the Customs Authority, on the basis of Article 24 of the Community Customs Code and Article 34
         of Regulation No 2454/93 and Annex 11 to the latter regulation, issued a BOI on 11 July 2003 declaring Korea to be the country of origin of those
         television receivers.
      
      9       Challenging the validity of the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 in the light of Article 24 of the Community Customs Code, Thomson subsequently applied to the Tribunal d’instance du 7e arrondissement de Paris (District Court, Paris 7) for annulment of that BOI and a declaration that Poland was the country
         of origin of the receivers in question.
      
      10     The Tribunal d’instance dismissed that application by a judgment of 8 June 2004, against which Thomson appealed to the Cour
         d’appel de Paris (Paris Court of Appeal). Having expressed doubts as to the validity of the contested provisions of Annex
         11 to Regulation No 2454/93, the latter court decided to stay proceedings and to refer the following question to the Court of Justice for a preliminary
         ruling:
      
      ‘Is Annex 11 to ... Regulation ... No 2454/93 ... invalid as being contrary to Article 24 of ... the Community Customs Code
         in that it has the result that a television receiver manufactured in Poland in the circumstances described in the proceedings
         is held to be of Korean origin?’
      
       Case C‑448/05
      
      11     Vestel markets in France television receivers manufactured in Turkey from parts originating in Turkey and other countries.
         The cathode ray tube, originating in China, represents 43.1141% of the ex-works price of a television receiver. The components
         of the television receivers which originate in Turkey and the manufacturing operations carried out in that country represent
         38.47% of the ex-works price.
      
      12     At the request of Vestel, the Customs Authority, on the basis of Article 24 of the Community Customs Code and Article 34 of
         Regulation No 2454/93 and Annex 11 to the latter regulation, issued a BOI on 24 March 2003 declaring China to be the country
         of origin of those television receivers.
      
      13     Challenging the validity of the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 in the light of Article 24 of the
         Community Customs Code, Vestel subsequently applied to the Tribunal d’instance du 7e arrondissement de Paris (District Court, Paris 7) for annulment of that BOI and for a declaration that Turkey was the country
         of origin of the receivers in question.
      
      14     The Tribunal d’instance dismissed that application by a judgment of 8 June 2004, against which Vestel appealed to the Cour
         d’appel de Paris (Paris Court of Appeal). Having expressed doubts as to the validity of the contested provisions of Annex
         11 to Regulation No 2454/93, the latter court decided to stay proceedings and to refer the following question to the Court
         of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
      
      ‘Is Annex 11 to ... Regulation ... No 2454/93 ... invalid as being contrary to Article 24 of ... the Community Customs Code
         in that it has the result that a television receiver manufactured in Turkey in the circumstances described in the proceedings
         is held to be of Chinese origin?’
      
      15     By order of the President of the Court of 7 March 2006, Cases C‑447/05 and C‑448/05 were joined for the purposes of the written and oral procedure and the judgment.
       The questions referred
      16     By its questions, the referring court seeks to ascertain whether the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 are invalid in so far as they require that the increase in value acquired as a result of assembly operations and, if applicable,
         the incorporation of parts originating in the country of assembly must represent at least 45% of the ex-works price of the
         television receivers in order for their manufacture to confer on them the origin of the country in which that assembly took
         place.
      
      17     The appellants in the main proceedings are essentially claiming that, by thus relying on a criterion based on added value,
         which they consider to be ‘quantitative’ and incompatible with the ‘qualitative’ criteria which, they submit, are set in Article
         24 of the Community Customs Code, the Commission has exceeded the powers conferred on it by the Council of the European Union
         for the purpose of implementing the rules which the Council set out in that code. 
      
      18     The first point to be noted is that the issue of the validity of the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 has been raised in the context of actions in the main proceedings which seek to challenge the legality of BOIs relating to
         television receivers, some of which were assembled in Poland and others in Turkey. The applications which gave rise to those
         BOIs were submitted in 2003 by undertakings with their headquarters in France and which wished to determine the non-preferential
         origin of those receivers as defined under the rules set out in Articles 22 to 26 of the Community Customs Code.
      
