5 IP and 101 TFUE 5 IP and 101 TFUE
5.1 Licensing agreement 5.1 Licensing agreement
5.1.1 CJEU, Nungesser, C-258/78 5.1.1 CJEU, Nungesser, C-258/78
Keywords
1 . COMPETITION - AGREEMENTS - INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS - EXERCISE OF THOSE RIGHTS - CONDITIONS - GRANT OF EXCLUSIVE LICENCE - EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENT - AGREEMENTS HAVING THE COMBINED EFFECT OF GRANTING ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION - PROHIBITION
( EEC TREATY , ART . 85 ( 1 ))
2 . COMPETITION - COMMUNITY RULES - INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS - PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - SUBJECT TO THE SAME SYSTEM AS OTHER PROPERTY RIGHTS - SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE PRODUCTS COVERED BY PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - NEED TO TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION
3 . COMPETITION - AGREEMENTS - INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS - PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - OPEN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE - CONCEPT - LAWFULNESS - CONDITIONS
( EEC TREATY , ART . 85 ( 1 ))
4 . COMPETITION - AGREEMENTS - EXCLUSIVE LICENCE CONFERRING ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION - CONCEPT - EFFECTS - ARTIFICIAL MAINTENANCE OF SEPARATE NATIONAL MARKETS - PROHIBITION
( EEC TREATY , ART . 85 ( 1 ))
5 . COMPETITION - AGREEMENTS - PROHIBITION - EXEMPTION - EXCLUSIVE LICENCE IN RESPECT OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS CONFERRING ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION - NOT INDISPENSABLE FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PRODUCTION - REFUSAL OF EXEMPTION JUSTIFIED
( EEC TREATY , ART . 85 ( 3 ))
Summary
1 . AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT , AS A LEGAL ENTITY , DOES NOT POSSESS THOSE ELEMENTS OF CONTRACT OR CONCERTED PRACTICE REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE EEC TREATY , BUT THE EXERCISE OF THAT RIGHT MIGHT FALL WITHIN THE AMBIT OF THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN THE TREATY IF IT WERE TO MANIFEST ITSELF AS THE SUBJECT , THE MEANS OR THE CONSEQUENCES OF AN AGREEMENT . SUCH IS THE CASE WHERE AN AGREEMENT GRANTING EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS TO UTILIZE AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT IN A CERTAIN TERRITORY , IN CONJUNCTION WITH AN AGREEMENT APPOINTING THE LICENSEE SOLE DISTRIBUTOR FOR THAT TERRITORY , HAS THE EFFECT OF ENSURING ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION FOR THE LICENSEE BY PREVENTING PARALLEL IMPORTS .
2 . THE CHARACTERISTICS OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS , STEMMING FROM THE PARTICULAR NATURE OF THE PROCEDURE FOR THE REPRODUCTION OF SEEDS , ARE NOT OF SO SPECIAL A NATURE AS TO REQUIRE , IN RELATION TO THE COMPETITION RULES , A DIFFERENT TREATMENT FROM OTHER COMMERCIAL OR INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS . THAT CONCLUSION DOES NOT AFFECT THE NEED TO TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION , FOR THE PURPOSES OF THE RULES ON COMPETITION , THE SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE PRODUCTS WHICH FORM THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS .
3 . IN SO FAR AS THE EXCLUSIVE LICENCE GRANTED IS IN THE NATURE OF AN OPEN LICENCE , THAT IS TO SAY THAT IT RELATES SOLELY TO THE CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE OWNER OF THE RIGHT AND THE LICENSEE , WHEREBY THE OWNER MERELY UNDERTAKES NOT TO GRANT OTHER LICENCES IN RESPECT OF THE SAME TERRITORY AND NOT TO COMPETE HIMSELF WITH THE LICENSEE ON THAT TERRITORY , THE GRANT OF AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN RESPECT OF CERTAIN VARIETIES OF SEEDS NEWLY DEVELOPED IN A MEMBER STATE IS NOT IN ITSELF INCOMPATIBLE WITH ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE EEC TREATY , IN VIEW OF THE SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE PRODUCTS IN QUESTION , IF IT PROMOTES THE DISSEMINATION OF A NEW TECHNOLOGY AND COMPETITION IN THE COMMUNITY BETWEEN THE NEW PRODUCT AND SIMILAR EXISTING PRODUCTS .
4 . AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OR ASSIGNMENT WITH ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION , UNDER WHICH THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT PROPOSE , AS REGARDS THE PRODUCTS AND THE TERRITORY IN QUESTION , TO ELIMINATE ALL COMPETITION FROM THIRD PARTIES , SUCH AS PARALLEL IMPORTERS OR LICENSEES FOR OTHER TERRITORIES , RESULTS IN THE ARTIFICIAL MAINTENANCE OF SEPARATE NATIONAL MARKETS AND IS THEREFORE CONTRARY TO THE TREATY .
5 . THE ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION CONFERRED ON THE LICENSEE OF A PLANT BREEDER ' S RIGHTS IN RESPECT OF CERTAIN VARIETIES OF SEEDS INTENDED TO BE USED BY A LARGE NUMBER OF FARMERS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF AN IMPORTANT PRODUCT FOR HUMAN AND ANIMAL FOODSTUFFS MANIFESTLY GOES BEYOND WHAT IS INDISPENSABLE FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OR THE PROMOTION OF TECHNICAL PROGRESS AND CONSTITUTES A SUFFICIENT REASON FOR REFUSING TO GRANT AN EXEMPTION UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE TREATY .
Parties
IN CASE 258/78
1 . L . C . NUNGESSER KG , DARMSTADT ,
2 . KURT EISELE , DARMSTADT ,
REPRESENTED BY JURGEN GUNDISCH , RECHTSANWALT , HAMBURG , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE IN LUXEMBOURG AT THE OFFICE OF JEANNE JANSEN-HOUSSE , HUISSIER , 21 RUE ALDRINGEN ,
APPLICANTS ,
V
COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES , REPRESENTED BY ITS LEGAL ADVISER , ERICH ZIMMERMANN , ACTING AS AGENT , ASSISTED BY HANS ULRICH , RECHTSANWALT , MUNICH , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE AT THE OFFICE OF ORESTE MONTALTO , A MEMBER OF THE COMMISSION ' S LEGAL DEPARTMENT , JEAN MONNET BUILDING , KIRCHBERG ,
DEFENDANT ,
WITH THE PARTICIPATION OF :
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM , REPRESENTED BY G . DAGTOGLOU , OF THE TREASURY SOLICITOR ' S OFFICE , ACTING AS AGENT , ASSISTED BY ROBIN JACOB QC , BARRISTER , OF GRAY ' S INN , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE IN LUXEMBOURG AT THE EMBASSY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM , 28 BOULEVARD ROYAL ,
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC , REPRESENTED SUCCESSIVELY BY GUY LADREIT DE LACHARRIERE AND BY NOEL MUSEUX , ACTING AS AGENTS , AND BY ALEXANDRE CARNELUTTI , ACTING AS DEPUTY AGENT , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE IN LUXEMBOURG AT THE EMBASSY OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC , 2 RUE BERTHOLET ,
THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES , REPRESENTED BY LISE FUNCK-BRENTANO , OF THE PARIS BAR , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE IN LUXEMBOURG AT THE CHAMBERS OF MR NEUEN-KAUFFMANN , 21 RUE PHILIPPE-II ,
AND
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY , REPRESENTED BY MARTIN SEIDEL , ACTING AS AGENT , ASSISTED BY PROFESSOR DR RUDOLF LUKES , WITH AN ADDRESS FOR SERVICE IN LUXEMBOURG AT THE EMBASSY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY , 20-22 AVENUE EMILE-REUTER ,
INTERVENERS ,
Subject of the case
APPLICATION FOR A DECLARATION THAT COMMISSION DECISION NO 78/823/EEC OF 21 SEPTEMBER 1978 RELATING TO A PROCEEDING UNDER ARTICLE 85 OF THE EEC TREATY ( IV/28.824 - BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - MAIZE SEED ) ( OFFICIAL JOURNAL 1978 , L 286 , P . 23 ) IS VOID ,
Grounds
1 BY AN APPLICATION LODGED AT THE COURT REGISTRY ON 27 NOVEMBER 1978 , THE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP L . C . NUNGESSER KG ( HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AS ' ' NUNGESSER ' ' ) AND KURT EISELE , SOLE ACTIVE PARTNER AND MAJORITY SHAREHOLDER OF THAT FIRM , BOTH CARRYING ON BUSINESS IN DARMSTADT , BROUGHT AN ACTION UNDER THE SECOND PARAGRAPH OF ARTICLE 173 OF THE EEC TREATY FOR A DECLARATION THAT THE COMMISSION ' S DECISION OF 21 SEPTEMBER 1978 RELATING TO A PROCEEDING UNDER ARTICLE 85 OF THE EEC TREATY ( IV/28.824 - BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - MAIZE SEED ), NOTIFIED TO THE APPLICANTS ON 27 SEPTEMBER 1978 AND PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL 1978 , L 286 , P . 23 , IS VOID .
2 UNDER ARTICLE 5 OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF NEW VARIETIES OF PLANTS OF 2 DECEMBER 1961 ( UNITED NATIONS TREATY SERIES , VOL . 815 P . 89 ), UPON WHICH THE LEGISLATION OF MEMBER STATES IS BASED , BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ARE THOSE RIGHTS CONFERRED ON THE BREEDER OF A NEW PLANT VARIETY OR HIS SUCCESSOR IN TITLE PURSUANT TO WHICH THE PRODUCTION , FOR PURPOSES OF COMMERCIAL MARKETING , OF THE REPRODUCTIVE OR VEGETATIVE PROPAGATING MATERIAL , AS SUCH , OF THE NEW VARIETY AND THE OFFERING FOR SALE OR MARKETING OF SUCH MATERIAL ARE SUBJECT TO THE PRIOR AUTHORIZATION OF THE BREEDER .
3 THE CONTESTED DECISION FOUND THAT ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE EEC TREATY HAD BEEN INFRINGED AS A RESULT OF THE CONTENT AND APPLICATION OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF TWO CONTRACTS ENTERED INTO BETWEEN MR EISELE AND THE INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE AGRONOMIQUE ( NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH , HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AS ' ' INRA ' ' ), PARIS , IN 1960 AND 1965 CONCERNING RESPECTIVELY THE ASSIGNMENT , IN RESPECT OF THE TERRITORY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY , OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OVER CERTAIN VARIETIES OF HYBRID MAIZE SEEDS DEVELOPED BY INRA AND THE GRANTING OF EXCLUSIVE PROPA GATING AND SELLING RIGHTS OVER THOSE SEEDS FOR THAT TERRITORY . IN ADDITION , IT FOUND THAT THE CONTENT AND APPLICATION OF THE SETTLEMENT REACHED IN 1973 BETWEEN MR EISELE AND LOUIS DAVID KG , OF MEISENHEIM ( GERMANY ), TO PREVENT THAT UNDERTAKING FROM IMPORTING AND SELLING INRA SEEDS IN THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY ALSO CONSTITUTED AN INFRINGEMENT OF ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE EEC TREATY ( ARTICLE 1 OF THE DECISION ).
4 THE DECISION ALSO REJECTED MR EISELE ' S APPLICATION FOR THE EXEMPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) ( ARTICLE 2 OF THE DECISION ).
5 IN SUPPORT OF THEIR APPLICATION THE APPLICANTS MAKE THE FOLLOWING FIVE SUBMISSIONS :
FIRST SUBMISSION : THE CONTESTED DECISION IS NUGATORY TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT REFERS TO THE 1960 CONTRACT , THAT CONTRACT HAVING BEEN SUPERSEDED BY OTHER CONTRACTS ENTERED INTO BY THE SAME PARTIES IN 1961 .
SECOND SUBMISSION : THE CONTESTED DECISION IS IN BREACH OF REGULATION NO 26/62 OF THE COUNCIL OF 4 APRIL 1962 APPLYING CERTAIN RULES OF COMPETITION TO PRODUCTION OF AND TRADE IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ( OFFICIAL JOURNAL , ENGLISH SPECIAL EDITION , 1959 TO 1962 , P . 129 ), THE PROVISIONS OF WHICH PRECLUDE THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY TO THE CONTRACTS AT ISSUE .
THIRD SUBMISSION : THE CONTESTED DECISION IS IN BREACH OF ARTICLES 85 ( 1 ) AND ( 2 ), 30 AND 36 OF THE TREATY INASMUCH AS :
A . THE COMMISSION FAILED TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE PARTICULAR NATURE OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS , THE EXERCISE OF WHICH DEMANDS STRICT OBSERVANCE OF TERRITORIAL PROTECTION ; AND
B.THE COMMISSION WAS WRONG TO CONSIDER THAT EVERY EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS BY DEFINITION FALLS WITHIN THE TERMS OF ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY .
FOURTH SUBMISSION : THE CONTESTED DECISION IS IN BREACH OF ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE TREATY , SINCE THE CONDITIONS FOR THE GRANT OF AN EXEMPTION UNDER THE TERMS OF THAT PROVISION ARE SATISFIED IN THE PRESENT CASE AND , IN ANY EVENT , THE REASONS GIVEN FOR REFUSING SUCH AN EXEMPTION ARE VITIATED BY ERRORS OF FACT AND LAW .
FIFTH SUBMISSION : THE CONTESTED DECISION IS UNLAWFUL FOR MISUSE OF POWERS IN SO FAR AS IT RELATES TO THE SETTLEMENT REACHED BETWEEN LOUIS DAVID KG AND MR EISELE , SINCE , UNDER GERMAN LAW , THAT SETTLEMENT MUST BE TREATED AS AN ORDER OF THE COURT .
6 THE ACTION DOES NOT RELATE TO THOSE PARTS OF ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION WHICH CONCERN THE OBLIGATIONS ARISING OUT OF CLAUSES 2 AND 3 OF THE CONTRACT OF 1965 OR CLAUSE 1 OF THAT CONTRACT TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT IMPOSES THE OBLIGATION ON THE LICENSEE TO REFRAIN FROM PRODUCING OR SELLING MAIZE SEED OF VARIETIES OTHER THAN INRA VARIETIES .
7 THE INTERVENTIONS BY THE GOVERNMENTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM , THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY AND FRANCE AND BY THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES ( OFFICE FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ) PRINCIPALLY RELATE TO THE THIRD AND FOURTH SUBMISSIONS . THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT ALSO STATED THAT INRA IS A PUBLIC BODY TO WHICH ARE ASSIGNED TASKS OF GENERAL INTEREST AND THAT THE APPLICANTS WERE THEREFORE RIGHT TO HAVE RELIED UPON ARTICLE 90 ( 2 ) OF THE EEC TREATY IN THE COURSE OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION .
8 IN THAT CONNECTION IT MUST BE REMEMBERED THAT UNDER ARTICLE 90 ( 2 ) OF THE TREATY UNDERTAKINGS ENTRUSTED WITH THE OPERATION OF SERVICES OF GENERAL ECONOMIC INTEREST ARE SUBJECT TO THE RULES ON COMPETITION CONTAINED IN THE TREATY , IN SO FAR AS THE APPLICATION OF SUCH RULES DOES NOT OBSTRUCT THE PERFORMANCE OF THE PARTICULAR TASKS ASSIGNED TO THEM .
9 THE CONTESTED DECISION STATES - AND THIS IS NOT DISPUTED BY THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT - THAT THE PARTICULAR TASK WHICH , UNDER FRENCH LAW , IS ASSIGNED TO INRA IS THAT OF ORGANIZING , PERFORMING AND DISSEMINATING ALL FORMS OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH , WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THE IMPROVEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT OF CROP PRODUCTION AND THE PRESERVATION AND PROCESSING OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS . THE PERFORMANCE OF THAT TASK IS NOT OBSTRUCTED BY THE APPLICATION OF THE TREATY ' S COMPETITION RULES TO A SERIES OF CONTRACTS WHOSE MAIN SUBJECT-MATTER IS NOT PLANT BREEDING , THAT IS TO SAY THE CREATION OR DEVELOPMENT OF NEW VARIETIES , BUT THE MARKETING OF MAIZE SEED WHICH ORIG INATES FROM BASIC LINES PREVIOUSLY BRED AND DEVELOPED BY INRA FOLLOWING RESEARCH ACTIVITY AND WHICH IS INTENDED FOR SALE TO FARMERS . RELIANCE ON ARTICLE 90 ( 2 ) OF THE TREATY IS THEREFORE NOT RELEVANT TO THE PRESENT CASE .
FIRST SUBMISSION : THE CONTRACTS COVERED BY THE CONTESTED DECISION
10 THE CONTRACT OF 1960 MARKED THE BEGINNING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN INRA AND MR EISELE . UNDER THE TERMS OF THAT CONTRACT , MR EISELE UNDERTOOK TO REPRESENT INRA BEFORE THE BUNDESSORTENAMT , THE GERMAN AUTHORITY RESPONSIBLE FOR BREEDERS ' RIGHTS , FOR THE PURPOSE OF REGISTERING THE VARIETIES OF MAIZE SEED DEVELOPED BY INRA WHICH WERE ALREADY PROTECTED BY THE REGISTRATION OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS UNDER FRENCH LEGISLATION . MR EISELE ALSO UNDERTOOK TO KEEP INRA INFORMED OF ALL MATTERS RELATING TO THE MARKETING OF THOSE VARIETIES IN THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY .
11 THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT DISCOVERED THAT UNDER THE GERMAN LEGISLATION IN FORCE AT THE TIME AN OWNER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ESTABLISHED OUTSIDE GERMAN TERRITORY WAS NOT ABLE TO HAVE THOSE RIGHTS REGISTERED WITH THE BUNDESSORTENAMT . IN ORDER TO OVERCOME THAT DIFFICULTY INRA ASSIGNED TO MR EISELE ITS BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OVER FOUR VARIETIES OF INRA MAIZE SEED IN RESPECT OF GERMAN TERRITORY BY FOUR DECLARATIONS MADE IN JANUARY AND FEBRUARY 1961 , BUT EFFECTIVE FROM THE DATE OF SIGNATURE OF THE CONTRACT OF 1960 .
12 ARTICLE 1 ( A ) OF THE CONTESTED DECISION DESCRIBES THE CONTENT AND APPLICATION OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF THE CONTRACT OF 1960 AS BEING IN BREACH OF ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY , WITHOUT REFERRING TO THE CONTRACTS OF 1961 . THE APPLICANTS ' FIRST SUBMISSION IS THAT THE DECISION IS NUGATORY TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT REFERS TO THE 1960 CONTRACT , THAT CONTRACT HAVING BEEN ' ' SUBSTANTIALLY SUPERSEDED ' ' BY THE ASSIGNMENTS .
13 IT IS APPARENT , HOWEVER , FROM THE PAPERS BEFORE THE COURT THAT THE DECLARATIONS OF ASSIGNMENT ALL INCLUDED THE FOLLOWING CLAUSE :
' ' TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH THE CONTENTS OF THIS DECLARATION AMEND THE AGREEMENT ENTERED INTO , THAT AGREEMENT IS HEREBY AMENDED BY COMMON ACCORD . ' '
14 IT IS THUS CLEAR THAT THE CONTRACT OF 1960 WAS AMENDED AND NOT ABROGATED BY THE DECLARATIONS OF ASSIGNMENT . MOREOVER , THE COMMISSION ALSO INTERPRETED THE CONTRACT IN THAT WAY BY STATING IN THE PREAMBLE TO THE DECISION ( I , D , NO 1.1 ) THAT ' ' ON THE BASIS OF THIS CONTRACT ' ' MR EISELE HAD INRA ' S MAIZE VARIETIES REGISTERED IN HIS NAME AT THE BUNDESSORTENAMT , THEREBY ACQUIRING BREEDERS ' RIGHTS FOR THOSE VARIETIES IN GERMANY ' ' , AND BY REFERRING IN THE OPERATIVE PART OF THE DECISION ( ARTICLE 1 ( A )) TO THE CONTRACT OF 1960 BY WHICH ' ' INRA ASSIGNED TO MR KURT EISELE THE BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN GERMANY ' ' .
15 SUCH AN INTERPRETATION IS ALL THE MORE JUSTIFIED SINCE THE CONTRACT OF 1960 AND THE DECLARATIONS OF ASSIGNMENT AMENDING IT MARKED ONLY THE BEGINNING OF THE COOPERATION BETWEEN INRA AND THE APPLICANTS , A COOPERATION WHICH WAS TO INCREASE AS TIME WENT BY , IN PARTICULAR AS A RESULT OF THE CONTRACT OF 1965 WHICH CONFERRED ON MR EISELE THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE SALES OF INRA MAIZE SEED IN GERMANY . THE ASSIGNMENTS THUS FORMED PART OF A SERIES OF OPERATIONS INTENDED TO ORGANIZE THE DISTRIBUTION OF INRA MAIZE SEED IN GERMANY .
16 THEREFORE THE FIRST SUBMISSION MUST BE REJECTED .
SECOND SUBMISSION : THE APPLICABILITY OF REGULATION NO 26/82
17 UNDER THE TERMS OF ARTICLE 2 OF REGULATION NO 26/82 , ADOPTED PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 42 OF THE TREATY , ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY DOES NOT APPLY TO AGREEMENTS , DECISIONS OR PRACTICES RELATING TO THE PRODUCTION OR SALE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS , IF THEY FORM AN INTEGRAL PART OF A NATIONAL MARKET ORGANIZATION OR ARE NECESSARY FOR THE ATTAINMENT OF THE OBJECTIVES OF THE COMMON AGRICULTURAL POLICY SET OUT IN ARTICLE 39 OF THE TREATY .
18 IN THAT CONNECTION THE DECISION CONTAINS THE FOLLOWING OBSERVATIONS : THE AGREEMENTS BETWEEN INRA AND MR EISELE DO NOT FORM AN INTEGRAL PART OF , OR AN EXTENSION OF , A NATIONAL MARKET ORGANIZATION FOR MAIZE SEED ( II , NO 5 , FIRST INDENT ); AS FROM 1973 INRA ENTRUSTED THE COMMERCIAL EXPLOITATION OF ITS MAIZE SEED IN FRANCE AND ELSEWHERE TO FRASEMA , A FRENCH PRIVATE COMPANY THE SHAREHOLDERS OF WHICH ARE THE MAIN SUPPLIERS OF CERTIFIED SEED OF EVERY VARIETY USED BY FRENCH AGRICULTURE ; INRA MAIZE SEED IS NOT OF SUCH A SPECIAL NATURE AS TO PERMIT THE ORGANIZATION OF THAT MARKET TO BE DISTINGUISHED FROM THE ORGANIZATION OF THE MARKET FOR MAIZE SEED IN GENERAL ; AS A RESULT THE AGREEMENTS BETWEEN INRA AND FRASEMA CANNOT BE REGARDED AS CONSTITUTING A NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF THE MARKET IN MAIZE SEED ; MOREOVER , THE MARKET FOR MAIZE SEED IS GOVERNED BY THE PROVISIONS OF REGULATION NO 2358/71 OF THE COUNCIL OF 26 OCTOBER 1971 ON THE COMMON ORGANIZATION OF THE MARKET IN SEEDS ( OFFICIAL JOURNAL , ENGLISH SPECIAL EDITION , 1971 ( III ) P . 894 ).
19 THE DECISION THEN FINDS THAT THE AGREEMENTS AT ISSUE ARE NOT NECESSARY FOR THE ATTAINMENT OF THE OBJECTIVES SET OUT IN ARTICLE 39 OF THE TREATY ( II , NO 5 , SECOND INDENT ); THE MEANS OF ATTAINING THOSE OBJECTIVES ARE DEFINED IN REGULATION NO 2358/71 AND THE AGREEMENTS CANNOT IN ANY WAY BE CONSIDERED TO FALL WITHIN THE TERMS OF THAT REGULATION ; MOREOVER , THE AGREEMENTS ALLOWED THE APPLICANTS TO ELIMINATE ALL COMPETITION IN INRA MAIZE SEED ON THE GERMAN MARKET , WITH THE RESULT THAT THE PRICES CHARGED FOR SUCH SEED IN GERMANY WERE MUCH HIGHER THAN THE PRICES CHARGED IN FRANCE ; THAT RESULT CONFLICTS WITH TWO OF THE OBJECTIVES OF ARTICLE 39 OF THE TREATY , NAMELY TO ENSURE A FAIR STANDARD OF LIVING FOR THE AGRICULTURAL COMMUNITY , IN PARTICULAR BY INCREASING THE INDIVIDUAL EARNINGS OF PERSONS ENGAGED IN AGRICULTURE , AND TO ENSURE THAT SUPPLIES REACH CONSUMERS AT REASONABLE PRICES ; FINALLY , BY RESTRICTING PRODUCTION OF INRA MAIZE SEED IN GERMANY , THE AGREEMENTS WERE LIKELY TO JEOPARDIZE THE OBJECTIVE LAID DOWN IN ARTICLE 39 OF THE TREATY CONCERNING THE AVAILABILITY OF SUPPLIES , SINCE THEY RESTRICTED SIGNIFICANTLY THE GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF THAT PRODUCTION IN THOSE PARTS OF THE COMMUNITY WHERE PRODUCTION WAS PRACTICABLE .
20 THE SECOND SUBMISSION CONTESTS THE VALIDITY OF THE SECOND PART OF THE ARGUMENTS SET FORTH ABOVE . THE APPLICANTS MAINTAIN FIRST THAT THE PRICES OF INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY WERE NOT MARKEDLY HIGHER THAN THOSE PREVAILING IN FRANCE . THEY THEN MAINTAIN THAT AN EXCLUSIVE TERRITORIAL LICENCE TO EXPLOIT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IS THE BEST MEANS OF ATTAINING THE OBJECTIVES OF ARTICLE 39 OF THE TREATY ; ON THE ONE HAND , EXCLUSIVE LICENCES ENABLE THE KNOWLEDGE ACQUIRED BY THE PRODUCER OF SEEDS TO BE DISSEMINATED AND AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY TO BE INCREASED BY PROMOTING TECHNICAL PROGRESS , WHICH LEADS TO AN INCREASE IN THE INDIVIDUAL EARNINGS OF PERSONS ENGAGED IN AGRICULTURE ( ARTICLE 39 ( 1 ) ( A ) AND ( B )); ON THE OTHER HAND , ONLY AN EXCLUSIVE LICENSEE IS ABLE , IN CONCERT WITH THE LICENSOR , TO OPERATE A LONG-TERM POLICY AIMED AT SATISFYING THE DEMAND FOR SEED WITHIN THE TERRITORY RESERVED TO HIM AND THUS TO ENSURE MARKET STABILITY AND THE AVAILABILITY OF SUPPLIES ( ARTICLE 39 ( 1 ) ( C ) AND ( D )).
21 IT APPEARS THEREFORE THAT THE SECOND SUBMISSION IS BASED ON THE ARGUMENT THAT THE CONTRACTS AT ISSUE , BY GRANTING AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OVER BREEDERS ' RIGHTS FOR INRA MAIZE SEEDS IN RESPECT OF GERMANY , CONSTITUTE THE MOST APPROPRIATE MEANS OF ATTAINING THE OBJECTIVES OF THE COMMON AGRICULTURAL POLICY , HAVING REGARD TO THE PARTICULAR REQUIREMENTS INHERENT IN THE PRODUCTION AND MARKETING OF THOSE SEEDS . THAT ARGUMENT WILL BE EXAMINED IN THE CONTEXT OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION .
22 IT IS THEREFORE NOT NECESSARY TO EXAMINE SEPARATELY THE SECOND SUBMISSION .
THIRD SUBMISSION
A - THE PARTICULAR NATURE OF PLANT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS
23 THE APPLICANTS EXPLAIN FIRST THAT MR EISELE WAS THE OWNER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS WHICH HAD BEEN ASSIGNED TO HIM BY INRA IN RESPECT OF GERMANY . UNDER THE RELEVANT GERMAN LEGISLATION THE OWNER IS GRANTED THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO PRODUCE SEED FOR SALE AND TO MARKET SEED OF THE PROTECTED VARIETY AND TO PREVENT THE IMPORTATION OF SUCH SEED WITHOUT HIS CONSENT ( ARTICLE 15 ( 1 ) OF THE SORTENSCHUTZGESETZ ( LAW ON THE PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETIES )).
24 THEY THEN ARGUE THAT THE PRINCIPLE OF THE TERRITORIALITY OF THE PROTECTION CONFERRED BY BREEDERS ' RIGHTS PURSUANT TO THAT LEGISLATION IS JUSTIFIED BY THE PARTICULAR NATURE OF THE PLANT SPECIES WHICH ARE THE SUBJECT OF IT . IN THE FIRST PLACE , CULTIVATION OF THE SEEDS DEPENDS ON CLIMATIC CONDITIONS AND ON THE NATURE OF THE SOIL ; THE SEEDS MUST BE ADAPTED TO THE PARTICULAR CONDITIONS OF THE COUNTRY WHERE THEY ARE TO BE USED . SECONDLY , HYBRID SEEDS , ONCE DEVELOPED , MUST BE CONSTANTLY REPRODUCED BY A BIOLOGICAL PROCESS IN ORDER THAT THEY MAY BE MAINTAINED ; THE RISK OF DESTABILIZATION OF THE VARIETY IS SUCH THAT MARKETING WHICH IS NOT CONTROLLED BY A BREEDER OR HIS LICENSEE IS LIKELY TO CAUSE CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE TO AGRICULTURE WITHIN THE TERRITORY IN QUESTION .
25 THOSE ARGUMENTS ARE SUPPORTED BY THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT AND BY THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES , WHICH STATE INTER ALIA THAT THE PROMOTION OF TECHNICAL INNOVATION IN THE FIELD OF PLANT SPECIES DEPENDS UPON THE POSSIBILITY OF BENEFITING FROM ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION . VERY LONG PERIODS OF TIME ARE NECESSARY TO DEVELOP THE BASIC LINES WHICH GENERATE THE CERTIFIED SEEDS COVERED BY BREEDERS ' RIGHTS AND THE CONSIDERABLE FINANCIAL COMMITMENT WHICH THAT ENTAILS IS ONLY ACCEPTABLE IF THE BREEDER AND HIS LICENSEE ARE ASSURED OF THE UNDISTURBED ENJOYMENT OF THEIR RIGHTS .
26 THE APPLICANTS AND THE TWO INTERVENERS INFER FROM THOSE ARGUMENTS THAT THE CONTESTED DECISION IS UNLAWFUL IN SO FAR AS IT CONSIDERS THAT THE CONTRACTS AT ISSUE ARE INTENDED TO BRING ABOUT A PARTITIONING OF THE MARKETS , WHEREAS THE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION ENJOYED BY MR EISELE IS MERELY THE RESULT OF THE LEGITIMATE EXERCISE OF THE BREEDERS ' RIGHTS WHICH HE OWNS IN GERMANY .
27 IT SHOULD FIRST BE NOTED THAT THE CONTESTED DECISION EXPRESSLY CONDEMNS THE CONTENT AND APPLICATION OF THE CONTRACT OF 1960 TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT ENABLED MR EISELE ' ' TO INVOKE HIS OWN BREEDERS ' RIGHTS TO PREVENT ALL IMPORTS INTO GERMANY OR EXPORTS TO OTHER MEMBER STATES OF MAIZE SEED OF INRA VARIETIES ' ' ( ARTICLE 1 ( A )).
28 IT SHOULD THEN BE REMEMBERED THAT , AS THE COURT HELD IN THE JUDGMENT OF 15 JUNE 1976 IN CASE 51/75 ( EMI RECORDS V CBS UNITED KINGDOM ( 1976 ) ECR 811 ), AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT , AS A LEGAL ENTITY , DOES NOT POSSESS THOSE ELEMENTS OF CONTRACT OR CONCERTED PRACTICE REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY , BUT THE EXERCISE OF THAT RIGHT MIGHT FALL WITHIN THE AMBIT OF THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN THE TREATY IF IT WERE TO MANIFEST ITSELF AS THE SUBJECT , THE MEANS OR THE CONSEQUENCE OF AN AGREEMENT .
29 AS THE COURT EMPHASIZED IN ITS JUDGMENT OF 20 JUNE 1978 IN CASE 28/77 ( TEPEA V COMMISSION ( 1978 ) ECR 139 ), THERE IS SUCH AN EXERCISE OF AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT PROHIBITED BY THE PROVISIONS OF THE TREATY , IN PARTICULAR BY ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ), WHERE AN AGREEMENT GRANTING EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS TO UTILIZE AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT IN A CERTAIN TERRITORY , IN CONJUNCTION WITH AN AGREEMENT APPOINTING THE LICENSEE SOLE DISTRIBUTOR FOR THAT TERRITORY , HAS THE EFFECT OF ENSURING ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION FOR THE LICENSEE BY PREVENTING PARALLEL IMPORTS .
