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2022/0302(COD) Liability for defective products

Progress: Procedure completed

RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Joint Responsible Committee [] BOTOŞ Vlad-Marius (icon: Renew Renew)
Joint Responsible Committee []
Committee Opinion ITRE
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
R, u, l, e, s, , o, f, , P, r, o, c, e, d, u, r, e, , E, P, , 5, 9

Events

2024/11/18
   Final act published in Official Journal
Details

PURPOSE: to adapt product liability rules to the digital age and the circular economy.

LEGISLATIVE ACT: Directive (EU) 2024/2853 of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products and repealing Council Directive 85/374/EEC.

CONTENT: this directive establishes common rules relating to the liability of economic operators for damage caused to natural persons by defective products and to the repair of this damage . The directive will apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 9 December 2026.

The new liability rules better take into account that nowadays many products have digital features and that the economy is becoming increasingly circular. In this context, the new directive extends the definition of “product” to digital manufacturing files and software. Also online platforms can be held liable for a defective product sold on their platform just like any other economic operators if they act like one.

Right to compensation

Any natural person who suffers damage caused by a defective product is entitled to compensation. The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage: (i) death or personal injury, including medically recognised damage to psychological health; (ii) damage to, or destruction of, any property; (iii) destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.

Defectiveness

A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including: (i) the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling; (ii) the effect on the product; or (iii) the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection.

Liability of economic operators

The manufacturer of a defective product, as well as the manufacturer of a defective component, will be held liable for damage, when this component was integrated into a product or interconnected with it under the control of the manufacturer and caused the defect of the product.

To ensure that consumers are compensated for damage caused by a product manufactured outside the EU, the company importing the product or the representative of the foreign manufacturer established in the EU may be held liable for damage caused.

Any natural or legal person that substantially modifies a product outside the manufacturer’s control and thereafter makes it available on the market or puts it into service will be considered to be a manufacturer of that product.

Disclosure of evidence

The directive simplifies the right to compensation by ensuring that an injured person who claims compensation before a national court can request access to relevant evidence at the disposal of the manufacturer in order to be able to prove their claim.

Burden of proof

Member States will ensure that a claimant is required to prove the defectiveness of the product, the damage suffered and the causal link between that defectiveness and that damage.

The defectiveness of the product will be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.

When the injured consumer is faced with excessive difficulties to prove the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, a court may decide that the claimant is only required to prove the likelihood that the product was defective or that its defectiveness is a likely cause of the damage.

Right of recourse

Where more than one economic operator is liable for the same damage, an economic operator that has compensated the injured person will be entitled to pursue remedies against other economic operators liable in accordance with national law.

Expiry period

Liability will be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.

ENTRY INTO FORCE: 8.12.2024.

TRANSPOSITION: 9.12.2026 at the latest.

Final act

2024/10/23
   Council of the EU - Draft final act
Documents
2024/10/23
   CSL - Final act signed
2024/10/10
   EP/CSL - Act adopted by Council after Parliament's 1st reading
2024/07/22
   European Commission - Commission response to text adopted in plenary
Documents
2024/03/12
   EP - Decision by Parliament, 1st reading
Details

The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.

The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:

Subject matter and objective

The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.

The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.

Damage

The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:

- death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;

- damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;

- destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.

The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.

Defectiveness

A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:

- the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;

- the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;

- the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;

- any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;

- in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.

Liability of economic operators

Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.

Disclosure of evidence

At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.

Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .

Burden of proof

The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.

A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.

Right of recourse

Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.

Expiry period

Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.

Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading

Documents
2024/03/12
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2024/03/11
   EP - Debate in Parliament
Documents
2024/02/22
   EP - Approval in committee of the text agreed at 1st reading interinstitutional negotiations
2024/01/24
   European Parliament - Text agreed during interinstitutional negotiations
Documents
2024/01/24
   Council of the EU - Coreper letter confirming interinstitutional agreement
2023/10/18
   EP - Committee decision to enter into interinstitutional negotiations confirmed by plenary (Rule 71)
2023/10/16
   EP - Committee decision to enter into interinstitutional negotiations announced in plenary (Rule 71)
2023/10/12
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading
Details

The Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection and the Committee on Legal Affairs adopted the report presented by Pascal ARIMONT (EPP, BE) and Vlad-Marius BOTOŞ (Renew, RO) on the proposal for a directive from the European Parliament on liability for defective products.

The relevant committees recommended that the European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:

Subject matter

The report specifies that this Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons caused by defective products and is aimed at ensuring that such persons are entitled to compensation.

The objective of this Directive is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market, while ensuring a high level of consumer protection, and to remove divergences between the legal systems of Member States related to the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons caused by defective products.

This Directive does not apply to free and open-source software, unless such software is offered in exchange for a price.

