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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Newby Foods Ltd, R (on the application of) v Food Standards Agency [2016] EWHC 408 (Admin) (23 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/408.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 408 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen (on the application of Newby Foods Limited) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Food Standards Agency |
Defendant |
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Mr Jason Coppel QC (instructed by the Food Standards Agency) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 9th & 10th February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart:
The issue
"The UK has been required to re-classify the process by which a very small part of its meat processing industry removes meat from animal bones.
The European Commission has asked that a moratorium is put in place on the production of 'desinewed meat' (DSM) from cows and sheep.Desinewed meat is produced using a low pressure technique to remove meat from animal bones. The product closely resembles minced meat, is currently a meat preparation and is regarded as meat.
DSM has been produced in the UK since the mid-1990s. UK producers have told us that DSM is also exported by other EU countries such as Germany, the Netherlands and Spain.
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) is clear that there is no evidence of any risk to human health from eating meat produced from the low-pressure DSM technique. There is no greater risk from eating this sort of produce than any other piece of meat or meat product. The European Commission has informed us today they do not consider this to be an identified public health concern.
However, the European Commission has decided that DSM does not comply with European Union single market legislation and has therefore required the UK to impose a moratorium on producing DSM from the bones of cows and sheep by the end of April. If the UK were not to comply with the Commission's ruling it would risk a ban on the export of UK meat products, which would have a devastating impact on the UK food industry.
DSM may still be produced from poultry and pig bones but from the end of May it must be classed and specifically labelled as 'Mechanically Separated Meat' (MSM), and can no longer count towards the meat content of a product."
"'Mechanically separated meat' or 'MSM' means the product obtained by removing meat from flesh-bearing bones after boning or from poultry carcasses, using mechanical means resulting in the loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure."
By paragraph 1.15
"'Meat preparations' means fresh meat, including meat that has been reduced to fragments, which has had foodstuffs, and seasonings or additives added to it or which has undergone processes insufficient to modify the internal muscle fibre structure of the meat and thus to eliminate the characteristics of fresh meat."
The positions of the parties prior to the Judgment
10. The view taken by the EU Commission, as stated in written evidence from the Director-General of the Health and Consumers Directorate-General to the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, is "that any loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure" results in a product that must be considered to be MSM. It was stated also in the same document that "MSM is very sensitive to bacterial growth because of the raw material and the production process involved".
11. The claimant's position, which until early 2012 was also the position taken by the FSA, is that it is only if there is significant "loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure", the product is to be treated as MSM.
12. In support of this position, the claimant submits that a change is significant only if it is sufficient "to eliminate the characteristics of fresh meat" and thus takes the product out of the definition of "meat preparations" in paragraph 1.15. Thus the principal issue between the parties (or, more accurately, between the Claimant and the Commission) is the correct interpretation of paragraphs 1.14 and 1.15 of the Regulation.
13. The Claimant submits also that to treat desinewed meat as MSM results in a substantial waste of meat that is acceptable for human consumption as fresh meat.
14. The evidence before the court shows that loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure of meat can be the result of many processes: for example, freezing and thawing, chopping and mincing. But each of the processes of freezing/thawing, chopping and mincing of fresh meat does not usually eliminate the characteristics of that meat: I do not imagine that anyone would suggest that a steak tartare is not fresh meat, but on the evidence in this case the process of chopping the beef would cause some measurable loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure. The meat used in steak tartare is not classified as MSM because it does not fall within the opening words of paragraph 1.14 of Annex I to the Regulation, not because there has been no loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure.
15. Thus the effect of the Commission's interpretation of paragraph 1.14 of Annex I to the Regulation is that any mechanical separation of meat from the bone after initial deboning, even if carried out without any damage to the bones themselves or extraction of bone marrow, will produce a product that has to be classified as MSM. That greatly reduces its commercial value.
16. The Commission would doubtless say that the merit of its approach is that it is clear: there can be no room for misunderstanding. By contrast, the approach contended for by the claimant, formerly supported by the FSA, means that whether or not the product of the mechanical separation is to be classified as MSM has to be the result of an individual assessment of the results of the particular process employed.
