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Uber or taxi? |
Is Uber a transport activity or an information
society service? Why does the answer to this matter? Why does all this matter?
The
answer to the second question is that - depending on how Uber is classified -
it can or cannot enjoy one of the founding freedoms of the EU internal market:
the freedom to provide services. Article 2(2) of the Service
Directive, in fact, excludes transport activities from the scope of the
directive. However if Uber was classified as an intermediary between the
owner of a vehicle and a person who needs to make a journey within a city, then
it could be regarded as an information society service. As such, it could enjoy
the freedom to provide its services and not be subject to the relevant local
regulations of the various Member States regarding taxi services.
As
to the final question, readers will be aware that in certain Member States
there has been some resistance towards accepting that Uber
can provide its services there. Significant resistance has come - among other
things - from representative organisations of taxi drivers. In some Member
States, in fact, taxi services are (heavily) regulated: this means that the
provision of this type of service is subject to licences and authorisations.
The CJEU reference
As
mentioned, this is a reference to the Court of Justice of the European
Union (CJEU) from Spain. It was made in the context of litigation between Elite
Taxi, a professional organisation representing taxi drivers in Barcelona and
Uber Spain (ie the Spanish branch of Uber).
Elite Taxi is asking a court in Barcelona, inter alia, to impose
penalties on Uber Spain for engaging in unfair competition towards Elite Taxi’s
drivers.
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Advocate General Szpunar |
In particular, Elite Taxi claims that Uber Spain is not entitled to
provide the UberPop service, because neither Uber Spain nor the owners or
drivers of the vehicles concerned have the licences and authorisations required
under Barcelona’s regulations on taxi services.
Since it considered that an interpretation of several provisions of EU
law was necessary to enable it to give a decision in the case before it, the
Juzgado de lo Mercantil n° 3 de Barcelona decided to refer a number of
questions to the CJEU concerning the classification of Uber’s activity in light
of EU law and the conclusions which must be drawn from that
classification.
The AG Opinion
In
his Opinion this morning, AG Szpunar advised the CJEU to rule that the Uber electronic platform - whilst innovative and
akin to a composite service - falls within the field of transport.
This means that Uber:
· can be required to obtain the necessary licences and
authorisations under national law, and
·
cannot claim the
benefit of the principle of the freedom to provide services guaranteed by EU
law for information society services.
The text of the Opinion is not yet available, but according to the
relevant press release:
"A composite
service may fall within the concept of ‘information society service’ where (1)
the supply which is not made by electronic means is economically independent of
the service which is provided by that means (as is the case, for example, of intermediation
platforms for purchasing flights or making hotel bookings) or (2) the provider
supplies the whole service (that is, both the part provided by electronic means
and the part provided by other means) or exercises decisive influence over the
conditions under which the latter part is provided, so that the two services
form an inseparable whole, a proviso being that the main component (or indeed
all essential elements of the transaction) is supplied by electronic means (as
is the case, for example, of the online sale of goods).
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Typical taxi driver when thinking about Uber |
According to the
Advocate General, the service offered by Uber does not meet either of those two
conditions. In that regard, the Advocate General observes that the drivers who
work on the Uber platform do not pursue an autonomous activity that is
independent of the platform. On the contrary, that activity exists solely
because of the platform, without which it would have no sense. The Advocate
General also points out that Uber controls the economically important aspects
of the urban transport service offered through its platform. Indeed, Uber (i)
imposes conditions which drivers must fulfill in order to take up and pursue
the activity; (ii) financially rewards drivers who accumulate a large number of
trips and informs them of where and when they can rely on there being a high
volume of trips and/or advantageous fares (which thus enables Uber to tailor
its supply to fluctuations in demand without exerting any formal constraints
over drivers); (iii) exerts control, albeit indirect, over the quality of
drivers’ work, which may even result in the exclusion of drivers from the
platform; and (iv) effectively determines the price of the service.
All those features mean
that Uber cannot be regarded as a mere intermediary between drivers and passengers.
