Title: General terms and conditions GTC benefits, dangers and strategies
1 General terms and conditions (GTC) benefits,
dangers and strategies
- Course on competition law and consumer protection
San Jose, Costa Rica, March 13-15, 2007
Prof. Dr. Roger Zäch, Zürich Vice-president
Swiss competition commission
2General terms and conditions (GTC)
- Overview
- Basics
- Law of the European Union
- Swiss law
3I. What are general terms and conditions (GTC) ?
- Terms and conditions which become part of a
plenty of contracts without being individually
negotiated. - The GTC are used by one contract party and have
to be accepted by the other to become effective,
thus GTC have not the quality of an act or
regulation. - Often GTC are formulated by a specific company
(for example the GTC of Sony PLC) or an
association (for example the GTC of a national
insurance association).
4I. History of GTC
- GTC are a consequence of the industrial
revolution where mass products and mass services
are provided there is also a need for mass
contracts. - Today GTC are found in every domain of economic
life.
5I. Functions of GTC
- Function of rationalisation (reduction of
transaction costs) - Function of specialisation (especially in fields
where the law offers no or only fragmentary
solutions like for example new types of
contracts) - Function of risk shifting (the user of GTC tries
to exclude risks like for example liability risks
which he would have to bear according to the law
if the parties had no agreement)
6I. Assessment of GTC
- How do we have to asses these functions?
- The function of rationalisation and
specialisation are desirable because they lead to
more efficiency. - The function of risk shifting is problematic from
the view of consumer protection.
7I. Problems of GTC
- Low negotiating power of the single consumer
concerning negotiation of GTC is a fact of live. - Often the GTC in specific lines of business are
very similar what leads to the situation of take
it or leave it from the consumers view. - The consumer normally is not able to find out
which clauses serve risk shifting because he or
she has not enough business experience. - The same or similar GTC can also be a problem
from the view of competition law because it means
an adjustment of a competition parameter. What
could a competitor do regarding GTC? - ? GTC can lead to a serious erosion of the
freedom of contract as a column of market economy.
8I. Strategies to avoid negativ impacts of GTC
- Three fields of a possible interference by law or
the judicary - Validity control of GTC
- Interpretation control of GTC
- Content control of GTC
9I. Validity control
- Control whether the GTC have become a valid part
of the contract between the two parties. - GTC are only valid if the consumer had a real
possibility to notice the GTC The user of the
GTC has the obligation to point at the GTC and
they have to be in noticalbe form (especially
readable). - GTC with unusual content do not become a valid
part of the contract if the user has not pointed
at them and the contracting party is not business
experienced (especially GTC which change the
typical character of the contract). - Weak point Unfair GTC become valid part of the
contract if the user points at the GTC and they
are in a noticable form. - Individual agreements are of course valid and
override contrary GTC.
10I. Interpreation control of GTC
- Vague GTC should be interpretated in favor of the
consumer (interpretatio contra proferentem). - The power gap between user of GTC and consumers
should be considered. - Weak point Unfair GTC cannot be interpretated in
favor of the consumer if the user phrases them
clearly enough.
11I. Content control of GTC
- Clauses which stipulate a disparity of
contractual rights or duties have to be qualified
as abusive and therefore have no force. - Because of the weak points of validity and
interpretation control the content control of GTC
is a necessary tool of consumer protection!
12II. Legislation in the European Union
- Council Directive 93/13/EEC concerning unfair
terms in consumer contracts
13II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Definition of the GTC, Article 3
- A contractual term which has not been
individually negotiated...a term shall always be
regarded as not individually negotiated where it
has been drafted in advance and the consumer has
therefore not been able to influence the
substance of the term, particularly in the
context of a pre-formulated standard contract...
The fact that certain aspects of a term or one
specific term have been individually negotiated
shall not exclude the application of this Article
to the rest of a contract if an overall
assessment of the contract indicates that it is
nevertheless a pre-formulated standard contract.
