Van Gend en Loos Trucks, Old trucks, Van


DAF Van Gend & Loos Vintage Trucks, Old Trucks, Cars Trucks, Train Truck, Road Train, Classic

Van Gend en Loos is a case with more than a single protagonist—central both to its genesis and its subsequent impact. The very decision by the Dutch court to make a preliminary reference (and the truly breakthrough decision of the lawyers who pleaded the case to request such) was not only procedurally and politically bold but conceptually.


Van Gend en Loos Vintage advertising posters, Old advertisements, Vintage advertisements

The Van Gend & Loos case was triggered by a company that claimed that Dutch customs duties on a product imported from West Germany were in violation of the standstill clause contained in Article 12 of the Treaty of Rome.


Van Gend & Loos Stichting Cultureel Erfgoed Enschede

The claimants, van Gend en Loos, imported chemicals from Western Germany to the Netherlands where they were asked to pay import taxes at Dutch customs, the defendants, which they objected to on the grounds it ran contrary to the European Economic Community's prohibition on inter-State import duties, as per Article 12 of the Treaty of Rome.


Pin op Van Gend en Loos

Van Gend en Loos, voluit Van Gend en Loos t. Nederlandse administratie der belastingen ( HvJ 5 februari 1963 , 26/62, ECLI:EU:C:1963:1 , Jur. 1963, p. 3 .) is de roepnaam van een standaardarrest van het Hof van Justitie van de Europese Gemeenschappen gewezen op 5 februari 1963, betreffende een verzoek om een prejudiciële beslissing van de.


Een wagen met paarden van Van Gend en Loos. Geheugen van Oost

William Phelan Chapter Get access Share Cite Summary This chapter discusses the Court's 1963 judgment, Van Gend en Loos, where the Court declared that European law could be relied upon by private individuals before their national courts.


Van Gend & Loos, Holland company Van Gend & Loos; tractor… Flickr

The seminal case of Van Gend & Loos offered the Court an opportunity to proclaim the doctrine of the direct effect of EU law within the legal orders of the Member States. In practice, this means.


Fordson Van Gend & Loos / ATO a photo on Flickriver

Van Gend en Loos, a postal and transportation company, imported urea formaldehyde from West Germany to the Netherlands. The authorities charged them a tariff on the import. Van Gend en Loos objected, stating that it was a clear violation of Article 12 of the Treaty of Rome (now replaced by Article 30 TFEU), which stated:


Van Gend & Loos oldtimer truck in het spoorwegmuseum tijde… Flickr

This essay examines, first, the reasons for the extraordinary impact and iconic status which are attached to Van Gend en Loos. It argues that the explanation lies in a confluence of structural factors and not in the 'direct effect' doctrine simpliciter. It then looks at the 'darker' side of the case - a proxy for governance - its.


1938 Paard&Wagen "Van Gend & Loos" a photo on Flickriver

Van Gend en Loos ( VGL) was understood very differently at the time to how it is understood today. 1 Within the Court, it was seen as a compromise judgment 2 and the distinguished comparatists, Riesenfeld and Buxbaum, noted that the judgment neither ventured "beyond the line of minimum exposure" nor engaged in "a premature en tanglement with con.


Van Gend & Loos Erwin de Rooy FotografieErwin de Rooy Fotografie

The Van Gend en Loos judgment is consequently not just a historical event of limited importance for contemporary affairs. It constitutes a focal point for a rich patchwork of constantly reproduced historical memory and myths used for ideological purposes. This makes the judgment particularly ripe for historical analysis.


DAF Van Gend & Loos Truck met Rolcontainer Aanhanger met slingermechaniek, jaren 50 Vintage

EUR-Lex - 61962CJ0026 - EN - EUR-Lex EUROPA EUR-Lex home EUR-Lex - 61962CJ0026 - EN Document 61962CJ0026 Judgment of the Court of 5 February 1963. NV Algemene Transport- en Expeditie Onderneming van Gend & Loos v Netherlands Inland Revenue Administration. Reference for a preliminary ruling: Tariefcommissie - Netherlands. Case 26-62.


Geheugenvanbaarn.nl Jan Daatzelaar bij Van Gend en Loos

van Gend en Loos: Free movement of goods - Customs union. Free movement of goods - Customs union; Available in : Spanish; Danish; German; Greek; English; French; Italian; Dutch; Portuguese; C-26/62: Judgment ECLI:EU:C:1963:1: 05/02/1963: van Gend en Loos: Free movement of goods - Customs union. Free movement of goods - Customs union; Available in :


Van Gend en Loos auto. Oude trucks, Busjes, Nostalgie

Van Gend & Loos was a Dutch distribution company. It was established in 1809, and was purchased by DHL in 2003. History Van Gend & Loos was established by the Antwerp -based innkeeper and carriage driver Jan-Baptist van Gend. He had married a woman from the Loos family in 1796.


Wie in 1956 met paard en wagen voor Van Gend en Loos? Foto AD.nl

The judgment - usually mentioned in one breath with its Italian twin Flaminio Costa v ENEL - is known as one of the landmark decisions that made the EU what it is today, with EU lawyers claiming that the EU may not even have survived without them. The Court of Justice itself celebrated the anniversary of the decision with a festive event in 2013.


Van Gend en Loos Trucks, Old trucks, Van

The product imported by Van Gend & Loos was, at the time of the entry into force of the Treaty of Rome (1 January 1958), subject to a customs duty charged at 3 %, as it was classified under heading 279-a-2 of the 1947 customs tariff. Under the 1960 tariff, the product was moved to heading 39.01-a-1, to which a higher duty of 8 % was attached.


Erfgoed spat van de Van Gend en Loosmuren De Erfgoedstem

On 13 May 2013, at the seat of the Court of Justice in Luxembourg, a day of reflection took place to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the judgment in Van Gend en Loos, delivered on 5 February 1963.During the day, the judgment was examined as a source of and a framework for the principles which have shaped the constitutional structure of the European Union and from the point of view of its.