In addition, in the context of the composite service offered by the Uber
platform, it is undoubtedly transport (namely the service not provided by
electronic means) which is the main supply and which gives the service meaning
in economic terms.
The Advocate General
concludes that, in relation to the supply of transport, the supply whereby
passengers and drivers are connected with one another by electronic means is
neither self-standing (see point 1 above) nor the main supply (see point 2
above). Consequently, the service offered by Uber cannot be classified as an
‘information society service’. Instead,
the service amounts to the organisation and management of a comprehensive
system for on-demand urban transport.
Moreover, Uber does not
offer a ride-sharing service, since the destination is selected by the
passenger and the driver is paid an amount which far exceeds the mere
reimbursement of costs incurred.
Taking account of the
fact that the supply of transport constitutes, from an economic perspective,
the main component, whilst the service of connecting passengers and drivers
with one another by means of the smartphone application is a secondary
component, the Advocate General proposes that the Court’s answer should be that the service offered by the Uber platform must be classified as a ‘service
in the field of transport’.
It follows from that interpretation that Uber’s
activity is not governed by the principle of the freedom to provide services in the context of ‘information
society services’ and that it is thus subject to the conditions under which
non-resident carriers may operate transport services within the Member
States".
A more detailed analysis will be provided when the text of the Opinion
becomes available: stay tuned!
UPDATE at 11:36 am: the full text of the Opinion is now available here
Very relevant to those having to find their way around Barcelona in a few days time at INTA!
ReplyDeleteThe Danish High Court in a test case recently found an Uber chauffeur guilty on similar legal grounds. The High Court did not consider it necessary to refer the question to the CJEU as the charges were not brought against Uber but against the chauffeur.
ReplyDeleteLandsretten finder ikke grundlag for at udsætte sagen med henblik på nærmere belysning af eventuelle EU-retlige aspekter mv.
Efter de afgivne forklaringer kan det lægges til grund, at tiltalte ved de omhandlede kørsler den 18. november 2015 og 6. februar 2016 kørte i en almindelig personbil med passagerer, som havde bestilt tiltalte til kørslen ved brug af selskabet Ubers internetapplikation. Efter indretningen af Uber-appen skulle betaling for kørslerne afregnes direkte over for Uber og efter Ubers takster, hvorefter Uber efter et fradrag, der for landsretten er oplyst til at udgøre på 20 %, skulle afregne betalingen for kørslerne over for tiltalte.
Det lægges efter bevisførelsen til grund, at de omhandlede kørsler er foretaget med passagerer, der ikke har nogen nærmere tilknytning til tiltalte ud over anvendelsen af Ubers internetapplikation, og at kørslerne er udført mod en betaling, der overstiger de med kørslen direkte forbundne omkostninger til f.eks. benzin eller olie.
Landsretten finder under disse omstændigheder, at kørslerne må anses for erhvervsmæssig personbefordring som nævnt i taxikørselslovens § 1, stk. 1, jf. bekendtgørelse om taxikørsel § 1, stk. 1. Der er ikke grundlag for at anse kørslerne for samkørselsarrangementer mv. omfattet af bekendtgørelsens § 1, stk. 5.
https://domstol.dk/oestrelandsret/nyheder/domsresumeer/Pages/Domf%C3%A6ldelseisagomUberk%C3%B8rsel.aspx
And this is IP related because...
ReplyDeleteIf the CJEU follows the advice of the Advocate General it will end, in Europe, the hypocrisy shown by Uber: "I am just a platform and not a transport company". One does not go without the other as correctly stated by the advocate general. It's not the drivers who are to blame and need to be fined, it is Uber.
ReplyDeleteIf the decision goes in this direction, the EU will have shown once more that it can help against the Americanisation of our way of life.
@Anonymous at 15:35: because it clarifies who can be regarded as an information society service. As you may imagine, this notion is crucial also when it comes to IP disputes having an online dimension.
ReplyDeleteErr I tend to agree with anonymous at 15.35.
ReplyDelete