Rules of Procedure of the Court of Justice (32012Q0929(01))
EU - Rechtsakte: 01 General, financial and institutional matters
RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE COURT OF JUSTICE
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS
Article 1
Definitions
Article 2
Purport of these Rules
TITLE I
- ORGANISATION OF THE COURT
CHAPTER 1 -
JUDGES AND ADVOCATES GENERAL
Article 3
Commencement of the term of office of Judges and Advocates General
Article 4
Taking of the oath
Article 5
Solemn undertaking
Article 6
Depriving a Judge or Advocate General of his office
Article 7
Order of seniority
CHAPTER 2 -
PRESIDENCY OF THE COURT, CONSTITUTION OF THE CHAMBERS AND DESIGNATION OF THE FIRST ADVOCATE GENERAL
Article 8
Election of the President and of the Vice-President of the Court
Article 9
Responsibilities of the President of the Court
Article 10
Responsibilities of the Vice-President of the Court
Article 11
Constitution of Chambers
Article 12
Election of Presidents of Chambers
Article 13
Where the President and Vice-President of the Court are prevented from acting
Article 14
Designation of the First Advocate General
CHAPTER 3 -
ASSIGNMENT OF CASES TO JUDGE-RAPPORTEURS AND ADVOCATES GENERAL
Article 15
Designation of the Judge-Rapporteur
Article 16
Designation of the Advocate General
CHAPTER 4 -
ASSISTANT RAPPORTEURS
Article 17
Assistant Rapporteurs
CHAPTER 5 -
REGISTRY
Article 18
Appointment of the Registrar
Article 19
Deputy Registrar
Article 20
Responsibilities of the Registrar
Article 21
Keeping of the register
Article 22
Consultation of the register and of judgments and orders
CHAPTER 6 -
THE WORKING OF THE COURT
Article 23
Location of the sittings of the Court
Article 24
Calendar of the Court’s judicial business
Article 25
General meeting
Article 26
Drawing-up of minutes
CHAPTER 7 -
FORMATIONS OF THE COURT
Section 1.
Composition of the formations of the Court
Article 27
Composition of the Grand Chamber
Article 28
Composition of the Chambers of five and of three Judges
Article 29
Composition of Chambers where cases are related or referred back
Article 30
Where a President of a Chamber is prevented from acting
Article 31
Where a member of the formation of the Court is prevented from acting
Section 2.
Deliberations
Article 32
Procedures concerning deliberations
Article 33
Number of Judges taking part in the deliberations
Article 34
Quorum of the Grand Chamber
Article 35
Quorum of the Chambers of five and of three Judges
CHAPTER 8 -
LANGUAGES
Article 36
Language of a case
Article 37
Determination of the language of a case
Article 38
Use of the language of the case
Article 39
Responsibility of the Registrar concerning language arrangements
Article 40
Languages of the publications of the Court
Article 41
Authentic texts
Article 42
Language service of the Court
TITLE II
- COMMON PROCEDURAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER 1 -
RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF AGENTS, ADVISERS AND LAWYERS
Article 43
Privileges, immunities and facilities
Article 44
Status of the parties’ representatives
Article 45
Waiver of immunity
Article 46
Exclusion from the proceedings
Article 47
University teachers and parties to the main proceedings
CHAPTER 2 -
SERVICE
Article 48
Methods of service
CHAPTER 3 -
TIME-LIMITS
Article 49
Calculation of time-limits
Article 50
Proceedings against a measure adopted by an institution
Article 51
Extension on account of distance
Article 52
Setting and extension of time-limits
CHAPTER 4 -
DIFFERENT PROCEDURES FOR DEALING WITH CASES
Article 53
Procedures for dealing with cases
Article 54
Joinder
Article 55
Stay of proceedings
Article 56
Deferment of the determination of a case
CHAPTER 5 -
WRITTEN PART OF THE PROCEDURE
Article 57
Lodging of procedural documents
Article 58
Length of procedural documents
CHAPTER 6 -
THE PRELIMINARY REPORT AND ASSIGNMENT OF CASES TO FORMATIONS OF THE COURT
Article 59
Preliminary report
Article 60
Assignment of cases to formations of the Court
CHAPTER 7 -
MEASURES OF ORGANISATION OF PROCEDURE AND MEASURES OF INQUIRY
Section 1.
Measures of organisation of procedure
Article 61
Measures of organisation prescribed by the Court
Article 62
Measures of organisation prescribed by the Judge-Rapporteur or the Advocate General
Section 2.
Measures of inquiry
Article 63
Decision on measures of inquiry
Article 64
Determination of measures of inquiry
Article 65
Participation in measures of inquiry
Article 66
Oral testimony
Article 67
Examination of witnesses
Article 68
Witnesses’ oath
Article 69
Pecuniary penalties
Article 70
Expert’s report
Article 71
Expert’s oath
Article 72
Objection to a witness or expert
Article 73
Witnesses’ and experts’ costs
Article 74
Minutes of inquiry hearings
Article 75
Opening of the oral part of the procedure after the inquiry
CHAPTER 8 -
ORAL PART OF THE PROCEDURE
Article 76
Hearing
Article 77
Joint hearing
Article 78
Conduct of oral proceedings
Article 79
Cases heard in camera
Article 80
Questions
Article 81
Close of the hearing
Article 82
Delivery of the Opinion of the Advocate General
Article 83
Opening or reopening of the oral part of the procedure
Article 84
Minutes of hearings
Article 85
Recording of the hearing
CHAPTER 9 -
JUDGMENTS AND ORDERS
Article 86
Date of delivery of a judgment
Article 87
Content of a judgment
Article 88
Delivery and service of the judgment
Article 89
Content of an order
Article 90
Signature and service of the order
Article 91
Binding nature of judgments and orders
Article 92
Publication in the Official Journal of the European Union
TITLE III
- REFERENCES FOR A PRELIMINARY RULING
CHAPTER 1 -
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 93
Scope
Article 94
Content of the request for a preliminary ruling
Article 95
Anonymity
Article 96
Participation in preliminary ruling proceedings
Article 97
Parties to the main proceedings
Article 98
Translation and service of the request for a preliminary ruling
Article 99
Reply by reasoned order
Article 100
Circumstances in which the Court remains seised
Article 101
Request for clarification
Article 102
Costs of the preliminary ruling proceedings
Article 103
Rectification of judgments and orders
Article 104
Interpretation of preliminary rulings
CHAPTER 2 -
EXPEDITED PRELIMINARY RULING PROCEDURE
Article 105
Expedited procedure
Article 106
Transmission of procedural documents
CHAPTER 3 -
URGENT PRELIMINARY RULING PROCEDURE
Article 107
Scope of the urgent preliminary ruling procedure
Article 108
Decision as to urgency
Article 109
Written part of the urgent procedure
Article 110
Service and information following the close of the written part of the procedure
Article 111
Omission of the written part of the procedure
Article 112
Decision on the substance
Article 113
Formation of the Court
Article 114
Transmission of procedural documents
CHAPTER 4 -
LEGAL AID
Article 115
Application for legal aid
Article 116
Decision on the application for legal aid
Article 117
Sums to be advanced as legal aid
Article 118
Withdrawal of legal aid
TITLE IV
- DIRECT ACTIONS
CHAPTER 1 -
REPRESENTATION OF THE PARTIES
Article 119
Obligation to be represented
CHAPTER 2 -
WRITTEN PART OF THE PROCEDURE
Article 120
Content of the application
Article 121
Information relating to service
Article 122
Annexes to the application
Article 123
Service of the application
Article 124
Content of the defence
Article 125
Transmission of documents
Article 126
Reply and rejoinder
CHAPTER 3 -
PLEAS IN LAW AND EVIDENCE
Article 127
New pleas in law
Article 128
Evidence produced or offered
CHAPTER 4 -
INTERVENTION
Article 129
Object and effects of the intervention
Article 130
Application to intervene
Article 131
Decision on applications to intervene
Article 132
Submission of statements
CHAPTER 5 -
EXPEDITED PROCEDURE
Article 133
Decision relating to the expedited procedure
Article 134
Written part of the procedure
Article 135
Oral part of the procedure
Article 136
Decision on the substance
CHAPTER 6 -
COSTS
Article 137
Decision as to costs
Article 138
General rules as to allocation of costs
Article 139
Unreasonable or vexatious costs
Article 140
Costs of interveners
Article 141
Costs in the event of discontinuance or withdrawal
Article 142
Costs where a case does not proceed to judgment
Article 143
Costs of proceedings
Article 144
Recoverable costs
Article 145
Dispute concerning the costs to be recovered
Article 146
Procedure for payment
CHAPTER 7 -
AMICABLE SETTLEMENT, DISCONTINUANCE, CASES THAT DO NOT PROCEED TO JUDGMENT AND PRELIMINARY ISSUES
Article 147
Amicable settlement
Article 148
Discontinuance
Article 149
Cases that do not proceed to judgment
Article 150
Absolute bar to proceeding with a case
Article 151
Preliminary objections and issues
CHAPTER 8 -
JUDGMENTS BY DEFAULT
Article 152
Judgments by default
CHAPTER 9 -
REQUESTS AND APPLICATIONS RELATING TO JUDGMENTS AND ORDERS
Article 153
Competent formation of the Court
Article 154
Rectification
Article 155
Failure to adjudicate
Article 156
Application to set aside
Article 157
Third-party proceedings
Article 158
Interpretation
Article 159
Revision
CHAPTER 10 -
SUSPENSION OF OPERATION OR ENFORCEMENT AND OTHER INTERIM MEASURES
Article 160
Application for suspension or for interim measures
Article 161
Decision on the application
Article 162
Order for suspension of operation or for interim measures
Article 163
Change in circumstances
Article 164
New application
Article 165
Applications pursuant to Articles 280 TFEU and 299 TFEU and Article 164 TEAEC
Article 166
Application pursuant to Article 81 TEAEC
TITLE V
- APPEALS AGAINST DECISIONS OF THE GENERAL COURT
CHAPTER 1 -
FORM AND CONTENT OF THE APPEAL, AND FORM OF ORDER SOUGHT
Article 167
Lodging of the appeal
Article 168
Content of the appeal
Article 169
Form of order sought, pleas in law and arguments of the appeal
Article 170
Form of order sought in the event that the appeal is allowed
CHAPTER 2 -
RESPONSES, REPLIES AND REJOINDERS
Article 171
Service of the appeal
Article 172
Parties authorised to lodge a response
Article 173
Content of the response
Article 174
Form of order sought in the response
Article 175
Reply and rejoinder
CHAPTER 3 -
FORM AND CONTENT OF THE CROSS-APPEAL, AND FORM OF ORDER SOUGHT
Article 176
Cross-appeal
Article 177
Content of the cross-appeal
Article 178
Form of order sought, pleas in law and arguments of the cross-appeal
CHAPTER 4 -
PLEADINGS CONSEQUENT ON THE CROSS-APPEAL
Article 179
Response to the cross-appeal
Article 180
Reply and rejoinder on a cross-appeal
CHAPTER 5 -
APPEALS DETERMINED BY ORDER
Article 181
Manifestly inadmissible or manifestly unfounded appeal or cross-appeal
Article 182
Manifestly well-founded appeal or cross-appeal
CHAPTER 6 -
EFFECT ON A CROSS-APPEAL OF THE REMOVAL OF THE APPEAL FROM THE REGISTER
Article 183
Effect on a cross-appeal of the discontinuance or manifest inadmissibility of the appeal
CHAPTER 7 -
COSTS AND LEGAL AID IN APPEALS
Article 184
Costs in appeals
Article 185
Legal aid
Article 186
Prior application for legal aid
Article 187
Decision on the application for legal aid
Article 188
Sums to be advanced as legal aid
Article 189
Withdrawal of legal aid
CHAPTER 8 -
OTHER PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO APPEALS
Article 190
Other provisions applicable to appeals
TITLE VI
- REVIEW OF DECISIONS OF THE GENERAL COURT
Article 191
Reviewing Chamber
Article 192
Information and communication of decisions which may be reviewed
Article 193
Review of decisions given on appeal
Article 194
Review of preliminary rulings
Article 195
Judgment on the substance of the case after a decision to review
TITLE VII
- OPINIONS
Article 196
Written part of the procedure
Article 197
Designation of the Judge-Rapporteur and of the Advocate General
Article 198
Hearing
Article 199
Time-limit for delivering the Opinion
Article 200
Delivery of the Opinion
TITLE VIII
- PARTICULAR FORMS OF PROCEDURE
Article 201
Appeals against decisions of the arbitration committee
Article 202
Procedure under Article 103 TEAEC
Article 203
Procedures under Articles 104 TEAEC and 105 TEAEC
Article 204
Procedure provided for by Article 111(3) of the EEA Agreement
Article 205
Settlement of the disputes referred to in Article 35 TEU in the version in force before the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon
Article 206
Requests under Article 269 TFEU
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 207
Supplementary rules
Article 208
Implementing rules
Article 209
Repeal
Article 210
Publication and entry into force of these Rules

RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE COURT OF JUSTICE

THE COURT OF JUSTICE
Having regard to the Treaty on European Union, and in particular Article 19 thereof,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular the sixth paragraph of Article 253 thereof,
Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community, and in particular Article 106a(1) thereof,
Having regard to the Protocol on the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union, and in particular Article 63 and the second paragraph of Article 64 thereof,
Whereas:
(1) Despite having been amended on several occasions over the years, the Rules of Procedure of the Court of Justice have remained fundamentally unchanged in structure since their original adoption on 4 March 1953. The Rules of Procedure of 19 June 1991, which are currently in force, still reflect the initial preponderance of direct actions, whereas in fact the majority of such actions now fall within the jurisdiction of the General Court, and references for a preliminary ruling from the courts and tribunals of the Member States represent, quantitatively, the primary category of cases brought before the Court. That fact should be taken into account and the structure and content of the Rules of Procedure of the Court adapted, in consequence, to changes in its caseload.
(2) While references for a preliminary ruling should be given their proper place in the Rules of Procedure, it is also appropriate to draw a clearer distinction between the rules that apply to all types of action and those that are specific to each type, to be contained in separate titles. In the interests of clarification, procedural provisions common to all cases brought before the Court should, therefore, all be contained in an initial title.
(3) In the light of experience gained in the course of implementing the various procedures, it is also necessary to supplement or to clarify, for the benefit of litigants as well as of national courts and tribunals, the rules that apply to each procedure. The rules in question concern, in particular, the concepts of party to the main proceedings, intervener and party to the proceedings before the General Court, or, in preliminary rulings, the rules governing the bringing of matters before the Court and the content of the order for reference. With regard to appeals against decisions of the General Court, a clearer distinction must also be drawn between appeals and cross-appeals in consequence of the service of an appeal on the cross-appellant.
(4) Conversely, the excessive complexity of certain procedures, such as the review procedure, has come to light on their implementation. Accordingly, they should be simplified by providing, inter alia, for a Chamber of five Judges to be designated for a period of one year to be responsible for ruling both on the First Advocate General’s proposal to review and on the questions to be reviewed.
(5) Similarly, the procedural arrangements for dealing with requests for Opinions should be eased by aligning them with those that apply to other cases and by providing, in consequence, for a single Advocate General to be involved in dealing with the request for an Opinion. In the interests of making the Rules easier to understand, all the particular procedures currently to be found in a number of separate titles and chapters of the Rules of Procedure should also be brought together in a single title.
(6) In order to maintain the Court’s capacity, in the face of an ever-increasing caseload, to dispose within a reasonable period of time of the cases brought before it, it is also necessary to continue the efforts made to reduce the duration of proceedings before the Court, in particular by extending the opportunities for the Court to rule by reasoned order, simplifying the rules relating to the intervention of the States and institutions referred to in the first and third paragraphs of Article 40 of the Statute and providing for the Court to be able to rule without a hearing if it considers that it has sufficient information on the basis of all the written observations lodged in a case.
(7) In the interests of making the Rules applied by the Court easier to understand, lastly, certain rules which are outdated or not applied should be deleted, every paragraph of the present Rules numbered, each article given a specific heading summarising its content and the terminology harmonised.
With the Council’s approval given on 24 September 2012.
HAS ADOPTED THESE RULES OF PROCEDURE:

INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS

Article 1

Definitions

1.   In these Rules:
(a) provisions of the Treaty on European Union are referred to by the number of the article concerned followed by ‘TEU’,
(b) provisions of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union are referred to by the number of the article concerned followed by ‘TFEU’,
(c) provisions of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community are referred to by the number of the article concerned followed by ‘TEAEC’,
(d) ‘Statute’ means the Protocol on the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union,
(e) ‘EEA Agreement’ means the Agreement on the European Economic Area,(1)
(f) ‘Council Regulation No 1’ means Council Regulation No 1 of 15 April 1958 determining the languages to be used by the European Economic Community.(2)
2.   For the purposes of these Rules:
(a) ‘institutions’ means the institutions of the European Union referred to in Article 13(1) TEU and bodies, offices and agencies established by the Treaties, or by an act adopted in implementation thereof, which may be parties before the Court,
(b) ‘EFTA Surveillance Authority’ means the surveillance authority referred to in the EEA Agreement,
(c) ‘interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute’ means all the parties, States, institutions, bodies, offices and agencies authorised, pursuant to that Article, to submit statements of case or observations in the context of a reference for a preliminary ruling.