      19     Those applications did not seek to determine the preferential origin of goods, as defined in Article 27 of the Community Customs
         Code, and therefore did not seek to establish whether those goods benefited from preferential tariff measures contained in
         agreements concluded between the European Community and certain countries or groups of countries. 
      
      20     Accordingly, although the Republic of Poland and the Republic of Turkey enjoyed, when the BOIs at issue were issued, a special
         status in their customs relations with the European Communities, that fact is not in itself such as to cast doubt on the relevance
         of the questions raised by the referring court.
      
      21     In that regard it should be recalled, first, that, under Article 24 of the Community Customs Code, goods whose production
         involved more than one country are to be deemed to originate in the country where they underwent their last, substantial,
         economically justified processing or working in an undertaking equipped for that purpose and resulting in the manufacture
         of a new product or representing an important stage of manufacture. 
      
      22     That article reproduces the terms of Article 5 of Regulation (EEC) No 802/68 of the Council of 27 June 1968 on the common definition of the concept of the origin of goods (OJ, English Special Edition
         1968 (I), p. 165), which applied before the entry into force of the Community Customs Code. For the purpose of interpreting
         that regulation, the Court has held that it is clear from Article 5 that the decisive criterion is that of the last substantial
         process or operation (Case C‑26/88Brother International [1989] ECR 4253, paragraph 15). 
      
      23     Secondly, Article 249 of the Community Customs Code constitutes a sufficient basis for the Commission to adopt a set of rules
         for the implementation of that code (Case C‑48/98Söhl & Söhlke [1999] ECR I‑7877, paragraph 35). 
      
      24     It follows from the Court’s case-law that the Commission is authorised to adopt all the measures which are necessary or appropriate
         for the implementation of the basic legislation, provided that they are not contrary to such legislation or to the implementing
         legislation adopted by the Council (see, inter alia, Söhl & Söhlke, paragraph 36).
      
      25     In addition, the Commission has, in exercising the power conferred upon it by the Council for the implementation of Article
         24 of the Community Customs Code, a margin of discretion which allows it to define the abstract concepts of that provision
         with reference to specific working or processing operations (see Case 162/82Cousin and Others [1983] ECR 1101, paragraph 17).
      
      26     Concerning the issue whether the operation of assembling various parts amounts to a substantial working or processing operation,
         the Court has already held that such an operation may be regarded as conferring origin where it represents, from a technical
         point of view and having regard to the definition of the goods in question, the decisive production stage during which the
         use to which the component parts are to be put becomes definite and the goods in question are given their specific qualities
         (Case 114/78 Yoshida [1979] ECR 151 and Brother International, paragraph 19). 
      
      27     The Court has, however, held that, in view of the variety of operations which may be described as assembly, there are situations
         where consideration on the basis of technical criteria may not be decisive in determining the origin of goods. In such cases
         it is necessary to take account of the value added by the assembly as an ancillary criterion (Brother International, paragraph 20).
      
      28     The Court has specified that the relevance of that criterion was also confirmed by the International Convention on the simplification
         and harmonisation of customs procedures (Kyoto Convention), several annexes to which were accepted on behalf of the Community
         by Council Decision 77/415/EEC of 3 June 1977 (OJ 1977 L 166, p. 1 and 3), and the notes of which in relation to Rule 3 of
         Annex D.1 state that in practice the substantial processing criterion can be expressed by the ad valorem percentage rule, where either the percentage value of the materials utilised or the percentage of the value added reaches
         a specified level (Brother International, paragraph 21). 
      
      29     Furthermore, by Decision 94/800/EC of 22 December 1994 concerning the conclusion on behalf of the European Community, as regards matters within its competence,
         of the agreements reached in the Uruguay Round multilateral negotiations (1986-1994) (OJ 1994 L 336, p. 1), the Council approved,
         inter alia, the Agreement on Rules of Origin attached to the final act signed in Marrakech on 15 April 1994 (OJ 1994 L 336,
         p. 144), which provides that, when developing those rules, the ad valorem percentage criterion may be used.
      
