Friday 23 May 2008

Europe: freedom of establishment and the 'life and death' of companies

Yesterday, Advocate General Poiares Maduro gave his opinion in Cartesio Oktató és Szolgáltató Bt. (Case C-210/06). The case concerned a limited partnership (Cartesio) which wanted to move its headquarters from Hungary to Italy. Hungarian law prevented Cartesio transferring its headquarters to another Member State whilst retaining its status as a partnership governed by Hungarian law. The only way for Cartesio to transfer its operational headquarters was by dissolving its business in Hungary and reestablishing in Italy. Does this amount to a restriction on freedom of establishment under Articles 43 and 48 of the EC Treaty?

The Advocate General held that the Hungarian legislation, which applied to partnerships and companies, breached Articles 43 and 48 of the EC Treaty. Articles 43 and 48, in his opinion, precluded rules which make it impossible for a company or partnership formed under the national law of a Member State to transfer its operational headquarters to another Member State. In this regard, and after considering recent case law of the Court, the Advocate General observed:
... it is impossible, in my view, to argue on the basis of the current state of Community law that Member States enjoy an absolute freedom to determine the ‘life and death’ of companies constituted under their domestic law, irrespective of the consequences for the freedom of establishment. Otherwise, Member States would have carte blanche to impose a ‘death sentence’ on a company constituted under its laws just because it had decided to exercise the freedom of establishment".

The Advocate General nevertheless recognised that restrictions of the kind in the Hungarian law could be justified on grounds of general public interest including the prevention of fraudulent conduct or the protection of the interests of creditors, minority shareholders, employees or the tax authorities. The Hungarian law did not, however, contain any grounds of justification.

NB:
[1] The Advocate General's opinion is not binding on the Court but in the majority of cases such opinions are followed.

[2] In 2004 the European Commission consulted on a proposed Directive (the 14th Company Law Directive) on the right of limited companies to transfer their registered office from one Member State to another. However, in December 2007 the Internal Market Commissioner Charlie McCreevy decided that legislative action was not required (see here). In the impact assessment it was explained why:
Since the practical effect of the existing legislation on cross-border mobility (i.e. the cross-border merger directive) is not yet known and that the issue of the transfer of the registered office might be clarified by the Court of Justice in the near future, the assessment concludes that it might be more appropriate to wait until the impacts of those developments can be fully assessed and the need and scope for any EU action better defined"

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