Article 2

Purport of these Rules

These Rules implement and supplement, so far as necessary, the relevant provisions of the EU, FEU and EAEC Treaties, and the Statute.

TITLE I

ORGANISATION OF THE COURT

Chapter 1

JUDGES AND ADVOCATES GENERAL

Article 3

Commencement of the term of office of Judges and Advocates General

The term of office of a Judge or Advocate General shall begin on the date fixed for that purpose in the instrument of appointment. In the absence of any provisions in that instrument regarding the date of commencement of the term of office, that term shall begin on the date of publication of the instrument in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 4

Taking of the oath

Before taking up his duties, a Judge or Advocate General shall, at the first public sitting of the Court which he attends after his appointment, take the following oath provided for in Article 2 of the Statute:
‘I swear that I will perform my duties impartially and conscientiously; I swear that I will preserve the secrecy of the deliberations of the Court.’

Article 5

Solemn undertaking

Immediately after taking the oath, a Judge or Advocate General shall sign a declaration by which he gives the solemn undertaking provided for in the third paragraph of Article 4 of the Statute.

Article 6

Depriving a Judge or Advocate General of his office

1.   Where the Court is called upon, pursuant to Article 6 of the Statute, to decide whether a Judge or Advocate General no longer fulfils the requisite conditions or no longer meets the obligations arising from his office, the President shall invite the Judge or Advocate General concerned to make representations.
2.   The Court shall give a decision in the absence of the Registrar.

Article 7

Order of seniority

1.   The seniority of Judges and Advocates General shall be calculated without distinction according to the date on which they took up their duties.
2.   Where there is equal seniority on that basis, the order of seniority shall be determined by age.
3.   Judges and Advocates General whose terms of office are renewed shall retain their former seniority.

Chapter 2

PRESIDENCY OF THE COURT, CONSTITUTION OF THE CHAMBERS AND DESIGNATION OF THE FIRST ADVOCATE GENERAL

Article 8

Election of the President and of the Vice-President of the Court

1.   The Judges shall, immediately after the partial replacement provided for in the second paragraph of Article 253 TFEU, elect one of their number as President of the Court for a term of three years.
2.   If the office of the President falls vacant before the normal date of expiry of the term thereof, the Court shall elect a successor for the remainder of the term.
3.   The elections provided for in this Article shall be by secret ballot. The Judge obtaining the votes of more than half the Judges of the Court shall be elected. If no Judge obtains that majority, further ballots shall be held until that majority is attained.
4.   The Judges shall then elect one of their number as Vice-President of the Court for a term of three years, in accordance with the procedures laid down in the preceding paragraph. Paragraph 2 shall apply if the office of the Vice-President of the Court falls vacant before the normal date of expiry of the term thereof.
5.   The names of the President and Vice-President elected in accordance with this Article shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 9

Responsibilities of the President of the Court

1.   The President shall represent the Court.
2.   The President shall direct the judicial business of the Court. He shall preside at general meetings of the Members of the Court and at hearings before and deliberations of the full Court and the Grand Chamber.
3.   The President shall ensure the proper functioning of the services of the Court.

Article 10

Responsibilities of the Vice-President of the Court

1.   The Vice-President shall assist the President of the Court in the performance of his duties and shall take the President’s place when the latter is prevented from acting.
2.   He shall take the President’s place, at his request, in performing the duties referred to in Article 9(1) and (3) of these Rules.
3.   The Court shall, by decision, specify the conditions under which the Vice-President shall take the place of the President of the Court in the performance of his judicial duties. That decision shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 11

Constitution of Chambers

1.   The Court shall set up Chambers of five and three Judges in accordance with Article 16 of the Statute and shall decide which Judges shall be attached to them.
2.   The Court shall designate the Chambers of five Judges which, for a period of one year, shall be responsible for cases of the kind referred to in Article 107 and Articles 193 and 194.
3.   In respect of cases assigned to a formation of the Court in accordance with Article 60, the word ‘Court’ in these Rules shall mean that formation.
4.   In respect of cases assigned to a Chamber of five or three Judges, the powers of the President of the Court shall be exercised by the President of the Chamber.
5.   The composition of the Chambers and the designation of the Chambers responsible for cases of the kind referred to in Article 107 and Articles 193 and 194 shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 12

Election of Presidents of Chambers

1.   The Judges shall, immediately after the election of the President and Vice-President of the Court, elect the Presidents of the Chambers of five Judges for a term of three years.
2.   The Judges shall then elect the Presidents of the Chambers of three Judges for a term of one year.
3.   The provisions of Article 8(2) and (3) shall apply.
4.   The names of the Presidents of Chambers elected in accordance with this Article shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 13

Where the President and Vice-President of the Court are prevented from acting

When the President and the Vice-President of the Court are prevented from acting, the functions of President shall be exercised by one of the Presidents of the Chambers of five Judges or, failing that, by one of the Presidents of the Chambers of three Judges or, failing that, by one of the other Judges, according to the order of seniority laid down in Article 7.

Article 14

Designation of the First Advocate General

1.   The Court shall, after hearing the Advocates General, designate a First Advocate General for a period of one year.
2.   If the office of the First Advocate General falls vacant before the normal date of expiry of the term thereof, the Court shall designate a successor for the remainder of the term.
3.   The name of the First Advocate General designated in accordance with this Article shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Chapter 3

ASSIGNMENT OF CASES TO JUDGE-RAPPORTEURS AND ADVOCATES GENERAL

Article 15

Designation of the Judge-Rapporteur

1.   As soon as possible after the document initiating proceedings has been lodged, the President of the Court shall designate a Judge to act as Rapporteur in the case.
2.   For cases of the kind referred to in Article 107 and Articles 193 and 194, the Judge-Rapporteur shall be selected from among the Judges of the Chamber designated in accordance with Article 11(2), on a proposal from the President of that Chamber. If, pursuant to Article 109, the Chamber decides that the reference is not to be dealt with under the urgent procedure, the President of the Court may reassign the case to a Judge-Rapporteur attached to another Chamber.
3.   The President of the Court shall take the necessary steps if a Judge-Rapporteur is prevented from acting.

Article 16

Designation of the Advocate General

1.   The First Advocate General shall assign each case to an Advocate General.
2.   The First Advocate General shall take the necessary steps if an Advocate General is prevented from acting.

Chapter 4

ASSISTANT RAPPORTEURS

Article 17

Assistant Rapporteurs

1.   Where the Court is of the opinion that the consideration of and preparatory inquiries in cases before it so require, it shall, pursuant to Article 13 of the Statute, propose the appointment of Assistant Rapporteurs.
2.   Assistant Rapporteurs shall in particular:
(a) assist the President of the Court in interim proceedings and
(b) assist the Judge-Rapporteurs in their work.
3.   In the performance of their duties the Assistant Rapporteurs shall be responsible to the President of the Court, the President of a Chamber or a Judge-Rapporteur, as the case may be.
4.   Before taking up his duties, an Assistant Rapporteur shall take before the Court the oath set out in Article 4 of these Rules.

Chapter 5

REGISTRY

Article 18

Appointment of the Registrar

1.   The Court shall appoint the Registrar.
2.   When the post of Registrar is vacant, an advertisement shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
. Interested persons shall be invited to submit their applications within a time-limit of not less than three weeks, accompanied by full details of their nationality, university degrees, knowledge of languages, present and past occupations, and experience, if any, in judicial and international fields.
3.   The vote, in which the Judges and the Advocates General shall take part, shall take place in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 8(3) of these Rules.
4.   The Registrar shall be appointed for a term of six years. He may be reappointed. The Court may decide to renew the term of office of the incumbent Registrar without availing itself of the procedure laid down in paragraph 2 of this Article.
5.   The Registrar shall take the oath set out in Article 4 and sign the declaration provided for in Article 5.
6.   The Registrar may be deprived of his office only if he no longer fulfils the requisite conditions or no longer meets the obligations arising from his office. The Court shall take its decision after giving the Registrar an opportunity to make representations.
7.   If the office of Registrar falls vacant before the normal date of expiry of the term thereof, the Court shall appoint a new Registrar for a term of six years.
8.   The name of the Registrar elected in accordance with this Article shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 19

Deputy Registrar

The Court may, in accordance with the procedure laid down in respect of the Registrar, appoint a Deputy Registrar to assist the Registrar and to take his place if he is prevented from acting.

Article 20

Responsibilities of the Registrar

1.   The Registrar shall be responsible, under the authority of the President of the Court, for the acceptance, transmission and custody of all documents and for effecting service as provided for by these Rules.
2.   The Registrar shall assist the Members of the Court in all their official functions.
3.   The Registrar shall have custody of the seals and shall be responsible for the records. He shall be in charge of the publications of the Court and, in particular, the European Court Reports.
4.   The Registrar shall direct the services of the Court under the authority of the President of the Court. He shall be responsible for the management of the staff and the administration, and for the preparation and implementation of the budget.

Article 21

Keeping of the register

1.   There shall be kept in the Registry, under the responsibility of the Registrar, a register in which all procedural documents and supporting items and documents lodged shall be entered in the order in which they are submitted.
2.   When a document has been registered, the Registrar shall make a note to that effect on the original and, if a party so requests, on any copy submitted for the purpose.
3.   Entries in the register and the notes provided for in the preceding paragraph shall be authentic.
4.   A notice shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
indicating the date of registration of an application initiating proceedings, the names of the parties, the form of order sought by the applicant and a summary of the pleas in law and of the main supporting arguments or, as the case may be, the date of lodging of a request for a preliminary ruling, the identity of the referring court or tribunal and the parties to the main proceedings, and the questions referred to the Court.

Article 22

Consultation of the register and of judgments and orders

1.   Anyone may consult the register at the Registry and may obtain copies or extracts on payment of a charge on a scale fixed by the Court on a proposal from the Registrar.
2.   The parties to a case may, on payment of the appropriate charge, obtain certified copies of procedural documents.
3.   Anyone may, on payment of the appropriate charge, also obtain certified copies of judgments and orders.

Chapter 6

THE WORKING OF THE COURT

Article 23

Location of the sittings of the Court

The Court may choose to hold one or more specific sittings in a place other than that in which it has its seat.

Article 24

Calendar of the Court’s judicial business

1.   The judicial year shall begin on 7 October of each calendar year and end on 6 October of the following year.
2.   The judicial vacations shall be determined by the Court.
3.   In a case of urgency, the President may convene the Judges and the Advocates General during the judicial vacations.
4.   The Court shall observe the official holidays of the place in which it has its seat.
5.   The Court may, in proper circumstances, grant leave of absence to any Judge or Advocate General.
6.   The dates of the judicial vacations and the list of official holidays shall be published annually in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 25

General meeting

Decisions concerning administrative issues or the action to be taken upon the proposals contained in the preliminary report referred to in Article 59 of these Rules shall be taken by the Court at the general meeting in which all the Judges and Advocates General shall take part and have a vote. The Registrar shall be present, unless the Court decides to the contrary.

Article 26

Drawing-up of minutes

Where the Court sits without the Registrar being present it shall, if necessary, instruct the most junior Judge for the purposes of Article 7 of these Rules to draw up minutes, which shall be signed by that Judge and by the President.

Chapter 7

FORMATIONS OF THE COURT

Section 1.   Composition of the formations of the Court

Article 27

Composition of the Grand Chamber

1.   The Grand Chamber shall, for each case, be composed of the President and the Vice-President of the Court, three Presidents of Chambers of five Judges, the Judge-Rapporteur and the number of Judges necessary to reach 15. The last-mentioned Judges and the three Presidents of Chambers of five Judges shall be designated from the lists referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4 of this Article, following the order laid down therein. The starting-point on each of those lists, in every case assigned to the Grand Chamber, shall be the name of the Judge immediately following the last Judge designated from the list concerned for the preceding case assigned to that formation of the Court.
2.   After the election of the President and the Vice-President of the Court, and then of the Presidents of the Chambers of five Judges, a list of the Presidents of Chambers of five Judges and a list of the other Judges shall be drawn up for the purposes of determining the composition of the Grand Chamber.
3.   The list of the Presidents of Chambers of five Judges shall be drawn up according to the order laid down in Article 7 of these Rules.
4.   The list of the other Judges shall be drawn up according to the order laid down in Article 7 of these Rules, alternating with the reverse order: the first Judge on that list shall be the first according to the order laid down in that Article, the second Judge shall be the last according to that order, the third Judge shall be the second according to that order, the fourth Judge the penultimate according to that order, and so on.
5.   The lists referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4 shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.
6.   In cases which are assigned to the Grand Chamber between the beginning of a calendar year in which there is a partial replacement of Judges and the moment when that replacement has taken place, two substitute Judges may be designated to complete the formation of the Court for so long as the attainment of the quorum referred to in the third paragraph of Article 17 of the Statute is in doubt. Those substitute Judges shall be the two Judges appearing on the list referred to in paragraph 4 immediately after the last Judge designated for the composition of the Grand Chamber in the case.
7.   The substitute Judges shall replace, in the order of the list referred to in paragraph 4, such Judges as are unable to take part in the determination of the case.