30 UNDERLYING THE ARGUMENTS ADVANCED IN SUPPORT OF PART A OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION IS THE CLAIM THAT THOSE PRINCIPLES , WHICH WERE DEVELOPED BY THE COURT IN RELATION TO TRADE MARK AND PATENT LAW , CANNOT APPLY TO BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ON ACCOUNT OF THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THOSE RIGHTS AND THE PRODUCTS WHICH FORM THE SUBJECT-MATTER THEREOF .
31 IN THIS CONNECTION IT SHOULD BE NOTED THAT THE CONTESTED DECISION IS CONCERNED WITH INRA MAIZE SEEDS COVERED BY BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OF WHICH INRA WAS THE OWNER IN FRANCE AND OF WHICH , FOLLOWING THE ASSIGNMENTS , MR EISELE WAS THE OWNER IN GERMANY ; THOSE SEEDS WERE OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED AND CAPABLE OF BEING IMPORTED , SOLD AND PRODUCED IN GERMANY WITH A VIEW TO BEING MADE AVAILABLE TO AGRICULTURAL USERS .
32 IT IS TRUE THAT UNDER CLAUSE 3 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT MR EISELE ALSO RECEIVED FROM INRA BASIC LINES SO THAT HE HIMSELF MIGHT CULTIVATE CERTIFIED SEEDS ON CONDITION THAT HE SHOULD NOT PRODUCE MORE THAN ONE THIRD OF THE CERTIFIED SEED REQUIRED BY GERMAN USERS AND THAT HE SHOULD IMPORT THE BALANCE FROM FRANCE . THE DECISION FINDS THAT THE OBLIGATION IMPOSED UPON MR EISELE NOT TO PRODUCE MORE THAN ONE THIRD OF THE SEED SOLD IS CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY ( SEE ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION , WITH REGARD TO CLAUSE 3 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT ). THE APPLICANTS HAVE NOT , HOWEVER , CHALLENGED THAT PART OF THE DECISION . THE OTHER PARTS OF THE DECISION DO NOT CONCERN THE DEVELOPMENT OR IMPORTATION OF BASIC LINES , BUT RATHER THE MARKETING AND PRODUCTION OF CERTIFIED SEEDS .
33 THAT FINDING ENABLES THE ARGUMENTS BASED ON THE PROMOTION OF TECHNICAL INNOVATION IN THE AGRICULTURAL FIELD TO BE BETTER APPRECIATED . ALTHOUGH THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW SEEDS MAY INVOLVE CONSIDERABLE FINANCIAL SACRIFICES , THAT RISK IS ENCOUNTERED AT THE TIME OF PRODUCTION OF THE BASIC SEEDS . ON THE OTHER HAND , WHEN THE NEWLY-DEVELOPED VARIETY HAS FOUND ITS DEFINITIVE FORM , IN THE SENSE THAT IT MAY BE USED FOR THE PRODUCTION OF SEEDS CAPABLE OF BEING OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED AND MARKETED , THE RULES RELATING TO TRADE IN PRODUCTS , INCLUDING COMPETITION LAW , MUST IN PRINCIPLE BE APPLIED TO THE MARKETING OF THOSE SEEDS .
34 THE CERTIFIED SEEDS WHICH FORM THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF THE CONTRACTS AT ISSUE ARE HYBRID MAIZE SEEDS , A SEED VARIETY WHOSE STABILITY CAN ONLY BE GUARANTEED IF THE SEEDS ARE CULTIVATED AGAIN EVERY TIME FROM BASIC LINES . ACCORDING TO THE APPLICANTS , THE REPRODUCTION OF THOSE SEEDS POSES A SPECIAL PROBLEM IN COMPARISON WITH THE REPRODUCTION OF PRODUCTS PROTECTED BY TRADE MARK OR PATENT RIGHTS , IN PARTICULAR BECAUSE THE PROCEDURE TO ACHIEVE IT IS MORE COMPLICATED AND REPRODUCTION DEPENDS TO A VERY MARKED DEGREE ON THE HAZARDS OF CLIMATE AND SOIL .
35 THAT LINE OF ARGUMENT FAILS TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT , HOWEVER , THAT MANY PRODUCTS CAPABLE OF FORMING THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF A TRADE MARK OR A PATENT , IN PARTICULAR CERTAIN FOOD OR PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS , ARE IN A SIMILAR SITUATION . ALTHOUGH THE REASONS PUT FORWARD BY THE APPLICANTS ARE BASED ON CORRECT FINDINGS OF FACT , THEY ARE NOT SUFFICIENT TO JUSTIFY A SPECIAL SYSTEM FOR BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN RELATION TO OTHER INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS .
36 THE MAIN ARGUMENT WHICH THE APPLICANTS PUT FORWARD IN SUPPORT OF THEIR CONTENTION IS THAT THE OWNER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN GERMANY IS THE GUARANTOR , AS REGARDS THE BUNDESSORTENAMT , OF THE STABILITY OF THE PROTECTED VARIETY . IT IS ARGUED THAT THE RESPONSIBILITY THUS IMPOSED ON THAT OWNER DEMANDS THAT HE EXERCISE AN ABSOLUTE CONTROL OVER ALL MARKETING OF SEEDS OF THE PROTECTED VARIETY IN GERMANY . ACCORDING TO THE APPLICANTS , IT IS PRECISELY FOR THAT REASON THAT THE VERY NATURE OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS UNDER THE GERMAN LEGISLATION RELEVANT TO THE PRESENT CASE PREVENTS PARALLEL IMPORTS FROM BEING CARRIED OUT OUTSIDE THE CONTROL OF THE OWNER .
37 IN THAT CONNECTION IT SHOULD BE OBSERVED THAT ARTICLES 12 AND 15 OF THE SORTENSCHUTZGESETZ ( CODIFIED VERSION , BUNDESGESETZBLATT 1977 , I , P . 105 ) PROVIDE THAT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS BELONG TO THE ORIGINAL BREEDER OR DISCOVERER OF A VARIETY OR TO HIS SUCCESSORS IN TITLE AND THAT THE EFFECT OF THOSE RIGHTS IS THAT ONLY THE OWNER THEREOF IS ENTITLED TO PRODUCE OR SELL FOR COMMERCIAL PURPOSES THE REPRODUCTIVE MATERIAL OF THE PROTECTED VARIETY . AS REGARDS THE CONSERVATION OF THE VARIETY , ARTICLE 16 OF THAT LAW PROVIDES THAT THE OWNER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IS REQUIRED TO SUPPLY ALL INFORMATION NEEDED FOR THE TESTING OF THE VARIETY BY THE BUNDESSORTENAMT , TO ALLOW THAT AUTHORITY TO VERIFY THE MEASURES TAKEN TO ENSURE THE CONSERVATION OF THE VARIETY AND TO SEND THAT AUTHORITY ALL THE MATERIAL WHICH IT MIGHT NEED FOR THAT PURPOSE .
38 AS WAS EXPLAINED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY IN ITS REPLIES TO THE QUESTIONS PUT BY THE COURT , THAT LAW DOES NOT GOVERN THE APPROVAL OF THE SEEDS FOR MARKETING OR THE ASSOCIATED TESTS , THOSE BEING MATTERS WHICH ARE GOVERNED BY THE SAATGUTVERKEHRSGESETZ ( LAW ON THE MARKETING OF SEEDS ) ( CODIFIED VERSION , BUNDESGESETZBLATT 1975 , I , P . 1453 ). UNDER ARTICLE 4 ( 1 ) OF THAT LAW , SEED MAY ONLY BE MARKETED AFTER HAVING BEEN APPROVED AS BASIC SEED OR CERTIFIED SEED . SUCH APPROVAL PRESUPPOSES , IN PARTICULAR , THAT THE VARIETY IN QUESTION HAS BEEN ENTERED ON THE LIST OF VARIETIES ( ARTICLE 7 ( 1 ) OF THE SAATGUTVERKEHRSGESETZ ) PURSUANT TO AN APPLICATION BY THE BREEDER OF THE VARIETY OR , IF IT IS A PROTECTED VARIETY , BY THE OWNER OF THE BREEDERS ' RIGHTS . NEITHER ENTRY ON THE LIST OF VARIETIES NOR APPROVAL OF THE SEED CONFERS EXCLUSIVE PRODUCTION OR MARKETING RIGHTS OVER THE REPRODUCTIVE MATERIAL .
39 BY VIRTUE OF ARTICLE 38 ( 1 ) OF THE SAATGUTVERKEHRSGESETZ A VARIETY MAY ONLY BE INCLUDED IN THE LIST OF VARIETIES IF IT IS DISTINCT , SUFFICIENTLY HOMOGENEOUS AND STABLE , AND IF IT IS OF AGRICULTURAL VALUE AND IS DESIGNATED BY A VARIETY NAME WHICH IS CAPABLE OF REGISTRATION . IT IS THE DUTY OF THE BUNDESSORTENAMT TO EXAMINE WHETHER THE REQUIREMENTS LAID DOWN FOR THE REGISTRATION OF THE VARIETY HAVE BEEN MET ( ARTICLE 57 ( 1 )). THE ENTRY OF A VARIETY MAY BE STRUCK OFF BY THE BUNDESSORTENAMT IF ONE OF THE FIVE CONDITIONS MENTIONED ABOVE IS NOT OR IS NO LONGER BEING FULFILLED ( ARTICLE 62 ( 2 )).
40 THE SAATGUTVERKEHRSGESETZ ALSO PROVIDES THAT THE BREEDER WHO HAS REGISTERED THE VARIETY ON THE LIST OF VARIETIES IS REQUIRED TO CONSERVE THAT VARIETY AS IT WAS WHEN HE REGISTERED IT , AND THAT THE BUNDESSORTENAMT IS TO SUPERVISE THE CONSERVATION OF REGISTERED VARIETIES ( ARTICLES 67 AND 68 ).
41 THAT SYNOPSIS OF THE GERMAN LEGISLATION SHOWS THAT SEEDS CERTIFIED AND APPROVED FOR MARKETING ARE SUBJECT TO QUALITY CONTROL ON THE PART OF THE PUBLIC AUTHORITIES AND THAT THAT CONTROL EXTENDS TO THE STABILITY OF THE VARIETY . HOWEVER , BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ARE NOT INTENDED TO SUBSTITUTE FOR CONTROLS CARRIED OUT BY THE COMPETENT AUTHORITIES , CONTROLS CARRIED OUT BY THE OWNER OF THOSE RIGHTS , BUT TO CONFER ON THE OWNER A KIND OF PROTECTION , THE NATURE AND EFFECTS OF WHICH ALL DERIVE FROM PRIVATE LAW . FROM THAT POINT OF VIEW THE LEGAL POSITION OF A BREEDER OF SEEDS IS NOT DIFFERENT FROM THAT OF THE OWNER OF PATENT OR TRADE MARK RIGHTS OVER A PRODUCT SUBJECT TO STRICT CONTROL BY THE PUBLIC AUTHORITIES , AS IS THE CASE WITH PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS .
42 MOREOVER , IT SHOULD BE OBSERVED THAT MAIZE SEEDS IMPORTED FROM FRANCE WHICH HAVE ALREADY BEEN APPROVED IN THAT MEMBER STATE MAY BE MARKETED IN GERMANY WITHOUT UNDERGOING A FURTHER ACCEPTANCE PROCEDURE . THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY EXPLAINED THAT IT HAS ADOPTED REGULATIONS TO THAT EFFECT ON THE BASIS OF ARTICLES 23 AND 24 OF THE SAATGUTVERKEHRSGESETZ AND COMMUNITY DIRECTIVES CONCERNING THE MARKETING OF CEREAL SEEDS .
43 IT IS THEREFORE NOT CORRECT TO CONSIDER THAT BREEDERS ' RIGHTS ARE A SPECIES OF COMMERCIAL OR INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHT WITH CHARACTERISTICS OF SO SPECIAL A NATURE AS TO REQUIRE , IN RELATION TO THE COMPETITION RULES , A DIFFERENT TREATMENT FROM OTHER COMMERCIAL OR INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS . THAT CONCLUSION DOES NOT AFFECT THE NEED TO TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION , FOR THE PURPOSES OF THE RULES ON COMPETITION , THE SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE PRODUCTS WHICH FORM THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS .
B - THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 85 OF THE EEC TREATY TO EXCLUSIVE LICENCES
44 BY THIS SUBMISSION THE APPLICANTS CRITICIZE THE COMMISSION FOR WRONGLY TAKING THE VIEW THAT AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS MUST BY ITS VERY NATURE BE TREATED AS AN AGREEMENT PROHIBITED BY ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY . THEY SUBMIT THAT THE COMMISSION ' S OPINION IN THAT RESPECT IS UNFOUNDED IN SO FAR AS THE EXCLUSIVE LICENCE CONSTITUTES THE SOLE MEANS , AS REGARDS SEEDS WHICH HAVE BEEN RECENTLY DEVELOPED IN A MEMBER STATE AND WHICH HAVE NOT YET PENETRATED THE MARKET OF ANOTHER MEMBER STATE , OF PROMOTING COMPETITION BETWEEN THE NEW PRODUCT AND COMPARABLE PRODUCTS IN THAT OTHER MEMBER STATE ; INDEED , NO GROWER OR TRADER WOULD TAKE THE RISK OF LAUNCHING THE NEW PRODUCT ON A NEW MARKET IF HE WERE NOT PROTECTED AGAINST DIRECT COMPETITION FROM THE HOLDER OF THE BREEDERS ' RIGHTS AND FROM HIS OTHER LICENSEES .
45 THIS CONTENTION IS SUPPORTED BY THE GERMAN AND BRITISH GOVERNMENTS AND BY THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES . IN PARTICULAR , THE TWO GOVERNMENTS CLAIM THAT THE GENERAL CHARACTER OF THE REASONS GIVEN FOR THE CONTESTED DECISION IS INCOMPATIBLE WITH THE TERMS OF ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY AND CONFLICTS WITH A SENSIBLE COMPETITION POLICY . THE REASONS GIVEN FOR THE DECISION ARE SAID TO BE BASED ON THE ILL-CONCEIVED PREMISE THAT EVERY EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OF AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHT , WHATEVER ITS NATURE , MUST BE REGARDED AS AN AGREEMENT PROHIBITED BY ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) AND THAT IT IS THEREFORE FOR THE COMMISSION TO JUDGE WHETHER , IN A GIVEN CASE , THE CONDITIONS FOR THE GRANT OF AN EXEMPTION UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) ARE SATISFIED .
46 DURING THE COURSE OF THE PROCEEDINGS OBJECTION WAS MADE TO THE USE OF THE EXPRESSION ' ' EXCLUSIVE LICENCE ' ' ON THE GROUND THAT , IN THE PRESENT CASE , THE APPLICANTS ' EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO MARKET THE SEEDS AT ISSUE IN GERMANY DERIVED FROM BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OF WHICH MR EISELE WAS THE OWNER IN THAT MEMBER STATE . THEREFORE , IT WAS ARGUED , THAT EXCLUSIVE RIGHT WAS FOUNDED NEITHER ON THE GRANT BY INRA OF AN EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE , WITHIN GERMAN TERRITORY , INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS VESTING IN INRA , NOR ON THE CONTRACT OF 1965 WHICH APPOINTED MR EISELE SOLE DISTRIBUTOR OF THE SEEDS IN QUESTION FOR THAT TERRITORY .
47 HOWEVER , THAT ARGUMENT DISREGARDS THE FACT THAT , FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF COMMUNITY LAW , THE CONTRACT OF 1960 INITIATING THE COOPERATION BETWEEN INRA AND MR EISELE , THE ' ' ASSIGNMENTS ' ' OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN 1961 AND THE CONTRACT OF 1965 ORGANIZING THE DISTRIBUTION OF INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY MAKE UP AN INDIVISIBLE WHOLE . IN ECONOMIC TERMS , MR EISELE ' S POSITION ON THE GERMAN MARKET WAS THAT OF AN EXCLUSIVE LICENSEE , SINCE THE AUTHORIZATION GIVEN BY INRA TO MR EISELE TO HAVE REGISTERED IN HIS NAME IN GERMANY BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OF WHICH INRA WAS THE OWNER IN FRANCE WAS DUE TO THE FACT THAT THAT BODY WAS NOT ABLE AT THAT TIME TO HAVE ITS OWN BREEDERS ' RIGHTS REGISTERED WITH THE BUNDESSORTENAMT AND SINCE THAT OPERATION IS TO BE SEEN WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF THE GRANT TO MR EISELE OF THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE THE SALE OF INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY .
48 THE STATEMENT OF REASONS ON WHICH THE DECISION IS BASED REFERS TO TWO SETS OF CIRCUMSTANCES IN ORDER TO JUSTIFY THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) TO THE EXCLUSIVE LICENCE IN QUESTION ( II , NO 3 ). THE ACCURACY OF THE FACTS THUS STATED HAS NOT BEEN CHALLENGED .
49 THE FIRST SET OF CIRCUMSTANCES IS DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS :
' ' BY LICENSING A SINGLE UNDERTAKING TO EXPLOIT HIS BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN A GIVEN TERRITORY , THE LICENSOR DEPRIVES HIMSELF FOR THE ENTIRE DURATION OF THE CONTRACT OF THE ABILITY TO ISSUE LICENCES TO OTHER UNDERTAKINGS IN THE SAME TERRITORY . . . ' '
' ' BY UNDERTAKING NOT TO PRODUCE OR MARKET THE PRODUCT HIMSELF IN THE TERRITORY COVERED BY THE CONTRACT THE LICENSOR LIKEWISE ELIMINATES HIMSELF , AS WELL AS FRASEMA AND ITS MEMBERS , AS SUPPLIERS IN THAT TERRITORY . ' '
50 CORRESPONDING TO THAT PART OF THE STATEMENT OF REASONS IS ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION , WHICH IN ITS FIRST AND SECOND INDENTS DECLARES THE EXCLUSIVE NATURE OF THE LICENCE GRANTED BY THE 1965 CONTRACT TO BE CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY IN SO FAR AS IT IMPOSES :
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM HAVING THE RELEVANT SEEDS PRODUCED OR SOLD BY OTHER LICENSEES IN GERMANY , AND
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM PRODUCING OR SELLING THE RELEVANT SEEDS IN GERMANY THEMSELVES .
51 THE SECOND SET OF CIRCUMSTANCES REFERRED TO IN THE DECISION IS DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS :
' ' THE FACT THAT THIRD PARTIES MAY NOT IMPORT THE SAME SEED ( NAMELY THE SEED UNDER LICENCE ) FROM OTHER COMMUNITY COUNTRIES INTO GERMANY , OR EXPORT 1 - TRANSLATOR ' S NOTE : THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE DECISION PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL IS NOT AUTHENTIC AND HAS NOT BEEN FOLLOWED IN ALL RESPECTS .
FROM GERMANY TO OTHER COMMUNITY COUNTRIES , LEADS TO MARKET SHARING AND DEPRIVES GERMAN FARMERS OF ANY REAL ROOM FOR NEGOTIATION SINCE SEED IS SUPPLIED BY ONE SUPPLIER AND ONE SUPPLIER ONLY . ' '
52 THAT PART OF THE STATEMENT OF REASONS IS ALSO REFLECTED IN ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION , WHICH IN ITS THIRD AND FOURTH INDENTS DECLARES THE EXCLUSIVE NATURE OF THE LICENCE GRANTED BY THE 1965 CONTRACT TO BE CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY IN SO FAR AS IT IMPOSES :
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO PREVENT THIRD PARTIES FROM EXPORTING THE RELEVANT SEEDS TO GERMANY WITHOUT THE LICENSEE ' S AUTHORIZATION FOR USE OR SALE THERE , AND
MR EISELE ' S CONCURRENT USE OF HIS EXCLUSIVE CONTRACTUAL RIGHTS AND HIS OWN BREEDER ' S RIGHTS TO PREVENT ALL IMPORTS INTO GERMANY OR EXPORTS TO OTHER MEMBER STATES OF THE RELEVANT SEEDS .
53 IT SHOULD BE OBSERVED THAT THOSE TWO SETS OF CONSIDERATIONS RELATE TO TWO LEGAL SITUATIONS WHICH ARE NOT NECESSARILY IDENTICAL . THE FIRST CASE CONCERNS A SO-CALLED OPEN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OR ASSIGNMENT AND THE EXCLUSIVITIY OF THE LICENCE RELATES SOLELY TO THE CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE OWNER OF THE RIGHT AND THE LICENSEE , WHEREBY THE OWNER MERELY UNDERTAKES NOT TO GRANT OTHER LICENCES IN RESPECT OF THE SAME TERRITORY AND NOT TO COMPETE HIMSELF WITH THE LICENSEE ON THAT TERRITORY . ON THE OTHER HAND , THE SECOND CASE INVOLVES AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OR ASSIGNMENT WITH ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION , UNDER WHICH THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT PROPOSE , AS REGARDS THE PRODUCTS AND THE TERRITORY IN QUESTION , TO ELIMINATE ALL COMPETITION FROM THIRD PARTIES , SUCH AS PARALLEL IMPORTERS OR LICENSEES FOR OTHER TERRITORIES .
54 THAT POINT HAVING BEEN CLARIFIED , IT IS NECESSARY TO EXAMINE WHETHER , IN THE PRESENT CASE , THE EXCLUSIVE NATURE OF THE LICENCE , IN SO FAR AS IT IS AN OPEN LICENCE , HAS THE EFFECT OF PREVENTING OR DISTORTING COMPETITION WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY .
55 IN THAT RESPECT THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY EMPHASIZED THAT THE PROTECTION OF AGRICULTURAL INNOVATIONS BY MEANS OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS CONSTITUTES A MEANS OF ENCOURAGING SUCH INNOVATIONS AND THE GRANT OF EXLUSIVE RIGHTS FOR A LIMITED PERIOD , IS CAPABLE OF PROVIDING A FURTHER INCENTIVE TO INNOVATIVE EFFORTS .
FROM THAT IT INFERS THAT A TOTAL PROHIBITION OF EVERY EXCLUSIVE LICENCE , EVEN AN OPEN ONE , WOULD CAUSE THE INTEREST OF UNDERTAKINGS IN LICENCES TO FALL AWAY , WHICH WOULD BE PREJUDICIAL TO THE DISSEMINATION OF KNOWLEDGE AND TECHNIQUES IN THE COMMUNITY .
56 THE EXCLUSIVE LICENCE WHICH FORMS THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF THE CONTESTED DECISION CONCERNS THE CULTIVATION AND MARKETING OF HYBRID MAIZE SEEDS WHICH WERE DEVELOPED BY INRA AFTER YEARS OF RESEARCH AND EXPERIMENTATION AND WERE UNKNOWN TO GERMAN FARMERS AT THE TIME WHEN THE COOPERATION BETWEEN INRA AND THE APPLICANTS WAS TAKING SHAPE . FOR THAT REASON THE CONCERN SHOWN BY THE INTERVENERS AS REGARDS THE PROTECTION OF NEW TECHNOLOGY IS JUSTIFIED .
57 IN FACT , IN THE CASE OF A LICENCE OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS OVER HYBRID MAIZE SEEDS NEWLY DEVELOPED IN ONE MEMBER STATE , AN UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHED IN ANOTHER MEMBER STATE WHICH WAS NOT CERTAIN THAT IT WOULD NOT ENCOUNTER COMPETITION FROM OTHER LICENSEES FOR THE TERRITORY GRANTED TO IT , OR FROM THE OWNER OF THE RIGHT HIMSELF , MIGHT BE DETERRED FROM ACCEPTING THE RISK OF CULTIVATING AND MARKETING THAT PRODUCT ; SUCH A RESULT WOULD BE DAMAGING TO THE DISSEMINATION OF A NEW TECHNOLOGY AND WOULD PREJUDICE COMPETITION IN THE COMMUNITY BETWEEN THE NEW PRODUCT AND SIMILAR EXISTING PRODUCTS .
58 HAVING REGARD TO THE SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE PRODUCTS IN QUESTION , THE COURT CONCLUDES THAT , IN A CASE SUCH AS THE PRESENT , THE GRANT OF AN OPEN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE , THAT IS TO SAY A LICENCE WHICH DOES NOT AFFECT THE POSITION OF THIRD PARTIES SUCH AS PARALLEL IMPORTERS AND LICENSEES FOR OTHER TERRITORIES , IS NOT IN ITSELF INCOMPATIBLE WITH ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY .
59 PART B OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION IS THUS JUSTIFIED TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT CONCERNS THAT ASPECT OF THE EXCLUSIVE NATURE OF THE LICENCE .
60 AS REGARD TO THE POSITION OF THIRD PARTIES , THE COMMISSION IN ESSENCE CRITICIZES THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT FOR HAVING EXTENDED THE DEFINITION OF EXCLUSIVITY TO IMPORTERS WHO ARE NOT BOUND TO THE CONTRACT , IN PARTICULAR PARALLEL IMPORTERS . PARALLEL IMPORTERS OR EXPORTERS , SUCH AS LOUIS DAVID KG IN GERMANY AND ROBERT BOMBERAULT IN FRANCE WHO OFFERED INRA SEED FOR SALE TO GERMAN BUYERS , HAD FOUND THEMSELVES SUBJECTED TO PRESSURE AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS BY INRA , FRASEMA AND THE APPLICANTS , THE PURPOSE OF WHICH WAS TO MAINTAIN THE EXCLUSIVE POSITION OF THE APPLICANTS ON THE GERMAN MARKET .
61 THE COURT HAS CONSISTENTLY HELD ( CF . JOINED CASES 56 AND 58/64 CONSTEN AND GRUNDIG V COMMISSION ( 1966 ) ECR 299 ) THAT ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION GRANTED TO A LICENSEE IN ORDER TO ENABLE PARALLEL IMPORTS TO BE CONTROLLED AND PREVENTED RESULTS IN THE ARTIFICIAL MAINTENANCE OF SEPARATE NATIONAL MARKETS , CONTRARY TO THE TREATY .
62 THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM ADVANCED THE VIEW THAT A CONTRACT BETWEEN TWO UNDERTAKINGS COULD NOT IMPEDE THE FREEDOM OF IMPORTERS TO BUY SEEDS IN THE COUNTRY OF THE OWNER OF THE BREEDER ' S RIGHTS WITH A VIEW TO EXPORTING THEM TO THE COUNTRY OF THE LICENSEE SINCE , ACCORDING TO PREVIOUS DECISIONS OF THE COURT , A COMMERCIAL OR INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHT CANNOT BE INVOKED AGAINST THE MARKETING OF A PRODUCT WHICH HAS BEEN LAWFULLY PLACED IN CIRCULATION ON THE MARKET OF ANOTHER MEMBER STATE BY THE OWNER OF THAT RIGHT OR WITH HIS CONSENT . THEREFORE SUCH A CONTRACT CANNOT BE REGARDED AS AN AGREEMENT PROHIBITED BY ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY .
63 HOWEVER , THAT VIEW FAILS TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE FACT THAT ONE OF THE POWERS OF THE COMMISSION IS TO ENSURE , PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY AND THE REGULATIONS ADOPTED IN IMPLEMENTATION THEREOF , THAT AGREEMENTS AND CONCERTED PRACTICES BETWEEN UNDERTAKINGS DO NOT HAVE THE OBJECT OR THE EFFECT OF RESTRICTING OR DISTORTING COMPETITION , AND THAT THAT POWER OF THE COMMISSION IS NOT AFFECTED BY THE FACT THAT PERSONS OR UNDERTAKINGS SUBJECT TO SUCH RESTRICTIONS ARE IN A POSITION TO RELY UPON THE PROVISIONS OF THE TREATY RELATING TO THE FREE MOVEMENT OF GOODS IN ORDER TO ESCAPE SUCH RESTRICTIONS .
64 IT IS CLEAR FROM THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE THAT THE CONTRACTS IN QUESTION WERE INDEED INTENDED TO RESTRICT COMPETITION FROM THIRD PARTIES ON THE GERMAN MARKET . IN FACT UNDER CLAUSE 5 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT INRA PROMISES THAT IT AND THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH IT WILL DO ' ' EVERYTHING IN THEIR POWER TO PREVENT THE EXPORT ' ' OF THE VARIETIES OF SEEDS IN QUESTION TO GERMANY .
65 IN THE CONTESTED DECISION THAT CLAUSE IS INTERPRETED AS SEEKING TO PREVENT THIRD PARTIES WHO PURCHASE INRA SEEDS IN FRANCE FROM EXPORTING THEM TO GERMANY ( II , NO . 3 ( B )). IT MAY BE INFERRED FROM THE OBSTRUCTIONS WHICH THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACTS HAVE PLACED IN THE WAY OF THE EFFORTS OF LOUIS DAVID KG AND ROBERT BOMBERAULT TO SELL INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY THAT THAT INTERPRETATION IS CORRECT .
66 ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION EXPRESSLY REFERS TO CLAUSE 5 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT AND TO THE EXERCISE OF BREEDERS ' RIGHTS BY MR EISELE SO AS TO PREVENT THE MARKETING OF INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY BY THIRD PARTIES . THEREFORE , TO THAT EXTENT PART B OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION IS UNFOUNDED .
67 AN EXAMINATION OF PART B OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION THEREFORE LEADS TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THAT SUBMISSION IS WELL-FOUNDED IN PART AND THAT ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE DECISION MUST BE DECLARED VOID TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT RELATES TO CLAUSE 1 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT AND IN SO FAR AS THAT CONTRACT IMPOSES :
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM HAVING THE RELEVANT SEEDS PRODUCED OR SOLD BY OTHER LICENSEES IN GERMANY , AND
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM PRODUCING OR SELLING THE RELEVANT SEEDS IN GERMANY THEMSELVES .
FOURTH SUBMISSION : THE GRANT OF AN EXEMPTION UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE EEC TREATY
68 IN SUPPORT OF THEIR FOURTH SUBMISSION , THE APPLICANTS OBSERVE THAT THE CONTESTED DECISION REFUSED AN EXEMPTION UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE TREATY BECAUSE THERE WAS NO QUESTION OF A NEW MARKET BEING PENETRATED OR A NEW PRODUCT BEING LAUNCHED AND BECAUSE MR EISELE ENJOYED ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION IN GERMANY . ACCORDING TO THE APPLICANTS , THOSE TWO REASONS ARE INCORRECT : ON THE ONE HAND , THE VERY PURPOSE OF THE 1965 CONTRACT , AT THE TIME OF ITS NOTIFICATION TO THE COMMISSION , WAS TO OPEN UP A NEW MARKET AND TO INTRODUCE A NEW PRUDUCT ; SECONDLY , THE EXCLUSIVITY ESTABLISHED BY THAT CONTRACT DID NOT GO BEYOND WHAT WAS NECESSARY FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE VARIETIES WHICH COULD BE GROWN OUTSIDE THEIR COUNTRY OF ORIGIN AND THUS FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS .
69 IN SUPPORT OF THAT SUBMISSION , THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM OBSERVED THAT ONLY THE BENEFIT OF THE PROTECTION AFFORDED BY AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE IS CAPABLE OF ENCOURAGING THE LICENSEE TO EXPLOIT THE BREEDERS ' RIGHTS IN QUESTION AND THAT THAT PROTECTION THUS SERVES TO IMPROVE THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS AND PROMOTE TECHNICAL AND ECONOMIC PROGRESS WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ). IT WAS THEREFORE SUBMITTED THAT THE CRITERIA APPLIED BY THE CONTESTED DECISION WERE EXCESSIVELY SEVERE .
70 THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES ARGUES THAT THESE PROCEEDINGS CONCERN A FRAGILE AND TECHNICALLY ADVANCED PRODUCT AND THAT IN SUCH A CASE AVAILABILITY OF SUPPLIES CAN ONLY BE ACHIEVED BY THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A SELECTIVE SYSTEM FOR PLANNING AND STABILIZING THE MARKET . IN REFUSING TO GRANT AN EXEMPTION THE COMMISSION DISREGARDED THE SPECIFIC NATURE OF THE CONTRACTS IN QUESTION .
71 IT SHOULD FIRST BE STATED THAT THE CONTESTED DECISION LEFT OPEN THE ASSESSMENT UNDER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE EXCLUSIVE PRODUCTION AND PROPAGATION RIGHTS GRANTED TO MR EISELE UND THAT IT CONFINED ITSELF TO STATING THAT THE CONDITIONS FOR THE EXEMPTION OF THE EXCLUSIVE SELLING RIGHTS AND THE ACCOMPANYING EXPORT PROHIBITIONS WERE NOT SATISFIED ( III , NO 1 ( B )).
72 IT FOLLOWS THAT , SINCE PART B OF THE THIRD SUBMISSION WAS PARTIALLY SUCCESSFUL , THE COURT ' S APPRAISAL OF THE REFUSAL TO GRANT AN EXEMPTION MAY BE CONFINED TO AN EXAMINATION OF THE COMMISSION ' S ARGUMENTS RELATING TO THE EXCLUSIVE SELLING RIGHTS IN SO FAR AS THEY CONFER ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION .
