Directive 2000/26/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 May 2000
on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating
to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use of motor
vehicles and amending Council Directives 73/239/EEC and 88/357/EEC
(Fourth motor insurance Directive)
Official
Journal L 181 , 20/07/2000 P. 0065 – 0074
Directive
2000/26/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council
of 16 May
2000
on the approximation of the laws of the Member States
relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use
of motor vehicles and amending Council Directives 73/239/EEC and
88/357/EEC
(Fourth motor insurance Directive)
THE EUROPEAN
PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to
the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular
Articles 47(2) and 95 thereof,
Having regard to the proposal from
the Commission(1),
Having regard to the opinion of the Economic
and Social Committee(2),
Acting in accordance with the procedure
laid down in Article 251 of the Treaty(3), in the light of the joint
text approved by the Conciliation Committee on 7 April
2000,
Whereas:
(1) At present, differences exist between
provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in
the Member States relating to insurance against civil liability in
respect of the use of motor vehicles and those differences constitute
an obstacle to the free movement of persons and of insurance
services.
(2) It is therefore necessary to approximate those
provisions in order to promote the sound functioning of the single
market.
(3) By Directive 72/166/EEC(4), the Council adopted
provisions on the approximation of the laws of the Member States
relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use
of motor vehicles, and to the enforcement of the obligation to insure
against such liability.
(4) By Directive 88/357/EEC(5), the
Council adopted provisions on the coordination of laws, regulations
and administrative provisions relating to direct insurance other than
life assurance and laying down provisions to facilitate the effective
exercise of freedom to provide services.
(5) The green card bureau
system ensures the ready settlement of claims in the injured party's
own country even where the other party comes from a different
European country.
(6) The green card bureau system does not solve
all problems of an injured party having to claim in another country
against a party resident there and an insurance undertaking
authorised there (foreign legal system, foreign language, unfamiliar
settlement procedures and often unreasonably delayed settlement).
(7)
By its Resolution of 26 October 1995 on the settlement of claims
arising from traffic accidents occurring outside the claimant's
country of origin(6), the European Parliament, acting under the
second paragraph of Article 192 of the Treaty, called on the
Commission to submit a proposal for a European Parliament and Council
Directive to solve these problems.
(8) It is in fact appropriate
to supplement the arrangements established by Directives 72/166/EEC,
84/5/EEC(7) and 90/232/EEC(8) in order to guarantee injured parties
suffering loss or injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident
comparable treatment irrespective of where in the Community accidents
occur; for accidents falling within the scope of this Directive
occurring in a State other than that of the injured party's
residence, there are gaps with regard to the settlement of injured
parties' claims.
(9) The application of this Directive to
accidents occurring in third countries covered by the green card
system, affecting injured parties resident in the Community and
involving vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State does
not imply an extension of the compulsory territorial coverage of
motor insurance as provided for in Article 3(2) of Directive
72/166/EEC.
(10) This entails giving the injured party a direct
right of action against the insurance undertaking of the responsible
party.
(11) One satisfactory solution might be for injured parties
suffering loss or injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident
falling within the scope of this Directive and occurring in a State
other than that of their residence to be entitled to claim in their
Member State of residence against a claims representative appointed
there by the insurance undertaking of the responsible party.
(12)
This solution would enable damage suffered by injured parties outside
their Member State of residence to be dealt with by procedures
familiar to them.
(13) This system of having claims
representatives in the injured party's Member State of residence
affects neither the substantive law to be applied in each individual
case nor the matter of jurisdiction.
(14) The existence of a
direct right of action against the insurance undertaking for the
party who has suffered loss or injury is a logical supplement to the
appointment of such representatives and moreover improves the legal
position of injured parties of motor vehicle accidents occurring
outside that party's Member State of residence.
(15) In order to
fill the gaps in question, it should be provided that the Member
State where the insurance undertaking is authorised should require
the undertaking to appoint claims representatives resident or
established in the other Member States to collect all necessary
information in relation to claims resulting from such accidents and
to take appropriate action to settle the claims on behalf and for the
account of the insurance undertaking, including the payment of
compensation therefor; claims representatives should have sufficient
powers to represent the insurance undertaking in relation to persons
suffering damage from such accidents, and also to represent the
insurance undertaking before national authorities including, where
necessary, before the courts, in so far as this is compatible with
the rules of private international law on the conferral of
jurisdiction.
(16) The activities of the claims representative are
not sufficient in order to confer jurisdiction on the courts in the
injured party's Member State of residence if the rules of private
international law on the conferral of jurisdiction do not so
provide.