Article 28

Composition of the Chambers of five and of three Judges

1.   The Chambers of five Judges and of three Judges shall, for each case, be composed of the President of the Chamber, the Judge-Rapporteur and the number of Judges required to attain the number of five and three Judges respectively. Those last-mentioned Judges shall be designated from the lists referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3, following the order laid down therein. The starting-point on those lists, in every case assigned to a Chamber, shall be the name of the Judge immediately following the last Judge designated from the list for the preceding case assigned to the Chamber concerned.
2.   For the composition of the Chambers of five Judges, after the election of the Presidents of those Chambers lists shall be drawn up including all the Judges attached to the Chamber concerned, with the exception of its President. The lists shall be drawn up in the same way as the list referred to in Article 27(4).
3.   For the composition of the Chambers of three Judges, after the election of the Presidents of those Chambers lists shall be drawn up including all the Judges attached to the Chamber concerned, with the exception of its President. The lists shall be drawn up according to the order laid down in Article 7.
4.   The lists referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 29

Composition of Chambers where cases are related or referred back

1.   Where the Court considers that a number of cases must be heard and determined together by one and the same formation of the Court, the composition of that formation shall be that fixed for the case in respect of which the preliminary report was examined first.
2.   Where a Chamber to which a case has been assigned requests the Court, pursuant to Article 60(3) of these Rules, to assign the case to a formation composed of a greater number of Judges, that formation shall include the members of the Chamber which has referred the case back.

Article 30

Where a President of a Chamber is prevented from acting

1.   When the President of a Chamber of five Judges is prevented from acting, the functions of President of the Chamber shall be exercised by a President of a Chamber of three Judges, where necessary according to the order laid down in Article 7 of these Rules, or, if that formation of the Court does not include a President of a Chamber of three Judges, by one of the other Judges according to the order laid down in Article 7.
2.   When the President of a Chamber of three Judges is prevented from acting, the functions of President of the Chamber shall be exercised by a Judge of that formation of the Court according to the order laid down in Article 7.

Article 31

Where a member of the formation of the Court is prevented from acting

1.   When a member of the Grand Chamber is prevented from acting, he shall be replaced by another Judge according to the order of the list referred to in Article 27(4).
2.   When a member of a Chamber of five Judges is prevented from acting, he shall be replaced by another Judge of that Chamber, according to the order of the list referred to in Article 28(2). If it is not possible to replace the Judge prevented from acting by a Judge of the same Chamber, the President of that Chamber shall so inform the President of the Court who may designate another Judge to complete the Chamber.
3.   When a member of a Chamber of three Judges is prevented from acting, he shall be replaced by another Judge of that Chamber, according to the order of the list referred to in Article 28(3). If it is not possible to replace the Judge prevented from acting by a Judge of the same Chamber, the President of that Chamber shall so inform the President of the Court who may designate another Judge to complete the Chamber.

Section 2.   Deliberations

Article 32

Procedures concerning deliberations

1.   The deliberations of the Court shall be and shall remain secret.
2.   When a hearing has taken place, only those Judges who participated in that hearing and, where relevant, the Assistant Rapporteur responsible for the consideration of the case shall take part in the deliberations.
3.   Every Judge taking part in the deliberations shall state his opinion and the reasons for it.
4.   The conclusions reached by the majority of the Judges after final discussion shall determine the decision of the Court.

Article 33

Number of Judges taking part in the deliberations

Where, by reason of a Judge being prevented from acting, there is an even number of Judges, the most junior Judge for the purposes of Article 7 of these Rules shall abstain from taking part in the deliberations unless he is the Judge-Rapporteur. In that case the Judge immediately senior to him shall abstain from taking part in the deliberations.

Article 34

Quorum of the Grand Chamber

1.   If, for a case assigned to the Grand Chamber, it is not possible to attain the quorum referred to in the third paragraph of Article 17 of the Statute, the President of the Court shall designate one or more other Judges according to the order of the list referred to in Article 27(4) of these Rules.
2.   If a hearing has taken place before that designation, the Court shall re-hear oral argument from the parties and the Opinion of the Advocate General.

Article 35

Quorum of the Chambers of five and of three Judges

1.   If, for a case assigned to a Chamber of five or of three Judges, it is not possible to attain the quorum referred to in the second paragraph of Article 17 of the Statute, the President of the Court shall designate one or more other Judges according to the order of the list referred to in Article 28(2) or (3), respectively, of these Rules. If it is not possible to replace the Judge prevented from acting by a Judge of the same Chamber, the President of that Chamber shall so inform the President of the Court forthwith who shall designate another Judge to complete the Chamber.
2.   Article 34(2) shall apply,
mutatis mutandis
, to the Chambers of five and of three Judges.

Chapter 8

LANGUAGES

Article 36

Language of a case

The language of a case shall be Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish or Swedish.

Article 37

Determination of the language of a case

1.   In direct actions, the language of a case shall be chosen by the applicant, except that:
(a) where the defendant is a Member State, the language of the case shall be the official language of that State; where that State has more than one official language, the applicant may choose between them;
(b) at the joint request of the parties, the use of another of the languages mentioned in Article 36 for all or part of the proceedings may be authorised;
(c) at the request of one of the parties, and after the opposite party and the Advocate General have been heard, the use of another of the languages mentioned in Article 36 may be authorised as the language of the case for all or part of the proceedings by way of derogation from subparagraphs (a) and (b); such a request may not be submitted by one of the institutions of the European Union.
2.   Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 1(b) and (c), and of Article 38(4) and (5) of these Rules,
(a) in appeals against decisions of the General Court as referred to in Articles 56 and 57 of the Statute, the language of the case shall be the language of the decision of the General Court against which the appeal is brought;
(b) where, in accordance with the second paragraph of Article 62 of the Statute, the Court decides to review a decision of the General Court, the language of the case shall be the language of the decision of the General Court which is the subject of review;
(c) in the case of challenges concerning the costs to be recovered, applications to set aside judgments by default, third-party proceedings and applications for interpretation or revision of a judgment or for the Court to remedy a failure to adjudicate, the language of the case shall be the language of the decision to which those applications or challenges relate.
3.   In preliminary ruling proceedings, the language of the case shall be the language of the referring court or tribunal. At the duly substantiated request of one of the parties to the main proceedings, and after the other party to the main proceedings and the Advocate General have been heard, the use of another of the languages mentioned in Article 36 may be authorised for the oral part of the procedure. Where granted, such authorisation shall apply in respect of all the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
4.   Requests as above may be decided on by the President; the latter may, and where he wishes to accede to a request without the agreement of all the parties must, refer the request to the Court.

Article 38

Use of the language of the case

1.   The language of the case shall in particular be used in the written and oral pleadings of the parties, including the items and documents produced or annexed to them, and also in the minutes and decisions of the Court.
2.   Any item or document produced or annexed that is expressed in another language must be accompanied by a translation into the language of the case.
3.   However, in the case of substantial items or lengthy documents, translations may be confined to extracts. At any time the Court may, of its own motion or at the request of one of the parties, call for a complete or fuller translation.
4.   Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions, a Member State shall be entitled to use its official language when taking part in preliminary ruling proceedings, when intervening in a case before the Court or when bringing a matter before the Court pursuant to Article 259 TFEU. This provision shall apply both to written documents and to oral statements. The Registrar shall arrange in each instance for translation into the language of the case.
5.   The States, other than the Member States, which are parties to the EEA Agreement, and also the EFTA Surveillance Authority, may be authorised to use one of the languages mentioned in Article 36, other than the language of the case, when they take part in preliminary ruling proceedings or intervene in a case before the Court. This provision shall apply both to written documents and to oral statements. The Registrar shall arrange in each instance for translation into the language of the case.
6.   Non-Member States taking part in preliminary ruling proceedings pursuant to the fourth paragraph of Article 23 of the Statute may be authorised to use one of the languages mentioned in Article 36 other than the language of the case. This provision shall apply both to written documents and to oral statements. The Registrar shall arrange in each instance for translation into the language of the case.
7.   Where a witness or expert states that he is unable adequately to express himself in one of the languages referred to in Article 36, the Court may authorise him to give his evidence in another language. The Registrar shall arrange for translation into the language of the case.
8.   The President and the Vice-President of the Court and also the Presidents of Chambers in conducting oral proceedings, Judges and Advocates General in putting questions and Advocates General in delivering their Opinions may use one of the languages referred to in Article 36 other than the language of the case. The Registrar shall arrange for translation into the language of the case.

Article 39

Responsibility of the Registrar concerning language arrangements

The Registrar shall, at the request of any Judge, of the Advocate General or of a party, arrange for anything said or written in the course of the proceedings before the Court to be translated into the languages chosen from those referred to in Article 36.

Article 40

Languages of the publications of the Court

Publications of the Court shall be issued in the languages referred to in Article 1 of Council Regulation No 1.

Article 41

Authentic texts

The texts of documents drawn up in the language of the case or, where applicable, in another language authorised pursuant to Articles 37 or 38 of these Rules shall be authentic.

Article 42

Language service of the Court

The Court shall set up a language service staffed by experts with adequate legal training and a thorough knowledge of several official languages of the European Union.

TITLE II

COMMON PROCEDURAL PROVISIONS

Chapter 1

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF AGENTS, ADVISERS AND LAWYERS

Article 43

Privileges, immunities and facilities

1.   Agents, advisers and lawyers who appear before the Court or before any judicial authority to which the Court has addressed letters rogatory shall enjoy immunity in respect of words spoken or written by them concerning the case or the parties.
2.   Agents, advisers and lawyers shall also enjoy the following privileges and facilities:
(a) any papers and documents relating to the proceedings shall be exempt from both search and seizure. In the event of a dispute, the customs officials or police may seal those papers and documents; they shall then be immediately forwarded to the Court for inspection in the presence of the Registrar and of the person concerned;
(b) agents, advisers and lawyers shall be entitled to travel in the course of duty without hindrance.

Article 44

Status of the parties’ representatives

1.   In order to qualify for the privileges, immunities and facilities specified in Article 43, persons entitled to them shall furnish proof of their status as follows:
(a) agents shall produce an official document issued by the party for whom they act, who shall immediately serve a copy thereof on the Registrar;
(b) lawyers shall produce a certificate that they are authorised to practise before a court of a Member State or of another State which is a party to the EEA Agreement, and, where the party which they represent is a legal person governed by private law, an authority to act issued by that person;
(c) advisers shall produce an authority to act issued by the party whom they are assisting.
2.   The Registrar of the Court shall issue them with a certificate, as required. The validity of this certificate shall be limited to a specified period, which may be extended or curtailed according to the duration of the proceedings.

Article 45

Waiver of immunity

1.   The privileges, immunities and facilities specified in Article 43 of these Rules are granted exclusively in the interests of the proper conduct of proceedings.
2.   The Court may waive immunity where it considers that the proper conduct of proceedings will not be hindered thereby.

Article 46

Exclusion from the proceedings

1.   If the Court considers that the conduct of an agent, adviser or lawyer before the Court is incompatible with the dignity of the Court or with the requirements of the proper administration of justice, or that such agent, adviser or lawyer is using his rights for purposes other than those for which they were granted, it shall inform the person concerned. If the Court informs the competent authorities to whom the person concerned is answerable, a copy of the letter sent to those authorities shall be forwarded to the person concerned.
2.   On the same grounds, the Court may at any time, having heard the person concerned and the Advocate General, decide to exclude an agent, adviser or lawyer from the proceedings by reasoned order. That order shall have immediate effect.
3.   Where an agent, adviser or lawyer is excluded from the proceedings, the proceedings shall be suspended for a period fixed by the President in order to allow the party concerned to appoint another agent, adviser or lawyer.
4.   Decisions taken under this Article may be rescinded.

Article 47

University teachers and parties to the main proceedings

1.   The provisions of this Chapter shall apply to university teachers who have a right of audience before the Court in accordance with Article 19 of the Statute.
2.   They shall also apply, in the context of references for a preliminary ruling, to the parties to the main proceedings where, in accordance with the national rules of procedure applicable, those parties are permitted to bring or defend court proceedings without being represented by a lawyer, and to persons authorised under those rules to represent them.

Chapter 2

SERVICE

Article 48

Methods of service

1.   Where these Rules require that a document be served on a person, the Registrar shall ensure that service is effected at that person’s address for service either by the dispatch of a copy of the document by registered post with a form for acknowledgement of receipt or by personal delivery of the copy against a receipt. The Registrar shall prepare and certify the copies of documents to be served, save where the parties themselves supply the copies in accordance with Article 57(2) of these Rules.
2.   Where the addressee has agreed that service is to be effected on him by telefax or any other technical means of communication, any procedural document, including a judgment or order of the Court, may be served by the transmission of a copy of the document by such means.
3.   Where, for technical reasons or on account of the nature or length of the document, such transmission is impossible or impracticable, the document shall be served, if the addressee has not specified an address for service, at his address in accordance with the procedures laid down in paragraph 1 of this Article. The addressee shall be so informed by telefax or any other technical means of communication. Service shall then be deemed to have been effected on the addressee by registered post on the 10th day following the lodging of the registered letter at the post office of the place in which the Court has its seat, unless it is shown by the acknowledgement of receipt that the letter was received on a different date or the addressee informs the Registrar, within three weeks of being informed by telefax or any other technical means of communication, that the document to be served has not reached him.
4.   The Court may, by decision, determine the criteria for a procedural document to be served by electronic means. That decision shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Chapter 3

TIME-LIMITS

Article 49

Calculation of time-limits

1.   Any procedural time-limit prescribed by the Treaties, the Statute or these Rules shall be calculated as follows:
(a) where a time-limit expressed in days, weeks, months or years is to be calculated from the moment at which an event occurs or an action takes place, the day during which that event occurs or that action takes place shall not be counted as falling within the time-limit in question;
(b) a time-limit expressed in weeks, months or years shall end with the expiry of whichever day in the last week, month or year is the same day of the week, or falls on the same date, as the day during which the event or action from which the time-limit is to be calculated occurred or took place. If, in a time-limit expressed in months or years, the day on which it should expire does not occur in the last month, the time-limit shall end with the expiry of the last day of that month;
(c) where a time-limit is expressed in months and days, it shall first be calculated in whole months, then in days;
(d) time-limits shall include Saturdays, Sundays and the official holidays referred to in Article 24(6) of these Rules;
(e) time-limits shall not be suspended during the judicial vacations.
2.   If the time-limit would otherwise end on a Saturday, Sunday or an official holiday, it shall be extended until the end of the first subsequent working day.

Article 50

Proceedings against a measure adopted by an institution

Where the time-limit allowed for initiating proceedings against a measure adopted by an institution runs from the publication of that measure, that time-limit shall be calculated, for the purposes of Article 49(1)(a), from the end of the 14th day after publication of the measure in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 51

Extension on account of distance

The procedural time-limits shall be extended on account of distance by a single period of 10 days.

Article 52

Setting and extension of time-limits

1.   Any time-limit prescribed by the Court pursuant to these Rules may be extended.
2.   The President and the Presidents of Chambers may delegate to the Registrar power of signature for the purposes of setting certain time-limits which, pursuant to these Rules, it falls to them to prescribe, or of extending such time-limits.

Chapter 4

DIFFERENT PROCEDURES FOR DEALING WITH CASES

Article 53

Procedures for dealing with cases

1.   Without prejudice to the special provisions laid down in the Statute or in these Rules, the procedure before the Court shall consist of a written part and an oral part.
2.   Where it is clear that the Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine a case or where a request or an application is manifestly inadmissible, the Court may, after hearing the Advocate General, at any time decide to give a decision by reasoned order without taking further steps in the proceedings.
3.   The President may in special circumstances decide that a case be given priority over others.
4.   A case may be dealt with under an expedited procedure in accordance with the conditions provided by these Rules.
5.   A reference for a preliminary ruling may be dealt with under an urgent procedure in accordance with the conditions provided by these Rules.