73 ON THAT POINT THE DECISION STATES THAT MR EISELE ENJOYED ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION IN RESPECT OF THE DISTRIBUTION IN GERMANY OF THE SEEDS FOR WHICH HE HAD EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS , AND THAT BY ITS ABSOLUTE NATURE THE SOLE AND DIRECT CONSEQUENCE OF SUCH PROTECTION WAS TO PREVENT ALL IMPORTS THROUGH OTHER CHANNELS OF THE ORIGINAL PRODUCTS , NAMELY INRA SEEDS ORIGINATING IN FRANCE , DESPITE A PERSISTENT DEMAND FOR SUCH IMPORTS IN GERMANY , WHICH IN ITSELF IS NOT CAPABLE OF CONTRIBUTING TO AN IMPROVEMENT IN THE PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) ( III , NO 1 ( B ), SECOND INDENT ).
74 THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES DISPUTED THAT REASONING . IN ITS VIEW , THE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION ENJOYED BY THE LICENSEE IN THE PRESENT CASE WAS RATHER A RELATIVE PROTECTION ON ACCOUNT OF THE PRESENCE ON THE MARKET OF NUMEROUS VARIETIES OF MAIZE SEED WHICH COULD BE SUBSTITUTED FOR INRA VARIETIES AND WHICH COULD THUS ENTER INTO DIRECT COMPETITION WITH THOSE VARIETIES .
75 HOWEVER , THE COMMISSION RIGHTLY STATED IN REPLY THAT THAT VIEW PUT FORWARD BY THE CAISSE DE GESTION DES LICENCES VEGETALES CONCERNS THE PROBLEM OF THE DEMARCATION OF THE MARKET ; THAT IS A PROBLEM WHICH ARISES WHEN THE COMMISSION HAS TO EXAMINE WHETHER AN AGREEMENT AFFORDS ' ' THE POSSIBILITY OF ELIMINATING COMPETITION IN RESPECT OF A SUBSTANTIAL PART OF THE PRODUCTS IN QUESTION ' ' ( ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) ( B )) BUT WHICH IS NOT RELEVANT TO THE QUESTION WHETHER AN AGREEMENT IS CAPABLE OF IMPROVING THE PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS .
76 IT MUST BE REMEMBERED THAT UNDER THE TERMS OF ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE TREATY AN EXEMPTION FROM THE PROHIBITION CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) MAY BE GRANTED IN THE CASE OF ANY AGREEMENT BETWEEN UNDERTAKINGS WHICH CONTRIBUTES TO IMPROVING THE PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS OR TO PROMOTING TECHNICAL PROGRESS , AND WHICH DOES NOT IMPOSE ON THE UNDERTAKINGS CONCERNED RESTRICTIONS WHICH ARE NOT INDISPENSABLE TO THE ATTAINMENT OF THOSE OBJECTIVES .
77 AS IT IS A QUESTION OF SEEDS INTENDED TO BE USED BY A LARGE NUMBER OF FARMERS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF MAIZE , WHICH IS AN IMPORTANT PRODUCT FOR HUMAN AND ANIMAL FOODSTUFFS , ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION MANIFESTLY GOES BEYOND WHAT IS INDISPENSABLE FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OR THE PROMOTION OF TECHNICAL PROGRESS , AS IS DEMONSTRATED IN PARTICULAR IN THE PRESENT CASE BY THE PROHIBITION , AGREED TO BY BOTH PARTIES TO THE AGREEMENT , OF ANY PARALLEL IMPORTS OF INRA MAIZE SEEDS INTO GERMANY EVEN IF THOSE SEEDS WERE BRED BY INRA ITSELF AND MARKETED IN FRANCE .
78 IT FOLLOWS THAT THE ABSOLUTE TERRITORIAL PROTECTION CONFERRED ON THE LICENSEE , AS ESTABLISHED TO EXIST BY THE CONTESTED DECISION , CONSTITUTED A SUFFICIENT REASON FOR REFUSING TO GRANT AN EXEMPTION UNTER ARTICLE 85 ( 3 ) OF THE TREATY . IT IS THEREFORE NO LONGER NECESSARY TO EXAMINE THE OTHER GROUNDS SET OUT IN THE DECISION FOR REFUSING TO GRANT SUCH AN EXEMPTION .
79 THEREFORE THE FOURTH SUBMISSION MUST BE REJECTED .
FIFTH SUBMISSION : THE SETTLEMENT CONCLUDED BETWEEN LOUIS DAVID KG AND MR EISELE
80 THE FIFTH SUBMISSION RELATES TO ARTICLE 1 ( C ) OF THE DECISION , WHEREBY THE COMMISSION DECLARED CLAUSE 1 OF THE SETTLEMENT CONCLUDED ON 14 NOVEMBER 1973 BETWEEN LOUIS DAVID KG AND MR EISELE TO BE CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY IN SO FAR AS IT OBLIGED LOUIS DAVID KG NOT TO SELL OR PLACE IN CIRCULATION IN GERMANY SEEDS OF INRA VARIETIES WITHOUT THE AUTHORIZATION OF THE GERMAN LICENSEE .
81 IT APPEARS FROM THE DOCUMENTS BEFORE THE COURT THAT THAT SETTLEMENT WAS REACHED IN THE FRAMEWORK OF LEGAL PROCEEDINGS BROUGHT BY MR EISELE BEFORE THE LANDGERICHT ( REGIONAL COURT ) BAD KREUZNACH FOR INFRINGEMENT OF HIS EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS AFTER LOUIS DAVID KG HAD IMPORTED FROM FRANCE AND RESOLD IN GERMANY , WITHOUT MR EISELE ' S AUTHORIZATION , A QUANTITY OF CERTIFIED SEEDS OF INRA VARIETIES .
82 THE APPLICANTS CLAIM THAT THAT SETTLEMENT WAS A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 794 I ( 1 ) OF THE GERMAN CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE CONCLUDED BETWEEN THE PARTIES IN ORDER TO DISPOSE DEFINITIVELY OF A DISPUTE BEFORE A GERMAN COURT . THEY SUBMIT THAT SUCH A SETTLEMENT , WHICH IS LEGALLY ENFORCEABLE UNDER THE TERMS OF THE AFOREMENTIONED PROVISION , IS NOT AN ORDINARY PRIVATE CONTRACT BUT AMOUNTS TO AN ORDER OF THE COURT .
83 FROM THAT THE APPLICANTS INFER THAT THE COMMISSION WAS NOT ABLE TO DECLARE SUCH A SETTLEMENT VOID WITHOUT ENCROACHING UPON THE JURISDICTION OF THE GERMAN COURTS ; BUT IN VIEW OF THE AUTOMATIC NULLITY DECREED BY ARTICLE 85 ( 2 ) OF THE TREATY THE COMMISSION DID DECLARE THE SETTLEMENT VOID WHEN IT HELD THAT A PART OF IT WAS CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ).
84 THE COMMISSION REPLIES THAT UNDER GERMAN LAW A SETTLEMENT CONCLUDED FOR THE PURPOSE OF DISPOSING OF A LEGAL DISPUTE MUST COMPLY WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF SUBSTANTIVE LAW APPLICABLE TO EVERY CIVIL CONTRACT , AND IN PARTICULAR WITH THOSE DERIVING FROM COMPETITION LAW . A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT IS A CONTRACT OF CIVIL LAW AS WELL AS AN ACT OF THE COURT AND THE NULLITY OF THE CONTRACT NULLIFIES THE WHOLE SETTLEMENT .
85 THE COMMISSION ADDS THAT DECISIONS OF THE GERMAN COURTS , IN PARTICULAR THE BUNDESGERICHTSHOF ( FEDERAL SUPREME COURT ), HAVE CONFIRMED THAT VIEW . ACCORDING TO THOSE DECISIONS , A PARTY TO A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT MAY NOT VALIDLY INVOKE CLAUSES OF THAT SETTLEMENT WHICH CONFLICT WITH THE GERMAN LAW ON MONOPOLIES . THERE IS NO REASON WHY A SETTLEMENT WHICH OFFENDS AGAINST COMMUNITY RULES ON COMPETITION SHOULD BE VIEWED DIFFERENTLY .
86 THE SETTLEMENT AT ISSUE WAS SUBMITTED TO THE COURT , WHICH WAS ABLE TO FIND THAT IT WAS INDEED A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 974 I ( 1 ) OF THE GERMAN CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE , NAMELY A SETTLEMENT CONCLUDED BEFORE A GERMAN COURT IN ORDER TO DISPOSE OF A LEGAL DISPUTE PENDING BEFORE IT .
87 WHILST IT IS TRUE , AS THE APPLICANTS MAINTAIN , THAT THE JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT IS ENFORCEABLE , IT DOES NOT HAVE THE AUTHORITY OF RES JUDICATA UNDER GERMAN LAW AND IS THERFORE NOT EFFECTIVE AGAINST OTHER COURTS , PUBLIC AUTHORITIES OR THIRD PARTIES . FURTHERMORE , AS THE COMMISSION EMPHASIZED , THE DECISIONS OF THE GERMAN COURTS ARE BASED ON THE PREMISE THAT A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT , TO BE VALID , MUST COMPLY WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF PUBLIC POLICY AND BONOS MORES AND THEREFORE CANNOT INFRINGE MANDATORY RULES OF COMPETITION LAW .
88 IN ADJUDGING THE APPLICANTS ' SUBMISSIONS IT IS NOT HOWEVER NECESSARY TO CONSIDER THE QUESTION WHETHER , AND IF SO TO WHAT EXTENT , A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT REACHED BEFORE A GERMAN COURT MAY BE DECLARED VOID FOR INFRINGING COMMUNITY RULES OF COMPETITION LAW . THE CONTESTED DECISION IN FACT MERELY STATES THAT THE OBLIGATION ON LOUIS DAVID KG , ARISING OUT OF THE SETTLEMENT , NO LONGER TO SELL OR TO PLACE IN CIRCULATION IN GERMANY INRA SEEDS WITHOUT MR EISELE ' S AUTHORIZATION CONFLICTS WITH ARTICLE 85 ( 1 ) OF THE TREATY .
89 THEREFORE , THE EFFECT OF THE DECISION IS CONFINED , IN THIS RESPECT , TO A PROHIBITION RESTRAINING MR EISELE FROM RELYING ON CLAUSE 1 OF THE SETTLEMENT TO PREVENT THE SALE OR THE PLACING IN CIRCULATION OF INRA SEEDS IN GERMANY BY LOUIS DAVID KG . SUCH A PROHIBITION IS IN CONFORMITY WITH THE PRINCIPLE , RECOGNIZED IN GERMAN LAW , ACCORDING TO WHICH A JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT , WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 794 I ( 1 ) OF THE CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE , CONSTITUTES BOTH AN ACT OF THE COURT TERMINATING A LEGAL DISPUTE AND A CONTRACT OF PRIVATE LAW WHICH DOES NOT ALLOW THE PARTIES TO DISREGARD MANDATORY RULES OF LAW .
90 THE FIFTH SUBMISSION MUST THEREFORE BE REJECTED .
91 IT FOLLOWS FROM THE FOREGOING THAT THE APPLICATION MUST BE ALLOWED TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT CHALLENGES ARTICLE 1 ( B ), RELATING TO CLAUSE 1 OF THE 1965 CONTRACT , FIRST AND SECOND INDENTS , AND THAT THE REST OF THE APPLICATION MUST BE DISMISSED .
Decision on costs
COSTS
92 UNDER ARTICLE 69 ( 3 ) OF THE RULES OF PROCEDURE THE COURT MAY ORDER THAT THE PARTIES BEAR THEIR OWN COSTS IN WHOLE OR IN PART WHERE EACH PARTY SUCCEEDS ON SOME AND FAILS ON OTHER HEADS . IN THE PRESENT CASE THE PARTIES AND THE INTERVENERS MUST BEAR THEIR OWN COSTS .
Operative part
ON THOSE GROUNDS ,
THE COURT
HEREBY :
1 . DECLARES ARTICLE 1 ( B ) OF THE COMMISSION ' S DECISION OF 21 SEPTEMBER 1978 RELATING TO A PROCEEDING UNDER ARTICLE 85 OF THE EEC TREATY ( IV/28.824 - BREEDERS ' RIGHTS - MAIZE SEED ; OFFICIAL JOURNAL 1978 , L 286 , P . 23 ) TO BE VOID TO THE EXTENT TO WHICH IT RELATES TO CLAUSE 1 OF THE CONTRACT OF 5 OCTOBER 1965 AND IN SO FAR AS THAT CONTRACT IMPOSES :
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM HAVING THE RELEVANT SEEDS PRODUCED OR SOLD BY OTHER LICENSEES IN GERMANY , AND
AN OBLIGATION UPON INRA OR THOSE DERIVING RIGHTS THROUGH INRA TO REFRAIN FROM PRODUCING OR SELLING THE RELEVANT SEEDS IN GERMANY THEMSELVES ;
2 . DISMISSES THE REST OF THE APPLICATION ;
3 . ORDERS THE PARTIES AND THE INTERVENERS TO BEAR THEIR OWN COSTS .
5.1.2 CJEU, Coditel SA v Ciné-Vog Films, Case 262/81 5.1.2 CJEU, Coditel SA v Ciné-Vog Films, Case 262/81
Keywords
1 . FREEDOM TO PROVIDE SERVICES - RESTRICTIONS - ARTISTIC AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY - DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE EXISTENCE AND THE EXERCISE OF A RIGHT IN THE CONTEXT OF THE FREE MOVEMENT OF GOODS - APPLICATION OF THAT DISTINCTION IN THE CONTEXT OF THE MOVEMENT OF SERVICES
( EEC TREATY , ARTS . 36 AND 59 )
2 . COMPETITION - AGREEMENTS AND CONCERTED PRACTICES - COPYRIGHT IN A FILM - EXERCISE OF THE RIGHT - CONDITIONS OF PROHIBITION - CONTRACT GRANTING THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT A FILM - EXERCISE OF THE EXCLUSIVE EXHIBITION RIGHT - CONDITIONS OF PROHIBITION - CRITERIA OF APPRAISAL
( EEC TREATY , ART . 85 ( 1 ))
Summary
1 . THE DISTINCTION , IMPLICIT IN ARTICLE 36 OF THE TREATY , BETWEEN THE EXISTENCE OF A RIGHT CONFERRED BY THE LEGISLATION OF A MEMBER STATE IN REGARD TO THE PROTECTION OF ARTISTIC AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY , WHICH CANNOT BE AFFECTED BY THE PROVISIONS OF THE TREATY , AND THE EXERCISE OF SUCH RIGHT , WHICH MIGHT CONSTITUTE A DISGUISED RESTRICTION ON TRADE BETWEEN MEMBER STATES , ALSO APPLIES WHERE THAT RIGHT IS EXERCISED IN THE CONTEXT OF THE MOVEMENT OF SERVICES .
2 . ALTHOUGH COPYRIGHT IN A FILM AND THE RIGHT DERIVING FROM IT , NAMELY THAT OF EXHIBITING THE FILM , ARE NOT AS SUCH SUBJECT TO THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 , THE EXERCISE OF THOSE RIGHTS MAY , NONE THE LESS , COME WITHIN THE SAID PROHIBITIONS WHERE THERE ARE ECONOMIC OR LEGAL CIRCUMSTANCES THE EFFECT OF WHICH IS TO RESTRICT FILM DISTRIBUTION TO AN APPRECIABLE DEGREE OR TO DISTORT COMPETITION ON THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC MARKET , REGARD BEING HAD TO THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THAT MARKET .
AS REGARDS , IN PARTICULAR , A CONTRACT WHEREBY THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM GRANTS AN EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT THAT FILM FOR A SPECIFIC PERIOD IN THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE , IT IS FOR NATIONAL COURTS TO MAKE SUCH INQUIRIES AS ARE NECESSARY AND IN PARTICULAR TO ESTABLISH WHETHER OR NOT THE EXERCISE OF THE EXCLUSIVE EXHIBITION RIGHT CREATES BARRIERS WHICH ARE ARTIFICIAL AND UNJUSTIFIABLE IN TERMS OF THE NEEDS OF THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC INDUSTRY , OR THE POSSIBILITY OF CHARGING FEES WHICH EXCEED A FAIR RETURN ON INVESTMENT , OR AN EXCLUSIVITY THE DURATION OF WHICH IS DISPROPORTIONATE TO THOSE REQUIREMENTS , AND WHETHER OR NOT , FROM A GENERAL POINT OF VIEW , SUCH EXERCISE WITHIN A GIVEN GEOGRAPHIC AREA IS SUCH AS TO PREVENT , RESTRICT OR DISTORT COMPETITION WITHIN THE COMMON MARKET .
Parties
IN CASE 262/81
REFERENCE TO THE COURT UNDER ARTICLE 177 OF THE EEC TREATY BY THE COUR DE CASSATION ( COURT OF CASSATION ) OF THE KINGDOM OF BELGIUM FOR A PRELIMINARY RULING IN THE CASE PENDING BEFORE THAT COURT BETWEEN
1 . CODITEL SA , COMPAGNIE GENERALE POUR LA DIFFUSION DE LA TELEVISION , BRUSSELS ,
2 . CODITEL BRABANT SA , BRUSSELS ,
3 . CODITEL LIEGE SA , COMPAGNIE LIEGEOISE POUR LA DIFFUSION DE LA TELEVISION , LIEGE ,
4 . INTERMIXT , A PUBLIC UTILITY UNDERTAKING , BRUSSELS ,
5 . UNION PROFESSIONNELLE DE RADIO ET DE TELEDISTRIBUTION , SCHAERBEEK ,
6 . INTER-REGIES , AN INTERCOMMUNAL COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION , SAINT-GILLES ,
APPELLANTS IN CASSATION ,
AND
1 . CINE-VOG FILMS SA , SCHAERBEEK ,
2 . CHAMBRE SYNDICALE BELGE DE LA CINEMATOGRAPHIE , A NON-PROFIT MAKING ASSOCIATION , SAINT-JOSSE-TEN-NOODE ,
3 . LES FILMS LA BOETIE SA , PARIS ,
4 . SERGE PINON , SYNDIC OF THE COURT-SUPERVISED RECEIVERSHIP OF LES FILMS LA BOETIE SA , PARIS ,
5 . CHAMBRE SYNDICALE DES PRODUCTEURS ET EXPORTATEURS DE FILMS FRANCAIS , PARIS ,
RESPONDENTS IN CASSATION ,
Subject of the case
ON THE INTERPRETATION OF ARTICLES 85 AND 86 OF THE TREATY ,
Grounds
1 BY ORDER OF 3 SEPTEMBER 1981 , WHICH WAS RECEIVED AT THE COURT ON 30 SEPTEMBER 1981 , THE BELGIAN COUR DE CASSATION ( COURT OF CASSATION ) REFERRED TO THE COURT FOR A PRELIMINARY RULING UNDER ARTICLE 177 OF THE EEC TREATY A QUESTION CONCERNING THE INTERPRETATION OF ARTICLE 85 READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 36 OF THAT TREATY .
2 THE QUESTION AROSE IN THE COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS BETWEEN THREE BELGIAN CABLE TELEVISION DIFFUSION COMPANIES , WHICH ARE HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO JOINTLY AS THE CODITEL COMPANIES , APPELLANTS IN CASSATION , ON THE ONE HAND , AND A BELGIAN FILM DISTRIBUTION COMPANY , CINE-VOG FILMS SA , A FRENCH FILM PRODUCING COMPANY , LES FILMS LA BOETIE , AND OTHER REPRESENTATIVES OF THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC INDUSTRY , THE RESPONDENTS IN CASSATION , ON THE OTHER HAND .
3 THE ACTION WHICH GAVE RISE TO THOSE PROCEEDINGS WAS FOR COMPENSATION FOR THE DAMAGE WHICH CINE-VOG ALLEGED IT HAD SUFFERED AS THE RESULT OF THE RETRANSMISSION OF THE BROADCAST ON GERMAN TELEVISION OF THE FILM ' ' LE BOUCHER ' ' , IN RESPECT OF WHICH CINE-VOG HAD ACQUIRED EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS IN BELGIUM FROM LES FILMS LA BOETIE .
4 IT IS APPARENT FROM THE FILE THAT THE CODITEL COMPANIES PROVIDE , WITH THE AUTHORITY OF THE BELGIAN ADMINISTRATION , A CABLE TELEVISION DIFFUSION SERVICE COVERING PART OF BELGIUM . TELEVISION SETS BELONGING TO SUBSCRIBERS TO THE SERVICE ARE LINKED BY CABLE TO A CENTRAL AERIAL HAVING SPECIAL TECHNICAL FEATURES WHICH ENABLE BELGIAN BROADCASTS TO BE PICKED UP AS WELL AS CERTAIN FOREIGN BROADCASTS WHICH THE SUBSCRIBER CANNOT ALWAYS RECEIVE WITH A PRIVATE AERIAL , AND WHICH FURTHERMORE IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF THE PICTURE AND SOUND RECEIVED BY THE SUBSCRIBERS .
5 THE COURT BEFORE WHICH THE CLAIM WAS ORIGINALLY MADE , THE TRIBUNAL DE PREMIERE INSTANCE ( COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE ), BRUSSELS , ORDERED THE CODITEL COMPANIES TO PAY DAMAGES TO CINE-VOG . THE CODITEL COMPANIES APPEALED AGAINST THAT JUDGMENT , AND THE COUR D ' APPEL ( COURT OF APPEAL ), AFTER HOLDING THAT ARTICLE 85 WAS NOT APPLICABLE TO THE DISPUTE , SUBMITTED TO THE COURT OF JUSTICE TWO QUESTIONS WHICH , ESSENTIALLY , RAISED THE PROBLEM OF WHETHER ARTICLES 59 AND 60 OF THE TREATY PROHIBIT THE ASSIGNMENT , LIMITED TO THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE , OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM , IN VIEW OF THE FACT THAT A SERIES OF SUCH ASSIGNMENTS MIGHT RESULT IN THE PARTITIONING OF THE COMMON MARKET AS REGARDS THE UNDERTAKING OF ECONOMIC ACTIVITY IN THE FILM INDUSTRY .
6 BY JUDGMENT DATED 18 MARCH (( 1980 ) ECR 881 ), THE COURT RULED AS FOLLOWS :
' ' THE PROVISIONS OF THE EEC TREATY RELATING TO THE FREEDOM TO PROVIDE SERVICES DO NOT PRECLUDE AN ASSIGNEE OF THE PERFORMING RIGHT IN A CINEMATOGRAPHIC FILM IN A MEMBER STATE FROM RELYING UPON HIS RIGHT TO PROHIBIT THE EXHIBITION OF THAT FILM IN THAT STATE , WITHOUT HIS AUTHORITY , BY MEANS OF CABLE DIFFUSION IF THE FILM SO EXHIBITED IS PICKED UP AND TRANSMITTED AFTER BEING BROADCAST IN ANOTHER MEMBER STATE BY A THIRD PARTY WITH THE CONSENT OF THE ORIGINAL OWNER OF THE RIGHT ' ' .
7 HOWEVER , WITHIN THE PERIOD PRESCRIBED BY STATUTE FOR LODGING AN APPEAL IN CASSATION , THE CODITEL COMPANIES HAD APPEALED TO THE COUR DE CASSATION AGAINST THE JUDGMENT OF THE COUR D ' APPEL , CLAIMING INTER ALIA THAT THE LATTER HAD ERRED IN HOLDING THAT ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY WAS NOT APPLICABLE TO THE CASE IN POINT . THEY MAINTAINED , ON THE ONE HAND , THAT ARTICLE 36 COULD NOT RESTRICT THE SCOPE OF APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 85 AND , ON THE OTHER HAND , THAT IF COPYRIGHT AS A LEGAL STATUS DID NOT FALL WITHIN THE CLASS OF AGREEMENTS AND CONCERTED PRACTICES AS ENVISAGED BY ARTICLE 85 , ITS EXERCISE MIGHT BE THE PURPOSE , THE MEANS OR THE RESULT OF AN AGREEMENT , DECISION OR CONCERTED PRACTICE AND THAT A CONTRACT INVOLVING AN EXCLUSIVE LICENCE OR AN ASSIGNMENT OF COPYRIGHT MIGHT AMOUNT TO AN AGREEMENT , DECISION OR CONCERTED PRACTICE FOR THE PURPOSES OF ARTICLE 85 , NOT ONLY BECAUSE OF THE RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS ARISING FROM ITS CLAUSES BUT ALSO BECAUSE OF THE ECONOMIC AND LEGAL CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING IT AND , IN PARTICULAR , BECAUSE OF THE EXISTENCE OF ANY SIMILAR AGREEMENTS CONCLUDED BETWEEN THE SAME PARTIES OR EVEN BETWEEN THIRD PARTIES , AND OF THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF SUCH PARALLEL AGREEMENTS .
8 THE COUR DE CASSATION CONSIDERED THAT THE ABOVE SUBMISSION RAISED A QUESTION OF INTERPRETATION OF COMMUNITY LAW AND REFERRED THE FOLLOWING QUESTION TO THE COURT :
' ' WHERE A COMPANY WHICH IS THE PROPRIETOR OF THE RIGHTS OF EXPLOITATION OF A CINEMATOGRAPHIC FILM GRANTS A CONTRACT TO A COMPANY IN ANOTHER MEMBER STATE AN EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO SHOW THAT FILM IN THAT STATE , FOR A SPECIFIED PERIOD , IS THAT CONTRACT LIABLE , BY REASON OF THE RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS CONTAINED IN IT AND OF THE ECONOMIC AND LEGAL CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING IT , TO CONSTITUTE AN AGREEMENT , DECISION OR CONCERTED PRACTICE WHICH IS PROHIBITED BETWEEN UNDERTAKINGS PURSUANT TO THE FIRST AND SECOND PARAGRAPHS OF ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY OR ARE THOSE PROVISIONS INAPPLICABLE EITHER BECAUSE THE RIGHT TO SHOW THE FILM IS PART OF THE SPECIFIC SUBJECT-MATTER OF COPYRIGHT AND ACCORDINGLY ARTICLE 36 OF THE TREATY WOULD BE AN OBSTACLE TO THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 85 , OR BECAUSE OF THE RIGHT RELIED UPON BY THE ASSIGNEE OF THE RIGHT TO SHOW THE FILM DERIVES FROM A LEGAL STATUS WHICH CONFERS ON THE ASSIGNEE PROTECTION ERGA OMNES AND WHICH DOES NOT FALL WITHIN THE CLASS OF AGREEMENTS AND CONCERTED PRACTICES REFERRED TO BY THE SAID ARTICLE 85?
' '
9 THE QUESTION ESSENTIALLY SEEKS TO ASCERTAIN THE POSITION , IN RELATION TO PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY , OF A CONTRACT WHEREBY THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM GRANTS THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT THAT FILM WITHIN THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE AND FOR A SPECIFIED PERIOD . MORE PARTICULARLY , THE QUESTION ASKS WHETHER SUCH A GRANT MAY POSSIBLY FALL OUTSIDE THE SCOPE OF ARTICLE 85 BY VIRTUE OF THE SPECIAL CHARACTER ATTRIBUTED TO THAT RIGHT BY ARTICLE 36 OF THE TREATY OR BY ITS PROTECTED STATUS UNDER NATIONAL LAW .
10 IT SHOULD BE NOTED , BY WAY OF A PRELIMINARY OBSERVATION , THAT ARTICLE 36 PERMITS PROHIBITIONS OR RESTRICTIONS ON TRADE BETWEEN MEMBER STATES PROVIDED THAT THEY ARE JUSTIFIED ON GROUNDS INTER ALIA OF THE PROTECTION OF INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY , A TERM WHICH COVERS LITERARY AND ARTISTIC PROPERTY , INCLUDING COPYRIGHT , WHEREAS THE MAIN PROCEEDINGS ARE CONCERNED WITH THE QUESTION OF PROHIBITIONS OR RESTRICTIONS PLACED UPON THE FREE MOVEMENT OF SERVICES .
11 IN THIS REGARD , AS THE COURT HELD IN ITS JUDGMENT OF 18 MARCH 1980 ( CODITEL V CINE-VOG FILMS ( 1980 ) ECR 881 ), THE PROBLEMS INVOLVED IN THE OBSERVANCE OF A FILM PRODUCER ' S RIGHTS IN RELATION TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE TREATY ARE NOT THE SAME AS THOSE WHICH ARISE IN CONNECTION WITH LITERARY AND ARTISTIC WORKS THE PLACING OF WHICH AT THE DISPOSAL OF THE PUBLIC IS INSEPARABLE FROM THE CIRCULATION OF THE MATERIAL FORM OF THE WORKS , AS IN THE CASE OF BOOKS OR RECORDS , WHEREAS THE FILM BELONGS TO THE CATEGORY OF LITERARY AND ARTISTIC WORKS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC BY PERFORMANCES WHICH MAY BE INFINITELY REPEATED AND THE COMMERCIAL EXPLOITATION OF WHICH COMES UNDER THE MOVEMENT OF SERVICES , NO MATTER WHETHER THE MEANS WHEREBY IT IS SHOWN TO THE PUBLIC BE THE CINEMA OR TELEVISION .
12 IN THE SAME JUDGMENT THE COURT FURTHER HELD THAT THE RIGHT OF THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM AND HIS ASSIGNS TO REQUIRE FEES FOR ANY SHOWING OF THAT FILM IS PART OF THE ESSENTIAL FUNCTION OF COPYRIGHT .
13 THE DISTINCTION , IMPLICIT IN ARTICLE 36 , BETWEEN THE EXISTENCE OF A RIGHT CONFERRED BY THE LEGISLATION OF A MEMBER STATE IN REGARD TO THE PROTECTION OF ARTISTIC AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY , WHICH CANNOT BE AFFECTED BY THE PROVISIONS OF THE TREATY , AND THE EXERCISE OF SUCH RIGHT , WHICH MIGHT CONSTITUTE A DISGUISED RESTRICTION ON TRADE BETWEEN MEMBER STATES , ALSO APPLIES WHERE THAT RIGHT IS EXERCISED IN THE CONTEXT OF THE MOVEMENT OF SERVICES .
14 JUST AS IT IS CONCEIVABLE THAT CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE MANNER IN WHICH THE RIGHT IS EXERCISED MAY PROVE TO BE INCOMPATIBLE WITH ARTICLES 59 AND 60 IT IS EQUALLY CONCEIVABLE THAT SOME ASPECTS MAY PROVE TO BE INCOMPATIBLE WITH ARTICLE 85 WHERE THEY SERVE TO GIVE EFFECT TO AN AGREEMENT , DECISION OR CONCERTED PRACTICE WHICH MAY HAVE AS ITS OBJECT OR EFFECT THE PREVENTION , RESTRICTION OR DISTORTION OF COMPETITION WITHIN THE COMMON MARKET .
15 HOWEVER , THE MERE FACT THAT THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM HAS GRANTED TO A SOLE LICENSEE THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT THAT FILM IN THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE AND , CONSEQUENTLY , TO PROHIBIT , DURING A SPECIFIED PERIOD , ITS SHOWING BY OTHERS , IS NOT SUFFICIENT TO JUSTIFY THE FINDING THAT SUCH A CONTRACT MUST BE REGARDED AS THE PURPOSE , THE MEANS OR THE RESULT OF AN AGREEMENT , DECISION OR CONCERTED PRACTICE PROHIBITED BY THE TREATY .
16 THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC INDUSTRY AND OF ITS MARKETS IN THE COMMUNITY , ESPECIALLY THOSE RELATING TO DUBBING AND SUBTITLING FOR THE BENEFIT OF DIFFERENT LANGUAGE GROUPS , TO THE POSSIBILITIES OF TELEVISION BROADCASTS , AND TO THE SYSTEM OF FINANCING CINEMATOGRAPHIC PRODUCTION IN EUROPE SERVE TO SHOW THAT AN EXCLUSIVE EXHIBITION LICENCE IS NOT , IN ITSELF , SUCH AS TO PREVENT , RESTRICT OR DISTORT COMPETITION .
17 ALTHOUGH COPYRIGHT IN A FILM AND THE RIGHT DERIVING FROM IT , NAMELY THAT OF EXHIBITING THE FILM , ARE NOT , THEREFORE , AS SUCH SUBJECT TO THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 , THE EXERCISE OF THOSE RIGHTS MAY , NONE THE LESS , COME WITHIN THE SAID PROHIBITIONS WHERE THERE ARE ECONOMIC OR LEGAL CIRCUMSTANCES THE EFFECT OF WHICH IS TO RESTRICT FILM DISTRIBUTION TO AN APPRECIABLE DEGREE OR TO DISTORT COMPETITION ON THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC MARKET , REGARD BEING HAD TO THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THAT MARKET .
18 SINCE NEITHER THE QUESTION REFERRED TO THE COURT NOR THE FILE ON THE CASE PROVIDES ANY INFORMATION IN THIS RESPECT , IT IS FOR THE NATIONAL COURT TO MAKE SUCH INQUIRIES AS MAY BE NECESSARY .