(17) The appointment of representatives responsible for
settling claims should be one of the conditions for access to and
carrying on the activity of insurance listed in class 10 of point A
of the Annex to Directive 73/239/EEC(9), except for carriers'
liability; that condition should therefore be covered by the single
official authorisation issued by the authorities of the Member State
where the insurance undertaking establishes its head office, as
specified in Title II of Directive 92/49/EEC(10); that condition
should also apply to insurance undertakings having their head office
outside the Community which have secured an authorisation granting
them access to the activity of insurance in a Member State of the
Community; Directive 73/239/EEC should be amended and supplemented
accordingly.
(18) In addition to ensuring that the insurance
undertaking has a representative in the State where the injured party
resides, it is appropriate to guarantee the specific right of the
injured party to have the claim settled promptly; it is therefore
necessary to include in national law appropriate effective and
systematic financial or equivalent administrative penalties - such as
injunctions combined with administrative fines, reporting to
supervisory authorities on a regular basis, on-the-spot checks,
publications in the national official journal and in the press,
suspension of the activities of the company (prohibition on the
conclusion of new contracts for a certain period), designation of a
special representative of the supervisory authorities responsible for
monitoring that the business is run in line with insurance laws,
withdrawal of the authorisation for this business line, sanctions to
be imposed on directors and management staff - in the event that the
insurance undertaking or its representative fails to fulfil its
obligation to make an offer of compensation within a reasonable
time-limit; this should not prejudice the application of any other
measure - especially under supervisory law - which may be considered
appropriate; however, it is a condition that liability and the damage
and injury sustained should not be in dispute, so that the insurance
undertaking is able to make a reasoned offer within the prescribed
time-limit; the reasoned offer of compensation should be in writing
and contain the grounds on the basis of which liability and damages
have been assessed.
(19) In addition to those sanctions, it is
appropriate to provide that interest should be payable on the amount
of compensation offered by the insurance undertaking or awarded by
the court to the injured party when the offer has not been made
within the said prescribed time-limit; if Member States have existing
national rules which cover the requirement for late-payment interest
this provision could be implemented by a reference to those
rules.
(20) Injured parties suffering loss or injury as a result
of motor vehicle accidents sometimes have difficulty in establishing
the name of the insurance undertaking providing insurance against
civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles involved in
an accident.
(21) In the interest of such injured parties, Member
States should set up information centres to ensure that such
information is made available promptly; those information centres
should also make available to injured parties information concerning
claims representatives; it is necessary that such centres should
cooperate with each other and respond rapidly to requests for
information about claims representatives made by centres in other
Member States; it seems appropriate that such centres should collect
information about the actual termination date of the insurance cover
but not about the expiry of the original validity of the policy if
the duration of the contract is extended owing to
non-cancellation.
(22) Specific provision should be made with
respect to vehicles (for example, government or military vehicles)
which fall under the exemptions from the obligation to be insured
against civil liability.
(23) The injured party may have a
legitimate interest in being informed about the identity of the owner
or usual driver or the registered keeper of the vehicle, for example
if he can obtain compensation only from these persons because the
vehicle is not duly insured or the damage exceeds the sum insured,
this information should also be provided accordingly.
(24) Certain
information provided, such as the name and address of the owner or
usual driver of the vehicle and the number of the insurance policy or
the registration number of the vehicle, constitutes personal data
within the meaning of Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament
and of the Council of 24 October 1995 on the protection of
individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the
free movement of such data(11); the processing of such data which is
required for the purposes of this Directive must therefore comply
with the national measures taken pursuant to Directive 95/46/EC; the
name and address of the usual driver should be communicated only if
national legislation provides for such communication.
(25) It is
necessary to make provision for a compensation body to which the
injured party may apply where the insurance undertaking has failed to
appoint a representative or is manifestly dilatory in settling a
claim or where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified to
guarantee that the injured party will not remain without the
compensation to which he is entitled; the intervention of the
compensation body should be limited to rare individual cases where
the insurance undertaking has failed to comply with its duties in
spite of the dissuasive effect of the potential imposition of
penalties.
(26) The role played by the compensation body is that
of settling the claim in respect of any loss or injury suffered by
the injured party only in cases which are capable of objective
determination and therefore the compensation body must limit its
activity to verifying that an offer of compensation has been made in
accordance with the time-limits and procedures laid down, without any
assessment of the merits.
(27) Legal persons who are subrogated by
law to the injured party in his claims against the person responsible
for the accident or the latter's insurance undertaking (such as, for
example, other insurance undertakings or social security bodies)
should not be entitled to present the corresponding claim to the
compensation body.
