Last week, on May 30, the CJEU gave its judgment in the Conny case (C-400/22) elaborating on the requirement from Article 8 of the Consumer Rights Directive to clearly label an online obligation to pay on a website on a relevant button with the words 'order with obligation to pay' (or an equivalent of this).
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Order with an obligation to pay - whether payment is conditional or unconditional
The CJEU clarifies, as expected, that the trader's obligation to transparently inform consumers concluding a contract through its website about an obligation to pay, just before a consumer binds themselves to this payment, does not change if the payment is dependent on satisfying a subsequent condition (para 56). This allows the consumer to explicitly acknowledge his consent to be bound by an online order with an obligation to pay (paras 43, 50). The CJEU points to the lack of distinction in the CRD between conditional and unconditional payments, as well as the duty to inform placed on traders when an order 'implies' an obligation to pay (paras 46-47). A different interpretation would have led to traders being able to explicitly inform consumers about their obligation to pay not at the ordering process, when consumers may still avoid the order and the subsequent payment obligation, but only at a time when the payment becomes due (para 52). Traders could then circumvent their duty to inform by placing in their T&Cs an objective condition, fulfilment of which would be required to lead to a payment obligation (para 53).
Sanction of voidability
An important clarification follows in paras 54-55 of the judgment. The CJEU emphasises the CRD's wording, which only states that a consumer is not bound by the contract in case the above-mentioned trader's duty has been breached. This does not need to indicate that a contract is void, but rather that a consumer has an opportunity to avoid it. This would make a significant difference in cases such as the one referred to the CJEU, when it is a trader who is trying to use an infringement of consumer protection rules as a 'weapon' against, ultimately, a consumer.