19 IT MUST THEREFORE BE STATED THAT IT IS FOR NATIONAL COURTS , WHERE APPROPRIATE , TO MAKE SUCH INQUIRIES AND IN PARTICULAR TO ESTABLISH WHETHER OR NOT THE EXERCISE OF THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT A CINEMATOGRAPHIC FILM CREATES BARRIERS WHICH ARE ARTIFICIAL AND UNJUSTIFIABLE IN TERMS OF THE NEEDS OF THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC INDUSTRY , OR THE POSSIBILITY OF CHARGING FEES WHICH EXCEED A FAIR RETURN ON INVESTMENT , OR AN EXCLUSIVITY THE DURATION OF WHICH IS DISPROPORTIONATE TO THOSE REQUIREMENTS , AND WHETHER OR NOT , FROM A GENERAL POINT OF VIEW , SUCH EXERCISE WITHIN A GIVEN GEOGRAPHIC AREA IS SUCH AS TO PREVENT , RESTRICT OR DISTORT COMPETITION WITHIN THE COMMON MARKET .
20 ACCORDINGLY , THE ANSWER TO BE GIVEN TO THE QUESTION REFERRED TO THE COURT MUST BE THAT A CONTRACT WHEREBY THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT IN A FILM GRANTS AN EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT THAT FILM FOR A SPECIFIC PERIOD IN THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE IS NOT , AS SUCH , SUBJECT TO THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY . IT IS , HOWEVER , WHERE APPROPRIATE , FOR THE NATIONAL COURT TO ASCERTAIN WHETHER , IN A GIVEN CASE , THE MANNER IN WHICH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT CONFERRED BY THAT CONTRACT IS EXERCISED IS SUBJECT TO A SITUATION IN THE ECONOMIC OR LEGAL SPHERE THE OBJECT OR EFFECT OF WHICH IS TO PREVENT OR RESTRICT THE DISTRIBUTION OF FILMS OR TO DISTORT COMPETITION WITHIN THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC MARKET , REGARD BEING HAD TO THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THAT MARKET .
Decision on costs
COSTS
21 THE COSTS INCURRED BY THE UNITED KINGDOM , THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC , THE GOVERNMENT OF THE KINGDOM OF THE NETHERLANDS AND THE COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES , WHICH HAVE SUBMITTED OBSERVATIONS TO THE COURT , ARE NOT RECOVERABLE . AS THESE PROCEEDINGS ARE , IN SO FAR AS THE PARTIES TO THE MAIN ACTION ARE CONCERNED , IN THE NATURE OF A STEP IN THE ACTION PENDING BEFORE THE NATIONAL COURT , COSTS ARE A MATTER FOR THAT COURT .
Operative part
ON THOSE GROUNDS ,
THE COURT
IN ANSWER TO THE QUESTION REFERRED TO IT BY THE BELGIAN COUR DE CASSATION , BY ORDER OF 3 SEPTEMBER 1981 , HEREBY RULES :
A CONTRACT WHEREBY THE OWNER OF THE COPYRIGHT FOR A FILM GRANTS AN EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO EXHIBIT THAT FILM FOR A SPECIFIC PERIOD IN THE TERRITORY OF A MEMBER STATE IS NOT , AS SUCH , SUBJECT TO THE PROHIBITIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 85 OF THE TREATY . IT IS , HOWEVER , WHERE APPROPRIATE , FOR THE NATIONAL COURT TO ASCERTAIN WHETHER , IN A GIVEN CASE , THE MANNER IN WHICH THE EXCLUSIVE RIGHT CONFERRED BY THAT CONTRACT IS EXERCISED IS SUBJECT TO A SITUATION IN THE ECONOMIC OR LEGAL SPHERE THE OBJECT OR EFFECT OF WHICH IS TO PREVENT OR RESTRICT THE DISTRIBUTION OF FILMS OR TO DISTORT COMPETITION ON THE CINEMATOGRAPHIC MARKET , REGARD BEING HAD TO THE SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THAT MARKET .
5.2 Block Exemption 5.2 Block Exemption
5.2.1 Technology Transfer BER, No 316/2014 5.2.1 Technology Transfer BER, No 316/2014
COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) No 316/2014 of 21 March 2014 on the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union to categories of technology transfer agreements
(Text with EEA relevance)
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
Having regard to Regulation No 19/65/EEC of the Council of 2 March 1965 on application of Article 85(3) of the Treaty to certain categories of agreements and concerted practices (1), and in particular Article 1 thereof,
Having published a draft of this Regulation,
After consulting the Advisory Committee on Restrictive Practices and Dominant Positions,
Whereas:
|
(1) |
Regulation No 19/65/EEC empowers the Commission to apply Article 101(3) of the Treaty by regulation to certain categories of technology transfer agreements and corresponding concerted practices to which only two undertakings are party which fall within Article 101(1) of the Treaty. |
|
(2) |
Pursuant to Regulation No 19/65/EEC, the Commission has, in particular, adopted Commission Regulation (EC) No 772/2004 (2). Regulation (EC) No 772/2004 defines categories of technology transfer agreements which the Commission regarded as normally satisfying the conditions laid down in Article 101(3) of the Treaty. In view of the overall positive experience with the application of that Regulation, which expires on 30 April 2014, and taking into account further experience acquired since its adoption, it is appropriate to adopt a new block exemption regulation. |
|
(3) |
This Regulation should meet the two requirements of ensuring effective protection of competition and providing adequate legal security for undertakings. The pursuit of those objectives should take account of the need to simplify administrative supervision and the legislative framework to as great an extent as possible. |
|
(4) |
Technology transfer agreements concern the licensing of technology rights. Such agreements will usually improve economic efficiency and be pro-competitive as they can reduce duplication of research and development, strengthen the incentive for the initial research and development, spur incremental innovation, facilitate diffusion and generate product market competition. |
|
(5) |
The likelihood that such efficiency-enhancing and pro-competitive effects will outweigh any anti-competitive effects due to restrictions contained in technology transfer agreements depends on the degree of market power of the undertakings concerned and, therefore, on the extent to which those undertakings face competition from undertakings owning substitute technologies or undertakings producing substitute products. |
|
(6) |
This Regulation should cover only technology transfer agreements between a licensor and a licensee. It should cover such agreements even if the agreement contains conditions relating to more than one level of trade, for instance requiring the licensee to set up a particular distribution system and specifying the obligations the licensee must or may impose on resellers of the products produced under the licence. However, such conditions and obligations should comply with the competition rules applicable to supply and distribution agreements set out in Commission Regulation (EU) No 330/2010 (3). Supply and distribution agreements concluded between a licensee and buyers of its contract products should not be exempted by this Regulation. |
|
(7) |
This Regulation should only apply to agreements where the licensor permits the licensee and/or one or more of its sub-contractors to exploit the licensed technology rights, possibly after further research and development by the licensee and/or its sub-contractors, for the purpose of producing goods or services. It should not apply to licensing in the context of research and development agreements which are covered by Commission Regulation (EU) No 1217/2010 (4) or to licensing in the context of specialisation agreements which are covered by Commission Regulation (EU) No 1218/2010 (5). It should also not apply to agreements, the purpose of which is the mere reproduction and distribution of software copyright protected products as such agreements do not concern the licensing of a technology to produce but are more akin to distribution agreements. Nor should it apply to agreements to set up technology pools, that is to say, agreements for the pooling of technologies with the purpose of licensing them to third parties, or to agreements whereby the pooled technology is licensed out to those third parties. |
|
(8) |
For the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty by regulation, it is not necessary to define those technology transfer agreements that are capable of falling within Article 101(1) of the Treaty. In the individual assessment of agreements pursuant to Article 101(1), account has to be taken of several factors, and in particular the structure and the dynamics of the relevant technology and product markets. |
|
(9) |
The benefit of the block exemption established by this Regulation should be limited to those agreements which can be assumed with sufficient certainty to satisfy the conditions of Article 101(3) of the Treaty. In order to attain the benefits and objectives of technology transfer, this Regulation should not only cover the transfer of technology as such but also other provisions contained in technology transfer agreements if, and to the extent that, those provisions are directly related to the production or sale of the contract products. |
|
(10) |
For technology transfer agreements between competitors it can be presumed that, where the combined share of the relevant markets accounted for by the parties does not exceed 20 % and the agreements do not contain certain severely anti-competitive restrictions, they generally lead to an improvement in production or distribution and allow consumers a fair share of the resulting benefits. |
|
(11) |
For technology transfer agreements between non-competitors it can be presumed that, where the individual share of the relevant markets accounted for by each of the parties does not exceed 30 % and the agreements do not contain certain severely anti-competitive restrictions, they generally lead to an improvement in production or distribution and allow consumers a fair share of the resulting benefits. |
|
(12) |
If the applicable market-share threshold is exceeded on one or more product or technology markets, the block exemption should not apply to the agreement for the relevant markets concerned. |
|
(13) |
There can be no presumption that, above those market-share thresholds, technology transfer agreements fall within the scope of Article 101(1) of the Treaty. For instance, exclusive licensing agreements between non-competing undertakings often fall outside the scope of Article 101(1). There can also be no presumption that, above those market-share thresholds, technology transfer agreements falling within the scope of Article 101(1) will not satisfy the conditions for exemption. However, it can also not be presumed that they will usually give rise to objective advantages of such a character and size as to compensate for the disadvantages which they create for competition. |
|
(14) |
This Regulation should not exempt technology transfer agreements containing restrictions which are not indispensable to the improvement of production or distribution. In particular, technology transfer agreements containing certain severely anti-competitive restrictions, such as the fixing of prices charged to third parties, should be excluded from the benefit of the block exemption established by this Regulation irrespective of the market shares of the undertakings concerned. In the case of such hardcore restrictions the whole agreement should be excluded from the benefit of the block exemption. |
|
(15) |
In order to protect incentives to innovate and the appropriate application of intellectual property rights, certain restrictions should be excluded from the benefit of the block exemption. In particular certain grant back obligations and non-challenge clauses should be excluded. Where such a restriction is included in a licence agreement only the restriction in question should be excluded from the benefit of the block exemption. |
|
(16) |
The market-share thresholds and the non-exemption of technology transfer agreements containing the severely anti-competitive restrictions and the excluded restrictions provided for in this Regulation will normally ensure that the agreements to which the block exemption applies do not enable the participating undertakings to eliminate competition in respect of a substantial part of the products in question. |
|
(17) |
The Commission may withdraw the benefit of this Regulation, pursuant to Article 29(1) of Council Regulation (EC) No 1/2003 (6), where it finds in a particular case that an agreement to which the exemption provided for in this Regulation applies nevertheless has effects which are incompatible with Article 101(3) of the Treaty. This may occur in particular where the incentives to innovate are reduced or where access to markets is hindered. |
|
(18) |
The competition authority of a Member State may withdraw the benefit of this Regulation pursuant to Article 29(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003 in respect of the territory of that Member State, or a part thereof where, in a particular case, an agreement to which the exemption provided for in this Regulation applies nevertheless has effects which are incompatible with Article 101(3) of the Treaty in the territory of that Member State, or in a part thereof, and where such territory has all the characteristics of a distinct geographic market. |
|
(19) |
In order to strengthen supervision of parallel networks of technology transfer agreements which have similar restrictive effects and which cover more than 50 % of a given market, the Commission may by regulation declare this Regulation inapplicable to technology transfer agreements containing specific restrictions relating to the market concerned, thereby restoring the full application of Article 101 of the Treaty to such agreements, |
HAS ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:
Article 1
Definitions
1. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions shall apply:
|
(a) |
‘agreement’ means an agreement, a decision of an association of undertakings or a concerted practice; |
|
(b) |
‘technology rights’ means know-how and the following rights, or a combination thereof, including applications for or applications for registration of those rights:
|
|
(c) |
‘technology transfer agreement’ means:
|
|
(d) |
‘reciprocal agreement’ means a technology transfer agreement where two undertakings grant each other, in the same or separate contracts, a technology rights licence, and where those licences concern competing technologies or can be used for the production of competing products; |
|
(e) |
‘non-reciprocal agreement’ means a technology transfer agreement where one undertaking grants another undertaking a technology rights licence, or where two undertakings grant each other such a licence but where those licences do not concern competing technologies and cannot be used for the production of competing products; |
|
(f) |
‘product’ means goods or a service, including both intermediary goods and services and final goods and services; |
|
(g) |
‘contract product’ means a product produced, directly or indirectly, on the basis of the licensed technology rights; |
|
(h) |
‘intellectual property rights’ includes industrial property rights, in particular patents and trademarks, copyright and neighbouring rights; |
|
(i) |
‘know-how’ means a package of practical information, resulting from experience and testing, which is:
|
|
(j) |
‘relevant product market’ means the market for the contract products and their substitutes, that is to say all those products which are regarded as interchangeable or substitutable by the buyer, by reason of the products’ characteristics, their prices and their intended use; |
|
(k) |
‘relevant technology market’ means the market for the licensed technology rights and their substitutes, that is to say all those technology rights which are regarded as interchangeable or substitutable by the licensee, by reason of the technology rights’ characteristics, the royalties payable in respect of those rights and their intended use; |
|
(l) |
‘relevant geographic market’ means the area in which the undertakings concerned are involved in the supply of and demand for products or the licensing of technology rights, in which the conditions of competition are sufficiently homogeneous and which can be distinguished from neighbouring areas because the conditions of competition are appreciably different in those areas; |
|
(m) |
‘relevant market’ means the combination of the relevant product or technology market with the relevant geographic market; |
|
(n) |
‘competing undertakings’ means undertakings which compete on the relevant market, that is to say:
|
|
(o) |
‘selective distribution system’ means a distribution system where the licensor undertakes to license the production of the contract products, either directly or indirectly, only to licensees selected on the basis of specified criteria and where those licensees undertake not to sell the contract products to unauthorised distributors within the territory reserved by the licensor to operate that system; |
|
(p) |
‘exclusive licence’ means a licence under which the licensor itself is not permitted to produce on the basis of the licensed technology rights and is not permitted to license the licensed technology rights to third parties, in general or for a particular use or in a particular territory; |
|
(q) |
‘exclusive territory’ means a given territory within which only one undertaking is allowed to produce the contract products, but where it is nevertheless possible to allow another licensee to produce the contract products within that territory only for a particular customer where the second licence was granted in order to create an alternative source of supply for that customer; |
|
(r) |
‘exclusive customer group’ means a group of customers to which only one party to the technology transfer agreement is allowed to actively sell the contract products produced with the licensed technology. |
2. For the purposes of this Regulation, the terms ‘undertaking’, ‘licensor’ and ‘licensee’ shall include their respective connected undertakings.
‘Connected undertakings’ means:
|
(a) |
undertakings in which a party to the technology transfer agreement, directly or indirectly:
|
|
(b) |
undertakings which directly or indirectly have, over a party to the technology transfer agreement, the rights or powers listed in point (a); |
|
(c) |
undertakings in which an undertaking referred to in point (b) has, directly or indirectly, the rights or powers listed in point (a); |
|
(d) |
undertakings in which a party to the technology transfer agreement together with one or more of the undertakings referred to in points (a), (b) or (c), or in which two or more of the latter undertakings, jointly have the rights or powers listed in point (a); |
|
(e) |
undertakings in which the rights or the powers listed in point (a) are jointly held by:
|
Article 2
Exemption
1. Pursuant to Article 101(3) of the Treaty and subject to the provisions of this Regulation, Article 101(1) of the Treaty shall not apply to technology transfer agreements.
2. The exemption provided for in paragraph 1 shall apply to the extent that technology transfer agreements contain restrictions of competition falling within the scope of Article 101(1) of the Treaty. The exemption shall apply for as long as the licensed technology rights have not expired, lapsed or been declared invalid or, in the case of know-how, for as long as the know-how remains secret. However, where know-how becomes publicly known as a result of action by the licensee, the exemption shall apply for the duration of the agreement.
3. The exemption provided for in paragraph 1 shall also apply to provisions, in technology transfer agreements, which relate to the purchase of products by the licensee or which relate to the licensing or assignment of other intellectual property rights or know-how to the licensee, if, and to the extent that, those provisions are directly related to the production or sale of the contract products.
Article 3
Market-share thresholds
1. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are competing undertakings, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall apply on condition that the combined market share of the parties does not exceed 20 % on the relevant market(s).
2. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are not competing undertakings, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall apply on condition that the market share of each of the parties does not exceed 30 % on the relevant market(s).
Article 4
Hardcore restrictions
1. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are competing undertakings, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall not apply to agreements which, directly or indirectly, in isolation or in combination with other factors under the control of the parties, have as their object any of the following:
|
(a) |
the restriction of a party’s ability to determine its prices when selling products to third parties; |
|
(b) |
the limitation of output, except limitations on the output of contract products imposed on the licensee in a non-reciprocal agreement or imposed on only one of the licensees in a reciprocal agreement; |
|
(c) |
the allocation of markets or customers except:
|
|
(d) |
the restriction of the licensee’s ability to exploit its own technology rights or the restriction of the ability of any of the parties to the agreement to carry out research and development, unless such latter restriction is indispensable to prevent the disclosure of the licensed know-how to third parties. |
2. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are not competing undertakings, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall not apply to agreements which, directly or indirectly, in isolation or in combination with other factors under the control of the parties, have as their object any of the following:
|
(a) |
the restriction of a party’s ability to determine its prices when selling products to third parties, without prejudice to the possibility of imposing a maximum sale price or recommending a sale price, provided that it does not amount to a fixed or minimum sale price as a result of pressure from, or incentives offered by, any of the parties; |
|
(b) |
the restriction of the territory into which, or of the customers to whom, the licensee may passively sell the contract products, except:
|
|
(c) |
the restriction of active or passive sales to end-users by a licensee which is a member of a selective distribution system and which operates at the retail level, without prejudice to the possibility of prohibiting a member of the system from operating out of an unauthorised place of establishment. |
3. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are not competing undertakings at the time of the conclusion of the agreement but become competing undertakings afterwards, paragraph 2 and not paragraph 1 shall apply for the full life of the agreement unless the agreement is subsequently amended in any material respect. Such an amendment includes the conclusion of a new technology transfer agreement between the parties concerning competing technology rights.
Article 5
Excluded restrictions
1. The exemption provided for in Article 2 shall not apply to any of the following obligations contained in technology transfer agreements:
|
(a) |
any direct or indirect obligation on the licensee to grant an exclusive licence or to assign rights, in whole or in part, to the licensor or to a third party designated by the licensor in respect of its own improvements to, or its own new applications of, the licensed technology; |
|
(b) |
any direct or indirect obligation on a party not to challenge the validity of intellectual property rights which the other party holds in the Union, without prejudice to the possibility, in the case of an exclusive licence, of providing for termination of the technology transfer agreement in the event that the licensee challenges the validity of any of the licensed technology rights. |
2. Where the undertakings party to the agreement are not competing undertakings, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall not apply to any direct or indirect obligation limiting the licensee’s ability to exploit its own technology rights or limiting the ability of any of the parties to the agreement to carry out research and development, unless such latter restriction is indispensable to prevent the disclosure of the licensed know-how to third parties.
Article 6
Withdrawal in individual cases
1. The Commission may withdraw the benefit of this Regulation, pursuant to Article 29(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003, where it finds in any particular case that a technology transfer agreement to which the exemption provided for in Article 2 of this Regulation applies nevertheless has effects which are incompatible with Article 101(3) of the Treaty, and in particular where:
|
(a) |
access of third parties’ technologies to the market is restricted, for instance by the cumulative effect of parallel networks of similar restrictive agreements prohibiting licensees from using third parties’ technologies; |
|
(b) |
access of potential licensees to the market is restricted, for instance by the cumulative effect of parallel networks of similar restrictive agreements prohibiting licensors from licensing to other licensees or because the only technology owner licensing out relevant technology rights concludes an exclusive license with a licensee who is already active on the product market on the basis of substitutable technology rights. |
2. Where, in any particular case, a technology transfer agreement to which the exemption provided for in Article 2 of this Regulation applies has effects which are incompatible with Article 101(3) of the Treaty in the territory of a Member State, or in a part thereof, which has all the characteristics of a distinct geographic market, the competition authority of that Member State may withdraw the benefit of this Regulation, pursuant to Article 29(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003, in respect of that territory, under the same circumstances as those set out in paragraph 1 of this Article.
Article 7
Non-application of this Regulation
1. Pursuant to Article 1a of Regulation (EC) No 19/65/EEC, the Commission may by regulation declare that, where parallel networks of similar technology transfer agreements cover more than 50 % of a relevant market, this Regulation is not to apply to technology transfer agreements containing specific restrictions relating to that market.
2. A regulation pursuant to paragraph 1 shall not become applicable earlier than six months following its adoption.
Article 8
Application of the market-share thresholds
For the purposes of applying the market-share thresholds laid down in Article 3 the following rules shall apply:
|
(a) |
the market share shall be calculated on the basis of market sales value data; if market sales value data are not available, estimates based on other reliable market information, including market sales volumes, may be used to establish the market share of the undertaking concerned; |
|
(b) |
the market share shall be calculated on the basis of data relating to the preceding calendar year; |
|
(c) |
the market share held by the undertakings referred to in point (e) of the second subparagraph of Article 1(2) shall be apportioned equally to each undertaking having the rights or the powers listed in point (a) of the second subparagraph of Article 1(2); |
|
(d) |
the market share of a licensor on a relevant market for the licensed technology rights shall be calculated on the basis of the presence of the licensed technology rights on the relevant market(s) (that is the product market(s) and the geographic market(s)) where the contract products are sold, that is on the basis of the sales data relating to the contract products produced by the licensor and its licensees combined; |
|
(e) |
if the market share referred to in Article 3(1) or (2) is initially not more than 20 % or 30 % respectively, but subsequently rises above those levels, the exemption provided for in Article 2 shall continue to apply for a period of two consecutive calendar years following the year in which the 20 % threshold or 30 % threshold was first exceeded. |
Article 9
Relationship with other block exemption regulations
This Regulation shall not apply to licensing arrangements in research and development agreements which fall within the scope of Regulation (EU) No 1217/2010 or in specialisation agreements which fall within the scope of Regulation (EU) No 1218/2010.
Article 10
Transitional period
The prohibition laid down in Article 101(1) of the Treaty shall not apply from 1 May 2014 until 30 April 2015 to agreements already in force on 30 April 2014 which do not satisfy the conditions for exemption provided for in this Regulation but which, on 30 April 2014, satisfied the conditions for exemption provided for in Regulation (EC) No 772/2004.
Article 11
Period of validity
This Regulation shall enter into force on 1 May 2014.
It shall expire on 30 April 2026.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Brussels, 21 March 2014.
For the Commission, On behalf of the President,
Joaquín ALMUNIA
Vice-President
(1) OJ 36, 6.3.1965, p. 533/65.
(2) Commission Regulation (EC) No 772/2004 of 7 April 2004 on the application of Article 81(3) of the Treaty to categories of technology transfer agreements (OJ L 123, 27.4.2004, p. 11).
(3) Commission Regulation (EU) No 330/2010 of 20 April 2010 on the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union to categories of vertical agreements and concerted practices (OJ L 102, 23.4.2010, p. 1).
(4) Commission Regulation (EU) No 1217/2010 of 14 December 2010 on the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union to certain categories of research and development agreements (OJ L 335, 18.12.2010, p. 36).
(5) Commission Regulation (EU) No 1218/2010 of 14 December 2010 on the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union to certain categories of specialisation agreements (OJ L 335, 18.12.2010, p. 43).
(6) Council Regulation (EC) No 1/2003 of 16 December 2002 on the implementation of the rules on competition laid down in Articles 81 and 82 of the Treaty (OJ L 1, 4.1.2003, p. 1).
5.2.2 Research and Development BER, No 2023/1066 5.2.2 Research and Development BER, No 2023/1066
COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) 2023/1066
of 1 June 2023
on the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union to certain categories of research and development agreements
(Text with EEA relevance)
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
Having regard to Regulation (EEC) No 2821/71 of the Council of 20 December 1971 on application of Article 85(3) of the Treaty to categories of agreements, decisions and concerted practices (1), and in particular Article 1(1), point (b), thereof,
Having published a draft of this Regulation (2),
After consulting the Advisory Committee on Restrictive Practices and Dominant Positions,
Whereas:
|
(1) |
Regulation (EEC) No 2821/71 empowers the Commission to apply Article 101(3) of the Treaty by regulation to certain categories of agreements, decisions and concerted practices falling within the scope of Article 101(1) of the Treaty which have as their object the research and development of products, technologies or processes up to the stage of industrial application, and the exploitation of the results, including provisions regarding intellectual property rights. |
|
(2) |
Article 179(2) of the Treaty calls upon the Union to encourage undertakings, including small and medium-sized undertakings, in their research and technological development activities of high quality, and to support their efforts to cooperate with one another. Cooperation between undertakings on research and development can contribute to achieving the objectives of the European Green Deal (3). |
|
(3) |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 1217/2010 (4) defines categories of research and development agreements that the Commission regarded as normally satisfying the conditions laid down in Article 101(3) of the Treaty. That Regulation expires on 30 June 2023. In view of the overall positive experience with the application of that Regulation and the results of the evaluation of that Regulation, it is appropriate to adopt a new block exemption regulation. |
|
(4) |
This Regulation aims to facilitate research and development while at the same time effectively protecting competition. This Regulation also aims to provide adequate legal security for undertakings. The pursuit of those objectives should take account of the need to simplify administrative supervision and the legislative framework to the greatest extent possible. |
|
(5) |
Below a certain level of market power, it can in general be presumed, for the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty, that the positive effects of research and development agreements will outweigh any negative effects on competition. |
|
(6) |
For the application of Article 101(3) of the Treaty by regulation, it is not necessary to define those agreements which are capable of falling within the scope of Article 101(1) of the Treaty. In the individual assessment of agreements under Article 101(1) of the Treaty, account has to be taken of several factors, and in particular the structure of the relevant market. |
|
(7) |
Cooperation in joint or paid-for research and development and in the exploitation of the results is most likely to promote technical and economic progress if the parties contribute complementary skills, assets or activities to the cooperation. |
|
(8) |
Consumers can generally be expected to benefit from the increased volume and effectiveness of research and development through the introduction of new or improved products, technologies or processes, a quicker launch of such products, technologies or processes, or a reduction of prices brought about by new or improved products, technologies or processes. |
|
(9) |
The joint exploitation of results can take different forms, such as the production and distribution of products, the application of technologies or processes, or the assignment or licensing of intellectual property rights or communication of know-how required for such production or application that substantially contribute to technical or economic progress. |
|
(10) |
In order to justify the exemption established by this Regulation, the joint exploitation should relate to products (including goods and services), technologies or processes for which the use of the results of the research and development is indispensable. |
|
(11) |
Moreover, all the parties should agree in the research and development agreement that they will all have full access to the final results of the joint research and development, including any arising intellectual property rights and know-how, for the purpose of further research and development, and for the purpose of exploitation, as soon as the final results become available. Access to the results should generally not be limited as regards the use of the results for the purposes of further research and development. However, where the parties, in accordance with this Regulation, limit their rights of exploitation, in particular where they specialise in the context of exploitation, access to the results for the purposes of exploitation may be limited accordingly. Furthermore, where academic bodies, research institutes, or undertakings which supply research and development as a commercial service without normally being active in the exploitation of results participate in research and development, they may agree to use the results of research and development solely for the purpose of further research and development. |
|
(12) |
Depending on their capabilities and commercial needs, the parties may make unequal contributions to their research and development cooperation. Therefore, in order to reflect, and to make up for, the differences in the value or the nature of the parties’ contributions, a research and development agreement benefiting from the exemption established by this Regulation may provide that one party is to compensate another for obtaining access to the results for the purposes of further research and development or exploitation. However, the compensation should not be so high as to effectively impede such access. |
|
(13) |
Where the research and development agreement does not provide for joint exploitation of the results, the parties should agree in the research and development agreement to grant each other access to their respective pre-existing know-how if such know-how is indispensable for the purpose of the exploitation of the results by the other parties. Any compensation (for example, licence fees) charged should not be so high as to effectively impede access to the know-how by the other parties. |
|
(14) |
The exemption established by this Regulation should be limited to research and development agreements that do not afford the undertakings the possibility of eliminating competition in respect of a substantial part of the products, technologies or processes in question. It is therefore necessary to exclude from the block exemption agreements between competitors whose combined share of the market for products, technologies or processes capable of being improved, substituted or replaced by the results of the research and development exceeds a certain level at the time the agreement is entered into. |
|
(15) |
Where one party finances several research and development projects carried out by competitors with regard to the same products, technologies or processes, it cannot be excluded that anti-competitive foreclosure effects may arise, in particular where that party obtains the exclusive right to exploit the results vis-à-vis third parties. Therefore, as regards paid-for research and development agreements, the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation should be limited to agreements under which the combined market share of all the parties involved in the connected agreements, namely the financing party and all the parties carrying out the research and development, does not exceed a certain level. |
|
(16) |
However, the exemption established by this Regulation should not be subject to a market share threshold where the parties to the research and development agreement are not competing undertakings in respect of products, technologies or processes capable of being improved, substituted or replaced by the products, technologies or processes arising from the agreement. This includes, for example, agreements relating to the development of products, technologies or processes that would create an entirely new demand, or research and development that is not closely related to a specific product, technology or process, or is not yet targeted at a specific objective. |
|
(17) |
There is no presumption that research and development agreements are either caught by Article 101(1) of the Treaty or that they fail to satisfy the conditions of Article 101(3) of the Treaty where the market share threshold set out in this Regulation is exceeded or other conditions of this Regulation are not met. In such cases, it is necessary to conduct an individual assessment of the research and development agreement under Article 101 of the Treaty. |
|
(18) |
In order to ensure the maintenance of effective competition during the joint exploitation of the results of the joint or paid-for research and development, provision should be made for the block exemption to cease to apply if the parties’ combined share in the market for the products, technologies or processes arising from the research and development exceeds a certain level. However, the exemption should continue to apply irrespective of the parties’ market shares for a certain period after the commencement of joint exploitation, so as to await stabilisation of their market shares, in particular after the introduction of an entirely new product, and to guarantee a minimum period of return on the investments involved. |
|
(19) |
The exemption established by this Regulation should not apply to agreements containing restrictions which are not indispensable to the attainment of the positive effects generated by a research and development agreement. In principle, agreements containing certain types of severe restrictions of competition, such as limitations on the freedom of parties to carry out research and development in a field unconnected to the agreement, the fixing of prices charged to third parties, limitations on output or sales, and limitations on effecting passive sales of the products, technologies or processes arising from the joint or paid-for research and development should be excluded from the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation, irrespective of the market share of the parties. In this context, field of use restrictions do not constitute limitations of output or sales, and do not constitute territorial or customer restrictions. |
|
(20) |
The market share thresholds, the non-exemption of certain agreements and the conditions provided for in this Regulation generally ensure that the agreements to which the block exemption applies do not enable the parties to eliminate competition in respect of a substantial part of the products, technologies or processes in question. |
|
(21) |
Agreements between undertakings which are not competing suppliers of products, technologies or processes capable of being improved, substituted or replaced by the results of the research and development and which satisfy the conditions of this Regulation will only eliminate effective innovation competition in exceptional circumstances. It is therefore appropriate to enable such agreements to benefit from the exemption established by this Regulation irrespective of market share and to address any exceptional cases by way of withdrawal of the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation. The exemption of such agreements pursuant to this Regulation is without prejudice to the competitive assessment of research and development agreements that do not meet the conditions of this Regulation or agreements in respect of which the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation has been withdrawn. |
|
(22) |
This Regulation should indicate typical situations in which it may be considered appropriate to withdraw the benefit of the exemption established by it, pursuant to Article 29 of Council Regulation (EC) No 1/2003 (5). |
|
(23) |
As research and development agreements are often of a long-term nature, especially where the cooperation extends to the exploitation of the results, the period of validity of this Regulation should be fixed at 12 years, |
HAS ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:
Article 1
Definitions
1. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions shall apply:
|
(1) |
‘research and development agreement’ means an agreement entered into between two or more parties which relates to the conditions under which those parties pursue any of the following:
|
|
(2) |
‘agreement’ means an agreement between undertakings, a decision by an association of undertakings or a concerted practice; |
|
(3) |
‘research and development’ means activities aimed at acquiring know-how relating to products, technologies or processes, the carrying out of theoretical analysis, systematic study or experimentation, including experimental and demonstrator production, technical testing of products or processes, the establishment of the necessary facilities up to demonstrator scale and the obtaining of intellectual property rights for the results; |
|
(4) |
‘product’ means a good or a service, including both intermediary goods or services and final goods or services; |
|
(5) |
‘contract technology’ means a technology or process arising out of the joint or paid-for research and development; |
|
(6) |
‘contract product’ means a product arising out of the joint or paid-for research and development or produced by applying the contract technologies; |
|
(7) |
‘exploitation of the results’ means the production or distribution of the contract products or the application of the contract technologies or the assignment or licensing of intellectual property rights or the communication of know-how required for such production, distribution or application; |
|
(8) |
‘intellectual property rights’ include industrial property rights, for example patents and trademarks, as well as copyright and neighbouring rights; |
|
(9) |
‘know-how’ means a package of practical information, resulting from experience and testing, which is:
|
|
(10) |
‘joint’, in the context of activities carried out under a research and development agreement, means activities where the work involved is:
|
|
(11) |
‘specialisation in the context of research and development’ means that each of the parties is involved in the research and development activities covered by the research and development agreement and they divide the research and development work between them in any way that they consider appropriate; this does not include paid-for research and development; |
|
(12) |
‘specialisation in the context of exploitation’ means that the parties allocate between them individual tasks such as production or distribution, or impose restrictions upon each other regarding the exploitation of the results, such as restrictions in relation to certain territories, customers or fields of use; this includes a scenario where only one party produces and distributes the contract products or applies the contract technologies on the basis of an exclusive licence granted by the other parties; |
|
(13) |
‘paid-for research and development’ means research and development that is carried out by one party and financed by a financing party; |
|
(14) |
‘financing party’ means a party financing paid-for research and development while not carrying out any of the research and development activities itself; |
|
(15) |
‘competing undertaking’ means an actual or a potential competitor:
|
|
(16) |
‘relevant product market’ means the relevant market for the products capable of being improved, substituted or replaced by the contract products; |
|
(17) |
‘relevant technology market’ means the relevant market for the technologies or processes capable of being improved, substituted or replaced by the contract technologies; |
|
(18) |
‘active sales’ means all forms of selling other than passive sales; |
|
(19) |
‘passive sales’ means sales made in response to unsolicited requests from individual customers, including delivery of products to the customer, without the sale having been initiated by actively targeting the particular customer, customer group or territory, and including sales resulting from participating in public procurement or responding to private invitations to tender. |
2. For the purposes of this Regulation, the terms ‘undertaking’ and ‘party’ shall include their respective connected undertakings. ‘Connected undertakings’ means:
|
(1) |
undertakings in which a party to the research and development agreement, directly or indirectly, has one or more of the following rights or powers:
|
|
(2) |
undertakings which directly or indirectly have, over a party to the research and development agreement, one or more of the rights or powers listed in point (1); |
|
(3) |
undertakings in which an undertaking referred to in point (2) has, directly or indirectly, one or more of the rights or powers listed in point (1); |
|
(4) |
undertakings in which a party to the research and development agreement together with one or more of the undertakings referred to in points (1), (2) or (3), or in which two or more of the latter undertakings, jointly have one or more of the rights or powers listed in point (1); |
|
(5) |
undertakings in which one or more of the rights or powers listed in point (1) are jointly held by:
|
Article 2
Exemption
1. Pursuant to Article 101(3) of the Treaty and subject to the provisions of this Regulation, Article 101(1) of the Treaty shall not apply to research and development agreements.