35. On 14 March 2012 the FVO [Food and Veterinary Office] auditors held their closing meeting with the FSA. An internal FSA email set out a brief record of the meeting in the following terms:
"In summary, there was an underlying position from the FVO auditors that they do not recognise desinewed meat (DSM) as a legally acceptable term for product derived from meat from flesh bearing bones and obtained with the aid of mechanical means, irrespective of the degree to which the muscle fibre structure is modified or lost. This contrasts with the UK position where, having met the first two criteria, a DSM product can be obtained depending on the degree to which the muscle fibre structure is modified. Consequently, the FVO consider all of the DSM they saw during the course of the audit as MSM and many, but not all, of their comments arose as a result of this stance."
36. This confirms that it was the FVO's view that any modification of muscle fibre structure visible on microscopy analysis meant that the product had to be classified as MSM.
37. On 28 March 2012, Paola Testori Coggi, Director-General of the Health and Consumers Directorate-General, wrote to the UK Permanent Ambassador to the EU in the following terms:
"… the findings and the preliminary assessment of the audit indicate a number of serious failures with regard to the interpretation and implementation of the above-mentioned rules by the UK authorities, which result in a violation of EU health requirements as laid down in Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 on hygiene rules for food of animal origin and in Regulation (EC) No 999/2001 on rules for the prevention, control and eradication of certain transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, and poses a risk for public health in the UK and in other member states.
… The production and placing on the market of a product category ('desinewed' meat) that the UK authorities erroneously consider not to fall under the definition of mechanically separated meat (MSM) as referred to in Regulation (EC) No 853/2004. The FSA UK guidance paper on this subject indicates that 'desinewed' meat would rather qualify as 'meat preparation' as the muscle fibre structure is not modified by the mechanical separation process but the audit team found consistent evidence that this product always shows modification of this structure;
…
As my colleagues indicated to UK officials during the above-mentioned audit, the interpretation given by the UK authorities to the provisions applicable to MSM is not correct. Such interpretation and the manufacturing practices which are based on it, have potentially very serious adverse consequences for public health and must be discontinued as a matter of urgency."
38. The letter did not explain precisely what the public health risk was or how it was said to arise.
39. On 30 March 2012, representatives of the FSA and the Commission met in Brussels. The Commission's team was led by Dr. Van Goethem. According to the FSA's note of the meeting, the FSA set out its view that there was no evidence that desinewed meat posed a risk to consumers. In return for imposing a moratorium, the FSA asked the Commission to undertake to provide a risk assessment of desinewed meat. However, the Commission was not prepared to negotiate. Dr. Van Goethem said that the Commission wished to see an immediate ban on the use of ruminant bones and the reclassification of desinewed meat as MSM or they would introduce safeguard measures, which would have very severe consequences for the UK meat industry.
42. The following month the FSA produced a document giving guidance on the moratorium, which concluded its explanation of the background to the moratorium in these terms:
"There is no evidence of any increased food safety risks associated with non-ruminant DSM obtained by mechanical separation or the process by which it is produced. There has, however, been a difference in interpretation of the definition of 'mechanically separated meat' (MSM) in EU law between some European member states, including the UK, and the European Commission."
43. In a similar vein, in the action plan prepared by the United Kingdom competent authorities in response to the report of the FVO auditors, under the heading "Action Proposed by the Competent Authority" the FSA said this:
"The Food Standards Agency disagrees with the phrase in the recommendation 'avoid risks to public health'. It was agreed at a meeting between Food Standards Agency Chief Executive Tim Smith and Paola Testori Coggi, Director-General DG SANCO on 24 May 2012 that the reference to 'risks to public health' should be removed from the report.
The Food Standards Agency also disagrees that material produced under low pressure falls within the definition of MSM and instead considers it to fall within the definition of 'meat preparations'.
However, in order to comply with the European Commission's interpretation of EU legislation, and further to discussion with the Commission, the UK introduced a moratorium on the production of desinewed meat from ruminant bones on 28 April 2012 …"
(Original emphasis)
44. On 15 May 2012 Mr. Tim Smith, the Chief Executive of the FSA, gave evidence to the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee. He said this:
"It is easy to look back with hindsight. … What they were intending to do, in my opinion, having read their brief, was effectively to look at the processes - the low pressure methods for separating meat from meaty bones. We are talking here about bones that are sometimes 80% meat, which normally, 10, 20 years or even longer ago, would have been boned out by people with knives. There is now equipment that does that.