Article 54

Joinder

1.   Two or more cases of the same type concerning the same subject-matter may at any time be joined, on account of the connection between them, for the purposes of the written or oral part of the procedure or of the judgment which closes the proceedings.
2.   A decision on whether cases should be joined shall be taken by the President after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, if the cases concerned have already been assigned, and, save in the case of references for a preliminary ruling, after also hearing the parties. The President may refer the decision on this matter to the Court.
3.   Joined cases may be disjoined, in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 2.

Article 55

Stay of proceedings

1.   The proceedings may be stayed:
(a) in the circumstances specified in the third paragraph of Article 54 of the Statute, by order of the Court, made after hearing the Advocate General;
(b) in all other cases, by decision of the President adopted after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General and, save in the case of references for a preliminary ruling, the parties.
2.   The proceedings may be resumed by order or decision, following the same procedure.
3.   The orders or decisions referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall be served on the parties or interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
4.   The stay of proceedings shall take effect on the date indicated in the order or decision of stay or, in the absence of such indication, on the date of that order or decision.
5.   While proceedings are stayed time shall cease to run for the parties or interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute for the purposes of procedural time-limits.
6.   Where the order or decision of stay does not fix the length of stay, it shall end on the date indicated in the order or decision of resumption or, in the absence of such indication, on the date of the order or decision of resumption.
7.   From the date of resumption of proceedings following a stay, the suspended procedural time-limits shall be replaced by new time-limits and time shall begin to run from the date of that resumption.

Article 56

Deferment of the determination of a case

After hearing the Judge-Rapporteur, the Advocate General and the parties, the President may in special circumstances, either of his own motion or at the request of one of the parties, defer a case to be dealt with at a later date.

Chapter 5

WRITTEN PART OF THE PROCEDURE

Article 57

Lodging of procedural documents

1.   The original of every procedural document must bear the handwritten signature of the party’s agent or lawyer or, in the case of observations submitted in the context of preliminary ruling proceedings, that of the party to the main proceedings or his representative, if the national rules of procedure applicable to those main proceedings so permit.
2.   The original, accompanied by all annexes referred to therein, shall be submitted together with five copies for the Court and, in the case of proceedings other than preliminary ruling proceedings, a copy for every other party to the proceedings. Copies shall be certified by the party lodging them.
3.   The institutions shall in addition produce, within time-limits laid down by the Court, translations of any procedural document into the other languages provided for by Article 1 of Council Regulation No 1. The preceding paragraph of this Article shall apply.
4.   To every procedural document there shall be annexed a file containing the items and documents relied on in support of it, together with a schedule listing them.
5.   Where in view of the length of an item or document only extracts from it are annexed to the procedural document, the whole item or document or a full copy of it shall be lodged at the Registry.
6.   All procedural documents shall bear a date. In the calculation of procedural time-limits, only the date and time of lodgment of the original at the Registry shall be taken into account.
7.   Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraphs 1 to 6, the date on and time at which a copy of the signed original of a procedural document, including the schedule of items and documents referred to in paragraph 4, is received at the Registry by telefax or any other technical means of communication available to the Court shall be deemed to be the date and time of lodgment for the purposes of compliance with the procedural time-limits, provided that the signed original of the procedural document, accompanied by the annexes and copies referred to in paragraph 2, is lodged at the Registry no later than 10 days thereafter.
8.   Without prejudice to paragraphs 3 to 6, the Court may, by decision, determine the criteria for a procedural document sent to the Registry by electronic means to be deemed to be the original of that document. That decision shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 58

Length of procedural documents

Without prejudice to any special provisions laid down in these Rules, the Court may, by decision, set the maximum length of written pleadings or observations lodged before it. That decision shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Chapter 6

THE PRELIMINARY REPORT AND ASSIGNMENT OF CASES TO FORMATIONS OF THE COURT

Article 59

Preliminary report

1.   When the written part of the procedure is closed, the President shall fix a date on which the Judge-Rapporteur is to present a preliminary report to the general meeting of the Court.
2.   The preliminary report shall contain proposals as to whether particular measures of organisation of procedure, measures of inquiry or, if appropriate, requests to the referring court or tribunal for clarification should be undertaken, and as to the formation to which the case should be assigned. It shall also contain the Judge-Rapporteur’s proposals, if any, as to whether to dispense with a hearing and as to whether to dispense with an Opinion of the Advocate General pursuant to the fifth paragraph of Article 20 of the Statute.
3.   The Court shall decide, after hearing the Advocate General, what action to take on the proposals of the Judge-Rapporteur.

Article 60

Assignment of cases to formations of the Court

1.   The Court shall assign to the Chambers of five and of three Judges any case brought before it in so far as the difficulty or importance of the case or particular circumstances are not such as to require that it should be assigned to the Grand Chamber, unless a Member State or an institution of the European Union participating in the proceedings has requested that the case be assigned to the Grand Chamber, pursuant to the third paragraph of Article 16 of the Statute.
2.   The Court shall sit as a full Court where cases are brought before it pursuant to the provisions referred to in the fourth paragraph of Article 16 of the Statute. It may assign a case to the full Court where, in accordance with the fifth paragraph of Article 16 of the Statute, it considers that the case is of exceptional importance.
3.   The formation to which a case has been assigned may, at any stage of the proceedings, request the Court to assign the case to a formation composed of a greater number of Judges.
4.   Where the oral part of the procedure is opened without an inquiry, the President of the formation determining the case shall fix the opening date.

Chapter 7

MEASURES OF ORGANISATION OF PROCEDURE AND MEASURES OF INQUIRY

Section 1.   Measures of organisation of procedure

Article 61

Measures of organisation prescribed by the Court

1.   In addition to the measures which may be prescribed in accordance with Article 24 of the Statute, the Court may invite the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute to answer certain questions in writing, within the time-limit laid down by the Court, or at the hearing. The written replies shall be communicated to the other parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
2.   Where a hearing is organised, the Court shall, in so far as possible, invite the participants in that hearing to concentrate in their oral pleadings on one or more specified issues.

Article 62

Measures of organisation prescribed by the Judge-Rapporteur or the Advocate General

1.   The Judge-Rapporteur or the Advocate General may request the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute to submit within a specified time-limit all such information relating to the facts, and all such documents or other particulars, as they may consider relevant. The replies and documents provided shall be communicated to the other parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
2.   The Judge-Rapporteur or the Advocate General may also send to the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute questions to be answered at the hearing.

Section 2.   Measures of inquiry

Article 63

Decision on measures of inquiry

1.   The Court shall decide in its general meeting whether a measure of inquiry is necessary.
2.   Where the case has already been assigned to a formation of the Court, the decision shall be taken by that formation.

Article 64

Determination of measures of inquiry

1.   The Court, after hearing the Advocate General, shall prescribe the measures of inquiry that it considers appropriate by means of an order setting out the facts to be proved.
2.   Without prejudice to Articles 24 and 25 of the Statute, the following measures of inquiry may be adopted:
(a) the personal appearance of the parties;
(b) a request for information and production of documents;
(c) oral testimony;
(d) the commissioning of an expert’s report;
(e) an inspection of the place or thing in question.
3.   Evidence may be submitted in rebuttal and previous evidence may be amplified.

Article 65

Participation in measures of inquiry

1.   Where the formation of the Court does not undertake the inquiry itself, it shall entrust the task of so doing to the Judge-Rapporteur.
2.   The Advocate General shall take part in the measures of inquiry.
3.   The parties shall be entitled to attend the measures of inquiry.

Article 66

Oral testimony

1.   The Court may, either of its own motion or at the request of one of the parties, and after hearing the Advocate General, order that certain facts be proved by witnesses.
2.   A request by a party for the examination of a witness shall state precisely about what facts and for what reasons the witness should be examined.
3.   The Court shall rule by reasoned order on the request referred to in the preceding paragraph. If the request is granted, the order shall set out the facts to be established and state which witnesses are to be heard in respect of each of those facts.
4.   Witnesses shall be summoned by the Court, where appropriate after lodgment of the security provided for in Article 73(1) of these Rules.

Article 67

Examination of witnesses

1.   After the identity of the witness has been established, the President shall inform him that he will be required to vouch the truth of his evidence in the manner laid down in these Rules.
2.   The witness shall give his evidence to the Court, the parties having been given notice to attend. After the witness has given his evidence the President may, at the request of one of the parties or of his own motion, put questions to him.
3.   The other Judges and the Advocate General may do likewise.
4.   Subject to the control of the President, questions may be put to witnesses by the representatives of the parties.

Article 68

Witnesses’ oath

1.   After giving his evidence, the witness shall take the following oath:
‘I swear that I have spoken the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.’
2.   The Court may, after hearing the parties, exempt a witness from taking the oath.

Article 69

Pecuniary penalties

1.   Witnesses who have been duly summoned shall obey the summons and attend for examination.
2.   If, without good reason, a witness who has been duly summoned fails to appear before the Court, the Court may impose upon him a pecuniary penalty not exceeding EUR 5 000 and may order that a further summons be served on the witness at his own expense.
3.   The same penalty may be imposed upon a witness who, without good reason, refuses to give evidence or to take the oath.

Article 70

Expert’s report

1.   The Court may order that an expert’s report be obtained. The order appointing the expert shall define his task and set a time-limit within which he is to submit his report.
2.   After the expert has submitted his report and that report has been served on the parties, the Court may order that the expert be examined, the parties having been given notice to attend. At the request of one of the parties or of his own motion, the President may put questions to the expert.
3.   The other Judges and the Advocate General may do likewise.
4.   Subject to the control of the President, questions may be put to the expert by the representatives of the parties.

Article 71

Expert’s oath

1.   After making his report, the expert shall take the following oath:
‘I swear that I have conscientiously and impartially carried out my task.’
2.   The Court may, after hearing the parties, exempt the expert from taking the oath.

Article 72

Objection to a witness or expert

1.   If one of the parties objects to a witness or an expert on the ground that he is not a competent or proper person to act as a witness or expert or for any other reason, or if a witness or expert refuses to give evidence or to take the oath, the matter shall be resolved by the Court.
2.   An objection to a witness or an expert shall be raised within two weeks after service of the order summoning the witness or appointing the expert; the statement of objection must set out the grounds of objection and indicate the nature of any evidence offered.

Article 73

Witnesses’ and experts’ costs

1.   Where the Court orders the examination of witnesses or an expert’s report, it may request the parties or one of them to lodge security for the witnesses’ costs or the costs of the expert’s report.
2.   Witnesses and experts shall be entitled to reimbursement of their travel and subsistence expenses. The cashier of the Court may make an advance payment towards these expenses.
3.   Witnesses shall be entitled to compensation for loss of earnings, and experts to fees for their services. The cashier of the Court shall pay witnesses and experts these sums after they have carried out their respective duties or tasks.

Article 74

Minutes of inquiry hearings

1.   The Registrar shall draw up minutes of every inquiry hearing. The minutes shall be signed by the President and by the Registrar. They shall constitute an official record.
2.   In the case of the examination of witnesses or experts, the minutes shall be signed by the President or by the Judge-Rapporteur responsible for conducting the examination of the witness or expert, and by the Registrar. Before the minutes are thus signed, the witness or expert must be given an opportunity to check the content of the minutes and to sign them.
3.   The minutes shall be served on the parties.

Article 75

Opening of the oral part of the procedure after the inquiry

1.   Unless the Court decides to prescribe a time-limit within which the parties may submit written observations, the President shall fix the date for the opening of the oral part of the procedure after the measures of inquiry have been completed.
2.   Where a time-limit has been prescribed for the submission of written observations, the President shall fix the date for the opening of the oral part of the procedure after that time-limit has expired.

Chapter 8

ORAL PART OF THE PROCEDURE

Article 76

Hearing

1.   Any reasoned requests for a hearing shall be submitted within three weeks after service on the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute of notification of the close of the written part of the procedure. That time-limit may be extended by the President.
2.   On a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, the Court may decide not to hold a hearing if it considers, on reading the written pleadings or observations lodged during the written part of the procedure, that it has sufficient information to give a ruling.
3.   The preceding paragraph shall not apply where a request for a hearing, stating reasons, has been submitted by an interested person referred to in Article 23 of the Statute who did not participate in the written part of the procedure.

Article 77

Joint hearing

If the similarities between two or more cases of the same type so permit, the Court may decide to organise a joint hearing of those cases.

Article 78

Conduct of oral proceedings

Oral proceedings shall be opened and directed by the President, who shall be responsible for the proper conduct of the hearing.

Article 79

Cases heard in camera

1.   For serious reasons related, in particular, to the security of the Member States or to the protection of minors, the Court may decide to hear a case
in camera
.
2.   The oral proceedings in cases heard
in camera
shall not be published.

Article 80

Questions

The members of the formation of the Court and the Advocate General may in the course of the hearing put questions to the agents, advisers or lawyers of the parties and, in the circumstances referred to in Article 47(2) of these Rules, to the parties to the main proceedings or to their representatives.

Article 81

Close of the hearing

After the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute have presented oral argument, the President shall declare the hearing closed.

Article 82

Delivery of the Opinion of the Advocate General

1.   Where a hearing takes place, the Opinion of the Advocate General shall be delivered after the close of that hearing.
2.   The President shall declare the oral part of the procedure closed after the Advocate General has delivered his Opinion.

Article 83

Opening or reopening of the oral part of the procedure

The Court may at any time, after hearing the Advocate General, order the opening or reopening of the oral part of the procedure, in particular if it considers that it lacks sufficient information or where a party has, after the close of that part of the procedure, submitted a new fact which is of such a nature as to be a decisive factor for the decision of the Court, or where the case must be decided on the basis of an argument which has not been debated between the parties or the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.

Article 84

Minutes of hearings

1.   The Registrar shall draw up minutes of every hearing. The minutes shall be signed by the President and by the Registrar. They shall constitute an official record.
2.   The parties and interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute may inspect the minutes at the Registry and obtain copies.

Article 85

Recording of the hearing

The President may, on a duly substantiated request, authorise a party or an interested person referred to in Article 23 of the Statute who has participated in the written or oral part of the proceedings to listen, on the Court’s premises, to the soundtrack of the hearing in the language used by the speaker during that hearing.

Chapter 9

JUDGMENTS AND ORDERS

Article 86

Date of delivery of a judgment

The parties or interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute shall be informed of the date of delivery of a judgment.

Article 87

Content of a judgment

A judgment shall contain:
(a) a statement that it is the judgment of the Court,
(b) an indication as to the formation of the Court,
(c) the date of delivery,
(d) the names of the President and of the Judges who took part in the deliberations, with an indication as to the name of the Judge-Rapporteur,
(e) the name of the Advocate General,
(f) the name of the Registrar,
(g) a description of the parties or of the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute who participated in the proceedings,
(h) the names of their representatives,
(i) in the case of direct actions and appeals, a statement of the forms of order sought by the parties,
(j) where applicable, the date of the hearing,
(k) a statement that the Advocate General has been heard and, where applicable, the date of his Opinion,
(l) a summary of the facts,
(m) the grounds for the decision,
(n) the operative part of the judgment, including, where appropriate, the decision as to costs.

Article 88

Delivery and service of the judgment

1.   The judgment shall be delivered in open court.
2.   The original of the judgment, signed by the President, by the Judges who took part in the deliberations and by the Registrar, shall be sealed and deposited at the Registry; certified copies of the judgment shall be served on the parties and, where applicable, the referring court or tribunal, the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute and the General Court.