2. The exemption established in paragraph 1 shall apply to the extent that research and development agreements contain restrictions of competition falling within the scope of Article 101(1) of the Treaty.
3. The exemption established in paragraph 1 shall also apply to research and development agreements which include provisions on the assignment or licensing of intellectual property rights to one or more of the parties or to an entity established by the parties to carry out the joint or paid-for research and development or joint exploitation of the results, provided that those provisions are directly related to and necessary for the implementation of the agreement and do not constitute the primary object of the agreement.
Article 3
Access to the final results
1. The exemption established in Article 2 shall apply subject to the conditions set out in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of this Article.
2. The research and development agreement must stipulate that all the parties have full access to the final results of the joint or paid-for research and development for the purpose of further research and development and for the purpose of exploitation.
3. The access provided for in paragraph 2 must:
|
(a) |
include any resulting intellectual property rights and know-how; |
|
(b) |
be granted as soon as the results of the research and development become available. |
4. Where the research and development agreement provides that the parties compensate each other for giving access to the results for the purposes of further research and development or for the purpose of exploitation, the compensation must not be so high as to effectively impede such access.
5. Research institutes, academic bodies, or undertakings which supply research and development as a commercial service without normally being active in the exploitation of results may agree to confine their use of the results for the purposes of further research and development.
6. Where the parties limit their rights of exploitation in accordance with this Regulation, in particular where they specialise in the context of exploitation, access to the results for the purposes of exploitation may be limited accordingly.
Article 4
Access to pre-existing know-how
1. Where the research and development agreement does not include joint exploitation of the results, the exemption established in Article 2 shall apply subject to the conditions set out in paragraphs 2 and 3 of this Article.
2. The agreement must stipulate that each party shall be granted access to any pre-existing know-how of the other parties if such know-how is indispensable for the purposes of exploitation of the results.
3. Where the agreement provides that the parties compensate each other for giving access to their pre-existing know-how, the compensation must not be so high as to effectively impede such access.
Article 5
Joint exploitation
1. The exemption established in Article 2 shall apply on condition that any joint exploitation only pertains to results which fulfil both of the following conditions:
|
(a) |
the results are indispensable for the production of the contract products or the application of the contract technologies; |
|
(b) |
the results are protected by intellectual property rights or constitute know-how. |
2. Where one or more parties are charged with the production of the contract products by way of specialisation in the context of exploitation, the exemption established in Article 2 shall apply on condition that those parties are required to fulfil orders for supplies of the contract products from the other parties, except where one of the following applies:
|
(a) |
the research and development agreement also provides for distribution to be carried out by a joint team, organisation or undertaking or to be jointly entrusted to a third party; |
|
(b) |
the parties have agreed that only the party producing the contract products may distribute them. |
Article 6
Market share thresholds and duration of exemption
1. Where two or more of the parties are competing undertakings within the meaning of Article 1(1), point (15), the exemption established in Article 2 shall apply for the duration of the research and development if, at the time the agreement is entered into:
|
(a) |
for the research and development agreements referred to in Article 1(1), points (1) (a) and (c), the combined market share of the parties to the agreement does not exceed 25 % on the relevant product and technology markets; |
|
(b) |
for the research and development agreements referred to in Article 1(1), points (1) (b) and (d), the combined market share of the financing party and all the parties with which the financing party has entered into research and development agreements with regard to the same contract products or contract technologies does not exceed 25 % on the relevant product and technology markets. |
2. Where the parties are not competing undertakings within the meaning of Article 1(1), point (15), the exemption established in Article 2 shall apply for the duration of the research and development.
3. For research and development agreements where the results are jointly exploited, the exemption established in Article 2 shall continue to apply for 7 years from the time the contract products or contract technologies are first put on the market within the internal market, if the conditions provided for in paragraphs 1 or 2 of this Article are satisfied at the time the agreement referred to in Article 1(1), point (1) (a) or (b) is entered into. For the research and development agreements referred to in Article 1(1), point (1) (c) and (d) to benefit from such a continued exemption, the conditions provided for in paragraphs 1 or 2 of this Article must be satisfied at the time the prior agreement referred to in Article 1(1), point (1) (a) or (b) was entered into.
4. After the end of the 7-year period referred to in paragraph 3 of this Article, the exemption established in Article 2 shall continue to apply as long as:
|
(a) |
for the research and development agreements referred to in Article 1(1), points (1) (a) and (c), the combined market share of the parties to the agreement does not exceed 25 % on the relevant markets to which the contract products or contract technologies belong; |
|
(b) |
for the research and development agreements referred to in Article 1(1), points (1) (b) and (d), the combined market share of the financing party and all the parties with which the financing party has entered into research and development agreements relating to the same contract products or contract technologies does not exceed 25 % on the relevant markets to which the contract products or contract technologies belong. |
5. If the combined market share of the relevant parties does not exceed the relevant threshold referred to in paragraph 4 at the end of the 7-year period referred to in paragraph 3, but subsequently rises above that threshold, the exemption established in Article 2 shall continue to apply for a period of 2 consecutive calendar years following the year in which the relevant market share threshold was first exceeded.
Article 7
Application of the market share thresholds
1. For the purpose of applying the market share thresholds provided for in Article 6(1) and (4), the rules set out in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of this Article shall apply.
2. Market shares shall be calculated on the basis of market sales value or, if market sales value data are not available, on the basis of market sales volumes. If market sales volumes data are not available, estimates based on other reliable market information, including expenditure on research and development, or research and development capabilities may be used.
3. Market shares shall be calculated on the basis of data relating to the preceding calendar year. If the preceding calendar year is not representative of the parties’ position in the relevant market(s), the market share shall be calculated as an average of the parties’ market shares for the 3 preceding calendar years.
4. The market share held by the undertakings referred to in Article 1(2), point (5), shall be apportioned equally to each undertaking having one or more of the rights or powers listed in Article 1(2), point (1).
Article 8
Hardcore restrictions
The exemption established in Article 2 shall not apply to research and development agreements which, directly or indirectly, in isolation or in combination with other factors under the control of the parties, have as their object any of the following restrictions:
|
(a) |
the restriction of the freedom of the parties to carry out research and development independently or in cooperation with third parties:
|
|
(b) |
the limitation of output or sales, with the exception of:
|
|
(c) |
the fixing of prices when selling the contract products or licensing the contract technologies to third parties, with the exception of the fixing of prices charged to immediate customers or the fixing of licence fees charged to immediate licensees where the joint exploitation of the results:
|
|
(d) |
the restriction of the territory in which, or of the customers to whom, the parties may passively sell the contract products or license the contract technologies, with the exception of the requirement to exclusively license the results of the research and development to another party; |
|
(e) |
the restriction of active sales of the contract products or contract technologies in territories or to customers which have not been exclusively allocated to one of the parties by way of specialisation in the context of exploitation; |
|
(f) |
the requirement to refuse to meet demand from customers in the parties’ respective territories, or from customers otherwise allocated between the parties by way of specialisation in the context of exploitation, where such customers would market the contract products in other territories within the internal market; |
|
(g) |
the requirement to make it difficult for users or resellers to obtain the contract products from other resellers within the internal market. |
Article 9
Excluded restrictions
1. The exemption established in Article 2 shall not apply to the following obligations in research and development agreements:
|
(a) |
the obligation not to challenge:
|
|
(b) |
the obligation not to grant licences to third parties to produce the contract products or to apply the contract technologies unless the agreement provides for the exploitation of the results of the joint or paid-for research and development by one or more of the parties and such exploitation takes place in the internal market vis-à-vis third parties. |
2. Paragraph 1, point (a), is without prejudice to the possibility to provide for the termination of the research and development agreement in the event that one of the parties challenges the validity of the intellectual property rights referred to in paragraph 1, points (a) (i) and (ii).
3. If the research and development agreement includes any of the excluded restrictions referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, the exemption established in Article 2 shall continue to apply to the remaining part of the research and development agreement, provided that the excluded restrictions can be severed from that remaining part and provided that the other conditions of this Regulation are met.
Article 10
Withdrawal in individual cases by the Commission
1. The Commission may withdraw the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation, pursuant to Article 29(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003, where it finds in any particular case that a research and development agreement to which the exemption established by this Regulation applies, nevertheless has effects which are incompatible with Article 101(3) of the Treaty.
2. The Commission may withdraw the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation, pursuant to Article 29(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003, in particular where:
|
(a) |
the existence of a research and development agreement substantially restricts the scope for third parties to carry out research and development in field(s) related to the contract products or contract technologies; |
|
(b) |
the existence of a research and development agreement substantially restricts the access of third parties to the relevant market for the contract products or contract technologies; |
|
(c) |
the parties do not exploit the results of the joint or paid-for research and development vis-à-vis third parties without any objectively valid reason; |
|
(d) |
the contract products or contract technologies are not subject in the whole or a substantial part of the internal market to effective competition; or |
|
(e) |
the existence of the research and development agreement would substantially restrict innovation competition in a particular field. |
Article 11
Withdrawal in individual cases by the competition authority of a Member State
The competition authority of a Member State may withdraw the benefit of the exemption established by this Regulation where the conditions of Article 29(2) of Regulation (EC) No 1/2003 are fulfilled.
Article 12
Transitional period
The prohibition laid down in Article 101(1) of the Treaty shall not apply during the period from 1 July 2023 to 30 June 2025 in respect of agreements already in force on 30 June 2023 which do not satisfy the conditions for exemption established by this Regulation but which satisfy the conditions for exemption established by Regulation (EU) No 1217/2010.
Article 13
Entry into force and application
This Regulation shall enter into force on 1 July 2023.
It shall apply until 30 June 2035.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Brussels, 1 June 2023.
5.3 Patent Pools 5.3 Patent Pools
5.3.1 Commission Guidelines on technology transfer agreements (extracts), 2014/C 89/03 5.3.1 Commission Guidelines on technology transfer agreements (extracts), 2014/C 89/03
4.4. Technology pools
|
244. |
Technology pools are defined as arrangements whereby two or more parties assemble a package of technology which is licensed not only to contributors to the pool but also to third parties. In terms of their structure technology pools can take the form of simple arrangements between a limited number of parties or of elaborate organisational arrangements whereby the organisation of the licensing of the pooled technologies is entrusted to a separate entity. In both cases the pool may allow licensees to operate on the market on the basis of a single licence. |
|
245. |
There is no inherent link between technology pools and standards, but the technologies in the pool often support, in whole or in part, a de facto or de jure industry standard (93). Different technology pools may support competing standards (94). Technology pools can produce pro-competitive effects, in particular by reducing transaction costs and by setting a limit on cumulative royalties to avoid double marginalisation. The creation of a pool allows for one-stop licensing of the technologies covered by the pool. This is particularly important in sectors where intellectual property rights are prevalent and licences need to be obtained from a significant number of licensors in order to operate on the market. In cases where licensees receive on-going services concerning the application of the licensed technology, joint licensing and servicing can lead to further cost reductions. Patent pools can also play a beneficial role in the implementation of pro-competitive standards. |
|
246. |
Technology pools may also be restrictive of competition. The creation of a technology pool necessarily implies joint selling of the pooled technologies, which in the case of pools composed solely or predominantly of substitute technologies amounts to a price fixing cartel. Moreover, in addition to reducing competition between the parties, technology pools may also, in particular when they support an industry standard or establish a de facto industry standard, result in a reduction of innovation by foreclosing alternative technologies. The existence of the standard and a related technology pool may make it more difficult for new and improved technologies to enter the market. |
|
247. |
Agreements establishing technology pools and setting out the terms and conditions for their operation are not — irrespective of the number of parties — covered by the block exemption, as the agreement to establish the pool does not permit a particular licensee to produce contract products (see section 3.2.4). Such agreements are addressed only by these guidelines. Pooling arrangements give rise to a number of particular issues regarding the selection of the included technologies and the operation of the pool, which do not arise in the context of other types of licensing. Licensing out from the pool is generally a multiparty agreement, taking into account that the contributors commonly determine the conditions for such licensing out, and is therefore also not covered by the block exemption. Licensing out from the pool is dealt with in point (261) and in section 4.4.2. |
4.4.1. The assessment of the formation and operation of technology pools
|
248. |
The way in which a technology pool is formed, organised and operated can reduce the risk of it having the object or effect of restricting competition and provide assurances to the effect that the arrangement is pro-competitive. In assessing the possible competitive risks and efficiencies, the Commission will, inter alia, take account of the transparency of the pool creation process; the selection and nature of the pooled technologies, including the extent to which independent experts are involved in the creation and operation of the pool and whether safeguards against exchange of sensitive information and independent dispute resolution mechanisms have been put in place. |
Open participation
|
249. |
When participation in a standard and pool creation process is open to all interested parties it is more likely that technologies for inclusion into the pool are selected on the basis of price/quality considerations than when the pool is set up by a limited group of technology owners. |
Selection and nature of the pooled technologies
|
250. |
The competitive risks and the efficiency enhancing potential of technology pools depend to a large extent on the relationship between the pooled technologies and their relationship with technologies outside the pool. Two basic distinctions must be made, namely (a) between technological complements and technological substitutes and (b) between essential and non-essential technologies. |
|
251. |
Two technologies are complements as opposed to substitutes when they are both required to produce the product or carry out the process to which the technologies relate. Conversely, two technologies are substitutes when either technology allows the holder to produce the product or carry out the process to which the technologies relate. |
|
252. |
A technology can be essential either (a) to produce a particular product or carry out a particular process to which the pooled technologies relate or (b) to produce such product or carry out such a process in accordance with a standard which includes the pooled technologies. In the first case, a technology is essential (as opposed to non-essential) if there are no viable substitutes (both from a commercial and technical point of view) for that technology inside or outside the pool and the technology in question constitutes a necessary part of the package of technologies for the purposes of producing the product(s) or carrying out the process(-es) to which the pool relates. In the second case, a technology is essential if it constitutes a necessary part (that is to say, there are no viable substitutes) of the pooled technologies needed to comply with the standard supported by the pool (standard essential technologies). Technologies that are essential are by necessity also complements. The fact that a technology holder merely declares that a technology is essential does not imply that such a technology is essential according to the criteria described in this point. |
|
253. |
When technologies in a pool are substitutes, royalties are likely to be higher than they would otherwise be, because licensees do not benefit from rivalry between the technologies in question. When the technologies in the pool are complements the technology pool reduces transaction costs and may lead to lower overall royalties because the parties are in a position to fix a common royalty for the package as opposed to each party fixing a royalty for its own technology while not taking into account that a higher royalty for one technology will usually decrease the demand for complementary technologies. If royalties for complementary technologies are set individually, the total of these royalties may often exceed what would be collectively set by a pool for the package of the same complementary technologies. The assessment of the role of substitutes outside the pool is set out in point (262). |
|
254. |
The distinction between complementary and substitute technologies is not clear-cut in all cases, since technologies may be substitutes in part and complements in part. When due to efficiencies stemming from the integration of two technologies licensees are likely to demand both technologies, the technologies are treated as complements, even if they are partly substitutable. In such cases it is likely that in the absence of the pool licensees would want to licence both technologies due to the additional economic benefit of using both technologies as opposed to using only one of them. Absent such demand based evidence on the complementarity of the pooled technologies, it is an indication that these technologies are complements if (i) the parties contributing technology to a pool remain free to license their technology individually and (ii) the pool is willing, besides licensing the package of technologies of all parties, to license the technology of each party also separately and (iii) the total royalties charged when taking separate licences to all pooled technologies do not exceed the royalties charged by the pool for the whole package of technologies. |
|
255. |
The inclusion of substitute technologies in the pool generally restricts inter-technology competition since it can amount to collective bundling and lead to price fixing between competitors. As a general rule the Commission considers that the inclusion of significant substitute technologies in the pool constitutes a violation of Article 101(1) of the Treaty. The Commission also considers that it is unlikely that the conditions of Article 101(3) will be fulfilled in the case of pools comprising to a significant extent substitute technologies. Given that the technologies in question are alternatives, no transaction cost savings accrue from including both technologies in the pool. In the absence of the pool licensees would not have demanded both technologies. To alleviate the competition concerns it is not sufficient that the parties remain free to license independently. This is because the parties are likely to have little incentive to license independently in order not to undermine the pool's licensing activity, which allows them to jointly exercise market power. |
Selection and function of independent experts
|
256. |
Another relevant factor in assessing the competitive risks and the efficiencies of technology pools is the extent to which independent experts are involved in the creation and operation of the pool. For instance, the assessment of whether or not a technology is essential to a standard supported by a pool is often a complex matter that requires special expertise. The involvement in the selection process of independent experts can go a long way in ensuring that a commitment to include only essential technologies is implemented in practice. Where the selection of technologies to be included in the pool is carried out by an independent expert this may also further competition between available technological solutions. |
|
257. |
The Commission will take into account how experts are selected and the functions that they are to perform. Experts should be independent from the undertakings that have formed the pool. If experts are connected to the licensors (or the licensing activity of the pool) or otherwise depend on them, the involvement of the expert will be given less weight. Experts must also have the necessary technical expertise to perform the various functions with which they have been entrusted. The functions of independent experts may include, in particular, an assessment of whether or not technologies put forward for inclusion into the pool are valid and whether or not they are essential. |
|
258. |
Finally, any dispute resolution mechanisms foreseen in the instruments setting up the pool are relevant and should be taken into account. The more dispute resolution is entrusted to bodies or persons that are independent of the pool and its members, the more likely it is that the dispute resolution will operate in a neutral way. |
Safeguards against exchange of sensitive information
|
259. |
It is also relevant to consider the arrangements for exchanging sensitive information between the parties (95). In oligopolistic markets exchanges of sensitive information such as pricing and output data may facilitate collusion (96). In such cases the Commission will take into account to what extent safeguards have been put in place, which ensure that sensitive information is not exchanged. An independent expert or licensing body may play an important role in this respect by ensuring that output and sales data, which may be necessary for the purposes of calculating and verifying royalties is not disclosed to undertakings that compete on affected markets. |
|
260. |
Special care should be taken to put in place such safeguards when interested parties participate simultaneously in efforts to form pools of competing standards where this may lead to exchange of sensitive information between competing pools. |
Safe harbour
|
261. |
The creation and operation of the pool, including the licensing out, generally falls outside Article 101(1) of the Treaty, irrespective of the market position of the parties, if all the following conditions are fulfilled:
|
Outside the safe harbour
|
262. |
Where significant complementary but non-essential patents are included in the pool there is a risk of foreclosure of third party technologies. Once a technology is included in the pool and is licensed as part of the package, licensees are likely to have little incentive to license a competing technology when the royalty paid for the package already covers a substitute technology. Moreover, the inclusion of technologies which are not necessary for the purposes of producing the product(s) or carrying out the process(-es) to which the technology pool relates or to comply with the standard which includes the pooled technology also forces licensees to pay for technology that they may not need. The inclusion of such complementary technology thus amounts to collective bundling. Where a pool encompasses non-essential technologies, the agreement is likely to be caught by Article 101(1) where the pool has a significant position on any relevant market. |
|
263. |
Given that substitute and complementary technologies may be developed after the creation of the pool, the need to assess essentiality does not necessarily end with the creation of the pool. A technology may become non-essential after the creation of the pool due to the emergence of new third party technologies. Where it is brought to the attention of the pool that such a new third party technology is offered to and demanded by licensees, foreclosure concerns may be avoided by offering to new and existing licensees a licence without the no-longer essential technology at a correspondingly reduced royalty rate. However, there may be other ways to ensure that third party technologies are not foreclosed. |
|
264. |
In the assessment of technology pools comprising non-essential but complementary technologies, the Commission will in its overall assessment, inter alia, take account of the following factors:
|
|
265. |
Even technology pool arrangements that restrict competition may give rise to pro-competitive efficiencies (see point (245)) which must be considered under Article 101(3) and balanced against the negative effects on competition. For example, if the technology pool includes non-essential patents but fulfils all the other criteria of the safe harbour listed in point (261), where there are pro-competitive reasons for including non-essential patents in the pool (see point (264)) and where licensees have the possibility of obtaining a licence for only part of the package with a corresponding reduction of royalties (see point (264)), the conditions of Article 101(3) are likely to be fulfilled. |
4.4.2. Assessment of individual restraints in agreements between the pool and its licensees
|
266. |
Where the agreement to set up a technology pool does not infringe Article 101 of the Treaty, the next step is to assess the competitive impact of the licences agreed by the pool with its licensees. The conditions under which these licences are granted may be caught by Article 101(1). The purpose of this section is to address a certain number of restraints that in one form or another are commonly found in licensing agreements from technology pools and which need to be assessed in the overall context of the pool. Generally the TTBER does not apply to licence agreements concluded between the pool and third party licensees (see point (247)). This section therefore deals with the individual assessment of licensing issues that are particular to licensing in the context of technology pools. |
|
267. |
In making its assessment of technology transfer agreements between the pool and its licensees the Commission will be guided by the following main principles:
|
|
268. |
Undertakings setting up a technology pool that is compatible with Article 101 of the Treaty, are normally free to negotiate and fix royalties for the technology package (subject to any commitment given to license on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, FRAND) and each technology's share of the royalties either before or after the standard is set. Such agreement is inherent in the establishment of the pool and cannot in itself be considered restrictive of competition. In certain circumstances it may be more efficient if the royalties of the pool are agreed before the standard is chosen, to avoid that the choice of the standard increases the royalty rate by conferring a significant degree of market power on one or more essential technologies. However, licensees must remain free to determine the price of products produced under the licence. |
|
269. |
Where the pool has a dominant position on the market, royalties and other licensing terms should be non-excessive and non-discriminatory and licences should be non-exclusive (98). These requirements are necessary to ensure that the pool is open and does not lead to foreclosure and other anti-competitive effects on down-stream markets. These requirements, however, do not preclude different royalty rates for different uses. It is in general not considered restrictive of competition to apply different royalty rates to different product markets, whereas there should be no discrimination within product markets. In particular, the treatment of licensees of the pool should not depend on whether or not they are also licensors. The Commission will therefore take into account whether licensors and licensees are subject to the same royalty obligations. |
|
270. |
Licensors and licensees should be free to develop competing products and standards. They should also be free to grant and obtain licences outside the pool. These requirements are necessary in order to limit the risk of foreclosure of third party technologies and ensure that the pool does not limit innovation and does not preclude the creation of competing technological solutions. Where pooled technology is included in a (de facto) industry standard and where the parties are subject to non-compete obligations, the pool creates a particular risk of preventing the development of new and improved technologies and standards. |
|
271. |
Grant back obligations should be non-exclusive and limited to developments that are essential or important to the use of the pooled technology. This allows the pool to feed on and benefit from improvements to the pooled technology. It is legitimate for the parties to ensure by grant back obligations that the exploitation of the pooled technology cannot be held up by licensees, including subcontractors working under the licence of the licensee, that hold or obtain essential patents. |
|
272. |
One of the problems identified with regard to technology pools is the risk that they may shield invalid patents. Pooling may raise the costs/risks for a successful challenge, because the challenge might fail if only one patent in the pool is valid. The shielding of invalid patents in the pool may oblige licensees to pay higher royalties and may also prevent innovation in the field covered by an invalid patent. In this context, non-challenge clauses, including termination clauses (99), in a technology transfer agreement between the pool and third parties are likely to fall within Article 101(1) of the Treaty. |
|
273. |
Pools often include both patents and patent applications. If patent applicants who submit their patent applications to pools, where available, use the patent application procedures that allow for a faster granting, this will achieve faster certainty on the validity and scope of these patents. |
5.4 Standardisation agreements 5.4 Standardisation agreements
5.4.1 Commission Guidelines on the applicability of Art. 101 TFUE to horizontal co-operation agreements, C/2023/4752, (extracts) 5.4.1 Commission Guidelines on the applicability of Art. 101 TFUE to horizontal co-operation agreements, C/2023/4752, (extracts)
7. STANDARDISATION AGREEMENTS
7.1. Introduction
|
436. |
Standardisation agreements have as their primary objective the definition of technical or quality requirements with which current or future products, production processes, value chain due diligence processes, services or methods may comply (306). Standardisation agreements can cover various issues, such as standardisation of different grades or sizes of a particular product, or technical specifications in product or services markets where compatibility and interoperability with other products or services is essential. The terms of access to a particular quality mark or for approval by a regulatory body can also be regarded as a standard, as well as agreements setting out sustainability standards. While sustainability standards have similarities with the standardisation agreements addressed in this Chapter, they also have certain special features. Guidance on sustainability standards is therefore provided in Chapter 9. |
|
437. |
The preparation and production of technical standards as part of the exercise of public powers are not covered by these Guidelines (307). The European standardisation organisations recognised under Regulation (EU) No 1025/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council (308) are subject to competition law to the extent that they can be considered to be an undertaking or an association of undertakings within the meaning of Articles 101 and 102 (309). Standards relating to the supply of professional services, such as rules of admission to a liberal profession, are not covered by these Guidelines. |
7.2. Relevant markets
|
438. |
Standardisation agreements may produce effects on four possible markets, which are to be defined according to the Market Definition Notice. First, standard development may have an impact on the markets for goods or services to which the standard relates. Second, where the standard development involves the development or selection of technology, or where intellectual property rights are marketed separately from the products to which they relate, the standard can have effects on the relevant technology market (310). Third, the market for standard development may be affected if there are several standard development bodies or standardisation agreements. Fourth, where relevant, a distinct market for testing and certification may be affected by standard development. |
7.3. Assessment under Article 101(1)
7.3.1. Main competition concerns
|
439. |
Standardisation agreements generally produce significant positive economic effects (311), for example by promoting economic interpenetration on the internal market and encouraging the development of new and improved products or markets and improved supply conditions. Standards thus generally increase competition and lower output and sales costs, benefiting economies as a whole. Standards may maintain and enhance product quality, safety, provide information and ensure interoperability and compatibility (thus increasing value for consumers). |
|
440. |
In the context of standards involving intellectual property rights (‘IPR’) (312), it is possible to distinguish three main groups of undertakings, with differing interests in the standard development process.
|
|
441. |
Participants in standardisation are not necessarily competitors. Standard development can, however, in specific circumstances where competitors are involved, also give rise to restrictive effects on competition by restricting price competition and limiting or controlling production, markets, innovation or technical development. As further explained below, this can occur in three main ways, namely (a) restriction of price competition, (b) foreclosure of innovative technologies and (c) exclusion of, or discrimination against, certain undertakings by preventing effective access to the standard. |
|
442. |
First, if undertakings engage in anti-competitive information exchanges in the context of standard development, this could reduce or eliminate price competition in the markets concerned, or limit or control production, thereby facilitating a collusive outcome on the market (313). |
|
443. |
Second, standards that set detailed technical specifications for a product or service may limit technical development and innovation. While a standard is being developed, alternative technologies can compete for inclusion in the standard. Once one technology has been chosen to be included in the standard and the standard has been set, some technologies and undertakings may face a barrier to entry and may potentially be excluded from the market. In addition, standards requiring the exclusive use of a particular technology can have the effect of hindering the development and diffusion of other technologies. Preventing the development of other technologies by obliging the members of the standard development organisation (‘SDO’) to exclusively use a particular standard may lead to the same effect. The risk of limitation of innovation is increased if one or more undertakings are unjustifiably excluded from the standard development process. |
|
444. |
Third, standardisation may lead to anti-competitive results by preventing certain undertakings from obtaining effective access to the results of the standard development process (that is to say, the specification and/or the essential IPR for implementing the standard). If an undertaking is either completely prevented from obtaining access to the result of the standard, or is only granted access on prohibitive or discriminatory terms, there is a risk of an anti-competitive effect. A system where potentially relevant IPR is disclosed up-front may increase the likelihood of effective access being granted to the standard (314), since it allows the participants to identify which technologies are covered by IPR and which are not. Intellectual property laws and competition laws share the same objectives (315) of promoting consumer welfare and innovation, as well as an efficient allocation of resources. IPR promote dynamic competition by encouraging undertakings to invest in developing new or improved products and processes. IPR are therefore in general pro-competitive. However, by virtue of its IPR, a participant holding IPR essential for implementing a standard could, in the specific context of standard development, also acquire control over the use of the standard. When the standard constitutes a barrier to entry, the undertaking could thereby control the product or service market to which the standard relates. This in turn could allow undertakings to behave in anti-competitive ways, for example by refusing to license the necessary IPR or by extracting excess rents by way of discriminatory or excessive (316) royalty fees, thereby preventing effective access to the standard (‘hold-up’). The reverse situation may also arise if licensing negotiations are drawn out for reasons attributable solely to the user of the standard. This could include for example a refusal to pay a royalty fee on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (‘FRAND’) terms, or using dilatory strategies (‘hold-out’) (317). |
|
445. |
Even if the establishment of a standard can create or increase the market power of IPR holders possessing IPR essential to the standard, there is no presumption that holding or exercising IPR essential to a standard equates to the possession or exercise of market power. The question of market power can only be assessed on a case by case basis (318). |
7.3.2. Restrictions of competition by object
|
446. |
Agreements that use a standard as part of a broader restrictive agreement aimed at excluding actual or potential competitors restrict competition by object. For instance, an agreement whereby a national association of manufacturers sets a standard and puts pressure on third parties not to market products that do not comply with the standard or where the producers of the incumbent product collude to exclude new technology from an already existing standard (319) would fall into this category. |
|
447. |
Agreements to reduce competition by using the disclosure of the most restrictive licensing terms prior to the adoption of a standard as a cover to jointly fix prices either of downstream products or of substitute IPR or technology will constitute restrictions of competition by object (320). |
7.3.3. Restrictive effects on competition
7.3.3.1.
