Monday, 13 October 2014

International Association of Consumer Law 2015 conference

PRESENTING

This post is just to remind our readers that there is only one month left to submit an abstract if you would like to present your work during our conference 29 June - 1 July 2015 in Amsterdam. We will make sure that the 15th International Association of Consumer Law conference will be informative and fun. While it's theme is "Virtues and Consumer Law" we understand it broadly and submissions in any areas related to consumer protection (e.g. consumer health, enforcement of consumer protection, consumer finances) are encouraged. We are planning three days packed with simultaneous sessions on various consumer protection issues so there will be a chance to discuss anything you may be interested in. The deadline for submissions is November 15th, 2014.

PARTICIPATION

For anyone who is not interested in presenting their research but would like to participate in the conference, the registration is already open. You may register through this website.

FEE WAIVER

Additionally, we will have a few scholarships available for participants from Asia, Africa and Latin America under the age of 35. We will award the scholarships at our discretion, based on the quality of the abstracts sent before the call for papers' deadline. Selected scholarship students will receive a fee waiver. Please add information that you are applying for this scholarship when you submit your abstract. 


Friday, 10 October 2014

Behavioural Exchange 2015 (BX2015)

Anyone interested in looking into behavioural insights when researching, evaluating or drafting law should book 2nd and 3rd of September 2015 for the Behavioural Exchange 2015. I'm looking foreward to find out more about this in the coming months.

Thursday, 9 October 2014

More light shed on clinical trials data

On 2nd of October 2014 the European Medicines Agency (EMA) Management Board unanimously adopted the new policy pursuant to which the clinical reports that underpin the decision-making on medicines will need to be published (Publication of clinical reports). This measure is to become effective as of 1 January 2015 and will apply to all applications for centralized marketing authorizations submitted after that date. EMA will thus increase transparency of clinical trials prior to May 2016 when the new rules on clinical trials may enter into force (see our previous post: New rules on clinical trials - adopted). The quest for granting access to this data has been long-lasting and had many obstacles on its path, but the pharma industry finally decided to co-operate with the academics and consumer advocates and allow them to re-evaluate the data of clinical trials. The individual patient data will not be revealed and any information that could be perceived as commercially confidential will be redacted. BEUC welcomed the news, however, it finds it 'deplorable' that pharma companies may still use the guise of commercially confidential information to avoid revealing all their data (Clinical trials transparency partially boosted by EMA).

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Consumers' choice and innovation in retail food sector

The European Commission published last week the results of a retail food study. The study "The economic impact of modern retail on choice and innovation in the EU food sector" has been jointly prepared by Ernst & Young, Cambridge Econometrics Ltd. and Arcadia International and for anyone interested in this sector and its developments it has a fascinating amount of data spread out on ca 450 pages (more than 300 shops analysed in 9 Member States with 23 product categories and for a period of time 2004-2012). What we can gather from the European Commission's press release is that there was a worry expressed by the traders active in the food supply chain that large retailers imposed detrimental conditions on their suppliers (a reason to adopt CESL?) and the latter ones were not able to invest in new products, which could lead to the reduction of choice and innovation in food products for EU consumers (Commission publishes results of retail food study). The main results as we could hear are:

  • consumer choice continuously increases (more shops, products, brands, package sizes);
  • number of innovations reaching consumer each year decreased since 2008 by 6.5%;
  • most innovations nowadays concern the packaging;
  • range of choice/innovation is related to the size and types of shops and the economic environment (e.g. whether the local area is high or low on unemployment, GDP per capita etc.), as well as to the turnover in a product category;
  • more competition among shops leads to the introduction of more choice/ innovation;
  • in moderately concentrated retail markets, retailers' stronger bargaining power in comparison with the supplier did not point to the reduction of choice and innovation in food products.
The last presented finding suggests that the assumption that led to this study might have been incorrect, so that the need to grant suppliers more protection in EU law might not necessarily be related to consumer protection. We will need to see what are the responses to this study (allowed to be submitted before 30 January 2015).

Wednesday, 1 October 2014

A "nudge unit" for Germany

Over the past years various governments have introduced so-called “nudge units”, by which they pay tribute to the challenging task of translating behavioural insights into policy-making and law-making. Behavioural economics as a discipline is characterized by research identifying how people, for instance consumers, really act. It shows how they can systematically deviate from rational behavior. Such insights are generally established by interdisciplinary work involving psychologists, sociologists, lawyers and economists. 
Following the U.S. (“Social and Behavioral Sciences Team”) and Great Britain (“Behavioural Insights Team”) also the German Chancellery is currently in the process of setting up such an interdisciplinary team to apply empirical evidence from behavioural economics in public policy making.

Thursday, 25 September 2014

Evidence of disclosure in consumer credit cases - AG Wahl's opinion in Case C-449/13 CA Consumer Finance v Bakkaus and Bonato

Contracts for consumer credit continue to raise questions under EU law, especially in regard to the mandatory disclosure duties that form the subject of the book that was mentioned in the previous post. On September 11th, Advocate General Wahl gave his opinion in a French case that is currently pending at the CJEU, CA Consumer Finance v Bakkaus and Bonato (opinion not yet available in English).