What they were intending to do was to determine whether the muscle fibres were being damaged sufficiently to cause that to be mechanically separated meat, rather than meat that would have been boned out in the normal way. Our view was that Newby Foods and others, which have done an excellent job of innovating in this area, would be able to demonstrate, using the Leatherhead method, with histology and microscopy, that the muscles are not being damaged. We were confident that the industry was in a strong position to demonstrate that this meat was meat and not mechanically separated meat."
A little later, in answer to a question from the Chair, Amber Rudd MP, "Do you remain satisfied, Mr. Smith, that desinewed meat is no public health risk?", Mr. Smith said:
"I do, yes. The way that the industry has approached this innovative way of effectively harvesting meat from meaty bones is entirely sensible. It is only the same as having lots of people with lots of knives at the end of the line. It is no different from that process."
45. In its written submissions to the Committee, the FSA said that in 2011 the consumer group "Which?" conducted research into consumer attitudes to meat products, including DSM. It said that this research found that consumers viewed DSM as being distinct from MSM and thought that it should count towards the meat content of the final product, whilst being identified separately as an ingredient on the label.
46. Evidence from the Commission given to the Committee in May 2013 makes it abundantly clear that the production of desinewed meat or MSM from pigs and poultry does not raise any risk to public health. So far as pigs and poultry are concerned, it is an issue about labelling. The Commission believes that it must be labelled as MSM, so that the meat content of the product attributable to the MSM must be shown as 0%.
The relevant European legislation
"The Court of Justice of the European Union shall have jurisdiction to give preliminary rulings concerning:
(a) the interpretation of the Treaty;
(b) the validity and interpretation of acts of the institutions, bodies, offices or agencies of the Union;
Where such a question is raised before any court or tribunal of a Member State, that court or tribunal may, if it considers that a decision on the question is necessary to enable it to give judgment, request the Court to give a ruling thereon."
21. Article 11 of TFEU provides:
"Environmental protection requirements must be integrated into the definition and implementation of the Union's policies and activities, in particular with a view to promoting sustainable development."
"1. Union policy on the environment shall contribute to pursuit of the following objectives:
- preserving, protecting and improving the quality of the environment,
- protecting human health,
- prudent and rational utilisation of natural resources"
"A high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment must be integrated into the policies of the Union and ensured in accordance with the principle of sustainable development."
The English authorities
"In various passages elsewhere in the judgment the court expressed its opinion about the nature of the breach for the consequences of which the respondents are claiming damages. But I would not be inclined to attach much importance to these expressions of opinion, because in para 58 of the judgment the court made clear that it was for the national courts to assess the seriousness of the breach. The national courts have the sole jurisdiction to find the facts in the main proceedings. It is for them to decide how to characterise the breaches of Community law which are in issue."
"25.. . . There was no dispute between the parties that on a reference under Art.234 EC, the purpose of the ECJ is "to decide a question of law that the ruling is binding on the national court as to the interpretation of the community provisions and acts in question". Even so, the ECJ has jurisdiction to review the legal characterisation of facts found by the national court. Also the ECJ has in the past provided guidance in order to enable the national court to give judgment. On occasions it has "steered" the national court for the purpose of unified application of the law. However, as the House of Lords made clear in R v Secretary of State for Transport Ex P Factortame (No 5), the English court is not bound by that steer and therefore, with hesitation, could conclude the case in a different way. It is the national court alone that must find the facts.
26. It follows that the judge was entitled to disregard any conclusion reached, in so far as it was based upon a factual background inconsistent with his judgment. Thus, upon his perception of the ECJ's judgment, he was entitled to disregard the conclusion in the ruling and decide the case upon the legal principles stated in the judgment of the ECJ."
"With regard to the admissibility of this ground of appeal, while it is true that under Article 225 EC and Article 51 of the EC Statute of the Court of Justice an appeal lies on a point of law only and that, therefore, the Court of First Instance has, in principle, sole jurisdiction to find and appraise the facts, the Court of Justice nevertheless has jurisdiction to review the legal characterisation of those facts by the Court of First Instance and the legal conclusions it has drawn from them . . ."
