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The Spanish Constitutional Court and Fundamental Rights Adjudication After the First Preliminary Reference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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The purpose of the preliminary reference procedure is to ensure a uniform application and interpretation of Community law across all the Member States, including European fundamental rights as enshrined in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. The entry into force of the Charter has reinforced the authority of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in the field of fundamental rights adjudication. But the Charter may also be a new source of conflicts between the jurisdiction of the CJEU and the jurisdiction of national constitutional courts. Indeed, compliance with the indirect rulings over national law contained in the CJEU decisions became something logical for the national ordinary courts from the beginning of the integration process, but it was not the same for national constitutional courts. Most of them have always disliked the idea of asking for the CJEU's opinion on a conflict of law involving national constitutional provisions. The CJEU succeeded in establishing a legal doctrine through principles of Community law—supremacy and direct effect being the pioneers—that meant a material constitutionalization of the European Union (EU) law system. And for the national constitutional courts, such an understanding of EU law made a rival of the CJEU.

Type
Part Three
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

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20 Díez Picazo suggests that this argument is similar to the one that has been usually given by the SCC to appellants who considered that a refusal by the judges to raise a constitutional reference to the SCC (Art. 163 SC) was a violation of the right to effective protection by the courts (Art. 24 SC). Only the reasons are different for EU law, as the SCC always stated that the preliminary reference procedure was none of its business. See Díez Picazo, supra note 17, at 262.Google Scholar

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37 Arguments repeated by the SCC in its Judgments 253/2004, 61/2013, 71/2013 and 116/2013.Google Scholar

38 See supra note 19.Google Scholar

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40 See SCC Judgment 254/1993 of 20 July, the very first case about protection of personal data decided by the SCC.Google Scholar

41 See as examples SCC Judgments 11/1998 of 13 January; 202/1999 of 8 November; 144/1999 of 22 July or 159/2009 of 29 June. The exception could be SCC Judgment 29/2013 of 11 February, in which the pictures of an employee recorded by a security camera were not treated as right to personal image, but as right to protection of personal data. The relationship between privacy and personal data as fundamental rights in the Spanish constitutional doctrine is studied in Pablo Lucas Murillo de la Cueva, El derecho a la autodeterminación informativa: la protección de los datos personales frente al uso de la informática 26 (1990); Francesc de Carreras Serra, El derecho fundamental a la protección de datos personales, in Los nuevos derechos fundamentales 65, 69 (2007); or Reina, Emilio Guichot, Datos personales y administración pública 164 (2005).Google Scholar

42 The Directive was obviously taken into account in SCC Judgment 292/2000 of 30 November, in which the SCC had to decide about the constitutionality of General Act 15/1999 of 13 December. In other decisions, the SCC had just mentioned the Directive indirectly and together with a reference to the Covenant 108 of the Council of Europe. See as examples SCC Judgments 202/1999 of 8 November and 79/2009 of 23 March. In its Judgment 29/2013 of 11 February, the SCC only mentions the Directive after having made reference to the General Act and to the regulations which implement it in the Spanish system of law.Google Scholar

43 S.T.S., May 9, 1994 (No. 143). Anyway, Díez Picazo considers that it would have been absurd to send a preliminary reference on this issue, as the Directive had not been enacted yet. Díez Picazo, supra note 17, at 262.Google Scholar

44 T.S. Sept. 19, 2008 (Sec. 3).Google Scholar

45 The same opinion is in Pedro Tenorio Sánchez, Tribunal Constitucional y Cuestión Prejudicial ante el Tribunal de Justicia de la Unión Europea, 7520 Diario La Ley 1 (2010).Google Scholar

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48 Joined Cases C–468/10 and C–469/10, Asnef and Fecemd, 2011 E.C.R. I–12181.Google Scholar

49 Case C–131/12, Google Spain v. AEPD, (May 13, 2014), http://curia.europa.eu/. The case involved a Spanish citizen, Mario Costeja, who contacted Google with the following demand: each time his name and surnames were entered in the search engine, a link to a newspaper of 1998 appeared and he wanted that link to be erased. The information in question was a note about a real-estate auction connected with attachment proceedings prompted by social security debts. The data subject, Costeja, was mentioned as the owner of the real-estate. All the information was true and it came from an official source, so no objection could be made in relation to the newspaper publication, covered by the exception of Article 9 of the Directive in relation to journalistic purposes. But the data subject argued that the particular proceedings recounted in the newspaper had been concluded years before and were not of relevance or public interest in 2010. The fact that his name appeared connected to that ancient judicial process affected his fundamental rights, in particular his right to reputation in connection with his right to protection of personal data, so he claimed a right to be forgotten to be included as a consequence of Art. 8 ECFR. This case was crucial in defining balancing criteria in a really up-to-date conflict of fundamental rights.Google Scholar

50 Crowther, Hannah, Google v. Spain: Is There a Right to be Forgotten?, 9 J. Intell. Prop. L. & Prac. 892, 893 (2014).Google Scholar

51 We make reference to the article of Mattias Kumm in which he suggests that there should not be a final arbiter, but rather collaboration between the CJEU and the Constitutional Courts, in particular the German one, in a pluralist conception of European constitutionalism. See Kumm, Mattias, Who Is the Final Arbiter of Constitutionality in Europe?, 36 Common Mkt. L. Rev., 351 (1999).Google Scholar

52 Sarmiento, supra note 30, at 1299. The identification of the rights of the Charter with European citizenship is analyzed in Von Bogdandy, supra note 11.Google Scholar

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54 “Furthermore, constitutional courts can put their privileged jurisdictions at the service of the Charter in order to reinforce the rights it enshrines in the domestic scene.” Sarmiento, supra note 30, at 1300.Google Scholar