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Revision:Grounds for Review
From The Student RoomTSR Wiki > Study Help > Subjects and Revision > Revision Notes > Politics > Grounds for Review Art 230 sets out 4 grounds for review:
Considerable overlapLack of competence- usually used as grounds between the institutions e.g. the MS and often the Commission. E.g. France v Commission However it is rarely used as the ECJ has interpreted the Commission's powers as being wide so that they can achieve their objectives.
Procedural requirementsThe defect must relate to an essential procedural requirement. What counts as essential is a matter of construction for the ECJ. E.g. Roquette v Council
Infringement of the treaty or any rule of law relating to its applicationThe first half is obvious the second half refers to all the rules of Comm law other than those which exist in the treaties. (For a more extensive list of such rules refer to later notes)
E.g. Proportionality- R v Intervention Board ex p Sugar: argued that the penalty imposed was excessive in relation to the aim of the measure in question. In this case the Board tried to take a deposit in excess of £1,500,000 in accordance with a regulation simply because the Defendant was 4 hours late!
Misuse of powersUse of power for purposes other than that for which it was granted. In Fedechar v High Authority, the ECJ held that a measure will not be annulled if one of the reasons for its adoption was improper providing that the other reasons were legitimate. Nor will it be annulled if the improper purpose has no effect on the substance of the measure.
CONSEQUENCES OF ANNULMENTSuccessful action under Art 230 -->the court declares that under Art 231 the measure is void. Note that the court may void only part of the measure providing that the offending part can be effectively severed from the rest of the measure.
INDIRECT CHALLENGEART 232 Failure to Act:- JR for failure to act is not brought under Art. 230 EC, but instead under the separate heading of Art. 232 EC. Range of Reviewable Acts Art. 232 EC does not confine itself to reviewable acts under Art. 230 EC. The Comitology case seemed to suggest that Art. 232 EC could be used where the act did not fit under an Art. 230 EC heading. BUT, individuals cannot challenge recommendations or opinions. There must be an obligation to act not merely a discretion to do so. In the Transport Policy case, the EP used Art. 232 EC to force the Council to formulate a transport policy.
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