Thursday 21 September 2023

Alternative terms on performance, average consumers... tune in to CJEU in mBank (C-139/22)

Claudio Schwarz on Unsplash
Today the CJEU decided another case on unfairness in mortgage loan agreements with an index-link to Swiss francs - in the Polish mBank case (C-139/22). The first part of the judgment is Poland-specific, as it refers to the validity and effect of a national register of unlawful terms, which Poland happens to have. This issue has already been considered in the previous Biuro case (see our comment on case C-119/15 here). The Court now reiterated that as long as the register is transparent, kept up to date, and the traders have an opportunity to question the applicability of the register in their particular case, national courts could benefit from such registers (paras 41-43). Hence, contested terms could be declared by national courts as unfair if their content has previously  been registered as unfair, provided that the court warns parties to the proceeding about this and gives the trader the opportunity to challenge this finding (para 45). 

The second question was more interesting: What happens if the mortgage loan contract contains a term that is likely to be unfair, however, it also contains another term, which allows consumers to disregard the unfair term and follow a different path for contractual performance? In this case, the contract included a term that obliged consumers to reimburse a loan index-linked to Swiss francs 'exclusively in the national currency as converted according to a rate of exchange freely determined by the bank' (para 52). This term was previously determined as unfair by Polish courts. However, the contract also included a term that allowed consumers instead to reimburse the bank directly in Swiss francs. This would allow consumers to choose where to obtain Swiss francs from, avoiding the conversion rates set by mBank. According to the bank, consumers could have then avoided the detrimental effect of the first term, which, again pursuant to the bank. would not lead to unfairness. The Court rightly rejects this argumentation. Contrarily, it emphasises that a contract containing such a mechanism - two alternative terms referring to the same obligation, one of which is unfair and one of which is lawful - per definition should be considered unfair (para 55). The trader could be seen as counting on consumers' 'lack of information, failure to pay due attention or a lack of understanding', which would lead them to re-pay the loan in the way set out by the detrimental, unfair term, with the other term then only providing a mechanism to avoid liability by the trader (para 55).

Interestingly, the Court makes the above-finding fully aware of the average consumer standard that applies to the interpretation of the UCTD provisions. On its basis, we could expect that reasonably well-informed and circumspect consumers, who are to read and attempt to understand the contract and its consequences, should recognise the better of the two options for re-payment. And yet... the Court does not think so.

The average consumer is mentioned by the Court when giving the answer to the third question: Does the fact that one of the borrowers worked for the bank exclude them from the scope of protection of the UCTD? The answer is: No. As the concluded contract does not pertain to the employment relationship, the sole fact that it is concluded with the employer does not mean that it could change its non-commercial purpose (para 69). Further, even if the consumer in this case had insights into exchange rates of mBank, which were not available to consumers not working for this bank, this did not mean that their 'more specialised' knowledge should exclude them from the scope of protection of the UCTD. The CJEU reminds that we refer to the objective benchmark of an average consumer and their knowledge. Thus neither less nor more consumer knowledge in a given case will matter (para 66).