Article 89

Content of an order

1.   An order shall contain:
(a) a statement that it is the order of the Court,
(b) an indication as to the formation of the Court,
(c) the date of its adoption,
(d) an indication as to the legal basis of the order,
(e) the names of the President and, where applicable, the Judges who took part in the deliberations, with an indication as to the name of the Judge-Rapporteur,
(f) the name of the Advocate General,
(g) the name of the Registrar,
(h) a description of the parties or of the parties to the main proceedings,
(i) the names of their representatives,
(j) a statement that the Advocate General has been heard,
(k) the operative part of the order, including, where appropriate, the decision as to costs.
2.   Where, in accordance with these Rules, an order must be reasoned, it shall in addition contain:
(a) in the case of direct actions and appeals, a statement of the forms of order sought by the parties,
(b) a summary of the facts,
(c) the grounds for the decision.

Article 90

Signature and service of the order

The original of the order, signed by the President and by the Registrar, shall be sealed and deposited at the Registry; certified copies of the order shall be served on the parties and, where applicable, the referring court or tribunal, the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute and the General Court.

Article 91

Binding nature of judgments and orders

1.   A judgment shall be binding from the date of its delivery.
2.   An order shall be binding from the date of its service.

Article 92

Publication in the Official Journal of the European Union

A notice containing the date and the operative part of the judgment or order of the Court which closes the proceedings shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

TITLE III

REFERENCES FOR A PRELIMINARY RULING

Chapter 1

GENERAL PROVISIONS

Article 93

Scope

The procedure shall be governed by the provisions of this Title:
(a) in the cases covered by Article 23 of the Statute,
(b) as regards references for interpretation which may be provided for by agreements to which the European Union or the Member States are parties.

Article 94

Content of the request for a preliminary ruling

In addition to the text of the questions referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling, the request for a preliminary ruling shall contain:
(a) a summary of the subject-matter of the dispute and the relevant findings of fact as determined by the referring court or tribunal, or, at least, an account of the facts on which the questions are based;
(b) the tenor of any national provisions applicable in the case and, where appropriate, the relevant national case-law;
(c) a statement of the reasons which prompted the referring court or tribunal to inquire about the interpretation or validity of certain provisions of European Union law, and the relationship between those provisions and the national legislation applicable to the main proceedings.

Article 95

Anonymity

1.   Where anonymity has been granted by the referring court or tribunal, the Court shall respect that anonymity in the proceedings pending before it.
2.   At the request of the referring court or tribunal, at the duly reasoned request of a party to the main proceedings or of its own motion, the Court may also, if it considers it necessary, render anonymous one or more persons or entities concerned by the case.

Article 96

Participation in preliminary ruling proceedings

1.   Pursuant to Article 23 of the Statute, the following shall be authorised to submit observations to the Court:
(a) the parties to the main proceedings,
(b) the Member States,
(c) the European Commission,
(d) the institution which adopted the act the validity or interpretation of which is in dispute,
(e) the States, other than the Member States, which are parties to the EEA Agreement, and also the EFTA Surveillance Authority, where a question concerning one of the fields of application of that Agreement is referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling,
(f) non-Member States which are parties to an agreement relating to a specific subject-matter, concluded with the Council, where the agreement so provides and where a court or tribunal of a Member State refers to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling a question falling within the scope of that agreement.
2.   Non-participation in the written part of the procedure does not preclude participation in the oral part of the procedure.

Article 97

Parties to the main proceedings

1.   The parties to the main proceedings are those who are determined as such by the referring court or tribunal in accordance with national rules of procedure.
2.   Where the referring court or tribunal informs the Court that a new party has been admitted to the main proceedings, when the proceedings before the Court are already pending, that party must accept the case as he finds it at the time when the Court was so informed. That party shall receive a copy of every procedural document already served on the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
3.   As regards the representation and attendance of the parties to the main proceedings, the Court shall take account of the rules of procedure in force before the court or tribunal which made the reference. In the event of any doubt as to whether a person may under national law represent a party to the main proceedings, the Court may obtain information from the referring court or tribunal on the rules of procedure applicable.

Article 98

Translation and service of the request for a preliminary ruling

1.   The requests for a preliminary ruling referred to in this Title shall be served on the Member States in the original version, accompanied by a translation into the official language of the State to which they are being addressed. Where appropriate, on account of the length of the request, such translation shall be replaced by the translation into the official language of the State to which it is addressed of a summary of that request, which will serve as a basis for the position to be adopted by that State. The summary shall include the full text of the question or questions referred for a preliminary ruling. That summary shall contain, in particular, in so far as that information appears in the request for a preliminary ruling, the subject-matter of the main proceedings, the essential arguments of the parties to those proceedings, a succinct presentation of the reasons for the reference for a preliminary ruling and the case-law and the provisions of national law and European Union law relied on.
2.   In the cases covered by the third paragraph of Article 23 of the Statute, the requests for a preliminary ruling shall be served on the States, other than the Member States, which are parties to the EEA Agreement and also on the EFTA Surveillance Authority in the original version, accompanied by a translation of the request, or where appropriate of a summary, into one of the languages referred to in Article 36, to be chosen by the addressee.
3.   Where a non-Member State has the right to take part in preliminary ruling proceedings pursuant to the fourth paragraph of Article 23 of the Statute, the original version of the request for a preliminary ruling shall be served on it accompanied by a translation of the request, or where appropriate of a summary, into one of the languages referred to in Article 36, to be chosen by the non-Member State concerned.

Article 99

Reply by reasoned order

Where a question referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling is identical to a question on which the Court has already ruled, where the reply to such a question may be clearly deduced from existing case-law or where the answer to the question referred for a preliminary ruling admits of no reasonable doubt, the Court may at any time, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, decide to rule by reasoned order.

Article 100

Circumstances in which the Court remains seised

1.   The Court shall remain seised of a request for a preliminary ruling for as long as it is not withdrawn by the court or tribunal which made that request to the Court. The withdrawal of a request may be taken into account until notice of the date of delivery of the judgment has been served on the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.
2.   However, the Court may at any time declare that the conditions of its jurisdiction are no longer fulfilled.

Article 101

Request for clarification

1.   Without prejudice to the measures of organisation of procedure and measures of inquiry provided for in these Rules, the Court may, after hearing the Advocate General, request clarification from the referring court or tribunal within a time-limit prescribed by the Court.
2.   The reply of the referring court or tribunal to that request shall be served on the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.

Article 102

Costs of the preliminary ruling proceedings

It shall be for the referring court or tribunal to decide as to the costs of the preliminary ruling proceedings.

Article 103

Rectification of judgments and orders

1.   Clerical mistakes, errors in calculation and obvious inaccuracies affecting judgments or orders may be rectified by the Court, of its own motion or at the request of an interested person referred to in Article 23 of the Statute made within two weeks after delivery of the judgment or service of the order.
2.   The Court shall take its decision after hearing the Advocate General.
3.   The original of the rectification order shall be annexed to the original of the rectified decision. A note of this order shall be made in the margin of the original of the rectified decision.

Article 104

Interpretation of preliminary rulings

1.   Article 158 of these Rules relating to the interpretation of judgments and orders shall not apply to decisions given in reply to a request for a preliminary ruling.
2.   It shall be for the national courts or tribunals to assess whether they consider that sufficient guidance is given by a preliminary ruling, or whether it appears to them that a further reference to the Court is required.

Chapter 2

EXPEDITED PRELIMINARY RULING PROCEDURE

Article 105

Expedited procedure

1.   At the request of the referring court or tribunal or, exceptionally, of his own motion, the President of the Court may, where the nature of the case requires that it be dealt with within a short time, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, decide that a reference for a preliminary ruling is to be determined pursuant to an expedited procedure derogating from the provisions of these Rules.
2.   In that event, the President shall immediately fix the date for the hearing, which shall be communicated to the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute when the request for a preliminary ruling is served.
3.   The interested persons referred to in the preceding paragraph may lodge statements of case or written observations within a time-limit prescribed by the President, which shall not be less than 15 days. The President may request those interested persons to restrict the matters addressed in their statement of case or written observations to the essential points of law raised by the request for a preliminary ruling.
4.   The statements of case or written observations, if any, shall be communicated to all the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute prior to the hearing.
5.   The Court shall rule after hearing the Advocate General.

Article 106

Transmission of procedural documents

1.   The procedural documents referred to in the preceding Article shall be deemed to have been lodged on the transmission to the Registry, by telefax or any other technical means of communication available to the Court, of a copy of the signed original and the items and documents relied on in support of it, together with the schedule referred to in Article 57(4). The original of the document and the annexes referred to above shall be sent to the Registry immediately.
2.   Where the preceding Article requires that a document be served on or communicated to a person, such service or communication may be effected by transmission of a copy of the document by telefax or any other technical means of communication available to the Court and the addressee.

Chapter 3

URGENT PRELIMINARY RULING PROCEDURE

Article 107

Scope of the urgent preliminary ruling procedure

1.   A reference for a preliminary ruling which raises one or more questions in the areas covered by Title V of Part Three of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union may, at the request of the referring court or tribunal or, exceptionally, of the Court’s own motion, be dealt with under an urgent procedure derogating from the provisions of these Rules.
2.   The referring court or tribunal shall set out the matters of fact and law which establish the urgency and justify the application of that exceptional procedure and shall, in so far as possible, indicate the answer that it proposes to the questions referred.
3.   If the referring court or tribunal has not submitted a request for the urgent procedure to be applied, the President of the Court may, if the application of that procedure appears, prima facie, to be required, ask the Chamber referred to in Article 108 to consider whether it is necessary to deal with the reference under that procedure.

Article 108

Decision as to urgency

1.   The decision to deal with a reference for a preliminary ruling under the urgent procedure shall be taken by the designated Chamber, acting on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General. The composition of that Chamber shall be determined in accordance with Article 28(2) on the day on which the case is assigned to the Judge-Rapporteur if the application of the urgent procedure is requested by the referring court or tribunal, or, if the application of that procedure is considered at the request of the President of the Court, on the day on which that request is made.
2.   If the case is connected with a pending case assigned to a Judge-Rapporteur who is not a member of the designated Chamber, that Chamber may propose to the President of the Court that the case be assigned to that Judge-Rapporteur. Where the case is reassigned to that Judge-Rapporteur, the Chamber of five Judges which includes him shall carry out the duties of the designated Chamber in respect of that case. Article 29(1) shall apply.

Article 109

Written part of the urgent procedure

1.   A request for a preliminary ruling shall, where the referring court or tribunal has requested the application of the urgent procedure or where the President has requested the designated Chamber to consider whether it is necessary to deal with the reference under that procedure, be served forthwith by the Registrar on the parties to the main proceedings, on the Member State from which the reference is made, on the European Commission and on the institution which adopted the act the validity or interpretation of which is in dispute.
2.   The decision as to whether or not to deal with the reference for a preliminary ruling under the urgent procedure shall be served immediately on the referring court or tribunal and on the parties, Member State and institutions referred to in the preceding paragraph. The decision to deal with the reference under the urgent procedure shall prescribe the time-limit within which those parties or entities may lodge statements of case or written observations. The decision may specify the matters of law to which such statements of case or written observations must relate and may specify the maximum length of those documents.
3.   Where a request for a preliminary ruling refers to an administrative procedure or judicial proceedings conducted in a Member State other than that from which the reference is made, the Court may invite that first Member State to provide all relevant information in writing or at the hearing.
4.   As soon as the service referred to in paragraph 1 above has been effected, the request for a preliminary ruling shall also be communicated to the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute, other than the persons served, and the decision whether or not to deal with the reference for a preliminary ruling under the urgent procedure shall be communicated to those interested persons as soon as the service referred to in paragraph 2 has been effected.
5.   The interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute shall be informed as soon as possible of the likely date of the hearing.
6.   Where the reference is not to be dealt with under the urgent procedure, the proceedings shall continue in accordance with the provisions of Article 23 of the Statute and the applicable provisions of these Rules.

Article 110

Service and information following the close of the written part of the procedure

1.   Where a reference for a preliminary ruling is to be dealt with under the urgent procedure, the request for a preliminary ruling and the statements of case or written observations which have been lodged shall be served on the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute other than the parties and entities referred to in Article 109(1). The request for a preliminary ruling shall be accompanied by a translation, where appropriate of a summary, in accordance with Article 98.
2.   The statements of case or written observations which have been lodged shall also be served on the parties and other interested persons referred to in Article 109(1).
3.   The date of the hearing shall be communicated to the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute at the same time as the documents referred to in the preceding paragraphs are served.

Article 111

Omission of the written part of the procedure

The designated Chamber may, in cases of extreme urgency, decide to omit the written part of the procedure referred to in Article 109(2).

Article 112

Decision on the substance

The designated Chamber shall rule after hearing the Advocate General.

Article 113

Formation of the Court

1.   The designated Chamber may decide to sit in a formation of three Judges. In that event, it shall be composed of the President of the designated Chamber, the Judge-Rapporteur and the first Judge or, as the case may be, the first two Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(2) on the date on which the composition of the designated Chamber is determined in accordance with Article 108(1).
2.   The designated Chamber may also request the Court to assign the case to a formation composed of a greater number of Judges. The urgent procedure shall continue before the new formation of the Court, where necessary after the reopening of the oral part of the procedure.

Article 114

Transmission of procedural documents

Procedural documents shall be transmitted in accordance with Article 106.

Chapter 4

LEGAL AID

Article 115

Application for legal aid

1.   A party to the main proceedings who is wholly or in part unable to meet the costs of the proceedings before the Court may at any time apply for legal aid.
2.   The application shall be accompanied by all information and supporting documents making it possible to assess the applicant’s financial situation, such as a certificate issued by a competent national authority attesting to his financial situation.
3.   If the applicant has already obtained legal aid before the referring court or tribunal, he shall produce the decision of that court or tribunal and specify what is covered by the sums already granted.

Article 116

Decision on the application for legal aid

1.   As soon as the application for legal aid has been lodged it shall be assigned by the President to the Judge-Rapporteur responsible for the case in the context of which the application has been made.
2.   The decision to grant legal aid, in full or in part, or to refuse it shall be taken, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, by the Chamber of three Judges to which the Judge-Rapporteur is assigned. The formation of the Court shall, in that event, be composed of the President of that Chamber, the Judge-Rapporteur and the first Judge or, as the case may be, the first two Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(3) on the date on which the application for legal aid is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur.
3.   If the Judge-Rapporteur is not a member of a Chamber of three Judges, the decision shall be taken, under the same conditions, by the Chamber of five Judges to which he is assigned. In addition to the Judge-Rapporteur, the formation of the Court shall be composed of four Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(2) on the date on which the application for legal aid is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur.
4.   The formation of the Court shall give its decision by way of order. Where the application for legal aid is refused in whole or in part, the order shall state the reasons for that refusal.

Article 117

Sums to be advanced as legal aid

Where legal aid is granted, the cashier of the Court shall be responsible, where applicable within the limits set by the formation of the Court, for costs involved in the assistance and representation of the applicant before the Court. At the request of the applicant or his representative, an advance on those costs may be paid.

Article 118

Withdrawal of legal aid

The formation of the Court which gave a decision on the application for legal aid may at any time, either of its own motion or on request, withdraw that legal aid if the circumstances which led to its being granted alter during the proceedings.

