Introduction
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The General Court examined, first, whether the agreement of 2010 resulted in a transfer of state resources. The Commission claimed in its decision that since the municipality owned 50% of the PPP, no decision of the PPP could have been taken without its consent.
The Court first recalled three fundamental issues concerning transfer of state resources which were elaborated in the judgment of the Court of Justice in case C-399/10 P, Bouygues Telecom v Commission. First, there must be a reduction in the state budget or an increase in the liabilities or risks that burden that budget. Second, there must be a close link between the impact [i.e. the reduction of assets or increase in liabilities] on the state budget and the advantage that is conferred to an undertaking. Third, it is not necessary that the impact on the state budget is equivalent to the advantage that is conferred [paragraphs 70-71]. [It should be added that a fourth element that was included in the judgment of the Court of Justice in Bouygues v Commission was that several seemingly distinct measures can be subsumed to a single measure if they serve the same purpose and are chronologically close to each other.]
On the basis of the above principles and because the decision of the PPP could be attributed to the municipality, the General Court agreed with the Commission that the agreement of 2010 resulted in a transfer of state resources.
Existence of advantage and MEIP
After some preliminary observations, the General Court explained that in the case of sale of public land, the amount of aid is the difference between the market price of the land and the price at which it is actually sold. [Paragraph 77]
Then the Court found that the Commission made a serious mistake. It took the value of land in 2004 to be EUR 7.2 million on the basis of a valuation by an independent expert. However, in the Court’s view, the Dutch authorities did not accept that valuation as corresponding to the market price of the land [paragraph 81]. The Commission responded by pointing out that the exact market price was not relevant. What was relevant was the agreed price in the 2004 agreement. No private investor would accept a lower price six years later when it had secured a higher price through a contract [paragraph 83]. For this reason the Court had to examine whether a private investor in similar circumstances would have accepted such a change in the contract.
The General Court faulted again the Commission for not taking into account all the relevant facts at the time the 2010 agreement was signed. The Commission appeared to have ignored that SJB refused to proceed to the construction phase because it had invoked a number of escape clauses in the 2004 agreement concerning in particular delays in building permits. The Commission also appeared to neglect that the municipality had limited options because the building site was of little interest to other developers. [Paragraphs 98-108]
With respect to the latter point, the Commission counter-argued that a private investor would not be concerned about leaving a deserted area in the centre of town. If the municipality cared about the condition of its town centre it would act instead as a public authority. [Paragraph 109]
Although the General Court did not reject the argument concerning the interference of potential public policy objectives, it noted that the Commission did not try to examine whether the municipality would have an interest akin to that of a private investor in ensuring the speedy completion of the project so that it would expedite receipt of payment [paragraph 114]. In addition, the municipality would want to start receiving income as soon as possible from fees it could charge to owners of both commercial and residential space [paragraph 125].
For all of the above reasons, the General Court annulled the contested Commission decision.
Conclusion
It is worth summarising the reasoning of the General Court in faulting the Commission. The Court did not find that the municipality had acted like a private investor. It only concluded that the Commission failed to take into account all the relevant factors which could have influenced the decision of a private investor. These factors were:
i) the contractual escape clauses that were invoked by SJB,
ii) the limited options of the municipality to re-tender the project or find alternative uses for the land and
iii) the desire of the municipality to expedite the potential payments it could receive from completion of the project.
In other words, contractual constraints are a cost that an investor could legitimately pay to avoid. Bringing forward income streams is a benefit that an investor could legitimately pay to realise.
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[1] The full text of the judgment can be accessed at:
http://curia.europa.eu/juris/liste.jsf?language=en&num=T-186/13.