(28) The compensation body should have a right
of subrogation in so far as it has compensated the injured party; in
order to facilitate enforcing the compensation body's claim against
the insurance undertaking where it has failed to appoint a claims
representative or is manifestly dilatory in settling a claim, the
body providing compensation in the injured party's State should enjoy
an automatic right of reimbursement with subrogation to the rights of
the injured party on the part of the corresponding body in the State
where the insurance undertaking is established; the latter body is
the best placed to institute proceedings for recourse against the
insurance undertaking.
(29) Even though Member States may provide
that the claim against the compensation body may be subsidiary, the
injured person should not be obliged to present his claim to the
person responsible for the accident before presenting it to the
compensation body; in this case the injured party should be in at
least the same position as in the case of a claim against the
guarantee fund under Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC.
(30) This
system can be made to function by means of an agreement between the
compensation bodies established or approved by the Member States
defining their functions and obligations and the procedures for
reimbursement.
(31) Where it is impossible to identify the insurer
of the vehicle, provision should be made so that the ultimate debtor
in respect of the damages to be paid to the injured party is the
guarantee fund provided for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC
situated in the Member State where the non-insured vehicle, the use
of which has caused the accident, is normally based; where it is
impossible to identify the vehicle, provision must be made so that
the ultimate debtor is the guarantee fund provided for in Article
1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC situated in the Member State in which the
accident occurred,
HAVE ADOPTED THIS DIRECTIVE:
Article
1
Scope
1. The objective of this Directive is to lay down
special provisions applicable to injured parties entitled to
compensation in respect of any loss or injury resulting from
accidents occurring in a Member State other than the Member State of
residence of the injured party which are caused by the use of
vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State.
Without
prejudice to the legislation of third countries on civil liability
and private international law, this Directive shall also apply to
injured parties resident in a Member State and entitled to
compensation in respect of any loss or injury resulting from
accidents occurring in third countries whose national insurer's
bureaux as defined in Article 1(3) of Directive 72/166/EEC have
joined the Green Card system whenever such accidents are caused by
the use of vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State.
2.
Articles 4 and 6 shall apply only in the case of accidents caused by
the use of a vehicle
(a) insured through an establishment in a
Member State other than the State of residence of the injured party,
and
(b) normally based in a Member State other than the State of
residence of the injured party.
3. Article 7 shall also apply to
accidents caused by third-country vehicles covered by Articles 6 and
7 of Directive 72/166/EEC.
Article 2
Definitions
For the
purpose of this Directive:
(a) "insurance undertaking"
means an undertaking which has received its official authorisation in
accordance with Article 6 or Article 23(2) of Directive 73/239/EEC;
(b) "establishment" means the head office, agency or
branch of an insurance undertaking as defined in Article 2(c) of
Directive 88/357/EEC;
(c) "vehicle" means a vehicle as
defined in Article 1(1) of Directive 72/166/EEC;
(d) "injured
party" means an injured party as defined in Article 1(2) of
Directive 72/166/EEC;
(e) "the Member State in which the
vehicle is normally based" means the territory in which the
vehicle is normally based as defined in Article 1(4) of Directive
72/166/EEC.
Article 3
Direct right of action
Each Member
State shall ensure that injured parties referred to in Article 1 in
accidents within the meaning of that provision enjoy a direct right
of action against the insurance undertaking covering the responsible
person against civil liability.
Article 4
Claims
representatives
1. Each Member State shall take all measures
necessary to ensure that all insurance undertakings covering the
risks classified in class 10 of point A of the Annex to Directive
73/239/EEC, other than carrier's liability, appoint a claims
representative in each Member State other than that in which they
have received their official authorisation. The claims representative
shall be responsible for handling and settling claims arising from an
accident in the cases referred to in Article 1. The claims
representative shall be resident or established in the Member State
where he is appointed.
2. The choice of its claims representative
shall be at the discretion of the insurance undertaking. The Member
States may not restrict this choice.
3. The claims representative
may work for one or more insurance undertakings.
4. The claims
representative shall, in relation to such claims, collect all
information necessary in connection with the settlement of the claims
and shall take the measures necessary to negotiate a settlement of
claims. The requirement of appointing a claims representative shall
not preclude the right of the injured party or his insurance
undertaking to institute proceedings directly against the person who
caused the accident or his insurance undertaking.
5. Claims
representatives shall possess sufficient powers to represent the
insurance undertaking in relation to injured parties in the cases
referred to in Article 1 and to meet their claims in full. They must
be capable of examining cases in the official language(s) of the
Member State of residence of the injured party.