TITLE IV

DIRECT ACTIONS

Chapter 1

REPRESENTATION OF THE PARTIES

Article 119

Obligation to be represented

1.   A party may be represented only by his agent or lawyer.
2.   Agents and lawyers must lodge at the Registry an official document or an authority to act issued by the party whom they represent.
3.   The lawyer acting for a party must also lodge at the Registry a certificate that he is authorised to practise before a court of a Member State or of another State which is a party to the EEA Agreement.
4.   If those documents are not lodged, the Registrar shall prescribe a reasonable time-limit within which the party concerned is to produce them. If the applicant fails to produce the required documents within the time-limit prescribed, the Court shall, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, decide whether the non-compliance with that procedural requirement renders the application or written pleading formally inadmissible.

Chapter 2

WRITTEN PART OF THE PROCEDURE

Article 120

Content of the application

An application of the kind referred to in Article 21 of the Statute shall state:
(a) the name and address of the applicant;
(b) the name of the party against whom the application is made;
(c) the subject-matter of the proceedings, the pleas in law and arguments relied on and a summary of those pleas in law;
(d) the form of order sought by the applicant;
(e) where appropriate, any evidence produced or offered.

Article 121

Information relating to service

1.   For the purpose of the proceedings, the application shall state an address for service. It shall indicate the name of the person who is authorised and has expressed willingness to accept service.
2.   In addition to, or instead of, specifying an address for service as referred to in paragraph 1, the application may state that the lawyer or agent agrees that service is to be effected on him by telefax or any other technical means of communication.
3.   If the application does not comply with the requirements referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2, all service on the party concerned for the purpose of the proceedings shall be effected, for so long as the defect has not been cured, by registered letter addressed to the agent or lawyer of that party. By way of derogation from Article 48, service shall then be deemed to be duly effected by the lodging of the registered letter at the post office of the place in which the Court has its seat.

Article 122

Annexes to the application

1.   The application shall be accompanied, where appropriate, by the documents specified in the second paragraph of Article 21 of the Statute.
2.   An application submitted under Article 273 TFEU shall be accompanied by a copy of the special agreement concluded between the Member States concerned.
3.   If an application does not comply with the requirements set out in paragraphs 1 or 2 of this Article, the Registrar shall prescribe a reasonable time-limit within which the applicant is to produce the abovementioned documents. If the applicant fails to put the application in order, the Court shall, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, decide whether the non-compliance with these conditions renders the application formally inadmissible.

Article 123

Service of the application

The application shall be served on the defendant. In cases where Article 119(4) or Article 122(3) applies, service shall be effected as soon as the application has been put in order or the Court has declared it admissible notwithstanding the failure to observe the requirements set out in those two Articles.

Article 124

Content of the defence

1.   Within two months after service on him of the application, the defendant shall lodge a defence, stating:
(a) the name and address of the defendant;
(b) the pleas in law and arguments relied on;
(c) the form of order sought by the defendant;
(d) where appropriate, any evidence produced or offered.
2.   Article 121 shall apply to the defence.
3.   The time-limit laid down in paragraph 1 may exceptionally be extended by the President at the duly reasoned request of the defendant.

Article 125

Transmission of documents

Where the European Parliament, the Council or the European Commission is not a party to a case, the Court shall send to them copies of the application and of the defence, without the annexes thereto, to enable them to assess whether the inapplicability of one of their acts is being invoked under Article 277 TFEU.

Article 126

Reply and rejoinder

1.   The application initiating proceedings and the defence may be supplemented by a reply from the applicant and by a rejoinder from the defendant.
2.   The President shall prescribe the time-limits within which those procedural documents are to be produced. He may specify the matters to which the reply or the rejoinder should relate.

Chapter 3

PLEAS IN LAW AND EVIDENCE

Article 127

New pleas in law

1.   No new plea in law may be introduced in the course of proceedings unless it is based on matters of law or of fact which come to light in the course of the procedure.
2.   Without prejudice to the decision to be taken on the admissibility of the plea in law, the President may, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, prescribe a time-limit within which the other party may respond to that plea.

Article 128

Evidence produced or offered

1.   In reply or rejoinder a party may produce or offer further evidence in support of his arguments. The party must give reasons for the delay in submitting such evidence.
2.   The parties may, exceptionally, produce or offer further evidence after the close of the written part of the procedure. They must give reasons for the delay in submitting such evidence. The President may, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, prescribe a time-limit within which the other party may comment on such evidence.

Chapter 4

INTERVENTION

Article 129

Object and effects of the intervention

1.   The intervention shall be limited to supporting, in whole or in part, the form of order sought by one of the parties. It shall not confer the same procedural rights as those conferred on the parties and, in particular, shall not give rise to any right to request that a hearing be held.
2.   The intervention shall be ancillary to the main proceedings. It shall become devoid of purpose if the case is removed from the register of the Court as a result of a party’s discontinuance or withdrawal from the proceedings or of an agreement between the parties, or where the application is declared inadmissible.
3.   The intervener must accept the case as he finds it at the time of his intervention.
4.   Consideration may be given to an application to intervene which is made after the expiry of the time-limit prescribed in Article 130 but before the decision to open the oral part of the procedure provided for in Article 60(4). In that event, if the President allows the intervention, the intervener may submit his observations during the hearing, if it takes place.

Article 130

Application to intervene

1.   An application to intervene must be submitted within six weeks of the publication of the notice referred to in Article 21(4).
2.   The application to intervene shall contain:
(a) a description of the case;
(b) a description of the main parties;
(c) the name and address of the intervener;
(d) the form of order sought, in support of which the intervener is applying for leave to intervene;
(e) a statement of the circumstances establishing the right to intervene, where the application is submitted pursuant to the second or third paragraph of Article 40 of the Statute.
3.   The intervener shall be represented in accordance with Article 19 of the Statute.
4.   Articles 119, 121 and 122 of these Rules shall apply.

Article 131

Decision on applications to intervene

1.   The application to intervene shall be served on the parties in order to obtain any written or oral observations they may wish to make on that application.
2.   Where the application is submitted pursuant to the first or third paragraph of Article 40 of the Statute, the intervention shall be allowed by decision of the President and the intervener shall receive a copy of every procedural document served on the parties, provided that those parties have not, within 10 days after the service referred to in paragraph 1 has been effected, put forward observations on the application to intervene or identified secret or confidential items or documents which, if communicated to the intervener, the parties claim would be prejudicial to them.
3.   In any other case, the President shall decide on the application to intervene by order or shall refer the application to the Court.
4.   If the application to intervene is granted, the intervener shall receive a copy of every procedural document served on the parties, save, where applicable, for the secret or confidential items or documents excluded from such communication pursuant to paragraph 3.

Article 132

Submission of statements

1.   The intervener may submit a statement in intervention within one month after communication of the procedural documents referred to in the preceding Article. That time-limit may be extended by the President at the duly reasoned request of the intervener.
2.   The statement in intervention shall contain:
(a) the form of order sought by the intervener in support, in whole or in part, of the form of order sought by one of the parties;
(b) the pleas in law and arguments relied on by the intervener;
(c) where appropriate, any evidence produced or offered.
3.   After the statement in intervention has been lodged, the President shall, where necessary, prescribe a time-limit within which the parties may reply to that statement.

Chapter 5

EXPEDITED PROCEDURE

Article 133

Decision relating to the expedited procedure

1.   At the request of the applicant or the defendant, the President of the Court may, where the nature of the case requires that it be dealt with within a short time, after hearing the other party, the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, decide that a case is to be determined pursuant to an expedited procedure derogating from the provisions of these Rules.
2.   The request for a case to be determined pursuant to an expedited procedure must be made by a separate document submitted at the same time as the application initiating proceedings or the defence, as the case may be, is lodged.
3.   Exceptionally the President may also take such a decision of his own motion, after hearing the parties, the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General.

Article 134

Written part of the procedure

1.   Under the expedited procedure, the application initiating proceedings and the defence may be supplemented by a reply and a rejoinder only if the President, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, considers this to be necessary.
2.   An intervener may submit a statement in intervention only if the President, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, considers this to be necessary.

Article 135

Oral part of the procedure

1.   Once the defence has been submitted or, if the decision to determine the case pursuant to an expedited procedure is not made until after that pleading has been lodged, once that decision has been taken, the President shall fix a date for the hearing, which shall be communicated forthwith to the parties. He may postpone the date of the hearing where it is necessary to undertake measures of inquiry or where measures of organisation of procedure so require.
2.   Without prejudice to Articles 127 and 128, a party may supplement his arguments and produce or offer evidence during the oral part of the procedure. The party must, however, give reasons for the delay in producing such further arguments or evidence.

Article 136

Decision on the substance

The Court shall give its ruling after hearing the Advocate General.

Chapter 6

COSTS

Article 137

Decision as to costs

A decision as to costs shall be given in the judgment or order which closes the proceedings.

Article 138

General rules as to allocation of costs

1.   The unsuccessful party shall be ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied for in the successful party’s pleadings.
2.   Where there is more than one unsuccessful party the Court shall decide how the costs are to be shared.
3.   Where each party succeeds on some and fails on other heads, the parties shall bear their own costs. However, if it appears justified in the circumstances of the case, the Court may order that one party, in addition to bearing its own costs, pay a proportion of the costs of the other party.

Article 139

Unreasonable or vexatious costs

The Court may order a party, even if successful, to pay costs which the Court considers that party to have unreasonably or vexatiously caused the opposite party to incur.

Article 140

Costs of interveners

1.   The Member States and institutions which have intervened in the proceedings shall bear their own costs.
2.   The States, other than the Member States, which are parties to the EEA Agreement, and also the EFTA Surveillance Authority, shall similarly bear their own costs if they have intervened in the proceedings.
3.   The Court may order an intervener other than those referred to in the preceding paragraphs to bear his own costs.

Article 141

Costs in the event of discontinuance or withdrawal

1.   A party who discontinues or withdraws from proceedings shall be ordered to pay the costs if they have been applied for in the other party’s observations on the discontinuance.
2.   However, at the request of the party who discontinues or withdraws from proceedings, the costs shall be borne by the other party if this appears justified by the conduct of that party.
3.   Where the parties have come to an agreement on costs, the decision as to costs shall be in accordance with that agreement.
4.   If costs are not claimed, the parties shall bear their own costs.

Article 142

Costs where a case does not proceed to judgment

Where a case does not proceed to judgment the costs shall be in the discretion of the Court.

Article 143

Costs of proceedings

Proceedings before the Court shall be free of charge, except that:
(a) where a party has caused the Court to incur avoidable costs the Court may, after hearing the Advocate General, order that party to refund them;
(b) where copying or translation work is carried out at the request of a party, the cost shall, in so far as the Registrar considers it excessive, be paid for by that party on the Registry’s scale of charges referred to in Article 22.

Article 144

Recoverable costs

Without prejudice to the preceding Article, the following shall be regarded as recoverable costs:
(a) sums payable to witnesses and experts under Article 73 of these Rules;
(b) expenses necessarily incurred by the parties for the purpose of the proceedings, in particular the travel and subsistence expenses and the remuneration of agents, advisers or lawyers.

Article 145

Dispute concerning the costs to be recovered

1.   If there is a dispute concerning the costs to be recovered, the Chamber of three Judges to which the Judge-Rapporteur who dealt with the case is assigned shall, on application by the party concerned and after hearing the opposite party and the Advocate General, make an order. In that event, the formation of the Court shall be composed of the President of that Chamber, the Judge-Rapporteur and the first Judge or, as the case may be, the first two Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(3) on the date on which the dispute is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur.
2.   If the Judge-Rapporteur is not a member of a Chamber of three Judges, the decision shall be taken, under the same conditions, by the Chamber of five Judges to which he is assigned. In addition to the Judge-Rapporteur, the formation of the Court shall be composed of four Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(2) on the date on which the dispute is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur.
3.   The parties may, for the purposes of enforcement, apply for an authenticated copy of the order.

Article 146

Procedure for payment

1.   Sums due from the cashier of the Court and from its debtors shall be paid in euro.
2.   Where costs to be recovered have been incurred in a currency other than the euro or where the steps in respect of which payment is due were taken in a country of which the euro is not the currency, the conversion shall be effected at the European Central Bank’s official rates of exchange on the day of payment.

Chapter 7

AMICABLE SETTLEMENT, DISCONTINUANCE, CASES THAT DO NOT PROCEED TO JUDGMENT AND PRELIMINARY ISSUES

Article 147

Amicable settlement

1.   If, before the Court has given its decision, the parties reach a settlement of their dispute and inform the Court of the abandonment of their claims, the President shall order the case to be removed from the register and shall give a decision as to costs in accordance with Article 141, having regard to any proposals made by the parties on the matter.
2.   This provision shall not apply to proceedings under Articles 263 TFEU and 265 TFEU.

Article 148

Discontinuance

If the applicant informs the Court in writing or at the hearing that he wishes to discontinue the proceedings, the President shall order the case to be removed from the register and shall give a decision as to costs in accordance with Article 141.

Article 149

Cases that do not proceed to judgment

If the Court declares that the action has become devoid of purpose and that there is no longer any need to adjudicate on it, the Court may at any time of its own motion, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the parties and the Advocate General, decide to rule by reasoned order. It shall give a decision as to costs.

Article 150

Absolute bar to proceeding with a case

On a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur, the Court may at any time of its own motion, after hearing the parties and the Advocate General, decide to rule by reasoned order on whether there exists any absolute bar to proceeding with a case.

Article 151

Preliminary objections and issues

1.   A party applying to the Court for a decision on a preliminary objection or issue not going to the substance of the case shall submit the application by a separate document.
2.   The application must state the pleas of law and arguments relied on and the form of order sought by the applicant; any supporting items and documents must be annexed to it.
3.   As soon as the application has been submitted, the President shall prescribe a time-limit within which the opposite party may submit in writing his pleas in law and the form of order which he seeks.
4.   Unless the Court decides otherwise, the remainder of the proceedings on the application shall be oral.
5.   The Court shall, after hearing the Advocate General, decide on the application as soon as possible or, where special circumstances so justify, reserve its decision until it rules on the substance of the case.
6.   If the Court refuses the application or reserves its decision, the President shall prescribe new time-limits for the further steps in the proceedings.

Chapter 8

JUDGMENTS BY DEFAULT

Article 152

Judgments by default

1.   If a defendant on whom an application initiating proceedings has been duly served fails to respond to the application in the proper form and within the time-limit prescribed, the applicant may apply to the Court for judgment by default.
2.   The application for judgment by default shall be served on the defendant. The Court may decide to open the oral part of the procedure on the application.
3.   Before giving judgment by default the Court shall, after hearing the Advocate General, consider whether the application initiating proceedings is admissible, whether the appropriate formalities have been complied with, and whether the applicant’s claims appear well founded. The Court may adopt measures of organisation of procedure or order measures of inquiry.
4.   A judgment by default shall be enforceable. The Court may, however, grant a stay of execution until the Court has given its decision on any application under Article 156 to set aside the judgment, or it may make execution subject to the provision of security of an amount and nature to be fixed in the light of the circumstances; this security shall be released if no such application is made or if the application fails.

Chapter 9

REQUESTS AND APPLICATIONS RELATING TO JUDGMENTS AND ORDERS

Article 153

Competent formation of the Court

1.   With the exception of applications referred to in Article 159, the requests and applications referred to in this Chapter shall be assigned to the Judge-Rapporteur who was responsible for the case to which the request or application relates, and shall be assigned to the formation of the Court which gave a decision in that case.
2.   If the Judge-Rapporteur is prevented from acting, the President of the Court shall assign the request or application referred to in this Chapter to a Judge who was a member of the formation of the Court which gave a decision in the case to which that request or application relates.
3.   If the quorum referred to in Article 17 of the Statute can no longer be attained, the Court shall, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, assign the request or application to a new formation of the Court.