Mr Mercer submitted the reference to the "national court" in the judgment of the Court of Appeal, at least in so far as it was relying on the case cited, was wrong because the court referred to in the judgment in Camar & Tico was the European Court of First Instance, not a national court. However, it is clear that in each case the lower or national court had the sole jurisdiction "to find and appraise the facts", so whether this really makes any difference may be open to question. But, whichever way one looks at it, in my view reviewing the "legal characterisation" of facts is not the same thing as finding the facts. If the national court finds that a disputed vegetable is a potato, I do not see how any amount of "legal characterisation" by the CJEU can turn it into a tomato. However, I can see no reason why the CJEU should not find that both a potato and a tomato share some common legal characteristic by reference to Community law.
"Article 267 TFEU confers on the Court of Justice jurisdiction to give preliminary rulings concerning (a) the interpretation of the Treaties and (b) the validity and interpretation of acts of the institutions, bodies, offices or agencies of the Union. In the present case, it is the court's jurisdiction to rule on the interpretation of the VAT directive which is relevant. On the other hand, putting the matter very broadly, the evaluation of the facts of the case, and the application of EU law to those facts, are in general functions of the national courts. The relevant principles were summarised more precisely by the Court of Justice in AC-ATEL Electronics . . ."
That was a case where the Supreme Court considered that elements had been left out of account by the Court of Justice and said that it was the duty of the national court to consider all the facts found by the lower tribunal, and the questions and arguments that arose out of them, but to do so in the light of such guidance as to the law as could be derived from the judgment of the Court of Justice. Mr Coppel submitted that this was an authority of limited relevance to the questions in the present case, is a submission with which I am inclined to agree.
The European authorities
"Having regard to the above, it is for the national court to determine the nature of the activities submitted to its judgment and to decide in particular whether in the sport in question the pacemaker and stayer do or do not constitute a team."
"Although the Court, when giving a ruling under Article 177, has no jurisdiction to apply the Community rule to a specific case, or, consequently, to pronounce upon a provision of national law, it may however provide the national court with the factors of interpretation depending on Community law which might be useful to it in evaluating the effects of such provision."
However, that was a case where the court was in practice able to decide the merits of the dispute before it albeit, as Mr Coppel put it, at one level of abstraction.
"Within the framework of proceedings under Article 177, it is not for the Court of Justice to interpret national law and assess its effect. Therefore, within that framework, it cannot make a comparison of any kind whatsoever between the effects of the decisions of the national courts and the effects of its own decisions."
Mr Mercer relied on this passage which, he submitted, made the position clear. However, Mr Coppel submitted that the decision was of limited assistance, because the court was being asked about a question of national law.
"It is, however, not for the Court of Justice but for the national court to ascertain the facts which have given rise to the dispute and to establish the consequences which they have the judgment which is required to deliver."
Mr Coppel submitted that this passage had to be read in its context, which was that the claimant had changed his case in the course of the proceedings before the court.
"The Court has consistently held that Article 177 of the Treaty provides the framework for close cooperation between national courts and the Court of Justice, based on a division of responsibilities between them. Within that framework, it is solely for the national court before which the dispute has been brought, and which must assume responsibility for the subsequent judicial decision, to determine in the light of the particular circumstances of each case both the need for a preliminary ruling in order to enable it to deliver judgment and the relevance of the question which it submits to the Court . . . Accordingly, where the national court's request concerns the interpretation of the provision of Community law, the Court is bound to reply to it, unless it is being asked to rule on a purely hypothetical general problem without having available the information as to fact or law necessary to enable it to give a useful reply to the questions referred to it . . ."
"16 On that point, it should be borne in mind that Article 177 of the Treaty is based on a clear separation of functions between the national courts and the Court of Justice, so that, when ruling on the interpretation of validity of Community provisions, the latter is empowered to do so only on the basis of the facts which the national court put before it . . .
