100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Exam Notes for EU Law B £5.99   Add to cart

Lecture notes

Exam Notes for EU Law B

 21 views  0 purchase

A comprehensive summary of lecture notes and textbook materials used in preparation for the assessment.

Preview 4 out of 31  pages

  • January 21, 2021
  • 31
  • 2018/2019
  • Lecture notes
  • -
  • All classes
All documents for this subject (2)
avatar-seller
graceliew88
01 LEGAL ORDER OF EU

1. Primary law of EU
 Treaty of Lisbon
 Treaty on European Union (TEU)
 Treaty of the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)
 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (CFREU)
 Each has the same legal value  No hierarchy between them

2. General principles
 EU's “acquis”: The body of common rights & obligations that are binding on all MSs
 TFEU Art 20: EU citizenship
 TEU Art 1: “The MSs establish among themselves a EU (which replaces & succeeds the old European
Community), on which the MSs confer competences to attain objectives they have in common”
 TEU Art 2: EU’s values  Reference point for all EU policies & actions
 TEU Art 3: EU’s aims, objectives & tasks
 EU law is an independent & supranational legal order based on the Treaties ( Van Gend en Loos;
Costa v ENEL)
 EU laws become part of each MS’s legal system directly / via national implementation
 MSs & EU citizens have rights & obligations under the Treaties  Direct applicability: EU
nationals can rely directly on the Treaties’ provisions (Van Gend en Loos)
 No domestic provision can supersede binding EU law  Where there is a conflict between EU
law & domestic law, EU law prevails (Costa v ENEL)
 EU law is autonomous as regards international law  An international agreement cannot
affect the autonomy of EU’s legal system (Kadi I)
 EU’s currency: Euro  Shared by 19 MSs

Overview of the Treaties
3. TEU
 Replaces & supersedes previous TEU
 Establishes EU & sets out its foundational values, aims, principles & institutional framework, including
a special regime for the Common Foreign and Security Policy
 TEU Art 6(1): CFREU is incorporated into the Treaties
 TEU Art 51: Treaty Protocols form an integral part of the Treaties
 TEU Art 50: If a MS gives notice to withdraw from the EU, the Treaties cease to apply to them from the
effective date of withdrawal

4. TFEU
 Replaces European Community Treaty (which evolved from European Economic Community)
 TFEU Art 1(1): “Organises the functioning of EU & determines the areas of, delimitation of, &
arrangements for exercising its competence”  Contains Treaty bases for EU legislation, EU policies
& detailed institutional provisions

Key institutions of EU (TEU Art 13)
5. European Commission – EU’s executive (TEU Art 17; TFEU Arts 244-250)
 Consists of 28 commissioners: Appointed by MSs  Approved by European Parliament
 Promotes EU’s interests
 Oversees the application of the Treaties & the measures adopted; May initiate enforcement actions
against non-compliant MSs; Sole initiator of legislative proposals (draft legislative acts) except where
the Treaties provide otherwise

6. Council (“Council of Ministers”) (TEU Art 16; TFEU Arts 237-243)
 Consists of ministerial-level representatives of the governments of MSs  Represents MSs
 Promotes national interests
 Exercises legislative & budgetary powers jointly with European Parliament

7. European Council (TEU Arts 15 & 18; TFEU Art 235)
 Consists of heads of state / government of 28 MSs
 Determines EU’s strategic direction; Exercises leadership

8. European Parliament (TEU Arts 14 & 17; TFEU Arts 223-234)
 Consists of 751 members: Directly elected by European citizens  Represents EU’s citizens

,  Exercises legislative & budgetary powers jointly with Council; Holds European Commission to account
(can pass a no-confidence vote on motions proposed by European Commission)

9. EU courts (CJEU) – EU’s judiciary (TEU Art 19; TFEU Arts 251-281)
 Consists of:
 Court of Justice (ECJ)
 Consists of:
o 28 judges: Chosen from each MS
o 11 Advocates-Generals
 Make reasoned submissions on cases in open court
 Act with complete impartiality & independence
 Issue his opinion in advance of the judgment with detailed legal
analysis of the issues  Advisory: Not binding on the court
 Deals with preliminary references from national courts, direct actions brought by EU
institutions & appeals from GC on points of law
 General Court (GC)
 Consists of 47 judges
 Deals with actions brought by private parties
 Bound by appeal judgments of ECJ
 Ensures the uniform application & interpretation of EU law; May review the legality of the acts of EU
institutions