      30     It should be recalled in this connection that international agreements, from their entry into force, are an integral part
         of the Community legal order (see, inter alia, Case C‑344/04IATA and ELFAA [2006] ECR I‑403, paragraph 36). It is settled case-law that Community legislation must, so far as possible, be interpreted
         in a manner that is consistent with those agreements (see, inter alia, Case C‑76/00 P Petrotub and Republica v Council [2003] ECR I‑79, paragraph 57).
      
      31     It follows from the foregoing that the choice of the criterion of added value is not per se incompatible with Article 24 of
         the Community Customs Code and that reliance on that criterion cannot, in itself, prove that the Commission has exceeded its
         powers of implementation under Article 249 of that code.
      
      32     The appellants in the main proceedings must be deemed to be claiming also that the situation in the industrial sector of television
         receiver manufacturing is such that consideration of the operations involved in the assembly of those television receivers
         on the basis of technical criteria may be conclusive for the purpose of determining the origin of those goods and therefore
         precludes the Commission from having regard, as it does in the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation 2454/93, to the criterion of added value, which is merely subsidiary.
      
      33     It must be pointed out in this connection that, for the purpose of applying Regulation No 802/68, the Commission adopted Regulation (EEC) No 2632/70 of 23 December 1970 on determining the origin of radio and television receivers (OJ, English Special Edition 1970 (III) p. 911),
         the provisions of which, referring to the criterion of the increase in value, are essentially reproduced in the contested
         provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93.
      
      34     According to the second recital in the preamble to Regulation No 2632/70, the assembly of radio and television receivers can involve processes of a more or less complicated character depending on
         the type of apparatus that is being assembled, the methods used and the conditions in which assembly takes place. The third
         recital in the preamble to that regulation also notes that the assembly operations, ‘at the present stage of technical development
         in this branch of industry’, do not generally constitute in themselves an important stage of manufacture within the meaning
         of Article 5 of Regulation No 802/68, but that the position may be otherwise in certain cases, for example where high performance apparatus or apparatus requiring
         strict control of the parts used is concerned or where assembly of all the component parts of the apparatus is involved. The
         fourth recital in the preamble to Regulation No 2632/70 adds that the variety of operations which come within the scope of ‘assembly’ makes it impossible to establish on the basis
         of a technical criterion the cases in which those operations represent an important stage of manufacture and that it is advisable,
         in those circumstances, to take into account the increase in value from those operations.
      
      35     Such grounds are capable of warranting retention of the criterion of added value in the contested provisions of Annex 11 to
         Regulation No 2454/93.
      
      36     The onus is on the Commission, within the framework of its discretion to adopt the measures required for the implementation
         of the Community Customs Code and in particular those relating to the origin of goods, to adopt provisions of a general nature
         which, with a view to ensuring legal certainty, take into account the overall situation of an industrial sector on a long-term
         basis and which, consequently, will not be called into question by the specific situation at a given time of one particular
         undertaking within that sector.
      
      37     In those circumstances, the account taken by the Commission of the wide variety of operations covered by the concept of assembly
         throughout the industrial sector concerned justified reliance being placed on the criterion of added value.
      
      38     Indeed, the appellants in the main proceedings themselves emphasise in their written observations that the operations to assemble
         the various components of the receivers at issue in the main proceedings form part of a complex industrial process. Furthermore,
         the documents in the files submitted to the Court do not permit the inference that that process is identical for all television
         receiver manufacturers. In any event, those documents do not allow the conclusion to be drawn that the operations covered
         by the concept of assembly throughout the industrial sector concerned are very diverse in nature.
      
      39     Against that background, the need to apply customs rules uniformly throughout the customs territory of the Community requires
         that the abstract concepts of the last substantial working or processing operation, to which Article 24 of the Community Customs
         Code refers in respect of all goods, are defined, with regard to particular products such as television receivers, by specific
         provisions which can take into account the diversity of the processes for manufacturing that equipment. Consequently, it cannot
         be incorrect in law to have recourse to a clear and objective criterion, such as that of added value, which, in respect of
         such goods composed of many different parts, makes it possible to explain what is meant by the substantial processing conferring
         on them their origin.
      