Article 154

Rectification

1.   Without prejudice to the provisions relating to the interpretation of judgments and orders, clerical mistakes, errors in calculation and obvious inaccuracies may be rectified by the Court, of its own motion or at the request of a party made within two weeks after delivery of the judgment or service of the order.
2.   Where the request for rectification concerns the operative part or one of the grounds constituting the necessary support for the operative part, the parties, whom the Registrar shall duly inform, may submit written observations within a time-limit prescribed by the President.
3.   The Court shall take its decision after hearing the Advocate General.
4.   The original of the rectification order shall be annexed to the original of the rectified decision. A note of this order shall be made in the margin of the original of the rectified decision.

Article 155

Failure to adjudicate

1.   If the Court has failed to adjudicate on a specific head of claim or on costs, any party wishing to rely on that may, within a month after service of the decision, apply to the Court to supplement its decision.
2.   The application shall be served on the opposite party and the President shall prescribe a time-limit within which that party may submit written observations.
3.   After these observations have been submitted, the Court shall, after hearing the Advocate General, decide both on the admissibility and on the substance of the application.

Article 156

Application to set aside

1.   Application may be made pursuant to Article 41 of the Statute to set aside a judgment delivered by default.
2.   The application to set aside the judgment must be made within one month from the date of service of the judgment and must be submitted in the form prescribed by Articles 120 to 122 of these Rules.
3.   After the application has been served, the President shall prescribe a time-limit within which the other party may submit his written observations.
4.   The proceedings shall be conducted in accordance with Articles 59 to 92 of these Rules.
5.   The Court shall decide by way of a judgment which may not be set aside.
6.   The original of this judgment shall be annexed to the original of the judgment by default. A note of the judgment on the application to set aside shall be made in the margin of the original of the judgment by default.

Article 157

Third-party proceedings

1.   Articles 120 to 122 of these Rules shall apply to an application initiating third-party proceedings made pursuant to Article 42 of the Statute. In addition such an application shall:
(a) specify the judgment or order contested;
(b) state how the contested decision is prejudicial to the rights of the third party;
(c) indicate the reasons for which the third party was unable to take part in the original case.
2.   The application must be made against all the parties to the original case.
3.   The application must be submitted within two months of publication of the decision in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.
4.   The Court may, on application by the third party, order a stay of execution of the contested decision. The provisions of Chapter 10 of this Title shall apply.
5.   The contested decision shall be varied on the points on which the submissions of the third party are upheld.
6.   The original of the judgment in the third-party proceedings shall be annexed to the original of the contested decision. A note of the judgment in the third-party proceedings shall be made in the margin of the original of the contested decision.

Article 158

Interpretation

1.   In accordance with Article 43 of the Statute, if the meaning or scope of a judgment or order is in doubt, the Court shall construe it on application by any party or any institution of the European Union establishing an interest therein.
2.   An application for interpretation must be made within two years after the date of delivery of the judgment or service of the order.
3.   An application for interpretation shall be made in accordance with Articles 120 to 122 of these Rules. In addition it shall specify:
(a) the decision in question;
(b) the passages of which interpretation is sought.
4.   The application must be made against all the parties to the case in which the decision of which interpretation is sought was given.
5.   The Court shall give its decision after having given the parties an opportunity to submit their observations and after hearing the Advocate General.
6.   The original of the interpreting decision shall be annexed to the original of the decision interpreted. A note of the interpreting decision shall be made in the margin of the original of the decision interpreted.

Article 159

Revision

1.   In accordance with Article 44 of the Statute, an application for revision of a decision of the Court may be made only on discovery of a fact which is of such a nature as to be a decisive factor and which, when the judgment was delivered or the order served, was unknown to the Court and to the party claiming the revision.
2.   Without prejudice to the time-limit of 10 years prescribed in the third paragraph of Article 44 of the Statute, an application for revision shall be made within three months of the date on which the facts on which the application is founded came to the applicant’s knowledge.
3.   Articles 120 to 122 of these Rules shall apply to an application for revision. In addition such an application shall:
(a) specify the judgment or order contested;
(b) indicate the points on which the decision is contested;
(c) set out the facts on which the application is founded;
(d) indicate the nature of the evidence to show that there are facts justifying revision, and that the time-limits laid down in paragraph 2 have been observed.
4.   The application for revision must be made against all parties to the case in which the contested decision was given.
5.   Without prejudice to its decision on the substance, the Court shall, after hearing the Advocate General, give in the form of an order its decision on the admissibility of the application, having regard to the written observations of the parties.
6.   If the Court declares the application admissible, it shall proceed to consider the substance of the application and shall give its decision in the form of a judgment in accordance with these Rules.
7.   The original of the revising judgment shall be annexed to the original of the decision revised. A note of the revising judgment shall be made in the margin of the original of the decision revised.

Chapter 10

SUSPENSION OF OPERATION OR ENFORCEMENT AND OTHER INTERIM MEASURES

Article 160

Application for suspension or for interim measures

1.   An application to suspend the operation of any measure adopted by an institution, made pursuant to Article 278 TFEU or Article 157 TEAEC, shall be admissible only if the applicant has challenged that measure in an action before the Court.
2.   An application for the adoption of one of the other interim measures referred to in Article 279 TFEU shall be admissible only if it is made by a party to a case before the Court and relates to that case.
3.   An application of a kind referred to in the preceding paragraphs shall state the subject-matter of the proceedings, the circumstances giving rise to urgency and the pleas of fact and law establishing a prima facie case for the interim measure applied for.
4.   The application shall be made by a separate document and in accordance with the provisions of Articles 120 to 122 of these Rules.
5.   The application shall be served on the opposite party, and the President shall prescribe a short time-limit within which that party may submit written or oral observations.
6.   The President may order a preparatory inquiry.
7.   The President may grant the application even before the observations of the opposite party have been submitted. This decision may be varied or cancelled even without any application being made by any party.

Article 161

Decision on the application

1.   The President shall either decide on the application himself or refer it immediately to the Court.
2.   If the President is prevented from acting, Articles 10 and 13 of these Rules shall apply.
3.   Where the application is referred to it, the Court shall give a decision immediately, after hearing the Advocate General.

Article 162

Order for suspension of operation or for interim measures

1.   The decision on the application shall take the form of a reasoned order, from which no appeal shall lie. The order shall be served on the parties forthwith.
2.   The execution of the order may be made conditional on the lodging by the applicant of security, of an amount and nature to be fixed in the light of the circumstances.
3.   Unless the order fixes the date on which the interim measure is to lapse, the measure shall lapse when the judgment which closes the proceedings is delivered.
4.   The order shall have only an interim effect, and shall be without prejudice to the decision of the Court on the substance of the case.

Article 163

Change in circumstances

On application by a party, the order may at any time be varied or cancelled on account of a change in circumstances.

Article 164

New application

Rejection of an application for an interim measure shall not bar the party who made it from making a further application on the basis of new facts.

Article 165

Applications pursuant to Articles 280 TFEU and 299 TFEU and Article 164 TEAEC

1.   The provisions of this Chapter shall apply to applications to suspend the enforcement of a decision of the Court or of any measure adopted by the Council, the European Commission or the European Central Bank, submitted pursuant to Articles 280 TFEU and 299 TFEU or Article 164 TEAEC.
2.   The order granting the application shall fix, where appropriate, a date on which the interim measure is to lapse.

Article 166

Application pursuant to Article 81 TEAEC

1.   An application of a kind referred to in the third and fourth paragraphs of Article 81 TEAEC shall contain:
(a) the names and addresses of the persons or undertakings to be inspected;
(b) an indication of what is to be inspected and of the purpose of the inspection.
2.   The President shall give his decision in the form of an order. Article 162 of these Rules shall apply.
3.   If the President is prevented from acting, Articles 10 and 13 of these Rules shall apply.

TITLE V

APPEALS AGAINST DECISIONS OF THE GENERAL COURT

Chapter 1

FORM AND CONTENT OF THE APPEAL, AND FORM OF ORDER SOUGHT

Article 167

Lodging of the appeal

1.   An appeal shall be brought by lodging an application at the Registry of the Court of Justice or of the General Court.
2.   The Registry of the General Court shall forthwith transmit to the Registry of the Court of Justice the file in the case at first instance and, where necessary, the appeal.

Article 168

Content of the appeal

1.   An appeal shall contain:
(a) the name and address of the appellant;
(b) a reference to the decision of the General Court appealed against;
(c) the names of the other parties to the relevant case before the General Court;
(d) the pleas in law and legal arguments relied on, and a summary of those pleas in law;
(e) the form of order sought by the appellant.
2.   Articles 119, 121 and 122(1) of these Rules shall apply to appeals.
3.   The appeal shall state the date on which the decision appealed against was served on the appellant.
4.   If an appeal does not comply with paragraphs 1 to 3 of this Article, the Registrar shall prescribe a reasonable time-limit within which the appellant is to put the appeal in order. If the appellant fails to put the appeal in order within the time-limit prescribed, the Court of Justice shall, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, decide whether the non-compliance with that formal requirement renders the appeal formally inadmissible.

Article 169

Form of order sought, pleas in law and arguments of the appeal

1.   An appeal shall seek to have set aside, in whole or in part, the decision of the General Court as set out in the operative part of that decision.
2.   The pleas in law and legal arguments relied on shall identify precisely those points in the grounds of the decision of the General Court which are contested.

Article 170

Form of order sought in the event that the appeal is allowed

1.   An appeal shall seek, in the event that it is declared well founded, the same form of order, in whole or in part, as that sought at first instance and shall not seek a different form of order. The subject-matter of the proceedings before the General Court may not be changed in the appeal.
2.   Where the appellant requests that the case be referred back to the General Court if the decision appealed against is set aside, he shall set out the reasons why the state of the proceedings does not permit a decision by the Court of Justice.

Chapter 2

RESPONSES, REPLIES AND REJOINDERS

Article 171

Service of the appeal

1.   The appeal shall be served on the other parties to the relevant case before the General Court.
2.   In a case where Article 168(4) of these Rules applies, service shall be effected as soon as the appeal has been put in order or the Court of Justice has declared it admissible notwithstanding the failure to observe the formal requirements laid down by that Article.

Article 172

Parties authorised to lodge a response

Any party to the relevant case before the General Court having an interest in the appeal being allowed or dismissed may submit a response within two months after service on him of the appeal. The time-limit for submitting a response shall not be extended.

Article 173

Content of the response

1.   A response shall contain:
(a) the name and address of the party submitting it;
(b) the date on which the appeal was served on him;
(c) the pleas in law and legal arguments relied on;
(d) the form of order sought.
2.   Articles 119 and 121 of these Rules shall apply to responses.

Article 174

Form of order sought in the response

A response shall seek to have the appeal allowed or dismissed, in whole or in part.

Article 175

Reply and rejoinder

1.   The appeal and the response may be supplemented by a reply and a rejoinder only where the President, on a duly reasoned application submitted by the appellant within seven days of service of the response, considers it necessary, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, in particular to enable the appellant to present his views on a plea of inadmissibility or on new matters relied on in the response.
2.   The President shall fix the date by which the reply is to be produced and, upon service of that pleading, the date by which the rejoinder is to be produced. He may limit the number of pages and the subject-matter of those pleadings.

Chapter 3

FORM AND CONTENT OF THE CROSS-APPEAL, AND FORM OF ORDER SOUGHT

Article 176

Cross-appeal

1.   The parties referred to in Article 172 of these Rules may submit a cross-appeal within the same time-limit as that prescribed for the submission of a response.
2.   A cross-appeal must be introduced by a document separate from the response.

Article 177

Content of the cross-appeal

1.   A cross-appeal shall contain:
(a) the name and address of the party bringing the cross-appeal;
(b) the date on which the appeal was served on him;
(c) the pleas in law and legal arguments relied on;
(d) the form of order sought.
2.   Articles 119, 121 and 122(1) and (3) of these Rules shall apply to cross-appeals.

Article 178

Form of order sought, pleas in law and arguments of the cross-appeal

1.   A cross-appeal shall seek to have set aside, in whole or in part, the decision of the General Court.
2.   It may also seek to have set aside an express or implied decision relating to the admissibility of the action before the General Court.
3.   The pleas in law and legal arguments relied on shall identify precisely those points in the grounds of the decision of the General Court which are contested. The pleas in law and arguments must be separate from those relied on in the response.

Chapter 4

PLEADINGS CONSEQUENT ON THE CROSS-APPEAL

Article 179

Response to the cross-appeal

Where a cross-appeal is brought, the applicant at first instance or any other party to the relevant case before the General Court having an interest in the cross-appeal being allowed or dismissed may submit a response, which must be limited to the pleas in law relied on in that cross-appeal, within two months after its being served on him. That time-limit shall not be extended.

Article 180

Reply and rejoinder on a cross-appeal

1.   The cross-appeal and the response thereto may be supplemented by a reply and a rejoinder only where the President, on a duly reasoned application submitted by the party who brought the cross-appeal within seven days of service of the response to the cross-appeal, considers it necessary, after hearing the Judge-Rapporteur and the Advocate General, in particular to enable that party to present his views on a plea of inadmissibility or on new matters relied on in the response to the cross-appeal.
2.   The President shall fix the date by which that reply is to be produced and, upon service of that pleading, the date by which the rejoinder is to be produced. He may limit the number of pages and the subject-matter of those pleadings.

Chapter 5

APPEALS DETERMINED BY ORDER

Article 181

Manifestly inadmissible or manifestly unfounded appeal or cross-appeal

Where the appeal or cross-appeal is, in whole or in part, manifestly inadmissible or manifestly unfounded, the Court may at any time, acting on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, decide by reasoned order to dismiss that appeal or cross-appeal in whole or in part.

Article 182

Manifestly well-founded appeal or cross-appeal

Where the Court has already ruled on one or more questions of law identical to those raised by the pleas in law of the appeal or cross-appeal and considers the appeal or cross-appeal to be manifestly well founded, it may, acting on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the parties and the Advocate General, decide by reasoned order in which reference is made to the relevant case-law to declare the appeal or cross-appeal manifestly well founded.

Chapter 6

EFFECT ON A CROSS-APPEAL OF THE REMOVAL OF THE APPEAL FROM THE REGISTER

Article 183

Effect on a cross-appeal of the discontinuance or manifest inadmissibility of the appeal

A cross-appeal shall be deemed to be devoid of purpose:
(a) if the appellant discontinues his appeal;
(b) if the appeal is declared manifestly inadmissible for non-compliance with the time-limit for lodging an appeal;
(c) if the appeal is declared manifestly inadmissible on the sole ground that it is not directed against a final decision of the General Court or against a decision disposing of the substantive issues in part only or disposing of a procedural issue concerning a plea of lack of competence or inadmissibility within the meaning of the first paragraph of Article 56 of the Statute.

Chapter 7

COSTS AND LEGAL AID IN APPEALS

Article 184

Costs in appeals

1.   Subject to the following provisions, Articles 137 to 146 of these Rules shall apply,
mutatis mutandis
, to the procedure before the Court of Justice on an appeal against a decision of the General Court.
2.   Where the appeal is unfounded or where the appeal is well founded and the Court itself gives final judgment in the case, the Court shall make a decision as to the costs.
3.   When an appeal brought by a Member State or an institution of the European Union which did not intervene in the proceedings before the General Court is well founded, the Court of Justice may order that the parties share the costs or that the successful appellant pay the costs which the appeal has caused an unsuccessful party to incur.
4.   Where the appeal has not been brought by an intervener at first instance, he may not be ordered to pay costs in the appeal proceedings unless he participated in the written or oral part of the proceedings before the Court of Justice. Where an intervener at first instance takes part in the proceedings, the Court may decide that he shall bear his own costs.