|
448. |
Standardisation agreements which do not restrict competition by object must be analysed in their legal and economic context, including by taking into account the nature of the goods, services or technologies affected, the real conditions of the functioning and the structure of the market or markets in question, with regard to their actual and likely effect on competition. In the absence of market power (321), a standardisation agreement is not capable of producing restrictive effects on competition. Therefore, restrictive effects are most unlikely in a situation where there is effective competition between a number of voluntary standards. |
|
449. |
For standard development agreements which may create market power, paragraphs 451-457 set out the conditions under which such agreements will generally fall outside the scope of Article 101(1). |
|
450. |
The non-fulfilment of any or all of the principles set out in this Section will not lead to any presumption of a restriction of competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). However, it will necessitate a self-assessment to establish whether the agreement falls under Article 101(1) and, if so, if the conditions of Article 101(3) are fulfilled. In this context, it is recognised that there exist different models for standard development and that competition within and between such models is a positive aspect of a market economy. Therefore, SDOs remain entirely free to put in place rules and procedures that do not violate competition rules whilst being different from those described in paragraphs 451-457. |
|
451. |
Where participation in standard development is unrestricted and the procedure for adopting the standard in question is transparent, standardisation agreements which contain no obligation to comply (322) with the standard and which provide effective access to the standard on FRAND terms will generally not restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). |
|
452. |
In particular, to ensure unrestricted participation, the rules of the SDO should provide that all competitors in the market or markets affected by the standard can participate in the process leading to the selection of the standard (323). The SDO should also provide objective and non-discriminatory procedures for allocating voting rights, as well as, if relevant, objective criteria for selecting the technology to be included in the standard. |
|
453. |
With respect to transparency, the relevant SDO should have procedures which allow stakeholders to effectively inform themselves of upcoming, on-going and finalised standardisation work in good time at each stage of the development of the standard. |
|
454. |
Furthermore, the SDO's rules should ensure effective access to the standard on FRAND terms (324). |
|
455. |
Where an SDO develops standards involving IPR, a clear and balanced IPR policy (325), adapted to the particular industry and the needs of the organisation in question, increases the likelihood that the implementers of the standards will be granted effective access. |
|
456. |
In order to ensure effective access to the standard, the IPR policy should require participants wishing to have their IPR included in the standard to provide an irrevocable commitment in writing to offer to license their essential IPR to all third parties on FRAND terms (‘FRAND commitment’) (326). That commitment should be given prior to the adoption of the standard. At the same time, the IPR policy should allow IPR holders to exclude specified technology from the standard development process and thereby from the FRAND commitment, provided that exclusion takes place at an early stage in the development of the standard. To ensure the effectiveness of the FRAND commitment, there should also be a requirement for all participating IPR holders who provide such a commitment to ensure that any undertaking to which the IPR owner transfers its IPR (including the right to license that IPR) is bound by that commitment, for example through a contractual clause between buyer and seller. It should be noted that FRAND can also cover royalty-free licensing. |
|
457. |
Moreover, the IPR policy should require good faith disclosure by participants of their IPR that may be essential for the implementation of the standard under development (327). This is relevant to (a) enable the industry to make an informed choice of the technology to be included in a standard (328) and (b) achieve the goal of effective access to the standard. As the standard develops, the disclosure could be updated based on reasonable endeavours to identify IPR reading on the (future) standard. With respect to patents, the IPR disclosure should include at least the patent number or patent application number. If this information is not yet publicly available, then it is also sufficient if the participant declares that it is likely to have IPR claims over a particular technology, without identifying specific IPR claims or applications for IPR (so-called blanket disclosure) (329). Participants should also be encouraged to update their disclosures at the time of adoption of a standard, in particular if there are any changes which may have an impact on the essentiality or validity of their IPRs. Since the risks relating to effective access are not the same in the case of an SDO with a royalty-free standards policy (330), IPR disclosure would not be relevant in that context. |
|
458. |
FRAND commitments are designed to ensure that essential IPR-protected technology incorporated in a standard is accessible to the users of that standard on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms and conditions. In particular, FRAND commitments can prevent IPR holders from making the implementation of a standard difficult by refusing to license or by requesting unfair or unreasonable fees (in other words excessive fees) after the industry has been locked into the standard or by charging discriminatory royalty fees (331). At the same time, FRAND commitments allow IPR holders to monetise their technologies via FRAND royalties and, in line with the principles in the following paragraphs, obtain a reasonable return on their investment in R&D, which by its nature is risky. This can ensure continued incentives to contribute the best available technology to the standard. |
|
459. |
Compliance with Article 101 by the SDO does not require it to verify whether the licensing terms of participants fulfil the FRAND commitment (332). Participants must assess for themselves whether their licensing terms and in particular the fees they charge fulfil the FRAND commitment. Therefore, when deciding whether to commit to FRAND for a particular IPR, participants will need to anticipate the implications of the FRAND commitment, notably on their ability to freely set the level of their fees. |
|
460. |
In the case of a dispute, the assessment of whether fees charged for access to IPR in the standard development context are unfair or unreasonable should be based on whether the fees bear a reasonable relationship to the economic value of the IPR (333). The economic value of the IPR could be based on the present value added of the covered IPR and should be irrespective of the market success of the products, which is unrelated to the patented technology (334). In general, there are various methods of carrying out the assessment (335), and in practice, more than one method is often used to compensate for the shortcomings of a particular method and cross-check the result (336). It may be possible to compare the licensing fees charged by the undertaking in question for the relevant IPRs in a competitive environment before the industry has developed the standard (ex ante); with the value/royalty of the next best available alternative (ex-ante), or with the value/royalty charged after the industry has been locked in (ex post). This assumes that the comparison can be made in a consistent and reliable manner (337). |
|
461. |
An independent expert assessment could also be obtained for the objective centrality and essentiality of the relevant IPR to the standard at issue. In an appropriate case, it may also be possible to refer to ex ante disclosures of licensing terms, including the individual or aggregate royalties for relevant IPR, in the context of a specific standard development process. Similarly, it may be possible to compare the licensing terms in agreements of the IPR holder with other implementers of the same standard. The royalty rates charged for the same IPR in other comparable standards may also provide an indication for FRAND royalty rates. These methods assume that the comparison can be made in a consistent and reliable manner and the level of the royalty rates is not the result of undue exercise of market power. Another method consists in determining, first, an appropriate overall value for all relevant IPR and, second, the portion attributable to a particular IPR holder. These Guidelines do not seek to provide an exhaustive list of appropriate methods to assess whether royalty fees are excessive or discriminatory under Article 102. |
|
462. |
However, it should be emphasised that nothing in these Guidelines affects the possibility for parties to resolve their disputes about the level of FRAND royalty rates by having recourse to the competent civil or commercial courts or alternative methods of dispute resolution (338). |
7.3.3.2.
|
463. |
The assessment of a standardisation agreement must take into account the likely effects of the standard on the markets concerned. In analysing standardisation agreements, the characteristics of the sector and industry must be taken into consideration. The following considerations apply to all standardisation agreements that depart from the principles set out in paragraphs 451-457. |
(a) Voluntary nature of the standard
|
464. |
Whether standardisation agreements may give rise to restrictive effects on competition may depend on whether the members of an SDO remain free to develop alternative standards or products that do not comply with the agreed standard (339). For example, if the standardisation agreement binds the members to only produce products in compliance with the standard, the risk of a likely negative effect on competition is significantly increased and could in certain circumstances give rise to a restriction of competition by object (340). In the same vein, standards that only cover minor characteristics of the final product are less likely to lead to competition concerns than more comprehensive standards, in particular where the standard does not involve any essential IPR. |
(b) Access to the standard
|
465. |
The assessment of whether the agreement restricts competition will also focus on access to the standard. Where the result of a standard (that is to say, the specification of how to comply with the standard and, if relevant, the essential IPR for implementing the standard) is not at all accessible for all members or third parties (that is to say, non-members of the relevant SDO), this may foreclose or segment markets and is thereby likely to restrict competition. Competition is likewise likely to be restricted where the result of a standard is only accessible on discriminatory or excessive terms for certain members or for third parties. However, where there are several competing standards, or where there is effective competition between the standardised solution and non-standardised solutions, a limitation of access may not produce restrictive effects on competition. |
|
466. |
As regards standard development agreements with IPR disclosure models that are different from the ones described in paragraph 457, it is necessary to assess on a case by case basis whether the disclosure model in question (for example a disclosure model that does not require but only encourages IPR disclosure) guarantees effective access to the standard. Standard development agreements providing for the disclosure of information regarding the characteristics and value-added of each IPR belonging to a standard and which thereby increase transparency for parties involved in the development of the standard will not, in principle, restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). |
(c) Participation in the development of the standard
|
467. |
Preventing certain undertakings from being able to influence the choice and definition of the standard is (except as described in paragraph 470) likely to result in a restrictive effect on competition. By contrast, if participation in the standard development process is open, the risks of a restrictive effect on competition are lower. (341) |
|
468. |
Open participation can be achieved by allowing all competitors and/or relevant stakeholders in the market affected by the standard to take part in developing and choosing the standard. |
|
469. |
The greater the likely market impact of the standard and the wider its potential fields of application, the more important it is to allow equal access to the standard development process. |
|
470. |
However, in certain situations, restricting participation may not have restrictive effects on competition within the meaning of Article 101(1), for instance: (a) if there is competition between several standards and SDOs, (b) if in the absence of a restriction on the participants (342) it would not have been possible to adopt the standard or such adoption would have been unlikely or (c) if the restriction on the participants is limited in time and with a view to progressing quickly (for example at the start of the standardisation effort) and as long as at major milestones all competitors have an opportunity to be involved in order to continue the development of the standard. |
|
471. |
In certain situations, the potential negative effects of restricted participation may be removed or at least lessened by ensuring that stakeholders are kept informed and consulted on the work in progress (343). This could be achieved by establishing procedures for the collective representation of stakeholders. The more stakeholders can influence the process leading to the selection of the standard and the more transparent the procedure for adopting the standard, the more likely it is that the adopted standard will take into account the interests of all stakeholders. |
(d) Market shares
|
472. |
To assess the effects of a standard development agreement, the market shares of the goods, services or technologies that are based on the standard should be taken into account. It may not always be possible (344) to assess with any certainty at an early stage whether the standard will in practice be adopted by a large, or only by an insignificant, share of the relevant industry. In cases where undertakings contributing technology to the standard are vertically integrated, the relevant market shares of the undertakings having participated in developing the standard may be used as a proxy for estimating the likely market share of the standard (since the undertakings participating in developing the standard will in most cases have an interest in implementing the standard) (345). However, as the effectiveness of standardisation agreements is often proportional to the share of the industry involved in developing and/or applying the standard, high market shares held by the parties in the market or markets affected by the standard will not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the standard is likely to give rise to restrictive effects on competition. |
(e) Discrimination
|
473. |
Any standard development agreement which clearly discriminates against any of the participating or potential members could lead to a restriction of competition. For example, if an SDO explicitly excludes upstream-only undertakings (that is to say, undertakings that are not active on the downstream production market), this could lead to the exclusion of potentially better upstream technologies. |
(f) Ex ante disclosure of royalty rates
|
474. |
Standard development agreements providing for the ex ante disclosure of the most restrictive licensing terms for standard-essential patents by individual IPR holders or of a maximum accumulated (346) royalty rate by all IPR holders will not, in principle, restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). In that regard, it is important that parties involved in the selection of a standard be fully informed, not only as to the available technical options and the associated IPR, but also as to the likely cost of that IPR. Therefore, should an SDO’s IPR policy choose to provide for IPR holders to disclose prior to the adoption of the standard their most restrictive licensing terms, including the maximum royalty rates or maximum accumulated royalty rate to be charged, this will generally not lead to a restriction of competition within the meaning of Article 101(1) (347). Such ex ante unilateral disclosures of the most restrictive licensing terms or maximum accumulated royalty rate would be one way to enable the parties involved in the development of a standard to take an informed decision based on the disadvantages and advantages of various alternative technologies. |
7.4. Assessment under Article 101(3)
7.4.1. Efficiency gains
|
475. |
Standardisation agreements frequently give rise to significant efficiency gains. For example, Union-wide standards may facilitate market integration and allow undertakings to market their goods and services in all Member States, leading to increased consumer choice and decreasing prices. Standards which establish technical interoperability and compatibility often encourage competition on the merits between the technologies of different undertakings and help prevent lock-in to a particular supplier. Furthermore, standards may reduce transaction costs for sellers and buyers. Standards relating to, for instance, the quality, safety and environmental aspects of a product may also facilitate consumer choice and may lead to increased product quality. Standards also play an important role for innovation: they can reduce the time it takes to bring a new technology to the market and facilitate innovation, by allowing undertakings to build on top of agreed solutions. These efficiency gains can contribute to a resilient internal market. |
|
476. |
In order for standardisation agreements to achieve efficiency gains, the information necessary to apply the standard must be effectively available to those wishing to enter the product/service market to which the standard relates (348). |
|
477. |
Dissemination of a standard can be enhanced by marks or logos certifying compliance, thereby providing certainty to customers. Agreements for testing and certification go beyond the primary objective of defining the standard and generally affect a distinct market. |
|
478. |
While effects on innovation must be analysed on a case-by-case basis, standards creating compatibility at a horizontal level between different technologies are likely to give rise to efficiency gains. |
7.4.2. Indispensability
|
479. |
Restrictions that go beyond what is necessary to achieve the efficiency gains that can be generated by a standardisation agreement do not fulfil the conditions of Article 101(3). |
|
480. |
The assessment of a standardisation agreement must take into account its likely effect on the markets concerned, on the one hand, and the scope of restrictions that possibly go beyond the objective of achieving efficiencies, on the other (349). |
|
481. |
Participation in standard development should generally be open to all competitors in the market or markets affected by the standard, unless such participation would generate significant inefficiencies, such as long delays in the adoption process (350). Where participation in the development of the standard is restricted, any restrictive effects of such limited participation should be removed or lessened (351) in order for such restriction on the participants to be outweighed by efficiencies under Article 101(3). |
|
482. |
As a general rule, standardisation agreements should cover no more than what is necessary to ensure their aims, whether this is technical interoperability and compatibility or a certain level of quality. In cases where having only one technological solution would benefit consumers or the economy at large, that standard should be set on a non-discriminatory basis. Technology-neutral standards can, in certain circumstances, lead to larger efficiency gains. Including substitute IPR (352) as essential parts of a standard while at the same time forcing the users of the standard to pay for more IPR than technically necessary would go beyond what is necessary to achieve any identified efficiency gains. In the same vein, including substitute IPR as essential parts of a standard and limiting the use of that technology to that particular standard (that is to say, exclusive use) could limit inter-technology competition and would not be necessary to achieve the efficiencies identified. |
|
483. |
Restrictions in a standardisation agreement making a standard binding and obligatory for the industry are in principle not indispensable. |
|
484. |
In a similar vein, standardisation agreements that entrust certain bodies with the exclusive right to test compliance with the standard go beyond the primary objective of defining the standard and may also restrict competition. The exclusivity can, however, be justified for a certain period of time, for example by the need to recoup significant start-up costs (353). The standardisation agreement should in that case include adequate safeguards to mitigate possible risks to competition resulting from exclusivity. This concerns, among others, the certification fee, which should be reasonable and proportionate to the cost of the compliance testing. |
7.4.3. Pass-on to consumers
|
485. |
Efficiency gains attained by indispensable restrictions must be passed on to consumers to an extent that outweighs the restrictive effects on competition caused by the standardisation agreement. For the purpose of assessing the likelihood of pass-on to consumers it is relevant to take into account the procedures that are used to guarantee that the interests of the users of standards and end consumers are protected. In addition, where standards facilitate technical interoperability and compatibility or competition between new and existing products, services and processes, it can be presumed that the standard will benefit consumers. |
7.4.4. No elimination of competition
|
486. |
Whether a standardisation agreement affords the parties the possibility of eliminating competition depends on the various sources of competition in the market, the level of competitive constraint that they impose on the parties and the impact of the agreement on that competitive constraint. While market shares are relevant for that analysis, the magnitude of remaining sources of actual competition cannot be assessed exclusively on the basis of market share, except in cases where a standard becomes a de facto industry standard (354). In the latter case, competition may be eliminated if third parties are foreclosed from effective access to the standard. |
7.5. Examples
|
487. |
Setting standards competitors cannot satisfy
Example 1 Situation: An SDO sets and publishes safety standards that are widely used by the relevant industry. Most competitors in the industry take part in the development of the standard. Prior to the adoption of the standard, a new entrant has developed a product which is technically equivalent in terms of performance and functional requirements and which is recognised by the technical committee of the SDO. However, the technical specifications of the safety standard are, without any objective justification, drawn up in such a way as to not allow for this or other new products to comply with the standard. Analysis: In this case, participation in the development of the standard is not unrestricted, and the process used to adopt the standard does not seem transparent. This standardisation agreement is likely to give rise to restrictive effects on competition within the meaning of Article 101(1) and is unlikely to meet the conditions of Article 101(3). The members of the SDO have, without any objective justification, set the standard in such a way that the products of their competitors which are based on different technological solutions cannot satisfy it, even though they have equivalent performance. Hence, this standard, which has not been set on a non-discriminatory basis, will reduce or prevent innovation and product variety. It is unlikely that the way the standard is drafted will lead to greater efficiency gains than a neutral standard. |
|
488. |
Non-compulsory and transparent standard covering a large share of the market
Example 2 Situation: A number of consumer electronics manufacturers with substantial market shares agree to develop a new standard for a product to follow up the DVD. Analysis: Provided that (a) the manufacturers remain free to produce other new products which do not conform to the new standard, (b) participation in the development of the standard is unrestricted and transparent, and (c) the standardisation agreement does not otherwise restrict competition, the agreement is unlikely to restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). On the other hand, if the parties agreed to only manufacture products which conform to the new standard, the agreement would be likely to restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1), by limiting product variety and technical innovation. |
|
489. |
Standardisation agreement without IPR disclosure
Example 3 Situation: A private SDO active in standardisation in the ICT (information and communication technology) sector has an IPR policy which neither requires nor encourages disclosures of IPR which could be essential for any future standard. The SDO took the conscious decision not to include such an obligation, in particular considering that in general all technologies potentially relevant for the future standard are covered by many IPR. Therefore the SDO considered that an IPR disclosure obligation would, on the one hand, not lead to the benefit of enabling the participants to choose a solution with little or no IPR and, on the other, would lead to additional costs in analysing whether the IPR would be potentially essential for the future standard. However, the IPR policy of the SDO requires all participants to make a commitment to license any IPR that might read on the future standard on FRAND terms. The IPR policy allows for opt-outs if there is specific IPR that an IPR holder wishes to put outside the blanket licensing commitment. In this particular industry there are several competing private SDOs. Participation in the SDO is open to anyone active in the industry. Analysis: In many cases, an IPR disclosure obligation would be pro-competitive, as it would increase competition between technologies ex ante. In general, such an obligation allows the members of an SDO to factor in the amount of IPR reading on a particular technology when deciding between competing technologies (or even - where possible – to choose a technology which is not covered by IPR). The amount of IPR reading on a technology will often have a direct impact on the cost of access to the standard. However, in this particular context, all available technologies seem to be covered by IPR, and even many IPR. Therefore, any IPR disclosure would not have the positive effect of enabling the members to factor in the amount of IPR when choosing technology, since regardless of what technology is chosen, it can be presumed that there is IPR reading on that technology. The agreement is unlikely to give rise to any negative effects on competition within the meaning of Article 101(1). |
5.5 Pay for delay 5.5 Pay for delay
5.5.1 CJEU, GlaxoSmithKline, C‑307/18 5.5.1 CJEU, GlaxoSmithKline, C‑307/18
Judgment
1 This request for a preliminary ruling concerns the interpretation of Articles 101 and 102 TFEU.
2 The request has been made in proceedings where the opposing parties are Generics (UK) Ltd (‘GUK’), GlaxoSmithKline plc (‘GSK’), Xellia Pharmaceuticals ApS, Alpharma LLC, formerly Zoetis Products LLC, Actavis UK Ltd and Merck KGaA, on the one hand, and the Competition and Markets Authority (United Kingdom) (‘the CMA’), on the other, concerning the latter’s decision of 12 February 2016 that those companies had taken part in unlawful agreements and concerted practices, that GSK had abused a dominant position and that financial penalties should be imposed on them (‘the CMA decision’).
Legal context
EU law
3 Paragraphs 17, 20 and 24 of the Commission Notice on the definition of relevant market for the purposes of Community competition law (OJ 1997 C 372, p. 5; ‘the notice on market definition’), state:
‘17. The question to be answered is whether the parties’ customers would switch to readily available substitutes or to suppliers located elsewhere in response to a hypothetical small (in the range 5% to 10%) but permanent relative price increase in the products and areas being considered. If substitution were enough to make the price increase unprofitable because of the resulting loss of sales, additional substitutes and areas are included in the relevant market. This would be done until the set of products and geographical areas is such that small, permanent increases in relative prices would be profitable. The equivalent analysis is applicable in cases concerning the concentration of buying power, where the starting point would then be the supplier and the price test serves to identify the alternative distribution channels or outlets for the supplier’s products. In the application of these principles, careful account should be taken of certain particular situations as described within paragraphs 56 and 58.
…
20. Supply-side substitutability may also be taken into account when defining markets in those situations in which its effects are equivalent to those of demand substitution in terms of effectiveness and immediacy. This means that suppliers are able to switch production to the relevant products and market them in the short term [that is, such a period that does not entail a significant adjustment of existing tangible and intangible assets (see paragraph 23)] without incurring significant additional costs or risks in response to small and permanent changes in relative prices. When these conditions are met, the additional production that is put on the market will have a disciplinary effect on the competitive behaviour of the companies involved. Such an impact in terms of effectiveness and immediacy is equivalent to the demand substitution effect.
…
24. The third source of competitive constraint, potential competition, is not taken into account when defining markets, since the conditions under which potential competition will actually represent an effective competitive constraint depend on the analysis of specific factors and circumstances related to the conditions of entry. If required, this analysis is only carried out at a subsequent stage, in general once the position of the companies involved in the relevant market has already been ascertained, and when such position gives rise to concerns from a competition point of view.’
United Kingdom law
4 Part I of the Competition Act 1998 includes Chapters I to V of that act. Within Chapter I, section 2 of that chapter provides:
‘Agreements … preventing, restricting or distorting competition
(1) …, agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings or concerted practices which:
(a) may affect trade within the United Kingdom, and
(b) have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the United Kingdom,
are prohibited unless they are exempt in accordance with the provisions of this part.
(2) Subsection 1 applies, in particular, to agreements, decisions or practices which:
…
(b) limit or control production, markets, technical development or investment;
(c) share markets or sources of supply …’
5 Section 18 of the Competition Act 1998, in Chapter II of Part I of that act, provides:
‘Abuse of dominant position
(1) …, any conduct on the part of one or more undertakings which amounts to the abuse of a dominant position in a market is prohibited if it may affect trade within the United Kingdom.
(2) Conduct may, in particular, constitute such an abuse if it consists in:
…
(b) limiting production, markets or technical development to the prejudice of consumers;
…
…’
6 Section 60 of that act, which is in Chapter V of Part I thereof, states:
‘Principles to be applied in determining questions
(1) The purpose of this section is to ensure that so far as is possible (having regard to any relevant differences between the provisions concerned), questions arising under this Part in relation to competition within the United Kingdom are dealt with in a manner which is consistent with the treatment of corresponding questions arising in EU law in relation to competition within the European Union.
(2) At any time when the court determines a question arising under this Part, it must act (so far as is compatible with the provisions of this Part and whether or not it would otherwise be required to do so) with a view to securing that there is no inconsistency between:
(a) the principles applied, and decision reached, by the court in determining that question; and
(b) the principles laid down by the Treaty and the European Court, and any relevant decision of that Court, as applicable at that time in determining any corresponding question arising in EU law.
(3) The court must, in addition, have regard to any relevant decision or statement of the Commission.
…’
The dispute in the main proceedings and the questions referred for a preliminary ruling
7 Paroxetine is a prescription-only anti-depressant medicine, belonging to the group of medicines known as selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (‘SSRIs’). It was marketed in the United Kingdom by GSK, the manufacturer of the originator medicine (‘the originator company’ or ‘the originator’), under the brand name ‘Seroxat’.
8 Following the expiry, in January 1999, of the patent obtained by GSK for the active ingredient of that originator medicine and, in December 2000, of the period of ‘data exclusivity’ in relation to that active ingredient, GSK was faced with the possibility that manufacturers of generic medicines (‘generic companies’ or ‘generics’) would seek a marketing authorisation (‘an MA’) in the United Kingdom, using an abridged procedure, for their own version of that medicine.
9 In that period, GSK obtained a number of ‘secondary’ patents, including patent GB 2 297 550 (‘the Anhydrate patent’) covering four polymorphs of the active ingredient in question and the process to produce them. The Anhydrate patent, issued in 1997, was declared partially invalid by the Patents Court (United Kingdom) and, to the extent that it remained valid, expired in 2016.
10 Further, by mid-2000, GSK was informed that several manufacturers of generic medicines, including IVAX Pharmaceuticals UK (‘IVAX’), GUK and Alpharma, were contemplating entering the United Kingdom market offering for sale a generic version of paroxetine. IVAX had submitted an MA application in Ireland and had obtained from BASF AG the active ingredient of paroxetine on the basis of which that application had been submitted. GUK had obtained an MA for paroxetine in Denmark in April 2001. Last, Alpharma had submitted an MA application in the United Kingdom on 30 May 2001.
11 Against that background, GSK entered into three agreements with the manufacturers of generic medicines concerned.
12 The first agreement (‘the GSK/IVAX agreement’) entered into with IVAX on 3 October 2001 and expiring on 29 June 2004, appointed IVAX as the ‘sole distributor’ in the United Kingdom, of 20 mg paroxetine hydrochloride, to a maximum volume of 770 000 packs of 30 tablets, to be sold as an authorised generic medicine, in return for an annual ‘promotional allowance’ of 3.2 million pounds sterling (GBP) paid by GSK.
13 The second agreement (‘the GSK/GUK agreement’) was entered into with GUK on 13 March 2002 and expired on 1 July 2004. That agreement followed various court proceedings, including the Anhydrate patent revocation proceedings brought on 27 July 2001 by BASF, the infringement proceedings brought against GUK on 18 September 2001 by GSK in relation to the same patent and the granting by the Patents Court on 23 October 2001 of an interim injunction prohibiting GUK from entering the market, at which time GSK gave an undertaking to compensate GUK for any loss or harm that it might sustain if the interim injunction was granted at the initial hearing, but that injunction was ultimately held to be inappropriate (‘the cross-undertaking in damages’). On 13 March 2002, namely the day before the proceedings brought by BASF and GSK were down for trial, GSK and GUK reached a settlement agreement which involved the discharge of the injunction and the cross‑undertaking in damages given by GSK, the waiver of all claims to damages and the staying of proceedings. Under that agreement, GSK undertook to purchase all GUK’s stock of generic paroxetine intended for sale in the United Kingdom for a sum of 12.5 million United States dollars (USD), to pay 50% of GUK’s legal costs up to a maximum of GBP 0.5 million and to pay GUK an annual marketing allowance of GBP 1.65 million. For its part, GUK undertook to enter into a sub-distribution agreement with IVAX for 750 000 20 mg packs of paroxetine at an indexed price, and undertook, in common with all the companies in the Merck group, not to make, import or supply paroxetine hydrochloride in the United Kingdom during the currency of the supply agreement between IVAX and GUK.
14 The third agreement (‘the GSK/Alpharma agreement’) was entered into with Alpharma on 12 November 2002 and expired on 13 February 2004. That agreement followed the infringement proceedings brought by GSK against Alpharma and GSK’s claim for interim relief. When the court seised indicated to the parties that such relief was likely to be granted, Alpharma gave an undertaking to that court on 1 August 2002 not to sell paroxetine in the United Kingdom prior to delivery of the final judgment, while GSK gave a cross-undertaking in damages. On 12 November 2002 a settlement was agreed by those two manufacturers under which the parties agreed to discharge their reciprocal undertakings and to abandon their claims. It was further provided that Alpharma would enter into a sub-distribution agreement with IVAX for the supply of 500 000 20 mg paroxetine packs (increased to 2 020 000 packs then reduced to 620 000 packs), that GSK would pay to Alpharma GBP 0.5 million towards its legal costs in the proceedings, GBP 3 million ‘in respect of the production and preparation cost for launch in the UK market by Alpharma of [paroxetine]’ and GBP 100 000 per month for a term of 12 months, as a ‘marketing allowance’, and that GSK would give Alpharma an option to purchase some products that GSK might sell in other therapeutic areas. In return for those benefits, Alpharma undertook not to make, import or supply in the United Kingdom any paroxetine hydrochloride other than what it would purchase from IVAX or what would be manufactured by GSK. That agreement also provided that Alpharma had the right to terminate the agreement on one month’s notice in the event of the formation of a ‘generic market’ or on the demise ‘whether by invalidation, surrender, abandonment, or otherwise’ of the process claim in the Anhydrate patent. Alpharma exercised that right following delivery of the judgment on 5 December 2003 in a parallel case that permitted manufacturers of generic medicines to enter the market, and Alpharma then entered the paroxetine market in February 2004.
15 Against that background, the CMA adopted on 12 February 2016 the decision in which it found that:
– GSK held a dominant position in the market for paroxetine and had abused that position, contrary to the prohibition in Chapter II of Part I of the Competition Act 1998 by entering into the GSK/IVAX, GSK/GUK and GSK/Alpharma agreements;
– GSK and GUK (and Merck) had infringed the prohibition in Chapter I of Part I of the Competition Act 1998 and, after 1 May 2004, Article 101 TFEU, by entering into the GSK/GUK agreement; and
– GSK and the companies in the Alpharma group (Actavis UK, Xellia Pharmaceuticals — formerly Alpharma UK Limited — and Alpharma) had infringed the prohibition in Chapter I of Part I of the Competition Act 1998 by entering into the GSK/Alpharma agreement.
16 Consequently, the CMA imposed on those companies financial penalties to a total of GBP 44.99 million.
17 As regards, however, the GSK/IVAX agreement, the CMA imposed no penalty, in accordance with the Competition Act 1998 (Land and Vertical Agreements Exclusion) Order 2000 (SI 2000/310) which, until its repeal on 30 April 2005, excluded vertical agreements from the prohibition laid down in Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998.
18 The companies on which penalties had been imposed brought an appeal against that decision before the Competition Appeal Tribunal (United Kingdom).
19 The Competition Appeal Tribunal considers that, in order to give a ruling on that appeal, it must determine, in accordance with EU law, whether the manufacturers of medicines concerned, namely GSK, GUK, Alpharma and IVAX were potential competitors with respect to the supply of paroxetine in the United Kingdom in the period concerned and whether the three agreements entered into by GSK with the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines constituted a restriction of competition ‘by object’ (‘restriction by object’) or by effect’ (‘restriction by effect’). That court considers that it must also define the product market on which GSK supplied paroxetine in order to ascertain whether that manufacturer of medicines held a dominant position in that market and whether it abused that position.
20 The Competition Appeal Tribunal holds, first, that, in order to assess the lawfulness of the CMA decision, in so far as it concerns restrictions of competition, it is necessary to interpret Article 101 TFEU. That court also states that the General Court of the European Union has given rulings in cases where the opposing parties include the same manufacturers of medicines as those involved in the main proceedings, on issues that are comparable to those arising this case, though all the applicants in the main proceedings dispute the relevance of those rulings to this case. Further, the Competition Appeal Tribunal considers that the rules governing the assessment of a restriction by effect, the subject of Question 6 that is referred for a preliminary ruling, remain uncertain. That court considers, second, that it is required to rule on novel issues of law in relation to the interpretation of Article 102 TFEU which concern both the definition of the relevant market and the definition of abuse of a dominant position and possible justification of the latter.
21 In those circumstances, the Competition Appeal Tribunal decided to stay the proceedings and to refer to the Court the following questions for a preliminary ruling:
‘(1) Potential competition
For the purpose of Article 101(1) [TFEU], are the holder of a patent for a pharmaceutical drug and a generic company seeking to enter the market with a generic version of the drug to be regarded as potential competitors when the parties are in bona fide dispute as to whether the patent is valid and/or the generic product infringes the patent?
(2) Does the answer to Question 1 differ if:
(a) there are pending court proceedings between the parties involving this dispute; and/or
(b) the patent-holder has obtained an interim injunction preventing the generic company from launching its generic product on the market until determination of those proceedings; and/or
(c) the patent holder regards the generic company as a potential competitor?
(3) Restriction by object
When there are pending court proceedings concerning the validity of a patent for a pharmaceutical drug and whether a generic product infringes that patent, and it is not possible to determine the likelihood of either party succeeding in those proceedings, is there a restriction of competition “by object” for the purpose of Article 101(1) [TFEU] when the parties make an agreement to settle that litigation whereby:
(a) the generic company agrees not to enter the market with its generic product and not to continue its challenge to the patent for the duration of the agreement (which is no longer than the unexpired period of the patent), and
(b) the patent holder agrees to make a transfer of value to the generic company in an amount substantially greater than the avoided litigation costs (including management time and disruption) and which does not constitute payment for any goods or services supplied to the patent holder?
(4) Does the answer to Question 3 differ if:
(a) the scope of the restriction on the generic company does not go beyond the scope of the patent in dispute; and/or
(b) the amount of the value transfer to the generic company may be less than the profit it would have made if it had instead succeeded in the patent litigation and entered the market with an independent generic product?
(5) Do the answers to Questions 3 and 4 differ if the agreement provides for the supply by the patent holder to the generic company of significant but limited volumes of authorised generic product and that agreement:
(a) does not give rise to any meaningful competitive constraint on the prices charged by the patent holder; but
(b) brings some benefits to consumers which would not have occurred if the patent holder had succeeded in the litigation, but which are significantly less than the full competitive benefits resulting from independent generic entry which would have occurred if the generic company had succeeded in the litigation, or is this relevant only to assessment under Article 101(3) [TFEU]?
