The M&A Perspective

Europe à la Carte – Avoiding/Leaving the Purview of the European Court of Justice?

11.04.2017

British Prime Minister Theresa May recently stated that Britain will not have truly left the European Union (EU), if it is not in control of its own laws. This means that by leaving the EU, Britain will also want to leave the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice (ECJ), the EU's supreme judicial authority. This may prove rather difficult as Ms May also stated that Britain wants to retain the "greatest possible access" to the EU's single market following its exit. In its negotiations with Switzerland, the EU has insisted on an institutional framework agreement that comprises a mechanism to settle disputes in terms of agreements, with an EU preference for the ECJ to retain ultimate jurisdiction. It will be interesting to see (in particular from a Swiss perspective), what position the EU will take in its negotiations with Britain.

But it may actually be the other way round, i.e. Britain following the negotiations between the EU and Switzerland on that point: On 6 April 2017, Doris Leuthard, President of the Swiss Confederation, and Jean-Claude Juncker, President of the European Commission, announced that "all so-called blocked elements" in the negotiations between the EU and Switzerland have been unblocked, including the talks regarding an institutional framework agreement which are planned to continue by the end of the year.
Why this sudden activism? It may simply be a natural consequence of Switzerland's EU-compliant implementation of the mass immigration initiative last December. But it could also be Brexit negotiation tactics of the EU, as it could use the negotiations with Switzerland to send indirect messages to London, which is not an entirely pleasant outlook from a Swiss perspective. It raises the question whether Switzerland should be patient in that specific context, defer to Britain and say "Britain first".

 

Restez à jour!

*Champs obligatoires

Newsletters & Newsflashes

Une sélection mensuelle de sujets clés issus de nos domaines d'activités, secteurs et industries, ainsi que des Newsflash sur l'actualité.

Publications

Courriel mensuel contenant les dernières mises à jour et les résumés de la jurisprudence du Tribunal fédéral suisse en matière d'arbitrage.
Des aperçus réguliers des tendances suisses et internationales et des développements juridiques dans le secteur de la construction.
Des aperçus et mises à jour réguliers sur les développements clés dans l'environnement en évolution rapide des litiges environnementaux, sociaux et de gouvernance d'entreprise.
Analyse concise des principales tendances dans le monde en pleine évolution de la gouvernance d'entreprise pour les membres des conseils d'administration des sociétés suisses.
Une mise à jour régulière d'un point de vue unique en matière de fusions et acquisitions sur les changements juridiques, les développements économiques et les tendances sociétales en Suisse.

Ce site est protégé par reCAPTCHA et les conditions d'utilisation de Google s'appliquent . Avis de confidentialité et Conditions d'utilisation.