Damage

Members maintain that ‘damage’ means material losses resulting from:

- death or personal injury, including medically recognised damage to psychological health;

- damage to, or destruction of, any property, with exceptions;

- destruction or irreversible corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes, provided that the material loss exceeds EUR 1 000.

Guidance

Member States should ensure that competent national consumer protection authorities and bodies provide all relevant information and tailored guidance to affected consumers to enable them to effectively exercise their right to compensation. Market surveillance authorities should regularly exchange relevant information with national consumer protection agencies and bodies to ensure a high level of consumer protection.

Defectiveness

A product should be considered defective when it does not provide the safety that an average person is entitled to expect or when this is required by Union or national law.

In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances shall be taken into account, including:

- the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design , technical features, composition, packaging, any other information regarding the product and the instructions for assembly, installation, use and maintenance;

- the reasonably foreseeable use of the product, taking into account the expected lifespan of the product;

- the effect on the product of any ability to acquire new features or knowledge after it is placed on the market or put into service;

- the effect that other products might have on the product to be assessed, where, at the time of placing on the market or putting into service;

- any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention decided by a regulatory authority or by an economic operator relating to product safety.

Responsibility of economic operators

Member States should ensure that, where a defective component has caused the product defect, the manufacturer of the defective component can also be held liable for the same damage, unless the defect is due to the design of the product in into which the component has been incorporated or to the instructions given by the manufacturer of this product to the manufacturer of the component.

Any natural or legal person who modifies a product substantially outside the control of the manufacturer and then makes it available on the market or in service should be considered a manufacturer of the product.

Where the victim does not obtain compensation because none of the economic operators can be held liable under the Directive, or because the economic operators responsible are insolvent or have ceased to exist, Member States will be able to use existing national sectoral compensation schemes or establish new ones to compensate injured parties who have suffered damage caused by defective products.

Disclosure of evidence

In legal proceedings to adjudicate on compensation for damage caused by a defective product, at the request of a claimant who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, national courts should be able to order the defendant to disclose relevant evidence that is at its disposal. At the request of the defendant, national courts should also be able to order the claimant to disclose relevant evidence that is at its disposal.

The requested disclosure of evidence should be limited to what is necessary and proportionate, and should be carried out in such a way as to ensure that trade secrets.

Burden of proof

A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between the defectiveness of the product and the damage, or both, when:

- the national court considers that the claimant faces excessive difficulties, due to technical or scientific complexity to be able to prove the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both; and

- the claimant establishes, on the basis of relevant evidence, that it is possible that the product contributed to the damage, and it is possible that the product is defective or that its defectiveness is a possible cause of the damage, or both.

Right of recourse

Where more than one economic operator is liable for the same damage, any economic operator that has compensated the injured person or was ordered to do so by an enforceable judgment will have a right of recourse against any other jointly and severally liable economic operator.

Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading

Documents
2023/10/09
   EP - Vote in committee, 1st reading
2023/10/09
   EP - Committee decision to open interinstitutional negotiations with report adopted in committee
2023/05/04
   European Parliament - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2023/05/04
   European Parliament - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2023/04/05
   European Parliament - Committee draft report
Documents
2023/03/16
   EP - Referral to joint committee announced in Parliament
2023/01/31
   EP - BOTOŞ Vlad-Marius (Renew) appointed as rapporteur in []
2023/01/25
   Economic and Social Committee: opinion, report - ESC
Documents
2023/01/03
   DE_BUNDESRAT - Contribution
Documents
2022/10/17
   EP - Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading
2022/09/29
   European Commission - Document attached to the procedure
2022/09/29
   European Commission - Document attached to the procedure
2022/09/29
   European Commission - Document attached to the procedure
2022/09/28
   European Commission - Document attached to the procedure
2022/09/28
   European Commission - Legislative proposal
2022/09/28
   EC - Legislative proposal published

Documents

Votes

A9-0291/2023 – Vlad-Marius Botoş, Pascal Arimont – Provisional agreement – Am 118 #

2024/03/12 Outcome: +: 543, 0: 58, -: 6
DE FR IT ES RO PL NL PT SE AT HU CZ BE BG EL IE DK SK FI HR LT LV SI EE LU MT CY
Total
87
71
61
55
22
45
27
19
19
17
17
19
19
16
16
13
11
14
10
11
8
7
7
6
5
4
1
icon: PPE PPE
151

Hungary PPE

1

Denmark PPE

For (1)

1

Finland PPE

2

Slovenia PPE

3

Estonia PPE

For (1)

1

Luxembourg PPE

For (1)

1

Malta PPE

For (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
127

Czechia S&D

For (1)

1

Belgium S&D

2

Greece S&D

1

Slovakia S&D

For (1)