(6) Restriction by effect
In the circumstances set out in Questions 3-5, is there a restriction of competition “by effect” for the purpose of Article 101(1) [TFEU] or does that depend upon the court finding that in the absence of that settlement:
(a) the generic company would probably have succeeded in the patent proceedings (i.e. that the chance that the patent was valid and infringed was below 50%); alternatively
(b) the parties would probably have entered into a less restrictive settlement (i.e. that the chance of a less restrictive settlement was above 50%)?
(7) Market definition
Where a patented pharmaceutical drug is therapeutically substitutable with a number of other drugs in a class, and the alleged abuse for the purpose of Article 102 [TFEU] is conduct by the patent holder that effectively excludes generic versions of that drug from the market, are those generic products to be taken into account for the purpose of defining the relevant product market, although they could not lawfully enter the market before expiry of the patent if (which is uncertain) the patent is valid and infringed by those generic products?
(8) Abuse
In the circumstances set out in Questions 3-5 above, if the patent holder is in a dominant position, does its conduct in entering into such an agreement constitute an abuse within the meaning of Article 102 [TFEU]?
(9) Does the answer to Question 8 differ if the patent holder makes an agreement of that kind not in settlement of actual litigation but to avoid litigation being commenced?
(10) Does the answer to Question 8 or 9 differ if:
(a) the patent holder pursues a strategy of entering into several such agreements to preclude the risk of unrestricted generic entry; and
(b) the consequence of the first such agreement is that by reason of the structure of the national arrangements for reimbursement by the public health authorities to pharmacies of their costs of purchasing pharmaceutical drugs, the reimbursement level for the pharmaceutical drug in question is reduced, resulting in a substantial saving to the public health authorities (albeit a saving which is significantly less than that which would arise upon independent generic entry following a successful outcome for the generic company in patent litigation); and
(c) that saving was no part of the intention of the parties when entering into any of the agreements?’
Preliminary observations
22 It is apparent from the CMA decision, summarised in paragraph 15 of the present judgment, that the CMA imposed penalties with respect to the practices of GSK, GUK and Alpharma on different grounds and on different legal bases.
23 Penalties were imposed with respect to the GSK/GUK agreement under competition law on the basis of Chapter I of Part I of the Competition Act 1998 for its entire duration and on the basis of Article 101 TFEU for the period subsequent to 1 May 2004. With respect to the GSK/Alpharma agreement, however, which came to an end before that date, penalties were imposed solely on the basis of Chapter I of Part I of the Competition Act 1998.
24 Again, a penalty was imposed on GSK for an abuse of a dominant position solely on the basis of Chapter II of Part I of that act and not of Article 102 TFEU.
25 In that regard, it is true that, under the procedure laid down in Article 267 TFEU, the Court has no jurisdiction to interpret national law, that being exclusively for the national court (judgments of 7 September 2006, Marrosu and Sardino, C‑53/04, EU:C:2006:517, paragraph 54, and of 18 November 2010, Georgiev, C‑250/09 and C‑268/09, EU:C:2010:699, paragraph 75).
26 The Court does, however, have jurisdiction to give a ruling on a request for a preliminary ruling concerning the provisions of EU law in situations where, although the facts in the main proceedings do not fall directly within the scope of that law, the provisions of that law have been made applicable under national law by means of a reference made in national law to their content (see, to that effect, judgments of 21 December 2011, Cicala, C‑482/10, EU:C:2011:868, paragraph 17; of 18 October 2012, Nolan, C‑583/10, EU:C:2012:638, paragraph 45; and of 15 November 2016, Ullens de Schooten, C‑268/15, EU:C:2016:874, paragraph 53).
27 Where, in regulating purely internal situations, national legislation adopts the same solutions as those adopted in EU law in order, for example, to avoid any distortion of competition, or to ensure that a single procedure is applied in comparable situations, it is clearly in the interest of the European Union that, in order to forestall future differences of interpretation, provisions or concepts taken from EU law should be interpreted uniformly, irrespective of the circumstances in which they are to be applied (see, to that effect, judgments of 18 October 1990, Dzodzi, C‑297/88 and C‑197/89, EU:C:1990:360, paragraph 37; of 17 July 1997, Leur-Bloem, C‑28/95, EU:C:1997:369, paragraph 32; and of 18 October 2012, Nolan, C‑583/10, EU:C:2012:638, paragraph 46).
28 In this case, as is apparent both from the information sent by the referring court to the Court and the replies of the parties to a question put by the Court at the hearing, section 2 of the Competition Act 1998, in Chapter I of Part I of that act, and section 18 of that act, in Chapter II of Part I, must be applied in a way that is compatible with the corresponding provisions of EU law, as is required in essence by section 60 of that act.
29 Consequently, a reply should be given to this request for a preliminary ruling.
Consideration of the questions referred for a preliminary ruling
Questions 1 to 6 (Article 101 TFEU)
Questions 1 and 2 (potential competition)
30 As a preliminary point, it must be recalled that Article 101(1) TFEU states that all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the internal market are incompatible with the internal market and are prohibited.
31 Accordingly, if the conduct of undertakings is to be subject to the prohibition in principle laid down in Article 101(1) TFEU, that conduct must not only reveal the existence of coordination between them — in other words, an agreement between undertakings, a decision by an association of undertakings or a concerted practice –, but that coordination must also have a negative and appreciable effect on competition within the internal market (see, to that effect, judgment of 13 December 2012, Expedia, C‑226/11, EU:C:2012:795, paragraphs 16 and 17).
32 The latter requirement means, with respect to horizontal cooperation agreements entered into by undertakings that operate at the same level of the production or distribution chain, that the coordination involves undertakings who are in competition with each other, if not in reality, then at least potentially.
33 That is the background to the sending by the referring court of Questions 1 and 2, which can be examined together.
34 By those questions, the referring court seeks, in essence to ascertain whether Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a manufacturer of an originator medicine who is the holder of a manufacturing process patent for an active ingredient which is in the public domain, on the one hand, and manufacturers of generic medicines who are taking steps to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient, on the other, where those parties are in dispute as to whether that patent is valid or whether the generic medicines concerned infringe that patent, are in potential competition with each other. The referring court also seeks to ascertain whether the existence of court proceedings relating to the validity of the patent concerned, which are still pending and which have given rise to an application for interim relief and the granting of interim measures, and the fact that the patent holder may perceive the manufacturers of generic medicines to be potential competitors, constitute factors that may influence the response to that question.
35 In this case, it is only the concept of ‘potential competition’ that is at issue, given that the manufacturers of generic medicines who concluded the agreements at issue with GSK had not entered the market for paroxetine at the time when those agreements were concluded.
36 In order to assess whether an undertaking that is not present in a market is a potential competitor of one or more other undertakings that are already present in that market, it must be determined whether there are real and concrete possibilities of the former joining that market and competing with one or more of the latter (see, to that effect, judgment of 28 February 1991, Delimitis, C‑234/89, EU:C:1991:91, paragraph 21).
37 Accordingly, when the agreement at issue is one which has the effect of temporarily keeping an undertaking outside a market, it must be determined whether there would have existed, in the absence of that agreement, real and concrete possibilities for that undertaking to enter that market and compete with the undertakings established in that market.
38 Such a criterion means that there can be no finding of a potential competitive relationship as an inference merely from the purely hypothetical possibility of such entry or even from the mere wish or desire of the manufacturer of generic medicines to enter the market. Conversely, there is no requirement that it must be demonstrated with certainty that that manufacturer will in fact enter the market concerned and, a fortiori, that it will be capable, thereafter, of retaining its place there.
39 The assessment of whether there is potential competition must be carried out having regard to the structure of the market and the economic and legal context within which it operates.
40 In that respect, first, as regards, as in the main proceedings, the pharmaceutical sector, the specific features of which with respect to the implementation of EU competition law have previously been noted by the Court (see, to that effect, judgment of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraphs 65 and 80), and more particularly the opening of a market, of a medicine containing an active ingredient that has recently entered the public domain, to the manufacturers of generic medicines, the effects of which on prices have been emphasised by the referring court, due account must be taken of the regulatory constraints that are characteristic of the medicine sector. One of those constraints is Article 6 of Directive 2001/83/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 November 2001 on the Community code relating to medicines for human use (OJ 2001 L 311, p. 67), as amended by Regulation (EC) No 1394/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 November 2007 (OJ 2007 L 324, p. 121, and corrigendum OJ 2009 L 87, p. 174), which provides that no medicine may be placed on the market of a Member State unless an MA has been issued by the competent authorities of that Member State or an authorisation has been granted in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 726/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 31 March 2004 laying down Community procedures for the authorisation and supervision of medicines for human and veterinary use and establishing a European Medicines Agency (OJ 2004 L 136, p. 1), as amended by Regulation (EC) No 219/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 2009 (OJ 2009 L 87, p. 109) (judgment of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraph 53).
41 Second, full account must be taken of the intellectual property rights and, in particular, the patents held by the manufacturers of originator medicines relating to one or more processes of manufacturing an active ingredient that is in the public domain, rights which enjoy a high level of protection in the internal market under Directive 2004/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the enforcement of intellectual property rights (OJ 2004 L 157, p. 45, and corrigendum OJ 2004 L 195, p. 16) and Article 17(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (see, to that effect, judgment of 16 July 2015, Huawei Technologies, C‑170/13, EU:C:2015:477, paragraph 57).
42 Further, as the Advocate General stated in point 60 of her Opinion, the perception of the established operator is a factor that is relevant to the assessment of the existence of a competitive relationship between that party and an undertaking outside the market since, if the latter is perceived as a potential entrant to the market, it may, by reason merely that it exists, give rise to competitive pressure on the operator that is established in that market.
43 In the light of the foregoing, in order to assess whether, on the one hand, a manufacturer of originator medicines who is the holder of a process patent for an active ingredient that is in the public domain and, on the other, a manufacturer of generic medicines preparing to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient who have entered into an agreement such as those at issue in the main proceedings are potential competitors of each other, it is necessary to determine, first, whether, at the time when that agreement was concluded, the manufacturer concerned of generic medicines had taken sufficient preparatory steps to enable it to enter the market concerned within such a period of time as would impose competitive pressure on the manufacturer of originator medicines.
44 Those steps may include the measures taken by the particular manufacturer of generic medicines to put itself in a position to have, within that period, the required administrative authorisations for the marketing of a generic version of the medicine concerned and an adequate stock of that generic medicine either through its own production or through supply contracts concluded with third parties. Of equal relevance in that regard are all the legal steps actually undertaken by that manufacturer with a view to challenging, either as a principal issue or as an incidental question, the process patents held by a manufacturer of originator medicines, or, again, the range of marketing initiatives adopted by the manufacturer of generic medicines in order to market its medicine. Such steps permit the conclusion that a manufacturer of generic medicines has a firm intention and an inherent ability to enter the market of a medicine containing an active ingredient that is in the public domain, even when there are process patents held by the manufacturer of originator medicines.
45 Second, the referring court must determine that the market entry of such a manufacturer of generic medicines does not meet barriers to entry that are insurmountable.
46 In that regard, the existence of a patent which protects the manufacturing process of an active ingredient that is in the public domain cannot, as such, be regarded as an insurmountable barrier, and does not mean that a manufacturer of generic medicines who has in fact a firm intention and an inherent ability to enter the market, and who, by the steps taken, shows a readiness to challenge the validity of that patent and to take the risk, upon entering the market, of being subject to infringement proceedings brought by the patent holder, cannot be characterised as a ‘potential competitor’ of the manufacturer of originator medicines concerned.
47 The arguments of the companies on whom the CMA imposed penalties in relation to (i) the presumption of validity attached to a process patent held by the manufacturer of originator medicines, (ii) the uncertain outcome of the dispute as to the validity of that patent, and (iii) the existence of injunctions granted by a national court, whereby the manufacturers of generic medicines are on an interim basis prohibited from selling the generic version of the originator medicine at issue, cannot undermine that finding.
48 As regards, in the first place, the argument that the validity of the patent concerned should be presumed, it is common ground that such a presumption is the automatic consequence of the registration of a patent and its subsequent issue to its holder. That factor therefore sheds no light, for the purposes of applying Articles 101 and 102 TFEU, on the outcome of any dispute in relation to the validity of that patent, something which, moreover, cannot ever be known as a result of the very conclusion of the agreement between the holder of the process patent and the manufacturer concerned of generic medicines.
49 If it were to be accepted that the presumption of validity of a process patent relating to an active ingredient that is in the public domain precludes the holder of that patent from being in a relationship of potential competition with any party that is allegedly infringing that patent on the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient, that would have the consequence, as regards agreements such as those at issue in the main proceedings, that Article 101 TFEU would be deprived of all meaning and that would be liable, thereby, to frustrate EU competition law (see, by analogy, judgment of 13 July 1966, Consten and Grundig v Commission, 56/64 and 58/64, EU:C:1966:41, p. 346).
50 Admittedly, as stated by the Advocate General in point 83 of her Opinion, that does not mean that the competition authority concerned must disregard any question relating to patent law that might influence the finding of the existence of such a competitive relationship. Any patents protecting an originator medicine or one of its manufacturing processes are indisputably part of the economic and legal context characterising the relationships of competition between the holders of those patents and the manufacturers of generic medicines. However, the assessment of the rights conferred by a patent, to be carried out by the competition authority, must not consist of a review of the strength of the patent or of the probability of a dispute between the patent holder and a manufacturer of generic medicines being brought to an end with a finding that the patent is valid and has been infringed. That assessment must rather concern the question whether, notwithstanding the existence of that patent, the manufacturer of generic medicines has real and concrete possibilities of entering the market at the relevant time.
51 To that effect, account must be taken of, inter alia, the following: that the uncertainty as to the validity of patents covering medicines is a fundamental characteristic of the pharmaceutical sector; that the presumption of validity of a patent for an originator medicine does not amount to a presumption that a generic version of that medicine properly placed on the market is illegal; that a patent does not guarantee protection against actions seeking to contest its validity; that such actions, and, in particular, the ‘at risk’ launch of a generic medicine, and the consequent court proceedings, commonly take place in the period before or immediately after the market entry of such a generic medicine; that, to obtain an MA for a generic medicine, there is no requirement to prove that that marketing does not infringe any originator medicine patent rights; and that, in the pharmaceutical sector, potential competition may be exerted before the expiry of a compound patent protecting an originator medicine, since the manufacturers of generic medicines want to be ready to enter the market as soon as that patent expires.
52 As regards, next, the argument that there is a genuine dispute, the outcome of which is uncertain, between the manufacturer of the originator medicine and a manufacturer of the generic version of that medicine who seeks to obtain access to the market for that medicine, the genuineness of their dispute, particularly when it is the subject of court proceedings, far from precluding the existence of any competition between them, rather constitutes evidence of the existence of a potential competitive relationship between them.
53 As regards, last, the argument concerning interim injunctions granted by a national court prohibiting a manufacturer of generic medicines from entering the market of a medicine containing an active ingredient that is in the public domain, it must be observed that interim measures in no way prejudge the merits of an infringement action brought by the patent holder, a fortiori when, as in the main proceedings, such an injunction is granted in return for a cross‑undertaking in damages, given by that patent holder.
54 Third, the finding that a manufacturer of generic medicines has a firm intention and an inherent ability to enter the market of an active ingredient that is in the public domain, if not called into question by the existence of insurmountable barriers to such market entry, can be confirmed by additional factors.
55 In that regard, the Court has previously had occasion to acknowledge that the conclusion of an agreement between a number of undertakings, operating at the same level in the production chain, some of which had no presence in the market concerned, constitutes a strong indication that a competitive relationship existed between those undertakings (see, by analogy, judgment of 20 January 2016, Toshiba Corporation v Commission, C‑373/14 P, EU:C:2016:26, paragraphs 33 and 34).
56 A further such indication is the intention, made known by a manufacturer of originator medicines and acted upon, to make transfers of value to a manufacturer of generic medicines in exchange for the postponement of the latter’s market entry, even though the former claims that the latter is infringing one or more of its process patents. The greater the transfer of value, the stronger the indication.
57 That intention discloses the perception of the manufacturer of originator medicines of the risk that the manufacturer concerned of generic medicines presents to its commercial interests, that perception being relevant to the assessment of the existence of potential competition, as stated in paragraph 42 of the present judgment, where that perception affects the conduct on the market of the manufacturer of originator medicines.
58 In the light of the foregoing, the answer to Questions 1 and 2 is that Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a manufacturer of originator medicines who is the holder of a manufacturing process patent for an active ingredient that is in the public domain, on the one hand, and the manufacturers of generic medicines who are preparing to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient, on the other, who are in dispute as to whether that patent is valid or whether the generic medicines concerned infringe that patent, are potential competitors, where it is established that the manufacturer of generic medicines has in fact a firm intention and an inherent ability to enter the market, and that market entry does not meet barriers to entry that are insurmountable, which it is for the referring court to assess.
Questions 3 to 5 (characterisation of a ‘restriction by object’)
59 Taking into consideration the answer given to Questions 1 and 2, Questions 3 to 5 must be examined only with regard to an agreement between, on the one hand, a manufacturer of originator medicines who is the holder of a manufacturing process patent for an active ingredient that is in the public domain and, on the other, a manufacturer of generic medicines who is preparing to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient, who are potential competitors.
60 By Questions 3 to 5, which can be examined together, the referring court seeks, in essence to ascertain whether Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a settlement agreement — with respect to pending court proceedings between a manufacturer of originator medicines and a manufacturer of generic medicines, who are potential competitors, concerning the validity of a patent, held by the former, for the process of manufacturing the active ingredient of an originator medicine that is in the public domain and whether a generic version of that product infringes that patent — whereby the manufacturer of generic medicines undertakes not to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient and not to pursue its action seeking the revocation of that patent for the term of the agreement, in consideration for transfers of value to it by the manufacturer of originator medicines, constitutes an agreement that has as its object the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition.
61 The referring court also seeks to ascertain whether one or more of the following factors influence the response to be given that question:
– it is impossible to determine which party is likely to succeed in those proceedings;
– the extent of the restriction on competition imposed on the manufacturer of generic medicines does not exceed that of the patent at issue;
– the sums transferred are significantly higher than the legal costs that were avoided and do not constitute payment for goods or services to be supplied to the manufacturer of originator medicines by the manufacturer of generic medicines, but are nonetheless lower than the profits that the former would have achieved if it had been successful in the patent proceedings and if it had entered the market with an independent generic medicine;
– the settlement agreement provides for the supply by the manufacturer of originator medicines, who is the holder of the patent, to the manufacturer of generic medicines of considerable, but limited, quantities of an authorised generic medicine which does not give rise to a significant competitive restriction on the prices charged by the holder of the patent, but does obtain for consumers benefits that they would not have had if the holder of the patent had been successful in the patent proceedings, though those benefits are significantly lower than the competitive benefits that would have resulted for them from bringing onto the market the independent generic medicine if the manufacturer of generic medicines had been successful in the patent proceedings.
62 In addition to the factors mentioned in paragraphs 30 and 31 of the present judgment, it must be recalled that, if a concerted practice is to be subject to the prohibition in principle laid down in Article 101(1) TFEU, a concerted practice must have as its ‘object or effect’ the prevention, restriction or distortion to an appreciable extent of competition within the internal market.
63 It follows that that provision, as interpreted by the Court, makes a clear distinction between the concept of restriction by object and the concept of restriction by effect, evidence with regard to each of those concepts being subject to different rules.
64 Accordingly, as regards practices characterised as ‘restrictions by object’, there is no need to investigate their effects nor a fortiori to demonstrate their effects on competition in order to classify them as ‘restrictions of competition’, within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU, in so far as experience shows that such behaviour leads to falls in production and price increases, resulting in poor allocation of resources to the detriment, in particular, of consumers (judgment of 19 March 2015, Dole Food and Dole Fresh Fruit Europe v Commission, C‑286/13 P, EU:C:2015:184, paragraph 115 and the case-law cited).
65 Concerning such practices, all that is required is the demonstration that they can in fact be classified as ‘restrictions by object’, though mere unsubstantiated allegations are not however sufficient.
66 On the other hand, where the anticompetitive object of an agreement, a decision by an association of undertakings or a concerted practice is not established, it is necessary to examine its effects in order to prove that competition has in fact been prevented or restricted or distorted to an appreciable extent (see, to that effect, judgment of 26 November 2015, Maxima Latvija, C‑345/14, EU:C:2015:784, paragraph 17).
67 It is clear from the Court’s case-law that the concept of restriction of competition ‘by object’ must be interpreted strictly and can be applied only to some concerted practices between undertakings which reveal, in themselves and having regard to the content of their provisions, their objectives, and the economic and legal context of which they form part, a sufficient degree of harm to competition for the view to be taken that it is not necessary to assess their effects, since some forms of coordination between undertakings can be regarded, by their very nature, as being harmful to the proper functioning of normal competition (judgments of 26 November 2015, Maxima Latvija, C‑345/14, EU:C:2015:784, paragraph 20, and of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraphs 78 and 79).
68 When determining that context, it is necessary to take into consideration the nature of the goods or services affected, as well as the real conditions of the functioning and structure of the market or markets in question (judgment of 11 September 2014, CB v Commission, C‑67/13 P, EU:C:2014:2204, paragraph 53 and the case-law cited).
69 In this case, the medicines sector not only has strong barriers to entry linked to the conditions attached to the placing of medicines on the market, those conditions being described in paragraphs 40 and 47 of the present judgment, but is also marked, as observed by the referring court with respect to the United Kingdom, by a pricing mechanism that is strictly controlled by legislation and strongly influenced by the market entry of generic medicines. Such entry leads, in the short term, to a very appreciable fall in the sale price of medicines containing an active ingredient that are henceforth sold not only by the manufacturer of the originator medicine, but also by manufacturers of generic medicines.
70 It follows from all the foregoing, of which the manufacturers of originator medicines and the manufacturers of generic medicines cannot be unaware, that the medicines sector is particularly sensitive to a delay in the market entry of the generic version of an originator medicine. Such a delay leads to the maintenance on the market of the medicine concerned of a monopoly price, which is very appreciably higher than the price at which generic versions of that medicine would be sold following their market entry and which has considerable financial consequences, if not for the final consumer, at least for social security authorities.
71 It must therefore be determined whether an agreement, such as those entered into by GSK with Alpharma or GUK, displays, in itself, a sufficient degree of harm to competition, so that an examination of its effects is not required for the purposes of applying Article 101(1) TFEU.
72 It is apparent from the documents available to the Court and from paragraphs 13 and 14 of the present judgment that, in essence, the agreements entered into between GSK and GUK and Alpharma, respectively, constitute two sets of complex agreements which display considerable similarities.
73 Both took the form of settlement agreements with respect to a dispute relating to a patent for the process of manufacturing an active ingredient that is in the public domain, paroxetine.
74 Those settlement agreements followed the bringing, by GSK, of infringement proceedings against GUK and Alpharma, which led, on the one hand, to the latter parties challenging, directly or indirectly, the validity of the patent concerned and, on the other, to a national court granting, in exchange for a ‘cross-undertaking in damages’ given by GSK, an interim injunction prohibiting GUK and Alpharma from entering the market.
75 Those agreements led (i) to the undertakings by GUK and Alpharma, while those agreements remained valid, not to enter the market, and not to manufacture and/or import the generic medicines manufactured under the patent at issue, and, further, not to persist in their challenges to that patent; (ii) to the conclusion of a distribution agreement enabling them to enter the market with a limited quantity of generic paroxetine manufactured by GSK; and (iii) to the payment by GSK to them of sums of money in various forms the amount of which, according to the referring court, is significantly higher than the costs of litigation that were avoided and which do not constitute payment for goods or services supplied by GUK or Alpharma to GSK.
76 It must be observed that, according to the very wording of the questions referred, the background to those agreements is a genuine dispute relating to a process patent, that dispute being the subject of proceedings before a national court. Accordingly, those agreements cannot be regarded as agreements bringing to an end entirely fictitious disputes, or as designed with the sole aim of disguising a market-sharing agreement or a market-exclusion agreement. When agreements are of that nature, they are as harmful to competition as market-sharing agreements or market-exclusion agreements, and such agreements have to be characterised as ‘restrictions by object’.
77 Consequently, it is necessary to assess, as requested by the referring court, whether those agreements may, nonetheless, be treated as equivalent to such market-sharing or market-exclusion agreements.
78 In accordance with settled case-law, each economic operator must determine independently the policy which he intends to adopt on the internal market (judgment of 19 March 2015, Dole Food and Dole Fresh Fruit Europe v Commission, C‑286/13 P, EU:C:2015:184, paragraph 119).
79 In that regard, and concerning more particularly the conduct of undertakings linked to intellectual property rights, the Court has held, inter alia, that an industrial or commercial property right, as a legal entity, does not possess those elements of contract or concerted practice referred to in Article 101(1) TFEU, but the exercise of that right might fall within the ambit of the prohibitions contained in the Treaty if it were to manifest itself as the subject, the means or the consequence of an agreement or concerted practice (judgment of 8 June 1982, Nungesser and Eisele v Commission, 258/78, EU:C:1982:211, paragraph 28 and the case-law cited), notwithstanding the fact that it may constitute the legitimate expression of the intellectual property right attached to the patent which empowers the holder of that patent, inter alia, to oppose any infringement (see, to that effect, judgment of 31 October 1974, Centrafarm and de Peijper, 15/74, EU:C:1974:114, paragraph 9) or also the fact, raised by the Commission, that settlement agreements are encouraged by the public authorities in that they make possible savings in terms of resources and are thus beneficial for the public at large.
80 It follows that, in prohibiting certain ‘agreements’ between undertakings, Article 101(1) TFEU makes no distinction between agreements whose purpose is to put an end to litigation and those concluded with other aims in mind (judgment of 27 September 1988, Bayer and Maschinenfabrik Hennecke, 65/86, EU:C:1988:448, paragraph 15).
81 Accordingly, settlement agreements whereby a manufacturer of generic medicines that is seeking to enter a market recognises, at least temporarily, the validity of a patent held by a manufacturer of originator medicines and gives an undertaking, as a result, no longer to challenge that patent and not to enter that market are liable to have effects that restrict competition (see, by analogy, judgment of 27 September 1988, Bayer and Maschinenfabrik Hennecke, 65/86, EU:C:1988:448, paragraph 16), since challenges to the validity and scope of a patent are part of normal competition in the sectors where there exist exclusive rights in relation to technology.
82 Likewise, a clause in an agreement providing that a patent will not be challenged may, in the light of its legal and economic context, restrict competition within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU (judgment of 27 September 1988, Bayer and Maschinenfabrik Hennecke, 65/86, EU:C:1988:448, paragraph 16).
83 Further, the Court has also held that agreements whereby competitors deliberately substitute practical cooperation between them for the risks of competition can be characterised as ‘restrictions by object’ (see, to that effect, judgment of 20 November 2008, Beef Industry Development Society and Barry Brothers, C‑209/07, EU:C:2008:643, paragraph 34).
84 That said, it is indeed possible that a manufacturer of generic medicines finding itself in the situation envisaged by the referring court in Questions 3 to 5, after assessing its chances of success in the court proceedings between it and the manufacturer of the originator medicine concerned, may decide to abandon entry to the market concerned and, in that context, may conclude with the manufacturer of the originator medicine an agreement in settlement of those proceedings. Such an agreement cannot, however, be considered, in all cases, to be a ‘restriction by object’, within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU.
85 The fact that such an agreement involves transfers of value, either pecuniary or non-pecuniary, made by the manufacturer of the originator medicine to the manufacturer of generic medicines is not sufficient ground to classify it as a ‘restriction by object’, since those transfers of value may prove to be justified, that is, appropriate and strictly necessary having regard to the legitimate objectives of the parties to the agreement.
86 That may, in particular, be the case where the manufacturer of generic medicines receives from the manufacturer of the originator medicine sums that correspond in fact to compensation for the costs of or disruption caused by the litigation between them, or that correspond to remuneration for the actual supply, immediate or subsequent, of goods or services to the manufacturer of the originator medicines. That may also be the case when the manufacturer of the generic medicines discharges undertakings, particularly financial, given by the patent holder to him, such as a cross-undertaking in damages.
87 However, such a characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’ must be adopted when it is plain from the analysis of the settlement agreement concerned that the transfers of value provided for by it cannot have any explanation other than the commercial interest of both the holder of the patent and the party allegedly infringing the patent not to engage in competition on the merits.
88 As stated by the Advocate General in point 114 of her Opinion, the conclusion of an agreement under which a competitor of the patent holder undertakes not to enter the market and to cease its challenge to the patent in exchange for payment of a substantial sum, the sole consideration for which is that undertaking, amounts precisely to ensuring protection for that patent holder against actions seeking the revocation of its patent and to establishing a presumption that the products which may be put on the market by its competitor are unlawful. Therefore, it cannot be maintained that entering into such an agreement falls within the exercise, by the patent holder, of its prerogatives stemming from the object of the patent. That is all the more the case when it is for public authorities and not private undertakings to ensure compliance with statutory requirements.
89 Accordingly, it cannot be asserted that the conclusion of such an agreement represents, on the part of the manufacturers of generic medicines, no more than their recognition of patent rights, presumed to be valid, of the holder of that patent. If the patent holder makes, in their favour, a significant transfer of value, the sole consideration for which is their undertaking not to enter the market and no longer to challenge the patent, that indicates, in the absence of any other plausible explanation, that it is not their perception of the patent’s strength, but the prospect of that transfer of value which has induced them to refrain from entering the market and challenging the patent.
90 In order to assess whether transfers of value contained in a settlement agreement, such as those at issue in the main proceedings, can have no explanation other than the commercial interest of the parties to that agreement not to engage in competition on the merits, it is important, first, as stated by the Advocate General in point 120 of her Opinion, to take into consideration all the transfers of value made between the parties, whether those were pecuniary or non-pecuniary.
91 As envisaged by the referring court and by the Advocate General in points 120 and 170 to 172 of her Opinion, that may involve taking account of indirect transfers resulting, for example, from profits to be obtained by the manufacturer of generic medicines from a distribution contract concluded with the manufacturer of originator medicines enabling the former manufacturer to sell a possibly defined quota of generic medicines manufactured by the manufacturer of originator medicines.
92 Further, it is necessary to assess whether the net gain arising from the transfers of value by the manufacturer of originator medicines in favour of the manufacturer of generic medicines may be justified, as envisaged in paragraph 86 of the present judgment, by the existence of any quid pro quo or waivers by the manufacturer of generic medicines that are proven and legitimate.
93 Last, if that is not the case, it has to be determined whether that net gain is sufficiently large actually to act as an incentive to the manufacturer concerned of generic medicines to refrain from entering the market concerned.
94 In that regard, taking into account the uncertainty as to the outcome of those proceedings, there is no requirement that the transfers of value should necessarily be greater than the profits which the manufacturer of generic medicines would have made if it had been successful in the patent proceedings. All that matters is that those transfers of value are shown to be sufficiently beneficial to encourage the manufacturer of generic medicines to refrain from entering the market concerned and not to compete on the merits with the manufacturer of originator medicines concerned.
95 If such is the case, the agreement concerned must, in principle, be characterised as a ‘restriction by object’, within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU.
96 Such a conclusion cannot be rebutted, first, on the ground that the undertakings that have entered into such agreements argue either that settlement agreements such as those at issue in the main proceedings do not exceed the scope and the remaining period of validity of the patent to which they relate and, therefore, are not anticompetitive, or that restrictions stemming from such agreements are merely ancillary within the meaning of the judgment of 11 July 1985, Remia and Others v Commission (42/84, EU:C:1985:327).
97 While the conclusion by the holder of a patent with a party allegedly infringing that patent of a settlement agreement that does not exceed the scope and duration of remaining validity of the patent does constitute an expression of the intellectual property right of its holder, which permits that holder, inter alia, to oppose any infringement (see, to that effect, judgment of 31 October 1974, Centrafarm and de Peijper, 15/74, EU:C:1974:114, paragraph 9), the fact remains that, as also observed by the Advocate General in point 114 of her Opinion and as stated in paragraph 79 of the present judgment, that patent does not permit its holder to enter into contracts that are contrary to Article 101 TFEU.
98 Second, the fact that there is uncertainty as to the validity of the patent, whether that is due to the existence of a genuine dispute between the holder of that patent and the particular manufacturer of generic medicines, the existence of court proceedings prior to the conclusion of the settlement agreement at issue or, last, the granting of an interim injunction by a national court prohibiting the party allegedly infringing the patent from entering the market, in exchange for the holder of the patent concerned giving a cross‑undertaking in damages, is again of no relevance to the question of whether characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’ can be ruled out.
99 If it were accepted that such factors made it possible to exclude from characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’ a practice capable of displaying, in itself, a sufficient degree of harm to competition, that would be liable excessively to circumscribe the scope of that concept, even if it is to be interpreted strictly, as recalled in paragraph 67 of the present judgment.
100 It is precisely the uncertainty as to the outcome of the court proceedings in relation to whether the patent held by the manufacturer of the originator medicine is valid and whether the generic version of that medicine infringes that patent which contributes, for as long as it lasts, to the existence of a situation of at least potential competition between the two parties to those proceedings.