Article 185

Legal aid

1.   A party who is wholly or in part unable to meet the costs of the proceedings may at any time apply for legal aid.
2.   The application shall be accompanied by all information and supporting documents making it possible to assess the applicant’s financial situation, such as a certificate issued by a competent national authority attesting to his financial situation.

Article 186

Prior application for legal aid

1.   If the application is made prior to the appeal which the applicant for legal aid intends to commence, it shall briefly state the subject of the appeal.
2.   The application for legal aid need not be made through a lawyer.
3.   The introduction of an application for legal aid shall, with regard to the person who made that application, suspend the time-limit prescribed for the bringing of the appeal until the date of service of the order making a decision on that application.
4.   The President shall assign the application for legal aid, as soon as it is lodged, to a Judge-Rapporteur who shall put forward, promptly, a proposal as to the action to be taken on it.

Article 187

Decision on the application for legal aid

1.   The decision to grant legal aid, in whole or in part, or to refuse it shall be taken, on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur and after hearing the Advocate General, by the Chamber of three Judges to which the Judge-Rapporteur is assigned. In that event, the formation of the Court shall be composed of the President of that Chamber, the Judge-Rapporteur and the first Judge or, as the case may be, the first two Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(3) on the date on which the application for legal aid is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur. It shall consider, if appropriate, whether the appeal is manifestly unfounded.
2.   If the Judge-Rapporteur is not a member of a Chamber of three Judges, the decision shall be taken, under the same conditions, by the Chamber of five Judges to which he is assigned. In addition to the Judge-Rapporteur, the formation of the Court shall be composed of four Judges designated from the list referred to in Article 28(2) on the date on which the application for legal aid is brought before that Chamber by the Judge-Rapporteur.
3.   The formation of the Court shall give its decision by way of order. Where the application for legal aid is refused in whole or in part, the order shall state the reasons for that refusal.

Article 188

Sums to be advanced as legal aid

1.   Where legal aid is granted, the cashier of the Court shall be responsible, where applicable within the limits set by the formation of the Court, for costs involved in the assistance and representation of the applicant before the Court. At the request of the applicant or his representative, an advance on those costs may be paid.
2.   In its decision as to costs the Court may order the payment to the cashier of the Court of sums advanced as legal aid.
3.   The Registrar shall take steps to obtain the recovery of these sums from the party ordered to pay them.

Article 189

Withdrawal of legal aid

The formation of the Court which gave a decision on the application for legal aid may at any time, either of its own motion or on request, withdraw that legal aid if the circumstances which led to its being granted alter during the proceedings.

Chapter 8

OTHER PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO APPEALS

Article 190

Other provisions applicable to appeals

1.   Articles 127, 129 to 136, 147 to 150, 153 to 155 and 157 to 166 of these Rules shall apply to the procedure before the Court of Justice on an appeal against decisions of the General Court.
2.   By way of derogation from Article 130(1), an application to intervene shall, however, be made within one month of the publication of the notice referred to in Article 21(4).
3.   Article 95 shall apply,
mutatis mutandis
, to the procedure before the Court of Justice on an appeal against decisions of the General Court.

TITLE VI

REVIEW OF DECISIONS OF THE GENERAL COURT

Article 191

Reviewing Chamber

A Chamber of five Judges shall be designated for a period of one year for the purpose of deciding, in accordance with Articles 193 and 194 of these Rules, whether a decision of the General Court is to be reviewed in accordance with Article 62 of the Statute.

Article 192

Information and communication of decisions which may be reviewed

1.   As soon as the date for the delivery or signature of a decision to be given under Article 256(2) or (3) TFEU is fixed, the Registry of the General Court shall inform the Registry of the Court of Justice.
2.   The decision shall be communicated to the Registry of the Court of Justice immediately upon its delivery or signature, as shall the file in the case, which shall be made available forthwith to the First Advocate General.

Article 193

Review of decisions given on appeal

1.   The proposal of the First Advocate General to review a decision of the General Court given under Article 256(2) TFEU shall be forwarded to the President of the Court of Justice and to the President of the reviewing Chamber. Notice of that transmission shall be given to the Registrar at the same time.
2.   As soon as he is informed of the existence of a proposal, the Registrar shall communicate the file in the case before the General Court to the members of the reviewing Chamber.
3.   As soon as the proposal to review has been received, the President of the Court shall designate the Judge-Rapporteur from among the Judges of the reviewing Chamber on a proposal from the President of that Chamber. The composition of the formation of the Court shall be determined in accordance with Article 28(2) of these Rules on the day on which the case is assigned to the Judge-Rapporteur.
4.   That Chamber, acting on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur, shall decide whether the decision of the General Court is to be reviewed. The decision to review the decision of the General Court shall indicate only the questions which are to be reviewed.
5.   The General Court, the parties to the proceedings before it and the other interested persons referred to in the second paragraph of Article 62a of the Statute shall forthwith be informed by the Registrar of the decision of the Court of Justice to review the decision of the General Court.
6.   Notice of the date of the decision to review the decision of the General Court and of the questions which are to be reviewed shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 194

Review of preliminary rulings

1.   The proposal of the First Advocate General to review a decision of the General Court given under Article 256(3) TFEU shall be forwarded to the President of the Court of Justice and to the President of the reviewing Chamber. Notice of that transmission shall be given to the Registrar at the same time.
2.   As soon as he is informed of the existence of a proposal, the Registrar shall communicate the file in the case before the General Court to the members of the reviewing Chamber.
3.   The Registrar shall also inform the General Court, the referring court or tribunal, the parties to the main proceedings and the other interested persons referred to in the second paragraph of Article 62a of the Statute of the existence of a proposal to review.
4.   As soon as the proposal to review has been received, the President of the Court shall designate the Judge-Rapporteur from among the Judges of the reviewing Chamber on a proposal from the President of that Chamber. The composition of the formation of the Court shall be determined in accordance with Article 28(2) of these Rules on the day on which the case is assigned to the Judge-Rapporteur.
5.   That Chamber, acting on a proposal from the Judge-Rapporteur, shall decide whether the decision of the General Court is to be reviewed. The decision to review the decision of the General Court shall indicate only the questions which are to be reviewed.
6.   The General Court, the referring court or tribunal, the parties to the main proceedings and the other interested persons referred to in the second paragraph of Article 62a of the Statute shall forthwith be informed by the Registrar of the decision of the Court of Justice as to whether or not the decision of the General Court is to be reviewed.
7.   Notice of the date of the decision to review the decision of the General Court and of the questions which are to be reviewed shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
.

Article 195

Judgment on the substance of the case after a decision to review

1.   The decision to review a decision of the General Court shall be served on the parties and other interested persons referred to in the second paragraph of Article 62a of the Statute. The decision served on the Member States, and the States, other than the Member States, which are parties to the EEA Agreement, as well as the EFTA Surveillance Authority, shall be accompanied by a translation of the decision of the Court of Justice in accordance with the provisions of Article 98 of these Rules. The decision of the Court of Justice shall also be communicated to the General Court and, if applicable, to the referring court or tribunal.
2.   Within one month of the date of service referred to in paragraph 1, the parties and other interested persons on whom the decision of the Court of Justice has been served may lodge statements or written observations on the questions which are subject to review.
3.   As soon as a decision to review a decision of the General Court has been taken, the First Advocate General shall assign the review to an Advocate General.
4.   The reviewing Chamber shall rule on the substance of the case, after hearing the Advocate General.
5.   It may, however, request the Court of Justice to assign the case to a formation of the Court composed of a greater number of Judges.
6.   Where the decision of the General Court which is subject to review was given under Article 256(2) TFEU, the Court of Justice shall make a decision as to costs.

TITLE VII

OPINIONS

Article 196

Written part of the procedure

1.   In accordance with Article 218(11) TFEU, a request for an Opinion may be made by a Member State, by the European Parliament, by the Council or by the European Commission.
2.   A request for an Opinion may relate both to whether the envisaged agreement is compatible with the provisions of the Treaties and to whether the European Union or any institution of the European Union has the power to enter into that agreement.
3.   It shall be served on the Member States and on the institutions referred to in paragraph 1, and the President shall prescribe a time-limit within which they may submit written observations.

Article 197

Designation of the Judge-Rapporteur and of the Advocate General

As soon as the request for an Opinion has been submitted, the President shall designate a Judge-Rapporteur and the First Advocate General shall assign the case to an Advocate General.

Article 198

Hearing

The Court may decide that the procedure before it shall also include a hearing.

Article 199

Time-limit for delivering the Opinion

The Court shall deliver its Opinion as soon as possible, after hearing the Advocate General.

Article 200

Delivery of the Opinion

The Opinion, signed by the President, the Judges who took part in the deliberations and the Registrar, shall be delivered in open court. It shall be served on all the Member States and on the institutions referred to in Article 196(1).

TITLE VIII

PARTICULAR FORMS OF PROCEDURE

Article 201

Appeals against decisions of the arbitration committee

1.   An application initiating an appeal under the second paragraph of Article 18 TEAEC shall state:
(a) the name and permanent address of the applicant;
(b) the description of the signatory;
(c) a reference to the arbitration committee’s decision against which the appeal is made;
(d) the names of the respondents;
(e) a summary of the facts;
(f) the grounds on which the appeal is based and arguments relied on, and a brief statement of those grounds;
(g) the form of order sought by the applicant.
2.   Articles 119 and 121 of these Rules shall apply to the application.
3.   A certified copy of the contested decision shall be annexed to the application.
4.   As soon as the application has been lodged, the Registrar of the Court shall request the arbitration committee registry to transmit to the Court the file in the case.
5.   Articles 123 and 124 of these Rules shall apply to this procedure. The Court may decide that the procedure before it shall also include a hearing.
6.   The Court shall give its decision in the form of a judgment. Where the Court sets aside the decision of the arbitration committee it may refer the case back to the committee.

Article 202

Procedure under Article 103 TEAEC

1.   Four certified copies shall be lodged of an application under the third paragraph of Article 103 TEAEC. The application shall be accompanied by the draft of the agreement or contract concerned, by the observations of the European Commission addressed to the State concerned and by all other supporting documents.
2.   The application and annexes thereto shall be served on the European Commission, which shall have a time-limit of 10 days from such service to submit its written observations. This time-limit may be extended by the President after the State concerned has been heard.
3.   Following the lodging of such observations, which shall be served on the State concerned, the Court shall give its decision promptly, after hearing the Advocate General and, if they so request, the State concerned and the European Commission.

Article 203

Procedures under Articles 104 TEAEC and 105 TEAEC

Applications under the third paragraph of Article 104 TEAEC and the second paragraph of Article 105 TEAEC shall be governed by the provisions of Titles II and IV of these Rules. Such applications shall also be served on the State to which the respondent person or undertaking belongs.

Article 204

Procedure provided for by Article 111(3) of the EEA Agreement

1.   In the case governed by Article 111(3) of the EEA Agreement, the matter shall be brought before the Court by a request submitted by the Contracting Parties which are parties to the dispute. The request shall be served on the other Contracting Parties, on the European Commission, on the EFTA Surveillance Authority and, where appropriate, on the other interested persons on whom a request for a preliminary ruling raising the same question of interpretation of European Union legislation would be served.
2.   The President shall prescribe a time-limit within which the Contracting Parties and the other interested persons on whom the request has been served may submit written observations.
3.   The request shall be made in one of the languages referred to in Article 36 of these Rules. Article 38 shall apply. The provisions of Article 98 shall apply
mutatis mutandis
.
4.   As soon as the request referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article has been submitted, the President shall designate a Judge-Rapporteur. The First Advocate General shall, immediately afterwards, assign the request to an Advocate General.
5.   The Court shall, after hearing the Advocate General, give a reasoned decision on the request.
6.   The decision of the Court, signed by the President, the Judges who took part in the deliberations and the Registrar, shall be served on the Contracting Parties and on the other interested persons referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2.

Article 205

Settlement of the disputes referred to in Article 35 TEU in the version in force before the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon

1.   In the case of disputes between Member States as referred to in Article 35(7) TEU in the version in force before the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, as maintained in force by Protocol No 36 annexed to the Treaties, the matter shall be brought before the Court by an application by a party to the dispute. The application shall be served on the other Member States and on the European Commission.
2.   In the case of disputes between Member States and the European Commission as referred to in Article 35(7) TEU in the version in force before the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, as maintained in force by Protocol No 36 annexed to the Treaties, the matter shall be brought before the Court by an application by a party to the dispute. The application shall be served on the other Member States, the Council and the European Commission if it was submitted by a Member State. The application shall be served on the Member States and on the Council if it was submitted by the European Commission.
3.   The President shall prescribe a time-limit within which the institutions and the Member States on which the application has been served may submit written observations.
4.   As soon as the application referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 has been submitted, the President shall designate a Judge-Rapporteur. The First Advocate General shall, immediately afterwards, assign the application to an Advocate General.
5.   The Court may decide that the procedure before it shall also include a hearing.
6.   The Court shall, after the Advocate General has delivered his Opinion, give its ruling on the dispute by way of judgment.
7.   The same procedure as that laid down in the preceding paragraphs shall apply where an agreement concluded between the Member States confers jurisdiction on the Court to rule on a dispute between Member States or between Member States and an institution.

Article 206

Requests under Article 269 TFEU

1.   Four certified copies shall be submitted of a request under Article 269 TFEU. The request shall be accompanied by any relevant document and, in particular, any observations and recommendations made pursuant to Article 7 TEU.
2.   The request and annexes thereto shall be served on the European Council or on the Council, as appropriate, each of which shall have a time-limit of 10 days from such service to submit its written observations. This time-limit shall not be extended.
3.   The request and annexes thereto shall also be communicated to the Member States other than the State in question, to the European Parliament and to the European Commission.
4.   Following the lodging of the observations referred to in paragraph 2, which shall be served on the Member State concerned and on the States and institutions referred to in paragraph 3, the Court shall give its decision within a time-limit of one month from the lodging of the request and after hearing the Advocate General. At the request of the Member State concerned, the European Council or the Council, or of its own motion, the Court may decide that the procedure before it shall also include a hearing, which all the States and institutions referred to in this Article shall be given notice to attend.

FINAL PROVISIONS

Article 207

Supplementary rules

Subject to the provisions of Article 253 TFEU and after consultation with the Governments concerned, the Court shall adopt supplementary rules concerning its practice in relation to:
(a) letters rogatory;
(b) applications for legal aid;
(c) reports by the Court of perjury by witnesses or experts, delivered pursuant to Article 30 of the Statute.

Article 208

Implementing rules

The Court may, by a separate act, adopt practice rules for the implementation of these Rules.

Article 209

Repeal

These Rules replace the Rules of Procedure of the Court of Justice of the European Communities adopted on 19 June 1991, as last amended on 24 May 2011 (
Official Journal of the European Union
, L 162 of 22 June 2011, p. 17
).

Article 210

Publication and entry into force of these Rules

These Rules, which are authentic in the languages referred to in Article 36 of these Rules, shall be published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
and shall enter into force on the first day of the second month following their publication.
Done at Luxembourg, 25 September 2012.
 
(1)  
OJ L 1, 3.1.1994, p. 27
.
(2)  OJ, English Special Edition 1952-1958 (I), p. 59.
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