14II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Definition of the consumer and supplier, Article
2 - (b) 'consumer' means any natural person who, in
contracts covered by this Directive, is acting
for purposes which are outside his trade,
business or profession - (c) 'seller or supplier' means any natural or
legal person who, in contracts covered by this
Directive, is acting for purposes relating to his
trade, business or profession, whether publicly
owned or privately owned.
15II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Validity control there is no special regulation
concerning the validity control in the Council
Directive.
16II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Interpretation control, Art. 5
- In the case of contracts where all or certain
terms offered to the consumer are in writing,
these terms must always be drafted in plain,
intelligible language. Where there is doubt about
the meaning of a term, the interpretation most
favourable to the consumer shall prevail.
17II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Content control, Art. 3
- A contractual term which has not been
individually negotiated shall be regarded as
unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good
faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the
parties' rights and obligations arising under the
contract, to the detriment of the consumer. - According to Art. 3 (3) the annex of the Council
Directive includes a non-exhaustive list of terms
which may be regarded as unfair.
18II. Important terms of the Council Directive
- Examples for unfair terms mentioned in the annex
- (a) excluding or limiting the legal liability of
a seller or supplier in the event of the death of
a consumer or personal injury to the latter
resulting from an act or omission of that seller
or supplier - (f) authorizing the seller or supplier to
dissolve the contract on a discretionary basis
where the same facility is not granted to the
consumer, or permitting the seller or supplier to
retain the sums paid for services not yet
supplied by him where it is the seller or
supplier himself who dissolves the contract - (e) requiring any consumer who fails to fulfil
his obligation to pay a disproportionately high
sum in compensation.
19III. Swiss Law
- There is no special act concerning GTC in Swiss
law. - Until today there is no real content control in
Swiss law! - But the courts anyway achieved consumer
protection through validity control,
interpretation control and a hidden content
control.
20III. Swiss Law
- Validity control BGE 109 II 452 leading case
from the year 1983 - (http//www.bger.ch)
- GTC which empower the architect to act as an
representative for the house builder in financial
aspects have an unusual content and therefore do
not become a valid part of the contract under the
condition the architect has not pointed at them
and the house builder is not experienced.
21III. Swiss Law
- Interpretation control
- is an accepted principle by the swiss courts for
GTC (for example BGE 115 II 264 ff.) - the principle is also fixed in Art. 33 VVG (swiss
federal insurance act) - Umfang der Gefahr
- Soweit dieses Gesetz nicht anders bestimmt,
haftet der Versicherer für alle Ereignisse,
welche die Merkmale der Gefahr, gegen deren
Folgen Versicherung genommen wurde, an sich
tragen, es sei denn, dass der Vertrag einzelne
Ereignisse in bestimmter, unzweideutiger Fassung
von der Versicherung ausschliesst. - ?If the insurer wants to exclude a certain
possible damage from a risk he insures he has do
this in an unambigous way.
22III. Swiss Law
- Content control
- There is no open content control of GTC in Swiss
law. - But hidden content control by the courts under
the cloak of validity control by assuming the
unusual content of GTC as soon as the GTC would
lead to a disparity of contractual rights or
duties. - But covert tools are never reliable tools
(Llewellyn 52 Harv.L.Rev. 700, 703 (1939)).
23III. Swiss Law
- Content control according to Art. 8 Act against
unfair competition (SR 241)? - Art. 8 states
- Unlauter handelt insbesondere, wer
vorformulierte allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen
verwendet, die in irreführender Weise (misleading
way) zum Nachteil einer Vertragspartei - a. von der unmittelbar oder sinngemäss
anwendbaren gesetzlichen Ordnung erheblich
abweichen oder b. eine der Vertragsnatur
erheblich widersprechende Verteilung von Rechten
und Pflichten vorsehen. - By insertion of the requirement that the GTC have
to lead in a misleading way to a disparity of
contractual rights or duties the Swiss legislator
missed the chance to create a real content
control - Because there is a cumulation of validity
(misleading way) and content criteria (disparity
of contractual rights or duties) necessary to
prevent unfair GTC from becoming effective
andbecause GTC are in written form there is no
content control. - As a result GTC which are not misleading, unusual
and ambigous are valid although they lead to a
disparity of contractual rights or duties!