101 Moreover, as follows from paragraphs 48 and 49 of the present judgment, uncertainty as to the outcome of those proceedings cannot be sufficient ground to exclude from characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’ a settlement agreement which may conceivably attain the degree of harm to competition mentioned in paragraph 67 of the present judgment.
102 As stated above in paragraph 48 of the present judgment, the presumption of validity attached to a patent, no more than the existence of court proceedings prior to the conclusion of a settlement agreement and the granting of an interim injunction by a national court, sheds no light, for the purpose of application of Articles 101 and 102 TFEU, on the outcome of any dispute in relation to the validity of that patent, something which, moreover, cannot ever be known as a result of the very conclusion of the agreement between the holder of the process patent and the manufacturer concerned of generic medicines.
103 Last, and in response to Question 5, it must be observed that, where the parties to that agreement rely on its pro-competitive effects, those effects must, as elements of the context of that agreement, be duly taken into account for the purpose of its characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’, as recalled in paragraph 67 of the present judgment and in point 158 of the Opinion of the Advocate General, in so far as they are capable of calling into question the overall assessment of whether the concerted practice concerned revealed a sufficient degree of harm to competition and, consequently, of whether it should be characterised as a ‘restriction by object’.
104 Since taking account of those pro-competitive effects is intended not to undermine characterisation as a ‘restriction of competition’ within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU, but merely to appreciate the objective seriousness of the practice concerned and, consequently, to determine the means of proving it, that is in no way in conflict with the Court’s settled case-law that EU competition law does not recognise a ‘rule of reason’, by virtue of which there should be undertaken a weighing of the pro- and anticompetitive effects of an agreement when it is to be characterised as a ‘restriction of competition’ under Article 101(1) TFEU (see, to that effect, judgment of 13 July 1966, Consten and Grundig v Commission, 56/64 and 58/64, EU:C:1966:41, page 343).
105 However, taking into consideration such matters presupposes that the pro-competitive effects are not only demonstrated and relevant, but also specifically related to the agreement concerned, as mentioned, concerning the agreements at issue in the main proceedings, by the Advocate General in point 144 of her Opinion.
106 Further, as again observed by the Advocate General in point 166 of her Opinion, the mere existence of such pro-competitive effects cannot as such preclude characterisation as a ‘restriction by object’.
107 If such effects are demonstrated, relevant and specifically related to the agreement concerned, those pro-competitive effects must be sufficiently significant, so that they justify a reasonable doubt as to whether the settlement agreement concerned caused a sufficient degree of harm to competition, and, therefore, as to its anticompetitive object.
108 In that regard, the factual situation raised by the referring court in Question 5(a) and (b), read in the light of the order for reference and mentioned by the Advocate General in points 168 to 172, 175 and 179 of her Opinion, suggest that the settlement agreements at issue in the main proceedings essentially gave rise to pro-competitive effects that were not only minimal but probably uncertain.
109 While the referring court finds that those agreements did in fact give rise to a slight reduction in the price of paroxetine, that court observes at the same time that, as is clear in particular from Question 5(a), the supply of paroxetine by GSK to the manufacturers of generic medicines provided for by those agreements did not give rise to meaningful competitive pressure on GSK. The referring court states on that point that, because of the limited volumes supplied, there being no technical reason for the capping of those volumes, the manufacturers of generic medicines had no interest in competing on prices. Further, in Question 5(b), the referring court alludes to the fact that the agreements concerned brought to consumers some benefits which they would not have had if the holder of the patent had been successful in the proceedings relating to that patent, while observing that those benefits were significantly less than the competitive benefits that would have followed the placing on the market of an independent generic product if the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines had been successful in those proceedings. Last, the referring court states that, first, the change in the structure of the market induced by the agreements at issue was due not to the introduction of competition, but to a controlled reorganisation of the market for paroxetine engineered by GSK, and, second, that the supply of paroxetine and the transfer of market share by GSK to the manufacturers of generic medicines should be understood as non‑pecuniary transfers of value.
110 Such pro-competitive effects, not only minimal but probably uncertain, cannot be sufficient justification for holding a reasonable doubt, even if those effects are identified by the referring court, that a settlement agreement such as those at issue in the main proceedings revealed sufficient harm to competition, which is in any event exclusively for the referring court to determine.
111 In the light of the foregoing, the answer to Questions 3 to 5 is that Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a settlement agreement, with respect to pending court proceedings between a manufacturer of originator medicines and a manufacturer of generic medicines, who are potential competitors, concerning whether the process patent (for the manufacture of an active ingredient of an originator medicine that is in the public domain) held by that manufacturer of originator medicines is valid and whether a generic version of that medicine infringes that patent, whereby that manufacturer of generic medicines undertakes not to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient and not to pursue its action challenging the validity of that patent for the duration of that agreement, in return for transfers of value in its favour by the manufacturer of originator medicines, constitutes an agreement that has as its object the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition:
– if it is clear from all the information available that the net gain from the transfers of value by the manufacturer of originator medicines in favour of the manufacturer of generic medicines can have no other explanation than the commercial interest of the parties to the agreement not to engage in competition on the merits;
– unless the settlement agreement concerned is accompanied by proven pro‑competitive effects capable of giving rise to a reasonable doubt that it causes a sufficient degree of harm to competition.
Question 6 (characterisation as a ‘restriction by effect’)
112 First, it must be observed that, according to the request for a preliminary ruling, the referring court considered that if the settlement agreements at issue had not existed, there would have been a real possibility that the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines would have been successful against GSK in the proceedings relating to the process patent concerned, or alternatively, that the parties to those agreements would have entered into a less restrictive form of settlement agreement.
113 However, the referring court adds that, if, before the existence of a ‘restriction by effect’ can be concluded, it is necessary to find that there was a more than 50% probability that the manufacturer of generic medicines would have succeeded in proving that it was entitled to enter the market or, alternatively, that the parties would have concluded a less restrictive form of settlement agreement, such a finding cannot be made on the information available to it.
114 Accordingly, Question 6 must be understood as seeking, in essence, to ascertain whether Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that if the existence of the appreciable potential or real effects on competition of a settlement agreement such as those at issue in the main proceedings is to be proved, and, if, therefore, that agreement is to be characterised as a ‘restriction by effect’, that presupposes a finding that, in the absence of that agreement, either the manufacturer of generic medicines who is a party to that agreement would probably have succeeded in the proceedings relating to the process patent concerned, or that the parties to that agreement would probably have concluded a less restrictive settlement agreement.
115 As stated in paragraph 66 of the present judgment, in the event that analysis of the concerted practice concerned does not reveal a sufficient degree of harm to competition, it is then necessary to examine the effects of that practice and, in order to classify that practice as a ‘restriction of competition’ within the meaning of Article 101(1) TFEU, to identify the factors which establish that competition was, in fact, prevented, or restricted, to an appreciable extent.
116 To that effect, it is necessary to take into consideration the actual context in which that practice occurs, in particular the economic and legal context in which the undertakings concerned operate, the nature of the goods or services affected, as well as the real conditions of the functioning and the structure of the market or markets in question (judgment of 11 September 2014, MasterCard and Others v Commission, C‑382/12 P, EU:C:2014:2201, paragraph 165 and the case-law cited).
117 In accordance with settled case-law, the restrictive effects on competition may be both real and potential, but they must, in any event, be sufficiently appreciable (see, to that effect, judgments of 9 July 1969, Völk, 5/69, EU:C:1969:35, paragraph 7, and of 23 November 2006, Asnef-Equifax and Administración del Estado, C‑238/05, EU:C:2006:734, paragraph 50).
118 In order to assess the effects of a concerted practice with regard to Article 101 TFEU, competition should be assessed within the actual context in which it would occur in the absence of the agreement in dispute (judgment of 11 September 2014, MasterCard and Others v Commission, C‑382/12 P, EU:C:2014:2201, paragraph 161).
119 It follows that, in a situation such as that at issue in the main proceedings, the establishment of the counter-factual does not involve, on the part of the referring court, any definitive finding in relation to the chances of success of the manufacturer of generic medicines in the patent proceedings or to the probability of the conclusion of a less restrictive agreement.
120 The sole purpose of the counter-factual is to establish the realistic possibilities with respect to that manufacturer’s conduct in the absence of the agreement at issue. Accordingly, while that counter-factual cannot be unaffected by the chances of success of the manufacturer of generic medicines in the patent proceedings or again in relation to the probability of conclusion of a less restrictive agreement, those factors constitute, however, only some factors among many to be taken into consideration in order to determine how the market will probably operate and be structured if the agreement concerned is not concluded.
121 Consequently, in order to establish the existence of appreciable potential or real effects on competition of settlement agreements such as those at issue in the main proceedings, the referring court does not have to find either that the manufacturer of generic medicines who is a party to that agreement would probably have been successful in the patent proceedings, or that the parties to that agreement would probably have concluded a less restrictive settlement agreement.
122 In the light of the foregoing, the answer to Question 6 is that Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that if a settlement agreement, such as those at issue in the main proceedings, is to be demonstrated to have appreciable potential or real effects on competition, and, therefore, is to be characterised as a ‘restriction by effect’, that does not presuppose a finding that, in the absence of that agreement, either the manufacturer of generic medicines who is a party to that agreement would probably have been successful in the proceedings relating to the process patent at issue, or the parties to that agreement would probably have concluded a less restrictive settlement agreement.
Questions 7 to 10 (Article 102 TFEU)
Question 7 (definition of the relevant market)
123 By Question 7, the referring court seeks to ascertain whether, where a patented medicine is therapeutically substitutable with a number of other medicines of a therapeutic class and where the alleged abuse within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU consists in the patent holder effectively excluding from the market generic versions of that medicine, those generic medicines should be taken into consideration for the purposes of definition of the product market concerned, although they could not lawfully enter the market before the expiry of the patent if (as is uncertain) that patent is valid and if that patent is infringed by those generic medicines.
124 As a preliminary point, it must be observed that that question must be placed in the context of the debate pursued before the referring court as to the extent of the product market for the purposes of determining whether GSK held a dominant position. GSK argued, in particular, that, given the centrality of therapeutic substitutability, the SSRIs other than paroxetine ought also to be included in the product market.
125 However, as is clear from the reply of the referring court to the Court’s request for information, the issue of whether SSRIs other than paroxetine are also to be included in the product market concerned is not the subject of this question, the referring court having found as a fact that the other SSRIs exercised little pressure on the prices of Seroxat set by GSK.
126 Consequently, Question 7 concerns solely the issue whether Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that, in a situation where a manufacturer of originator medicines containing an active ingredient which is in the public domain, but the process of manufacturing which is covered by a process patent, the validity of which is uncertain, impedes, on that basis, the market entry of generic versions of that medicine, there should be taken into consideration for the definition of the product market concerned not only the originator version of that medicine but also its generic versions, although the latter would not be able legally to enter the market before the expiry of that process patent.
127 In that regard, it must be recalled that the definition of the relevant market, in the application of Article 102 TFEU, is, as a general rule, a prerequisite of any assessment of whether the undertaking concerned holds a dominant position (see, to that effect, judgment of 21 February 1973, Europemballage and Continental Can v Commission, 6/72, EU:C:1973:22, paragraph 32), the objective being to define the boundaries within which it must be assessed whether that undertaking is able to behave, to an appreciable extent, independently of its competitors, customers and consumers (see, to that effect, judgment of 9 November 1983, Nederlandsche Banden-Industrie-Michelin v Commission, 322/81, EU:C:1983:313, paragraph 37).
128 The definition of that relevant market involves defining, first, the product market and then, secondly, the geographical market (see, to that effect, judgment of 14 February 1978, United Brands and United Brands Continentaal v Commission, 27/76, EU:C:1978:22, paragraphs 10 and 11).
129 As regards the product market, which is the only point at issue in this question, it is clear from settled case-law that the concept of the relevant market implies that there can be effective competition between the products or services which form part of it, and this presupposes that there is a sufficient degree of interchangeability between all the products or services forming part of the same market in so far as a specific use of such products or services is concerned. That interchangeability or substitutability is not assessed solely in relation to the objective characteristics of the products and services at issue. There must also be taken into consideration the conditions of competition and the structure of supply and demand on the market (judgment of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraph 51 and the case-law cited).
130 In that context, and as the Advocate General stated, in essence, in point 222 of her Opinion, the interchangeability or substitutability of products are naturally dynamic, in that a new supply of products may alter the conception of the products considered to be interchangeable with a product already present on the market or as substitutable for that product and, in that way, justify a new definition of the parameters of the relevant market.
131 As regards, in particular, the definition of the product market to which, for the possible application of Article 102 TFEU, an originator medicine belongs such as, in the main proceedings, the paroxetine marketed as ‘Seroxat’, which can be therapeutically substituted with other SSRIs, it is clear from the point made in the preceding paragraph of the present judgment that a supply of generic medicines containing the same active ingredient, in this case paroxetine, could lead to a situation where the originator medicine is considered, in the professional circles concerned, to be interchangeable only with those generic medicines and, consequently, to belong to a specific market, limited exclusively to medicines which contain that active ingredient.
132 Such a finding presupposes, however, in accordance with the principles set out in paragraph 129 of the present judgment, that there is a sufficient degree of interchangeability between the originator medicine and the generic medicines concerned.
133 Such is the case if the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines are in a position to present themselves within a short period on the market concerned with sufficient strength to constitute a serious counterbalance to the manufacturer of the originator medicine already on the market (see, to that effect, judgment of 21 February 1973, Europemballage and Continental Can v Commission, 6/72, EU:C:1973:22, paragraph 34).
134 That is accordingly true where, on the expiry of the patent relating to the active ingredient concerned, or of the data exclusivity period of that active ingredient, those manufacturers of generic medicines are in a position to enter the market immediately or within a short period, particularly where those parties have formed a prior effective strategy for market entry, have taken the steps necessary to achieve it, such as, for example, the lodging of an MA application or the obtaining of such an MA, or have concluded supply contracts with third-party distributors.
135 In that regard, as stated by the Advocate General in point 239 of her Opinion, evidence of the perception, by the manufacturer of originator medicines, of the immediacy of the threat of market entry by the manufacturers of generic medicines might also be taken into account in order to assess the significance of the competitive constraints imposed by the latter.
136 The fact that the manufacturer of originator medicines relies on an intellectual property right over the process of manufacturing the active ingredient concerned as capable of possibly impeding the market entry of generic versions of the originator medicine containing that active ingredient cannot be sufficient ground for any other finding.
137 While, admittedly, and as recalled in paragraph 41 of the present judgment, Directive 2004/48 and Article 17(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights ensure a high level of protection of intellectual property in the internal market, the fact remains that the process patent on which a manufacturer of originator medicines is likely to rely in order to impede the placing on the market of a generic version of a medicine containing an active ingredient that is in the public domain does not offer any certainty to the manufacturer of the originator medicine concerned that the generic medicine containing that active ingredient may not lawfully be placed on the market or that that patent is safe from any challenge, as was moreover the case in the main proceedings, as is clear from paragraph 14 of the present judgment.
138 Consequently, and provided that the conditions set out in paragraphs 133 and 134 of the present judgment are satisfied, the generic versions of an originator medicine containing an active ingredient which is in the public domain, but the process of manufacturing which is protected by a patent, the validity of which remains uncertain, must be taken into account for the purposes of definition of the relevant market, if due regard is to be given to the case-law cited in paragraph 129 of the present judgment, which requires the taking into consideration of the conditions of competition and the structure of supply and demand in the market concerned.
139 That conclusion does not contradict the Court’s case-law that if pharmaceutical products are manufactured or sold illegally, that prevents such products, in principle, from being regarded as substitutable or interchangeable (judgment of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraph 52). That case-law concerns not the entry into the market of generic versions of an originator medicine of which the active ingredient is in the public domain which are alleged to infringe a process patent, but the placing on the market of a medicine in the absence of an MA issued by the competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2001/83 or an authorisation issued in accordance with the provisions of Regulation No 726/2004, the objective of that legislation being the protection of the health of patients and public health (judgment of 23 January 2018, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Others, C‑179/16, EU:C:2018:25, paragraphs 81 and 82).
140 In the light of the foregoing, the answer to Question 7 is that Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that, in a situation where a manufacturer of originator medicines containing an active ingredient which is in the public domain, but the process of manufacturing which is covered by a process patent, the validity of which is disputed, impedes, on the basis of that process patent, the market entry of generic versions of that medicine, there must be taken into consideration, for the purposes of definition of the product market concerned, not only the originator version of that medicine but also its generic versions, even if the latter would not be able to enter legally the market before the expiry of that process patent, if the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines are in a position to present themselves within a short period on the market concerned with sufficient strength to constitute a serious counterbalance to the manufacturer of originator medicines already on that market, which it is for the referring court to determine.
Questions 8 to 10
141 As a preliminary point, it must be observed that, by Question 8, the referring court seeks to ascertain whether, in the circumstances such as those of the main proceedings and on the assumption that the holder of process patent at issue, in this case GSK, holds a dominant position, the fact that it concluded a settlement agreement such as those at issue in the main proceedings constitutes an abuse of that dominant position within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU.
142 It is however clear from the documents available to the Court that a penalty was imposed on GSK not because it had committed a number of abuses of a dominant position by concluding each of the agreements at issue with IVAX, GUK and Alpharma respectively, but for having committed a single abuse of a dominant position because of its overall strategy of concluding those agreements with those manufacturers of generic medicines.
143 Consequently, the Court must answer from that perspective alone, as alluded to by the referring court in Question 10(a).
144 It must also be observed, as is apparent from Question 9 and Question 10(b), read in the light of the reply of the referring court to the Court’s request for information, that a penalty was imposed on GSK for having committed an abuse of a dominant position not only because of the agreements concluded with GUK and Alpharma, with respect to which penalties were also imposed under United Kingdom and EU competition law, but also because of a third agreement concluded with IVAX which (i) was entered into not to bring to an end ongoing court proceedings but in order to avoid such proceedings; (ii) was exempted from the scope of United Kingdom competition law due to a specific provision of domestic law; and (iii) gave rise to favourable effects, namely a reduction in the level of reimbursement for the medicine concerned because of the structure of the national system for the reimbursement of pharmacies by the public health authorities, securing substantial savings for those authorities.
145 Consequently, Questions 8 to 10, taken together, must be understood as seeking to ascertain whether Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that the strategy of a dominant undertaking that is the holder of a process patent, for the production of an active ingredient that is in the public domain, which leads it to conclude, either as a precaution or following the bringing of court proceedings challenging the validity of that patent, a number of settlement agreements, the effect of which is, at least, to keep temporarily outside the market potential competitors who manufacture generic medicines using that active ingredient, constitutes an abuse of a dominant position, within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU, even though one of the agreements concerned was exempted from the scope of national competition law.
146 In accordance with settled case-law, the same practice may give rise to an infringement of both Article 101 TFEU and Article 102 TFEU, even if the two provisions pursue distinct objectives (see, to that effect, judgments of 13 February 1979, Hoffmann-La Roche v Commission, 85/76, EU:C:1979:36, paragraph 116, and of 16 March 2000, Compagnie maritime belge transports and Others v Commission, C‑395/96 P and C‑396/96 P, EU:C:2000:132, paragraph 33).
147 Accordingly, a contract-oriented strategy of a manufacturer of originator medicines holding a dominant position in a market may be penalised not only under Article 101 TFEU by reason of each agreement taken individually but also under Article 102 TFEU for the possible additional damage that strategy may cause to the competitive structure of a market in which, because of the dominance in that market of that manufacturer of originator medicines, the degree of competition is already weakened (see, to that effect, judgment of 13 February 1979, Hoffmann-La Roche v Commission, 85/76, EU:C:1979:36, paragraph 120).
148 In that regard, it must be recalled that the concept of ‘abuse of a dominant position’ within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU is an objective concept relating to the conduct of a dominant undertaking which, on a market where the degree of competition is already weakened precisely because of the presence of the undertaking concerned, through recourse to methods different from those governing normal competition in products or services on the basis of the transactions of commercial operators, has the effect of hindering the maintenance of the degree of competition still existing in the market or the growth of that competition (judgments of 13 February 1979, Hoffmann-La Roche v Commission, 85/76, EU:C:1979:36, paragraph 91, and of 19 April 2012, Tomra Systems and Others v Commission, C‑549/10 P, EU:C:2012:221, paragraph 17).
149 However, the fact that an undertaking is in a dominant position does not disqualify it from protecting its own commercial interests if they are attacked, and it must be conceded the right to take such reasonable steps as it deems appropriate to protect its commercial interests (judgment of 14 February 1978, United Brands and United Brands Continentaal v Commission, 27/76, EU:C:1978:22, paragraph 189).
150 More particularly, the exercise of an exclusive right linked to an intellectual property right, such as the conclusion of settlement agreements between the holder of a patent and parties allegedly infringing that patent in order to bring to an end litigation relating to that patent, is one of the rights of the holder of an intellectual property right, and consequently the exercise of such a right, even when done by a dominant undertaking, cannot in itself constitute an abuse of the dominant position (see, to that effect, judgment of 16 July 2015, Huawei Technologies, C‑170/13, EU:C:2015:477, paragraph 46 and the case-law cited).
151 However, such conduct cannot be accepted when its purpose is precisely to strengthen the dominant position of the party engaging in it and to abuse that position (see, to that effect, judgment of 14 February 1978, United Brands and United Brands Continentaal v Commission, 27/76, EU:C:1978:22, paragraph 189), as when such conduct is intended to deprive parties demonstrated to be potential competitors of effective access to a market, such as that of a medicine containing an active ingredient that is in the public domain.
152 Accordingly, when the intention of a manufacturer of originator medicines holding a dominant position is to protect its own commercial interests, in particular by defending its patents, and to guard itself against the competition of generic medicines, that alone does not justify resorting to practices that fall outside the scope of competition on the merits (see, by analogy, judgment of 16 July 2015, Huawei Technologies, C‑170/13, EU:C:2015:477, paragraph 47 and the case-law cited).
153 A dominant undertaking has a special responsibility not to allow its behaviour to impair genuine, undistorted competition in the internal market (judgment of 6 September 2017, Intel v Commission, C‑413/14 P, EU:C:2017:632, paragraph 135 and the case-law cited).
154 From that perspective, it must, further, be observed that if such conduct is to be characterised as abusive, that presupposes that that conduct was capable of restricting competition and, in particular, producing the alleged exclusionary effects (see, to that effect, judgments of 17 February 2011, TeliaSonera Sverige, C‑52/09, EU:C:2011:83, paragraphs 64 and 66, and of 6 September 2017, Intel v Commission, C‑413/14 P, EU:C:2017:632, paragraph 138), and that assessment must be undertaken having regard to all the relevant facts surrounding that conduct (see, to that effect, judgment of 17 February 2011, TeliaSonera Sverige, C‑52/09, EU:C:2011:83, paragraph 68).
155 In this case, the information contained in the documents available to the Court indicate that the CMA and the referring court considered that the set of settlement agreements concluded on the initiative of GSK were part of an overall strategy on the part of that manufacturer of originator medicines and had, if not as their object, at least the effect of delaying the market entry of generic medicines containing the active ingredient ‘paroxetine’ that had earlier entered the public domain and, therefore, of preventing a significant fall in the prices of the originator medicines containing that active ingredient and produced by GSK; the direct consequence of that entry would have been an appreciable reduction in GSK’s market share and an equally appreciable reduction in the sale price of its originator medicine.
156 However, such a contract-oriented strategy, the actual nature of which it is for the referring court to determine having regard to the evidence available to it, constitutes, in principle, a practice that impedes, while adversely affecting at least the national health systems if not the final consumer, the growth of competition in the market of a medicine containing an active ingredient that is in the public domain.
157 The anticompetitive effects of such a contract-oriented strategy are liable to exceed the anticompetitive effects inherent in the conclusion of each of the agreements that are part of it. That strategy has a significant foreclosure effect on the market of the originator medicine containing the active ingredient at issue, depriving the consumer of the benefits of entry into that market of potential competitors manufacturing their own medicine and, therefore, reserving that market directly or indirectly to the manufacturer of the originator medicine concerned.
158 In that regard, the fact, alluded to in the context of Question 9, that one of the settlement agreements at issue, namely the GSK/IVAX agreement, was entered into not to settle existing court proceedings but to avoid the bringing of such proceedings is immaterial.
159 Likewise, the fact that one of the settlement agreements concluded by that manufacturer of originator medicines, in this case the GSK/IVAX agreement, could not have been penalised under national competition law or that it might have led to substantial savings for the national health system cannot in itself call into question the finding that such a strategy existed and that it constituted an abuse.
160 Irrespective of whether the provision of United Kingdom law under which that agreement could not be penalised is in accordance with the principle of primacy attached to Article 101 TFEU, the mere fact that that agreement was not penalised does not mean that it did not have anticompetitive effects.
161 Consequently, and recalling that it is not the place of a dominant undertaking to dictate how many viable competitors are to be allowed to compete with it (see, to that effect, judgment of 19 April 2012, Tomra Systems and Others v Commission, C‑549/10 P, EU:C:2012:221, paragraph 42), it cannot be ruled out that the GSK/IVAX agreement might have generated, taken together with the GSK/Alpharma and GSK/GUK agreements, cumulative effects from parallel restrictive agreements that were liable to strengthen GSK’s dominant position, and, therefore, that the strategy of that manufacturer of originator medicines may prove to be abusive within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU, which, however, it is solely for the referring court to determine.
162 To that effect, it must also be recalled that, while, for the purposes of application of Article 102 TFEU, there is no requirement to establish that the dominant undertaking has an anticompetitive intent, evidence of such an intent, while it cannot be sufficient in itself, constitutes a fact that may be taken into account in order to determine that a dominant position has been abused (see, to that effect, judgment of 19 April 2012, Tomra Systems and Others v Commission, C‑549/10 P, EU:C:2012:221, paragraphs 20, 21 and 24).
163 In this case, the CMA and the referring court consider that the conclusion by GSK of the agreements at issue was part of an overall strategy pursued by GSK to maintain as long as possible its monopoly position in the United Kingdom paroxetine market.
164 Consequently, if those matters are established, any anticompetitive intent on the part of GSK must be taken into consideration by the referring court in order to assess whether the conduct of GSK must be characterised as ‘abuse of a dominant position’ within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU.
165 That said, it must be recalled, in response to Question 10(b) and (c), that, in accordance with settled case-law, it is open to a dominant undertaking to provide justification for behaviour that is liable to be caught by the prohibition under Article 102 TFEU, in particular by establishing that the exclusionary effect produced by its conduct may be counterbalanced, or outweighed, by advantages in terms of efficiency that also benefit consumers (see, to that effect, judgment of 27 March 2012, Post Danmark, C‑209/10, EU:C:2012:172, paragraphs 40 and 41 and the case-law cited).
166 To that effect, it is for the dominant undertaking to show that the efficiency gains likely to result from the conduct under consideration offset any likely negative effects on competition and the interests of consumers in the affected markets; that those gains have been, or are likely to be, brought about as a result of that conduct; that such conduct is necessary for the achievement of those efficiency gains, and that it does not eliminate effective competition, by removing all or most existing sources of actual or potential competition (judgment of 27 March 2012, Post Danmark, C‑209/10, EU:C:2012:172, paragraph 42), and consequently that undertaking has to do more than put forward vague, general and theoretical arguments on that point or rely exclusively on its own commercial interests.
167 It follows that the assessment of whether a practice that may be subject to the prohibition laid down in Article 102 TFEU is justified requires, inter alia, a weighing of the favourable and unfavourable effects on competition of the practice concerned (judgment of 6 September 2017, Intel v Commission, C‑413/14 P, EU:C:2017:632, paragraph 140), which requires objective analysis of its effects on the market.
168 Accordingly, the taking into consideration of, inter alia, the efficiency gains of the practices concerned cannot depend on the objectives that may have been pursued by the party engaged in those practices and, therefore, on whether those practices result from deliberate intention or, on the contrary, are only fortuitous or accidental.
169 Such a conclusion is moreover confirmed by the Court’s settled case-law that the concept of abuse of a dominant position is an objective one (see, inter alia, judgments of 13 February 1979, Hoffmann-La Roche v Commission, 85/76, EU:C:1979:36, paragraph 91, and of 16 July 2015, Huawei Technologies, C‑170/13, EU:C:2015:477), which implies that any justifications of such a practice should themselves be assessed objectively.
170 Consequently, the fact that the financial implications of the GSK/IVAX agreement that are favourable to the national health system, referred to in Question 10(b), may have been accidental cannot have the result that, for that reason alone, such financial implications are excluded from the weighing of favourable and unfavourable effects on competition of the practice concerned, and those financial implications must therefore be duly taken into account in order to assess whether they do constitute efficiency gains that may arise from the conduct under examination and, if so, whether they offset the adverse effects that that conduct is capable of having on competition and the interests of consumers in the market affected.
171 In that regard, it must be stated that that weighing of effects should be carried out taking due account of the specific characteristics of the practice concerned and more particularly, with respect to a unilateral practice such as that at issue in the main proceedings, of the fact mentioned by the referring court in Question 10(b), namely the fact that the demonstrated favourable effects resulting from the GSK/IVAX agreement are significantly less than those which would have arisen upon the independent market entry of a generic version of Seroxat following a successful outcome for IVAX in the patent proceedings.
172 In the light of the foregoing, the answer to Questions 8 to 10, taken together, is that Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that the strategy of a dominant undertaking, the holder of a process patent for the production of an active ingredient that is in the public domain, which leads it to conclude, either as a precautionary measure, or following the bringing of court proceedings challenging the validity of that patent, a set of settlement agreements which have, at the least, the effect of keeping temporarily outside the market potential competitors who manufacture generic medicines using that active ingredient, constitutes an abuse of a dominant position within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU, provided that that strategy has the capacity to restrict competition and, in particular, to have exclusionary effects, going beyond the specific anticompetitive effects of each of the settlement agreements that are part of that strategy, which it is for the referring court to determine.
Costs
173 Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings, a step in the action 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:
1. Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a manufacturer of originator medicines who is the holder of a manufacturing process patent for an active ingredient that is in the public domain, on the one hand, and the manufacturers of generic medicines who are preparing to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient, on the other, who are in dispute as to whether that patent is valid or whether the generic medicines concerned infringe that patent, are potential competitors, where it is established that the manufacturer of generic medicines has in fact a firm intention and an inherent ability to enter the market, and that its market entry does not meet barriers that are insurmountable, which it is for the referring court to assess.
2. Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that a settlement agreement with respect to pending court proceedings between a manufacturer of originator medicines and a manufacturer of generic medicines, who are potential competitors, concerning whether a process patent (for the manufacture of an active ingredient of an originator medicine that is in the public domain) held by the manufacturer of originator medicines is valid and whether a generic version of that medicine infringes the patent, whereby that manufacturer of generic medicines undertakes not to enter the market of the medicine containing that active ingredient and not to pursue its action for the revocation of that patent for the duration of that agreement, in return for transfers of value in its favour by the manufacturer of originator medicines, constitutes an agreement which has as its object the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition:
– if it is clear from all the information available that the net gain from the transfers of value by the manufacturer of originator medicines in favour of the manufacturer of generic medicines can have no explanation other than the commercial interest of the parties to the agreement not to engage in competition on the merits;
– unless the settlement agreement concerned is accompanied by proven pro-competitive effects capable of giving rise to a reasonable doubt that it causes a sufficient degree of harm to competition.
3. Article 101(1) TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that if a settlement agreement, such as those at issue in the main proceedings, is to be demonstrated to have appreciable potential or real effects on competition, and, therefore, is to be characterised as a ‘restriction by effect’, that does not presuppose a finding that, in the absence of that agreement, either the manufacturer of generic medicines who is a party to that agreement would probably have been successful in the proceedings relating to the process patent at issue, or the parties to that agreement would probably have concluded a less restrictive settlement agreement.
4. Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that, in a situation where a manufacturer of originator medicines containing an active ingredient which is in the public domain, but the process of manufacturing which is covered by a process patent, the validity of which is disputed, impedes, on the basis of that process patent, the market entry of generic versions of that medicine, there must be taken into consideration, for the purposes of definition of the product market concerned, not only the originator version of that medicine but also its generic versions, even if the latter would not be able to enter the market legally before the expiry of that process patent, if the manufacturers concerned of generic medicines are in a position to present themselves within a short period on the market concerned with sufficient strength to constitute a serious counterbalance to the manufacturer of originator medicines already on that market, which it is for the referring court to determine.
5. Article 102 TFEU must be interpreted as meaning that the strategy of a dominant undertaking, the holder of a process patent for the production of an active ingredient that is in the public domain, which leads it to conclude, either as a precautionary measure or following the bringing of court proceedings challenging the validity of that patent, a set of settlement agreements which have, at the least, the effect of keeping temporarily outside the market potential competitors who manufacture generic medicines using that active ingredient, constitutes an abuse of a dominant position within the meaning of Article 102 TFEU, provided that that strategy has the capacity to restrict competition and, in particular, to have exclusionary effects, going beyond the specific anticompetitive effects of each of the settlement agreements that are part of that strategy, which it is for the referring court to determine.