1 oct. 2011

ECJ: in the absence of “complementary elements”, controlling 98 % of shares does not presume liability of the mother company, Elf Aquitaine, C-521/09 P

The ECJ annulled the decision of the European Commission ordering mother company Elf Aquitaine SA to pay the fine of € 45 million jointly with its daughter company Arkema SA for a participation in cartel AMCA at the monochloroacetic acid market. The EU General Court held the mother company liable due to the fact that it controls 98 % of the daughter’s shares (§ 158). The ECJ set aside this judgment and dismissed the conclusions of its own Attorney General.

Elf Aquitaine argued that she is a “pure holding” without operational functions, the daughter company never got any instructions from the mother company, the daughter company did not inform the mother company, the daughter company was financially autonomous and could act without any authorization, and the daughter company was perceived as autonomous by the third parties (§ 160).

The ECJ adjudicated that the right to motivation required the European Commission to bring “complementary elements” showing an interference of the mother company into the commercial behavior of the daughter company.

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