Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler

This paper discusses the Köbler case, in which the Court of Justice confirmed that the principle of Member States’ liability for breaches of Community law (the “Francovich” Principle) also applies to breaches committed by national judiciaries. The author looks at this decision and, more importantly,...

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Main Author: Jan Komarek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law 2005-12-01
Series:Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/7
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spelling doaj-da63d4a5639b45d4b294c7de7564eeb92020-11-25T03:56:21ZengUniversity of Zagreb, Faculty of LawCroatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy1845-56621848-99582005-12-011759410.3935/cyelp.01.2005.07Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor KöblerJan Komarek0Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic, Department of EC LawThis paper discusses the Köbler case, in which the Court of Justice confirmed that the principle of Member States’ liability for breaches of Community law (the “Francovich” Principle) also applies to breaches committed by national judiciaries. The author looks at this decision and, more importantly, at the Court’s reasoning from the point of view of the concept of multi-constitutionalism, which, he believes, is a viable model for a pluralistic entity such as the European Union. Several shortcomings of the decision are discussed in this paper, including the Court’s avoidance of difficult questions by reference to the principle of national procedural autonomy, or its unpersuasive comparative reasoning. One further shortcoming is the lack of any balancing argumentation, which would have seemed appropriate in a case where two legal principles (the effectiveness of Community law, on the one hand, and legal certainty and res judicata, on the other) stood in opposition. In the final part of the paper, the author points out that the problem of gaining acceptance for this decision may be even more difficult with regard to judges in the new Member States, as their legal systems are simultaneously undergoing not only Europeanisation but also transition.https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/7köbler caseliability for breaches of eu lawmulti-constitutionalismnational procedural autonomybalancingeffectiveness of eu lawlegal certaintyres judicata
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Komarek
spellingShingle Jan Komarek
Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
köbler case
liability for breaches of eu law
multi-constitutionalism
national procedural autonomy
balancing
effectiveness of eu law
legal certainty
res judicata
author_facet Jan Komarek
author_sort Jan Komarek
title Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
title_short Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
title_full Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
title_fullStr Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
title_full_unstemmed Inter-Court Constitutional Dialogue after the Enlargement – Implications of the Case of Professor Köbler
title_sort inter-court constitutional dialogue after the enlargement – implications of the case of professor köbler
publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law
series Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
issn 1845-5662
1848-9958
publishDate 2005-12-01
description This paper discusses the Köbler case, in which the Court of Justice confirmed that the principle of Member States’ liability for breaches of Community law (the “Francovich” Principle) also applies to breaches committed by national judiciaries. The author looks at this decision and, more importantly, at the Court’s reasoning from the point of view of the concept of multi-constitutionalism, which, he believes, is a viable model for a pluralistic entity such as the European Union. Several shortcomings of the decision are discussed in this paper, including the Court’s avoidance of difficult questions by reference to the principle of national procedural autonomy, or its unpersuasive comparative reasoning. One further shortcoming is the lack of any balancing argumentation, which would have seemed appropriate in a case where two legal principles (the effectiveness of Community law, on the one hand, and legal certainty and res judicata, on the other) stood in opposition. In the final part of the paper, the author points out that the problem of gaining acceptance for this decision may be even more difficult with regard to judges in the new Member States, as their legal systems are simultaneously undergoing not only Europeanisation but also transition.
topic köbler case
liability for breaches of eu law
multi-constitutionalism
national procedural autonomy
balancing
effectiveness of eu law
legal certainty
res judicata
url https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/7
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