Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2012
Established explanations of the development of the European legal system focus on the decisive power of the Court of Justice in determining the system's practice and parameters. Even accounts highlighting the various interlocutors involved with the Court are ultimately drawn to Luxembourg as the fulcrum of decision. However, these approaches neglect the equally constitutive role played by national courts, particularly when resisting the European Court of Justice (ECJ). By analysing the important consequences of the German Constitutional Court's Solange decision of 1974, this paper argues that we must complicate our retelling of the European Union's (EU) legal history by rethinking the importance of national-level agency.
On explique généralement le développement du système juridique européen en soulignant les pouvoirs décisifs de la Cour de justice pour déterminer la pratique et les paramètres du système. Même ceux qui voudraient mettre en valeur les divers interlocuteurs concernés doivent finalement se référer au pivot décisif que représente Luxembourg. Ces approches laissent néanmoins de côté le rôle tout aussi constitutif des cours nationales, surtout quand il s'agit de résister à la Cour de justice européenne. Cet article analyse les conséquences importantes de la décision prise par la cour constitutionnelle de l'Allemagne dans le cas Solange en 1974, et soutient qu'il faut compliquer le récit de l'histoire juridique de l'Union Européenne en réévaluant l'importance des agences nationales.
Gängige Erklärungen für die Entwicklung des europäischen Rechtssystems stellen ab auf die entscheidende Macht des Gerichtshofs beim Festlegen der Praxis und der Parameter des Systems. Selbst Berichte, welche die verschiedenen Beteiligten mit Beziehung zum Gericht herausstellen, sind letztlich ausgerichtet nach Luxemburg, dem Dreh- und Angelpunkt der Entscheidung. Jedoch vernachlässigen diese Ansätze die gleichermaßen gestaltende Rolle, welche die nationalen Gerichte gespielt haben, vor allem als sie sich dem Europäischen Gerichtshof (EuGH) widersetzten. Diese Studie analysiert die wichtigen Konsequenzen des Solange-Beschlusses des Bundesverfassungsgerichts aus dem Jahr 1974 und argumentiert, dass wir die Rechtsgeschichte der Europäischen Union (EU) in komplexer Form weitertragen müssen, indem wir die Bedeutung nationaler Erschwernisse überdenken.
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6 This process has continued in more recent times, with the coming into force of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union in 2009, as well as steps taken in 2010 in the ongoing process towards the full accession of the EU itself to the Convention. In June 2010, Article 17 of Protocol 14 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms was amended to allow the EU to accede to the treaty. http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/EN/Treaties/Html/194.htm (last visited, 31 Mar. 2012).
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12 Ernst Benda, President of the FCC, made this clear at the time in both academic and public media. Ernst Benda, ‘Das Spannungsverhältnis von Grundrechten und übernationalen Recht’, Deutsches Verwaltungsblatt, 10/11 (1974), 389–96. See also subsequent media interviews with Benda, especially ‘Zur Frage der Schaffung eines europäischen Grundrechtskatalog’, Deutsche Welle, 9 Apr. 1975 and ‘Für europäische Grundrechte’, Die Rheinpfalz, 18 Apr. 1972.
13 Benda, ‘Das Spannungsverhältnis’, 395–6. See also media publications and interviews with Benda in this period, especially ‘Zur Frage der Schaffung eines europäischen Grundrechtskatalog’, interview with Ernst Benda, Deutsche Welle, 9 Apr. 1975.
14 See Green Paper SJ/229/79-EN in C. E. Archives Historiques de la Commission (CHA) H00-h01-h02-h03-h08 BAC 201–1989 1976–1978.
15 The abolition of the death penalty and the right for convictions to be appealed to the ECHR came about in France in 1981 as a result of a new President, François Mitterrand, and his appointment of the abolitionist Robert Badinter as Minister of Justice.
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22 Carl-Friedrich Ophüls (1895–1970) was a lawyer and diplomat, who was present during the Treaty of Rome negotiations and served as Germany's permanent representative to the Communities in the early 1960s.
23 Karl Carstens (1914–92) served in the foreign ministry as State Secretary (1960–6), State Secretary of the Defence Ministry (1966–8), Head of the chancellor's office (1968–9) and Federal President (1979–84), as well as actively publishing on European law during this period.
24 See the article in this special issue by Bernier.
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26 2 BvE 4/52 – EDC Treaty decision, 7 Mar 1953 – BVerfGE 2, 143.
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35 Case 29/69 Stauder v. Ulm [1969] European Court Report 419.
36 2 BvL 52/71 – Solange I, 29 May 1974 – BVerfGE 37, 271.
37 The French Gaullist MEP Coustet had even written to the Commission to instigate this and the Legal Committee of the European Parliament had initiated an inquiry into the decision. See Memo, 9 Oct 1974 in BA B106 39568 Bundesinnenministerium: Vereinbarkeit von EWG-Recht mit dem Grundgesetz. Band 4: Feb 1973 – Dez 1974.
38 Exposé by Walter Much, 7 Feb. 1975, in Politisches Archiv des Auswärtiges Amt (thereafter PA AA) Zwischenarchiv 121875 424.
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43 A point which was emphasised in a letter to a Cabinet meeting at the chancellor's office by the Justice Minister in Oct. 1974 – Letter from Vogel to Bundeskanzleramt, 17 Oct. 1974 in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
44 Letter from British Embassy, 9 Jul. 1975 in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
45 Report from the State Secretary Committee on European Affairs on 21 Feb. 1975, in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
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48 In this, the First Senate denied the competency of the German court to rule on laws issued by European public authorities. 1 BvR 248/63 and 216/6 – European Regulations, 18 Oct 1967 – BVerfGE 22, 293.
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50 Memo from foreign ministry on 8 Oct. 1974, in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
51 Protocols of the 87 Meeting of the Cabinet of the Federal Government on 6 Nov. 1974.
52 See Letter from Genscher, 16 June 1975 in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50SB1.
53 Letter from Seidel (Economics) to Teske (Justice) and foreign ministry, 12 Jan. 1976 in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
54 Reischl was born in Munich at the end of the First World War, had graduated third in a class of 275 law school students, spoke fluent French, English and Italian, and had served for eleven years as a SPD member of the Bundestag and for two years as an MEP.
55 Letter to Schmidt from Reischl from 14 Nov. 1974, in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121825.
56 PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121825.
57 Letter to Reischl from Schmidt from 9 Dec. 1974, in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121825.
58 Outline from justice to foreign ministry from 16 Apr. 1975, in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121874 424.50.
59 See Telegram, 18 Feb. 1976 in PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121875 424.50SB3.
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63 See PA AA Zwischenarchiv 121875 424.50SB3.
64 See Point 11 of European Parliament Working Document 436/74 13 Jan. 1975.
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