17. It is not for the Court of Justice, but for the national court, to ascertain the facts which have given rise to the dispute and to establish the consequences which they have for the judgment which it is required to deliver (see the judgment in Case 17/81 Pabst & Richarz KG v Hauptzollamt Oldenburg [1982] ECR 1331, paragraph 12).
18. It is, moreover, solely for the national court before which the dispute has been brought, and which must assume the responsibility for the subsequent judicial decision, to determine in the light of the particular circumstances of each case both the need for a preliminary ruling in order to enable it to deliver judgment and the relevance of the question which it submits to the Court . . ."
"On this basis, the Court of Justice has long been moving towards a more concrete style of interpretation, where the preliminary ruling is formulated in a manner that takes into account relevant aspects of the facts in the main proceedings and of the national law. Thereby, depending on the circumstances, an interpretation will be given which is still formulated in abstract terms but which in reality is tantamount to application. This is regularly expressed in the rulings themselves in the formulation whereby a given factual and legal situation such as the one before the referring court, is or is not in accordance with EU law. Indeed, sometimes the Court of Justice states that even if the actual application is a matter for the jurisdiction of the national court, the Court of Justice has enough information to decide the application of the law itself."
The relevant EC regulations
"1.10 "Fresh meat" means a meat that has not undergone any preserving process other than chilling, freezing or quick-freezing, including meat that is vacuum-wrapped or wrapped in a controlled atmosphere.
1.13 "Minced meat" means boned meat that has been minced into fragments and contains less than 1% salt.
1.14 "Mechanically separated meat" or "MSM" means the product obtained by removing meat from flesh-bearing bones after boning or from poultry carcasses, using mechanical means resulting in the loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure.
1.15 "Meat preparations" means fresh meat, including meat that has been reduced to fragments, which has had foodstuffs, seasonings or additives added to it or which has undergone processes insufficient to modify the internal muscle fibre structure of the meat and thus to eliminate the characteristics of fresh meat."
Processed products from meat are defined, at paragraph 7 .1, as:
"Meat products" means processed products resulting from the processing of meat or from the further processing of such processed products, so that the cut surface shows that the product no longer has the characteristics of fresh meat."
". . .
(m) "processing" means any action that substantially alters the initial product, including heating, smoking, curing, maturing, drying, marinating, extraction, extrusion or a combination of those processes;
(n) "unprocessed products" means foodstuffs that have not undergone processing, and includes products that have been divided, parties, severed, sliced, boned, minced, skinned, ground, cut, cleaned, trimmed, husked, milled, chilled, frozen, deep-frozen or thawed;
(o) "processed products" means foodstuffs resulting from the processing of unprocessed products. These products may contain ingredients that are necessary for their manufacture or to give them specific characteristics."
"1. The raw material used to prepare minced meat must meet the following requirements.
(a) It must comply with the requirements for fresh meat;
(b) It must derive from skeletal muscle, including adherent fatty tissues;
(c) It must not derive from:
(i) scrap cuttings and scrap trimmings (other than whole muscle cuttings);
(ii) MSM;
(iii) meat containing bone fragments or skin;
or
(iv) meat of the head with the exception of the masseters, the non-muscular part of the linea alba, the region of the carpus and the tarsus, bone scrapings and the muscles of the diaphragm (unless the serosa has been removed)."
The questions referred
(1) Do the words "loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure" in [point] 1.14 of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 [(the same words appearing also in article 3(n) of Regulation No 999/2001)] mean "any loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure" that is visible using standard techniques of my microscopy? . . .
(2) Can a meat product be classified as a meat preparation within [point] 1.15 of Annex I [to Regulation No 853/2004] where there has been some loss or modification of its muscle fibre structure that is visible using standard techniques of microscopy?
(3) If the answer to [the first question] is no and the answer to [the second question] is yes, is the degree of loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure that is sufficient to require them each product to be classified as [mechanically separated meat] within [point] 1.14 of Annex I [to Regulation No 853/2004] the same as that required to eliminate the characteristics of fresh meat within [point] 1.15 [of that annex]?
(4) To what extent must the characteristics of fresh meat have been diminished before they can be said to have been eliminated within the meaning of [point] 1.15 [of Annex I Regulation No 853/2004]?