      40     The fact that the Commission has been led, for the reasons mentioned above, to thus define the rules on determination of origin
         of television receivers by relying on the criterion of added value in no way implies that that criterion is per se, and generally
         speaking, stricter than the general criteria set out in Article 24 of the Community Customs Code or that it would necessarily
         place such products in a more unfavourable position than those products, even if comparable in character, to which those general
         criteria or other criteria are applied. The appellants in the main proceedings cannot therefore effectively challenge the
         validity of the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 by invoking the Court’s findings in Cousin and Others, which concerned the provisions of a regulation which was held to be discriminatory because it relied on considerably stricter
         criteria to define the origin of a product than those used to define another comparable product. 
      
      41     Furthermore, the documents in the files submitted to the Court do not indicate that applying that criterion of added value,
         as the appellants in the main proceedings submit, is any more problematic than applying the general concepts to which Article
         24 of the Community Customs Code refers. There is no mention, in this connection, of any problem having been encountered by
         the Customs Authority responsible for dealing with the appellants’ requests for BOIs when that authority applied, in the cases
         before the Court, the criterion of added value set out in the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93. 
      
      42     It is, admittedly, true that if, as the appellants in the main proceedings also claim, the cathode ray tube now always represents
         at least 35% of the ex-works price of television receivers, there is a risk that the origin of that part will more often than
         not confer on those receivers their origin. Nevertheless, fulfilling the condition referred to above will be impossible only
         where the cathode ray tube represents at least 55% of the ex-works price. By contrast, the situations described before the
         referring court do not suggest that that condition will not be fulfilled in any situation. Application of the contested provisions
         of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 cannot therefore have the effect that the origin of the television receivers will be treated as being the same as that of
         the cathode ray tubes.
      
      43     The provisions at issue are drafted in general terms and do not confer any decisive significance in the determination of the
         origin of the product concerned on any of its particular components, such as the cathode ray tube. Those provisions, contrary
         to what is contended by appellants in the main proceedings, are therefore not comparable to the provisions which were at issue
         in Yoshida and which precisely did confer such a significance on one of the components of the product concerned in that case. 
      
      44     It must be observed, in addition, that, although the situation described by the appellants in the main proceedings is the
         result of developments in television receiver manufacturing techniques, that situation appears in the present case to be merely
         circumstantial whereas, as the observations submitted at the hearing demonstrate, developments in current manufacturing techniques
         such as those for plasma screens have the potential substantially to affect that alleged situation. It follows that that situation
         is not a valid ground on which the soundness of relying on the criterion of added value may be challenged.
      
      45     Finally, it must be stated that, by requiring that the value acquired as a result of assembly operations and, if applicable,
         the incorporation of parts originating in the country of assembly must represent at least 45% of the ex-works price of the
         products in order for their manufacture to confer on them the origin of the country where that assembly from material originating
         in several countries took place, the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93 thereby set a sufficient percentage for those operations to be considered to involve an appreciable increase in the commercial
         value of the finished product  (see, to that effect, Brother International, paragraph 22). Such a percentage does not therefore appear to be vitiated by any manifest error of assessment.
      
      46     In the light of all the foregoing, the answer to the questions raised is that consideration of them has disclosed nothing
         capable of affecting the validity of the contested provisions of Annex 11 to Regulation No 2454/93.
      
       Costs
      47     Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings, a step in the actions pending before the national court,
         the decision on costs is a matter for that court. Costs incurred in submitting observations to the Court, other than the costs
         of those parties, are not recoverable.
      
      On those grounds, the Court (Fourth Chamber) hereby rules:
      Consideration of the questions raised has disclosed nothing capable of affecting the validity of the provisions in column
            three, under heading 8528 of the Combined Nomenclature, set out in Annex 11 to Commission Regulation (EEC) No 2454/93 of 2 July 1993 laying down provisions for the implementation of Council Regulation (EEC) No 2913/92 establishing the Community Customs Code.
      [Signatures]
      1* Language of the cases: French.