While many consumer lawyers are currently busy analysing the details of the opinion of AG Emiliou in Compass Banca case (C-646/22) (and we will add our own analysis of it in the coming days, too), on the same day (April 25) two judgments were issued by the CJEU clarifying the consequences of terms’ unfairness on restitution of costs paid by consumers. Both in Caixabank (Délai de prescription) (C-484/21) and Banco Santander (Départ du délai de prescription) (C-561/21) Spanish courts posed questions concerning validity of various limitation periods for consumers raising a restitution claim for ‘the costs clause’. The costs clause included in mortgage loan contracts obliged consumers to pay all the costs relating to the mortgage’s creation. This may encompass notary, registry and agency fees.
The CJEU refers back to the Gutiérrez Naranjo and Others case (C-154/15 – with our comment here) to reaffirm the obligation of national courts to facilitate restitution of amounts consumers paid, which were imposed by an unfair contract term (e.g. paras 16-17 in C-484/21). Could national limitation periods stand in the way of such consumer claims? Previously, the CJEU already confirmed that limitation periods could be set in national laws as applicable to restitution claims brought by consumers in enforcing their rights from UCTD, however, these cannot make it in practice impossible or excessively difficult to exercise such rights (para 27 in C-484/21).
In short, regarding limitation periods for restitution claims, which are raised by consumers following a declaration of unfairness of terms setting the payment obligation, CJEU decided as follows:
- They cannot start running from the date of the payment, irrespective of whether consumers were or could reasonably have been aware of the unfairness of terms at the time of the payment, or before the term was found to be void (paras 30, 32, 34-35 in C-484/21).
- They cannot start running from the date on which the national supreme court delivered a judgment in a separate, earlier case, declaring a corresponding term unfair (C-484/21 and C-561/21). To pay attention to: The CJEU highlights here the lack of obligation for service providers to inform their consumers that terms in their contracts are equivalent in scope to terms in other contracts that have been found unfair (para 41 in C-484/21). Further, it mentions that average consumers cannot be ‘required not only to keep himself or herself regularly informed, on his or her own initiative, of decisions of the national supreme court relating to standard terms contained in contracts of a similar nature to those which or she has concluded with sellers or suppliers, but also to determine, on the basis of a judgment of a national supreme court, whether a term included in a particular contract is unfair’ (para 45 in C-484/21).
- They cannot start running on the date of the CJEU’s judgments, which confirmed, in principle, that limitation periods for actions for restitutions are compatible with EU law (provided they are equivalent and effective) (C-561/21). (for similar as above reasons + the fact that CJEU often leaves determination of unfairness to national courts – para 58 in C-561/21)
- They can start running on the date on which the decision about unfairness of a term in a given case becomes final, without prejudice to the trader’s right to prove that consumers were or could have been reasonably aware of the unfairness before the decision was made (paras 35-38 in C-561/21).