(5) If the answer to [the first question] is no, but the answer to [the third question] is also no, what degree of modification to the muscle fibre structure is required in order for the product in question to be classified as [mechanically separated meat]?
(6) On the same assumption, what criteria should be used by national courts in determining whether or not the muscle fibre structure of the meat has been modified by that degree?
The Judgment of the CJEU ("the Judgment")
The first requirement of paragraph 1.14 of the regulation
". . . must be interpreted as meaning that the product obtained by the mechanical removal of meat from flesh-bearing bones after boning or from poultry carcasses must be classified as "mechanically separated meat" within the meaning of that point 1.14 only where the process used results in a loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure which is significant, while a classification as "meat preparations" within the meaning of point 1.15 must be chosen where that loss or modification is not significant."
"41 It must be stated at the outset that the definition of the concept of "mechanically separated meat" set out in point 1.14 of Annex I to Regulation No 853/2004 is based on three cumulative criteria which must be read in conjunction with one another, namely (i) the use of bones from which the intact muscles have already been detached, or of poultry carcasses, to which meat remains attached, (ii) the use of methods of mechanical separation to recover that meat, and (iii) the loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure of the meat thus recovered by reason of the use of those processes. In particular, that definition does not make any distinction as regards the degree of loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure, with the result that any loss or modification of that structure is taken into consideration within the context of that definition.
42 Consequently, any meat product which satisfies those three criteria must be classified as "mechanically separated meat", irrespective of the degree of loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure, in so far as, by reason of the process used, that loss or modification is greater than that which is strictly confined to the cutting point.
43 In the case of use of mechanical processes, that third criterion allows "mechanically separated meat" within the meaning of point 1.14 of Annex I to Regulation No 853/2004 to be distinguished from the product obtained by cutting intact muscles; the latter product does not show a more general loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure, but reveals a loss or modification of the muscle fibre structure which is strictly confined to the cutting point. Consequently, chicken breasts which are detached from the carcass of the animal by mechanically operated cutting rightly do not constitute mechanically separated meat."
"Products obtained by mechanical deboning, which remove[s] definitive pieces of meat from meaty bones or carcass, which may or may not have had the primal muscles previously removed, such that the muscle fibre structure of the meat is substantially intact are not considered to be [mechanically separated meat]. This meat may then be desinewed and have the appearance of finely minced meat."
(My emphasis)
"Those recitals [(1) and (7) in the preamble to Directive 2001/101] express the finding that, although mechanically separated meat is technically fit for human consumption in so far as it is not obtained from ruminants, it is nonetheless a product of inferior quality because it consists of residual meat, fat and connective tissue which remain attached to the bones after the main part of the meat has been removed."
I should explain that Directive 2001/101 is concerned with labelling, and recitals (1) and (7) are in the following terms:
"(1) . . . [T]he definition [of meat which was drawn up for the purposes of hygiene and protection of public health] covers all parts of animals which are fit for human consumption. It does not correspond, however, to the consumer's perception of meat and does not inform the consumer as to the real nature of the product designated by the term "meat".
(7) Mechanically recovered meat [the former term for MSM] differs significantly from "meat" as perceived by consumers. It should therefore be excluded from the scope of the definition."
"(2) [Newby's] argument in any event rests on a patent misinterpretation of the CJEU's judgment. The CJEU did not refer in §41 to bones with no muscle attached to them but bones from which the intact muscles had been detached. The "intact muscles" are muscles before the animal carcass is cut: see the reference to the production of chicken breasts in §43, a process which is effected by cutting intact muscles. Once the animal is boned or butchered, whether by hand or by machine, the muscles are no longer intact. Bones carrying residual muscle meat which is left after cutting satisfy the first criterion for the production of MSM."
"(3) That reading is consistent with §63 of the CJEU's judgment where it refers, again in the context of the definition of MSM, to the processing of "residual meat, fat and connective tissue which remain attached to the bones after the main part of the meat has been removed". That is an accurate description of the "meaty bones" which are in fact used by Newby."