Law-making & democracy in EU
10. Institutional balance in law-making
 TEU Art 17(2): With limited exceptions, EU legislative acts may only be adopted based on a European
Commission proposal / draft legislative act
 TEU Arts 14(1) & 16(1): Legislative functions are exercised jointly by European Parliament & Council
 Voting procedures
 Qualified Majority Voting in Council
 TEU Art 16(3): QMV is the norm, unless the Treaties provide otherwise
 TFEU Art 238(3)(a): 2 conditions must be satisfied
o 55% of MSs vote in favour
o The proposal is supported by MSs representing at least 65% of the total EU
population
o A blocking minority may defeat the proposal  The blocking minority must
have at least 4 Council members representing at least 35% of the total EU
population
 Proportional system: Weighted votes for each MS based on population  Adjusted
depending on the number of MS participating in the policy area
 Voting in European Parliament
 Normally a majority of votes cast is needed to adopt legislative acts but absolute
majority is required for the amendment / rejection of acts
 The number of members from each MS takes into account both the population & size
of the MS

11. Hierarchy of norms: Legislative & non-legislative acts
 Legislative acts
 TFEU Art 288: Regulations, directives, decisions, recommendations & opinions
 TFEU Art 289(3): Instruments adopted by either 1 of the 2 legislative procedures
 Subject to full democratic control under the legislative procedures
 TFEU Art 296: Legal acts shall state the reasons on which they are based
 TFEU Art 291(1): MSs have an obligation to adopt all measures of national law necessary to
implement legally binding EU acts
 Legislative acts adopted under the wrong legal basis are susceptible to annulment (Linguistic
Diversity)
 Non-legislative acts
 TFEU Art 290: Delegated acts adopted by European Commission under powers specified in
legislative acts for the purposes of supplementing / amending certain “non-essential" elements
of a legislative act
 Can be revoked by European Parliament & Council
12. Legislative acts

,  Regulations
 General application  Binding in its entirety & directly applicable in all MSs (requires no
implementation)
 Confer rights on individuals which the national courts have a duty to protect (Variola)
 Directives
 Binding as to the result to be achieved upon each MS to which it is addressed  Leave to the
national authorities the choice of form & methods (requires implementation)
 TFEU Art 297: Deadline to transpose – Typically 2 years
 Where directives are not correctly implemented, national courts are bound, as far as is
possible, to interpret national laws in conformity with EU law (Simmenthal)
 Decisions
 Binding in its entirety  Where specified, binding only on those to whom it is addressed
 Recommendations & opinions
 No binding force
 Soft law: Rules of conduct; Persuasive; Seek to ensure compliance without a binding
obligation

13. Legislative procedures
 The applicable procedure depends on the legal basis for the legislative act in question
 Ordinary legislative procedure (“co-decision”)  The default procedure
 TFEU Art 289: The joint adoption of legislative acts by European Parliament and Council on a
proposal from European Commission
 TFEU Art 294: 1st reading  2nd reading  3rd reading
 Key features: Joint agreement between European Parliament & Council; Doubt veto of
European Parliament; Assent of Council; Conciliation Committee
 Special legislative procedures  Only used where provided by the Treaties
 2 types: Consultation / Assent

14. Representative & participatory democracy
 TEU Arts 2 & 3(1): Democracy is 1 of the values of EU & which it has the aim of promoting
 TEU Arts 9-12: Democratic principles
 Representative democracy: Increasing the involvement of national parliaments
 TEU Art 12; Protocol No 1: Empowers national parliaments in pre-legislative & legislative
stages
 Participatory democracy: Increasing the participation of the wider civil society
 TEU Art 10(3): Every citizen has the right to participate in the democratic life of EU
 TEU Art 11(1-2): Achieved through dialogue with representative groups & civil society
 TEU Art 11(4): Citizens’ initiative – 1 million signatures to demand European Commission to
propose an EU legal act  E-petitions