The case concerns the interpretation of the European Directive 2008/48/EC on credit agreements for consumers, in particular as regards pre-contractual information duties of professional credit providers towards consumers. Both Ms Bakkaus and Mr and Mrs Bonato had concluded contracts for car loans with CA Consumer Finance. In a dispute regarding the repayment of these loans, the tribunal d'instance in Orléans of its own motion (the consumers had not appeared in court) raised several preliminary questions concerning the rules of evidence applying under the European Directive. These questions concern the credit provider's duties under the Directive to (i) provide consumers with certain information and an explanation, in order for them to make a well-advised choice before entering into a credit agreement, and (ii) to assess the consumer's creditworthiness, with an eye on both parties' responsibilities when they decide to conclude the contract. According to French law, a credit provider faces severe consequences in case of non-compliance with these duties, including a loss of the possibility to recover interest on repayments of the loan. 

The referring judge in Orléans wishes to obtain more clarity as to (a) who bears the burden of proof of (non-)fulfillment of the credit provider's information duties and (b) in which form evidence has to be produced. AG Wahl submits that the answer to the first question implicitly follows from the Directive, whereas the answer to the second question depends on national laws, in accordance with the principle of procedural autonomy of Member States.

According to AG Wahl, the effective exercise of the rights deriving from the Directive does not preclude a national provision, such as the French rule applicable in this case, that requires the credit provider to prove that he has correctly fulfilled his information duties. On the contrary, in line with the Directive's objectives of consumer protection, it may be assumed that the burden of proof rests on the professional credit provider. In case a national judge lacks sufficient information to assess whether the relevant information duties have been fulfilled, the judge should ask the credit company to provide additional data.

The AG is of the opinion that the credit provider may not shift the burden of proof to the consumer by simply including a standard term in the contract according to which the consumer declares to have received the relevant information. The Directive does not preclude credit providers from using such standard terms, as they may support the proof of fulfillment of information duties, but additional evidence may be required in the specific case.

As regards the consumer's creditworthiness, the AG considers that Article 8 of the Directive obliges the credit provider to assess this on the basis of sufficient information. In this context, the credit provider may not limit the assessment to simple declarations by the consumer that have not been checked. Article 8 does, however, in the AG's opinion not require the credit provider to systematically check information  given by the consumer in order to establish its truthfulness.

Finally, AG Wahl submits that Article 5(6) of the Directive should be interpreted in the sense that, on the one hand, the credit provider should not assess the consumer's financial situation and needs before having given an explanation of the pre-contractual information, whereas, on the other hand, an appropriate explanation cannot be considered to follow from contractual information included in the credit agreement. The credit provider can, however, not be required to provide an explanation in a written document.

Even more than you wanted to know

New additions have been added to the virtual symposium on Ben-Shahar's and Schneider's book on mandatory disclosure. They include contributions by:

VII. Nancy Kim

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Online 'free' newspapers also subject to national libel and defamation rules - CJEU in Papasavvas and Others (C-291/13)

11 September 2014: CJEU judgment in case Papasavvas and Others (C-291/13)

Over a week ago the CJEU issued an important judgment in this case concerning interpretation of the e-Commerce Directive (2000/31/EC). While e-Commerce Directive is not per se a consumer protection measure, its provisions regulating the legal aspects of electronic commerce have a significant impact on European consumers, as well.

In this case from Cyprus Mr Papasavvas claimed damages against a newspaper company for what he considered to be defamation through articles published in the daily newspaper, which were published online on two websites. One of the questions raised was whether the e-Commerce Directive should apply at all in this case, since the websites of the newspaper were free for Mr Papasavvas to access and peruse and they only generated income from the advertisements placed on them. The question was whether the Directive should only apply to such 'information society services' that have been provided against a remuneration from the recipient? The positive answer to this question would significantly lower the level of protection granted online to internet users since many websites nowadays earn their money through advertisements rather than through financial contributors of their readers. The CJEU confirms that the 'service' does not need to be paid by the person for whom it is performed (Par. 28-30) to fall under the scope of the e-Commerce Directive, even if the definition refers to a service 'normally provided for remuneration' (Par. 27). It is sufficient that this remuneration is being paid by someone else than the recipient.

This broader scope of application could allow the online newspaper to rely on Articles 12 and 14 of the Directive in order to escape liability for the posted content (incl. defamation) if it could prove that it was 'merely' a 'conduit'. In this case the online newspaper could not be qualified as such. For these articles to apply the service provider would have to have no knowledge or control over the information that was transmitted or stored, which was not the case here. (Par. 40) (this and following articles refer also to the Google France case)

The e-Commerce Directive allows for the Member States to keep on applying their rules on civil liability (incl. for defamation) to information society service providers, as long as this does not restrict the freedom to provide them from another MS. (Par. 33-34) Since in the given case the services originated in Cyprus, the rules on civil liability for defamation could be applicable.

However, if the Cyprus did not implement the provisions of the Directive in time its provisions may not be directly invoked by the parties. The Directive does not have a direct horizontal effect, which means that the national service providers could only rely on the national provisions implementing it and not on the rights granted to them by the Directive itself. Failing the timely interpretation, the national court is obliged to the consistent interpretation of the national law with the EU law. (Par. 54-56)

Friday, 19 September 2014

More than you wanted to know - a virtual symposium

On ContractsProf Blog, a virtual symposium is currently taking place on the book 'More than you wanted to know' by Omri Ben-Shahar and Carl E. Schneider. 

The book, of which we posted a summary earlier, addresses the problem of lacking effectiveness and potential harmfulness of mandatory disclosure rules in consumer contract law. 

Contributions to the virtual debate so far include an introduction of the authors and blog posts by:
III. Ryan Calo

New IACL website

The International Association of Consumer Law has a new website - http://www.iacl.net.au/. Even though the old one is still functional it has stopped being updated some time ago so I refer everyone to the new one.