1

Lithuania S&D

2

Latvia S&D

2

Slovenia S&D

2

Estonia S&D

2

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1

Cyprus S&D

1
icon: Renew Renew
87

Poland Renew

1
3

Austria Renew

For (1)

1

Hungary Renew

2

Belgium Renew

2

Greece Renew

1

Ireland Renew

2

Finland Renew

2

Lithuania Renew

1

Latvia Renew

For (1)

1

Slovenia Renew

2

Estonia Renew

3

Luxembourg Renew

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
64

Italy Verts/ALE

2

Spain Verts/ALE

3

Poland Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Portugal Verts/ALE

1

Sweden Verts/ALE

2

Austria Verts/ALE

2

Czechia Verts/ALE

3

Belgium Verts/ALE

3

Greece Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Ireland Verts/ALE

2

Denmark Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Finland Verts/ALE

2

Lithuania Verts/ALE

2

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1
icon: ID ID
48
3

Czechia ID

For (1)

1

Denmark ID

For (1)

1
icon: The Left The Left
32

Netherlands The Left

For (1)

1

Sweden The Left

For (1)

1

Czechia The Left

1

Belgium The Left

For (1)

1

Denmark The Left

1
icon: NI NI
37

Germany NI

Abstain (1)

2

France NI

1

Romania NI

For (1)

1

Netherlands NI

Against (1)

1

Czechia NI

For (1)

1

Belgium NI

For (1)

1

Croatia NI

Abstain (1)

2

Latvia NI

1
icon: ECR ECR
61

Germany ECR

Abstain (1)

1

France ECR

Abstain (1)

1

Romania ECR

Abstain (1)

1

Netherlands ECR

Abstain (1)

5

Sweden ECR

For (1)

3

Belgium ECR

Abstain (1)

3

Bulgaria ECR

2

Greece ECR

Abstain (1)

1

Slovakia ECR

Against (1)

1

Finland ECR

Abstain (1)

2

Croatia ECR

Abstain (1)

1
AmendmentsDossier
387 2022/0302(COD)
2023/05/04 IMCO, JURI 387 amendments...
source: 746.997

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(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