"The second difficulty is that, if the assertion were correct, even the old high-pressure process of crushing the meat and bones to a slurry would not be capable of producing MSM because it, too, would not meet the first requirement of the definition. Any argument that leads to such obviously incorrect result must be flawed. In my view the flaw in the argument is that it involves the proposition that the process of deboning must involve the removal of the bulk of the meat that was originally attached to the bones. I do not see why this assumption has to be made; particularly, when if it is made, the result is an obviously incorrect conclusion."
The cutting point
"In the edge sections the muscle fibres were almost completely intact and similar to the centre, with some broken fibres close to the area of the cut edge."
"In the edge sections the muscle fibres were almost completely intact and similar to the centre, with some broken fibres and fragments close to the area of the cut edge."
As I have already noted, Prof Groves said that the damage at the edges was similar in appearance for all samples.
". . . the wishbone is precisely cut out of the breast, resulting in a minimum bone contamination and low meat loss with the wishbone."
And then:
"The breast fat rim remover removes the fat rim automatically from the fillet which reduces trim losses . . . In the same carousel, the fillet is scraped loose from the breast cage."
My conclusion as to the meaning of the term "cutting point"
Paragraph 55 of the Judgment
"In addition, as the French Government suggests, a classification of products, such as that at issue in the main proceedings, as "fresh meat" within the meaning of point 1.10 of Annex I to Regulation No 853/2004 is also excluded. Disregarding their other characteristics, such products consisting in fragmented meat would be capable of coming only within the concept of "minced meat" within the meaning of point 1.13 of that annex, a concept from which they must, however, be excluded by reason of point 1(c)(iv) of Chapter II of Section V of Annex III to that regulation as products obtained from bone scrapings."
"I have consulted my colleagues about the processes you have at Newby Foods and the questions you raised. In summary, I am content that, from the information you have provided and that we have available Newby Foods is not making MSM; neither is Newby Foods using bone scrapings."
"In that regard, the French Government does not dispute that the product in question constitutes fresh meat within the meaning of the provision."
As the context makes clear, the provision referred to in that sentence is point 1.15, and "fresh meat", as there referred to, is in turn defined at point 1.10.
"(i) scrap cuttings and scrap trimmings (other than whole muscle cuttings);
(ii) MSM;
(iii) meat containing bone fragments or skin;
or
(iv) meat of the head with the exception of the masseters, the non-muscular part of the linea alba, the region of the carpus and the tarsus, bone scrapings and the muscles of the diaphragm (unless the serosa has been removed)."
Meat preparations
"52. By contrast, a classification as "meat preparations", within the meaning of point 1.15 of Annex I to Regulation No 853/2004, of products which, like that at issue in the main proceedings, satisfy the criteria for mechanically separated meat is excluded by the definition laid down in that point.
53. In this regard, it should be noted that the production of mechanically separated meat involves neither of the two processes provided for in that definition, namely the addition of foodstuffs, seasonings or additives, or a "processing" within the meaning of Article 2(1)(m) of Regulation No 852/2004; on the contrary, a product such as that at issue in the main proceedings corresponds to the notion of an "unprocessed product" within the meaning of Article 2(1)(n) of that regulation.
54.Furthermore, the concept of "meat preparations" has a direct link, not with the concept of "mechanically separated meat", but rather, first, with the concept of "fresh meat" and "minced meat", which are, in principle, the only usable raw material, and, secondly, with the concept of "meat products" within the meaning of point 7.1 of Annex I to Regulation No 853/2004, which combines the concept of "meat preparations" in the event of the processing of the fresh meat used as a raw material. In that event, those two latter concepts are alternative in the sense that, depending on whether a procedure for the processing of fresh meat modifies the internal muscle fibre structure by thus eliminating the characteristics of fresh meat or does not result in such a modification, the resulting product is either a meat product or a meat preparation."
Conclusion and disposal
Note 1 This is an over simplification, because there are separate, intercostal, muscles between each of the rib bones. [Back] Note 2 As shown by the photographs at Figures 2 and 3 in Mr Manning's seventh witness statement. [Back] Note 3 That is effectively what Prof Groves (as she now is) said when she first saw the meat after the first stage of the Newby process: see paragraph 12 of her witness statement dated 28 June 2012. This is not consistent with this being the product of "residual meat, fat and connective tissue" as described in paragraph 63 of the Judgment. [Back]