Top Court Deals Blow to EU Antitrust Watchdog
March 10 2016 - 10:20AM
Dow Jones News
BRUSSELS—The European Union's top court on Thursday annulled a
request for information the European Commission had made to several
cement makers in a cartel probe, a judgment that could curtail the
competition watchdog's investigative powers.
The commission in 2010 opened an investigation into several
cement makers—including Heidelberg Cement, Holcim and
Lafarge—saying it suspected the companies of possibly restricting
imports into the EU, divvying up markets and coordinating
prices.
A year later, the commission sent lengthy questionnaires to the
companies, requesting information on their business practices. The
probe into the cement makers was closed last year, but the
companies have been challenging the commission's rights to demand
such vast amounts of information.
On Thursday, the European Court of Justice, the EU's highest
court, sided with the companies, saying the commission's requests
went beyond its rights under EU law.
"The questions sent by the commission to the companies are
extremely numerous and cover very different types of information,"
the court said. "However, the commission's decisions don't
disclose, clearly and unequivocally, the suspicions of infringement
which justify their adoption and don't make it possible to
determine whether the requested information is necessary for the
purposes of the investigation."
The ruling overturns a 2014 decision by the EU's General Court,
which said that the commission questionnaires were justified.
At the time, the commission said that the decision was an
important confirmation of its rights to investigate suspected
anticompetitive behavior.
"The court confirmed that it is for the commission to decide
what information it considers necessary to request from companies
when investigating potential anticompetitive practices, as long as
the commission can reasonably expect that the information would
help it to determine whether the alleged infringement took place,"
it had said. "In addition, the court held that the commission is
entitled to request undertakings to submit the requested
information in a specific format."
On Wednesday, however, the commission played down the impact of
the new ruling. "The implications of the judgments are likely to be
confined to the present case, as the ECJ pronounced itself only on
the issue of reasoning," it said.
David Anderson, antitrust partner in the Brussels office of
Berwin Leighton Paisner LLP, said the ruling will deter the
commission from undertaking "fishing expeditions" in future cartel
investigations, but added that its impact may be limited in
practice.
In most cartel investigations, the commission doesn't need to
shoot in the dark as it did in this case, because it usually starts
an investigation armed with evidence supplied by a whistleblower
seeking leniency, he said.
"Today's decision by the court will be welcome by those who feel
the commission at times overreaches and overplays its hand in
exercising its already very extensive investigatory powers in the
cartel space," said Mr. Anderson.
Natalia Drozdiak contributed to this article.
Write to Gabriele Steinhauser at
gabriele.steinhauser@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 10, 2016 11:05 ET (16:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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