02 PRIMACY OF EU LAW & FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS

15. Principle of primacy of EU law
 EU law, within the fields where sovereign power has been conferred on EU, is supreme over national
law & penetrates into national legal orders (Costa v ENEL)
 Applies even where national constitutions may provide a higher protection of fundamental rights, as
long as the EU rule in question is compatible with CFREU (Melloni)
 Duty on MSs to guarantee full & uniform application of an EU rule from its date of entry in force
(Filipak; Kapferer)
 Declaration No 17: An “explicit endorsement” of the primacy principle
 UK’s approach: Constitutional tolerance
 Parliament limited sovereignty voluntarily in ECA 1972  Directly enforceable rules of EU law
override conflicting rules of national law (Factortame)

, 16. Duty of fidelity
 TEU Art 4(3): Based on the principle of sincere cooperation / solidarity  MSs have a positive duty to
“facilitate the achievement of EU’s tasks & refrain from any measure which could jeopardise the
attainment of EU’s objectives” (Spanish Strawberries)
 National courts must ensure that penalties for breaches of EU law are effective, proportionate &
dissuasive (Berlusconi)
 Closely related to the duty of mutual trust between MSs based on the principle of equality between
MSs under TEU Art 4(2)

Competences of EU: Conferred powers
17. Doctrine of pre-emption
 EU has areas in which it may legislate exclusively (MSs are no longer able to legislate in these fields
once they have joined the EU) / on the basis of competence shared with the MSs
 TFEU Arts 3 & 4: Lists of areas of exclusive & shared competence respectively
 TFEU Art 2: Once EU wholly occupies a field of competence (exclusive / shared) under its conferred
powers, the MSs are pre-empted from acting in that area  To pre-empt conflicts over whether EU
should act alone / whether there is room for separate actions by the MSs
 Areas of exclusive competence: Pre-emption applies fully
 Areas of shared competence: Pre-emption is not automatic  Both EU & the MSs have competence
but “MSs shall exercise their competence to the extent that EU has not exercised its competence”
 Most EU legislative acts only provide for minimum harmonisation / can be interpreted as
allowing the MSs some discretion as long as their actions are consistent with the objectives of
the particular EU rule / broader EU objectives (Wild Birds)

18. Limits & use of EU competences
 TEU Art 5: Stages of EU competences
 (1) Principle of conferral: Establishes the limits of EU’s legal authority to act
 (2) Principles of subsidiarity & proportionality: The conditions for the use of that legal authority
commensurate with the objectives of the Treaties

19. Stage (1): Principle of conferral
 TEU Art 5: The limits of EU competences are governed by the principle of conferral  Under the
principle of conferral, EU shall act only within the limits of the competences conferred upon it by the
MSs in the Treaties to attain the objectives set out
 TEU Art 13(2): Each institution shall act within the limits of the powers conferred on it in the Treaties”
 TEU Art 4(1): In the absence of an adequate legal basis in the Treaties, competences remain with the
MSs
 Treaty provisions that grant such competence are known as “legal basis” provisions
 Specific legal basis provisions (e.g. TFEU Art 192 – Protection of the environment)
 General legal basis provisions
 TFEU Art 114: “Harmonisation clause” – Measures for the approximation of common
standards across the internal market
o TFEU Art 114 is broad but does not create a general power to regulate the
internal market  Measures must either genuinely have their objective set on
improving market conditions, / must remove existing / future obstacles to inter-
state trade (Tobacco Advertising I  Tobacco Advertising II)
 TFEU Art 352: “General powers clause” / “Flexibility clause” – Allows for general
measures but only where necessary for the attainment of the objectives of EU
o Where there is a choice of legal bases, the most specific to attain the
objective must be used  Where there is no alternative / more specific legal
basis available the court must determine whether the measure is necessary to
attain 1 of the objectives in the Treaties (Kadi I)

20. Stage (2): Principle of subsidiarity (Protocol No 2)
 TEU Art 5(3): Determines whether EU action is to be exercised – In areas which do not fall within its
exclusive competence, EU shall act only if & in so far as the objectives of the proposed action cannot
be sufficiently achieved by the MSs, at central level / at regional & local level, but can rather, due to
the scale / effects of the proposed action, be better achieved at EU level  Creates a presumption in
favour of decentralisation & self-government (Working Time)

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller graceliew88. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £5.99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

67096 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling
£5.99
  • (0)
  Add to cart