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url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
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  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
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url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
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Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
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Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
docs/11
date
2024-03-12T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2024-0132_EN.html title: T9-0132/2024
type
Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
body
EP
events/10/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 543 votes to 6, with 58 abstentions a legislative resolution on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on liability for defective products.
  • The European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter and objective
  • The proposed Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons and caused by defective products, and on compensation for such damage. Its objective is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market while ensuring a high level of protection of consumers and other natural persons.
  • The Directive should apply to products placed on the market or put into service after 2 years from the date of entry into force of this Directive. It should not apply to free and open-source software that is developed or supplied outside the course of a commercial activity.
  • Damage
  • The right to compensation should apply in respect of only the following types of damage:
  • - death or personal injury , including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property , except: (i) the defective product itself; (ii) a product damaged by a defective component that is integrated into, or inter-connected with, that product by the manufacturer of that product or within that manufacturer’s control; (iii) property used exclusively for professional purposes;
  • - destruction or corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes.
  • The right to compensation should cover all material losses resulting from the abovementioned damage. The right to compensation should also cover non-material losses resulting from the damage, in so far as they can be compensated for under national law.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective if it does not provide the safety that a person is entitled to expect or that is required under Union or national law. In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances should be taken into account, including:
  • - the presentation and the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design, technical features, composition and packaging and the instructions for its assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the effect on the product of its ability to continue to learn or acquire new features after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable effect on the product of other products that can be expected to be used together with the product, including by means of inter-connection;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention by a competent authority or by an economic operator referred to in Article 8 relating to product safety;
  • - in the case of a product whose very purpose is to prevent damage, any failure of the product to fulfil that purpose.
  • Liability of economic operators
  • Those liable for damage: (a) the manufacturer of a defective product; (b) the manufacturer of a defective component, where that component was integrated into, or inter-connected with, a product within the manufacturer’s control and caused that product to be defective, and without prejudice to the liability of the manufacturer; and (c) in the case of a manufacturer of a product or a component established outside the Union, the importer of the defective product or component; the authorised representative of the manufacturer; and the fulfilment service provider.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • At the request of an injured person who is claiming compensation in proceedings before a national court for damage caused by a defective product and who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, the defendant is required to disclose relevant evidence that is at the defendant’s disposal.
  • Member States should ensure that, at the request of a defendant that has presented facts and evidence sufficient to demonstrate the defendant’s need for evidence for the purposes of countering a claim for compensation the claimant is required, in accordance with national law, to disclose relevant evidence that is at the claimant’s disposal. The disclosure of evidence is limited to what is necessary and proportionate .
  • Burden of proof
  • The defectiveness of the product should be presumed where: (i) the claimant demonstrates that the product does not comply with mandatory product safety requirements laid down in Union law or national law that are intended to protect against the risk of the damage suffered by the injured person; (ii) demonstrates that the damage was caused by an obvious malfunction of the product during reasonably foreseeable use or under ordinary circumstances.
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both, where, despite the disclosure of evidence and taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, the claimant faces excessive difficulties , in particular due to technical or scientific complexity, in proving the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Without prejudice to national law concerning rights of contribution or recourse, Member States should ensure that where two or more economic operators are liable for the same damage pursuant to this Directive, they can be held so liable jointly and severally.
  • Expiry period
  • Liability should be subject to a reasonable length of time, namely 10 years from the placing of a product on the market, without prejudice to claims pending in legal proceedings. The expiry period should be extended to 25 years in cases where the symptoms of a personal injury are, according to medical evidence, slow to emerge.
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  • The Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection and the Committee on Legal Affairs adopted the report presented by Pascal ARIMONT (EPP, BE) and Vlad-Marius BOTOŞ (Renew, RO) on the proposal for a directive from the European Parliament on liability for defective products.
  • The relevant committees recommended that the European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure amends the proposal as follows:
  • Subject matter
  • The report specifies that this Directive lays down common rules on the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons caused by defective products and is aimed at ensuring that such persons are entitled to compensation.
  • The objective of this Directive is to contribute to the proper functioning of the internal market, while ensuring a high level of consumer protection, and to remove divergences between the legal systems of Member States related to the liability of economic operators for damage suffered by natural persons caused by defective products.
  • This Directive does not apply to free and open-source software, unless such software is offered in exchange for a price.
  • Damage
  • Members maintain that ‘damage’ means material losses resulting from:
  • - death or personal injury, including medically recognised damage to psychological health;
  • - damage to, or destruction of, any property, with exceptions;
  • - destruction or irreversible corruption of data that are not used for professional purposes, provided that the material loss exceeds EUR 1 000.
  • Guidance
  • Member States should ensure that competent national consumer protection authorities and bodies provide all relevant information and tailored guidance to affected consumers to enable them to effectively exercise their right to compensation. Market surveillance authorities should regularly exchange relevant information with national consumer protection agencies and bodies to ensure a high level of consumer protection.
  • Defectiveness
  • A product should be considered defective when it does not provide the safety that an average person is entitled to expect or when this is required by Union or national law.
  • In assessing the defectiveness of a product, all circumstances shall be taken into account, including:
  • - the characteristics of the product, including its labelling, design , technical features, composition, packaging, any other information regarding the product and the instructions for assembly, installation, use and maintenance;
  • - the reasonably foreseeable use of the product, taking into account the expected lifespan of the product;
  • - the effect on the product of any ability to acquire new features or knowledge after it is placed on the market or put into service;
  • - the effect that other products might have on the product to be assessed, where, at the time of placing on the market or putting into service;
  • - any recall of the product or any other relevant intervention decided by a regulatory authority or by an economic operator relating to product safety.
  • Responsibility of economic operators
  • Member States should ensure that, where a defective component has caused the product defect, the manufacturer of the defective component can also be held liable for the same damage, unless the defect is due to the design of the product in into which the component has been incorporated or to the instructions given by the manufacturer of this product to the manufacturer of the component.
  • Any natural or legal person who modifies a product substantially outside the control of the manufacturer and then makes it available on the market or in service should be considered a manufacturer of the product.
  • Where the victim does not obtain compensation because none of the economic operators can be held liable under the Directive, or because the economic operators responsible are insolvent or have ceased to exist, Member States will be able to use existing national sectoral compensation schemes or establish new ones to compensate injured parties who have suffered damage caused by defective products.
  • Disclosure of evidence
  • In legal proceedings to adjudicate on compensation for damage caused by a defective product, at the request of a claimant who has presented facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of the claim for compensation, national courts should be able to order the defendant to disclose relevant evidence that is at its disposal. At the request of the defendant, national courts should also be able to order the claimant to disclose relevant evidence that is at its disposal.
  • The requested disclosure of evidence should be limited to what is necessary and proportionate, and should be carried out in such a way as to ensure that trade secrets.
  • Burden of proof
  • A national court should presume the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between the defectiveness of the product and the damage, or both, when:
  • - the national court considers that the claimant faces excessive difficulties, due to technical or scientific complexity to be able to prove the defectiveness of the product or the causal link between its defectiveness and the damage, or both; and
  • - the claimant establishes, on the basis of relevant evidence, that it is possible that the product contributed to the damage, and it is possible that the product is defective or that its defectiveness is a possible cause of the damage, or both.
  • Right of recourse
  • Where more than one economic operator is liable for the same damage, any economic operator that has compensated the injured person or was ordered to do so by an enforceable judgment will have a right of recourse against any other jointly and severally liable economic operator.
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