[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Court of Justice of the European Communities (including Court of First Instance Decisions) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Court of Justice of the European Communities (including Court of First Instance Decisions) >> Verbraucher-Zentrale Hamburg (Economic policy) [2004] EUECJ C-19/03 (14 September 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/eu/cases/EUECJ/2004/C1903.html Cite as: [2004] EUECJ C-19/03, [2004] EUECJ C-19/3 |
[New search] [Help]
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Grand Chamber)
14 September 2004 (1)
(Economic and monetary policy - Regulation (EC) No 1103/97 - Introduction of the euro - Conversion of national currency units to the euro unit - Rounding of monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for after conversion - Contract concluded in the telecommunications sector - Meaning of -�monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for-� - Per-minute tariffs for telephone calls)
In Case C-19/03,REFERENCE for a preliminary ruling under Article 234 EC from the Landgericht München I (Germany), made by decision of 17 December 2002, registered at the Court on 20 January 2003, in the proceedings Verbraucher-Zentrale Hamburg eVv
O2 (Germany) GmbH & Co. OHGTHE COURT (Grand Chamber),
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 25 March 2004,
gives the following
-�The introduction of the euro shall not have the effect of altering any term of a legal instrument or of discharging or excusing performance under any legal instrument, nor give a party the right unilaterally to alter or terminate such an instrument. This provision is subject to anything which parties may have agreed.-�
-�1. The conversion rates shall be adopted as one euro expressed in terms of each of the national currencies of the participating Member States. They shall be adopted with six significant figures.2. The conversion rates shall not be rounded or truncated when making conversions.3. The conversion rates shall be used for conversions either way between the euro unit and the national currency units. Inverse rates derived from the conversion rates shall not be used.4. Monetary amounts to be converted from one national currency unit into another shall first be converted into a monetary amount expressed in the euro unit, which amount may be rounded to not less than three decimals and shall then be converted into the other national currency unit. No alternative method of calculation may be used unless it produces the same results.-�
-�Monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for when a rounding takes place after a conversion into the euro unit pursuant to Article 4 shall be rounded up or down to the nearest cent. Monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for which are converted into a national currency unit shall be rounded up or down to the nearest sub-unit or in the absence of a sub-unit to the nearest unit, or according to national law or practice to a multiple or fraction of the sub-unit or unit of the national currency unit. If the application of the conversion rate gives a result which is exactly half-way, the sum shall be rounded up.-�
-�Where in legal instruments existing at the end of the transitional period reference is made to the national currency units, these references shall be read as references to the euro unit according to the respective conversion rates. The rounding rules laid down in Regulation (EC) No 1103/97 shall apply.-�
-�1) Is the first sentence of Article 5 of Regulation No 1103/97 to be understood as meaning that, in a private-law contractual relationship, only the final amount of the invoice, or an individual amount detailed on the invoice, may or must be rounded, or does a contractually agreed unit price/tariff (in this case a per-minute price) constitute a monetary amount to be paid or accounted for within the meaning of that provision? In determining whether a tariff is a monetary amount to be paid or accounted for within the meaning of Article 5 of Regulation No 1103/97, is it decisive whether the tariff relates to a particular multiple (in this case six) of a unit on the basis of which the final amount of the invoice is ascertained (in this case a 10-second unit), or whether it is the tariff as perceived by consumers that is the decisive factor for the purposes of the invoice? 2) Is Regulation No 1103/97 (and in particular Article 5) to be understood as constituting an exhaustive rule whereby sums other than monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for (if any) may not be rounded in the manner described in Article 5, in other words, must they either continue to be displayed in the former national currency, or be quoted in the exact amount produced on conversion?-�
Observations submitted to the Court
The Court-�s reply
Observations submitted to the Court
The Court-�s reply
1 - Language of the case: German.