6. The Member
States shall create a duty, backed by appropriate, effective and
systematic financial or equivalent administrative penalties, to the
effect that, within three months of the date when the injured party
presented his claim for compensation either directly to the insurance
undertaking of the person who caused the accident or to its claims
representative,
(a) the insurance undertaking of the person who
caused the accident or his claims representative is required to make
a reasoned offer of compensation in cases where liability is not
contested and the damages have been quantified, or
(b) the
insurance undertaking to whom the claim for compensation has been
addressed or his claims representative is required to provide a
reasoned reply to the points made in the claim in cases where
liability is denied or has not been clearly determined or the damages
have not been fully quantified.
Member States shall adopt
provisions to ensure that where the offer is not made within the
three-month time-limit, interest shall be payable on the amount of
compensation offered by the insurance undertaking or awarded by the
court to the injured party.
7. The Commission shall report to the
European Parliament and Council on the implementation of paragraph 4,
first subparagraph, and on the effectiveness of that provision as
well as on the equivalence of national penalty provisions before 20
January 2006 and shall submit proposals if necessary.
8. The
appointment of a claims representative shall not in itself constitute
the opening of a branch within the meaning of Article 1(b) of
Directive 92/49/EEC and the claims representative shall not be
considered an establishment within the meaning of Article 2(c) of
Directive 88/357/EEC or an establishment within the meaning of the
Brussels Convention of 27 September 1968 on jurisdiction and the
enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial
matters(12).
Article 5
Information centres
1. For the
purposes of allowing the injured party to seek compensation, each
Member State shall establish or approve an information centre
responsible:
(a) for keeping a register containing the following
information:
1. the registration numbers of motor vehicles
normally based in the territory of the State in question;
2. (i)
the numbers of the insurance policies covering the use of those
vehicles for the risks classified in class 10 of point A of the Annex
to Directive 73/239/EEC, other than carrier's liability, and where
the period of validity of the policy has expired, also the date of
termination of the insurance cover;
(ii) the number of the green
card or frontier insurance policy if the vehicle is covered by one of
those documents in case the vehicle benefits from the derogation
provided for in Article 4(b) of Directive 72/166/EEC;
3.
insurance undertakings covering the use of vehicles for the risks
classified in class 10 of point A of the Annex to Directive
73/239/EEC, other than carrier's liability, and claims
representatives appointed by such insurance undertakings in
accordance with Article 4 whose names shall be notified to the
information centre in accordance with paragraph 2 of this Article;
4. the list of vehicles which, in each Member State, benefit from
the derogation from the requirement for civil liability insurance
cover in accordance with Article 4(a) and (b) of Directive
72/166/EEC;
5. regarding the vehicles provided for in point
(4):
(i) the name of the authority or the body designated in
accordance with the second subparagraph of Article 4(a) of Directive
72/166/EEC as responsible for compensating injured parties in the
cases where the procedure provided for in the first indent of Article
2(2) of Directive 72/166/EEC is not applicable, if the vehicle
benefits from the derogation provided for in Article 4(a) of
Directive 72/166/EEC;
(ii) the name of the body covering the
vehicle in the Member State where it is normally based if the vehicle
benefits from the derogation provided for in Article 4(b) of
Directive 72/166/EEC;
(b) or for coordinating the compilation and
dissemination of that information;
(c) and for assisting entitled
persons to be apprised of the information mentioned in points (a)(1),
(2), (3), (4) and (5).
The information under points (a)(1), (2)
and (3) must be preserved for a period of seven years after the
termination of the registration of the vehicle or the termination of
the insurance contract.
2. Insurance undertakings referred to in
paragraph 1(a)(3) shall notify to the information centres of all
Member States the name and address of the claims representative which
they have appointed in accordance with Article 4 in each of the
Member States.
3. The Member States shall ensure that the injured
party is entitled for a period of seven years after the accident to
obtain without delay from the information centre of the Member State
where he resides, the Member State where the vehicle is normally
based or the Member State where the accident occurred the following
information:
(a) the name and address of the insurance
undertaking;
(b) the number of the insurance policy; and
(c)
the name and address of the insurance undertaking's claims
representative in the State of residence of the injured
party.
Information centres shall cooperate with each other.
4.
The information centre shall provide the injured party with the name
and address of the owner or usual driver or the registered keeper of
the vehicle if the injured party has a legitimate interest in
obtaining this information. For the purposes of this provision, the
information centre shall address itself in particular:
(a) to the
insurance undertaking, or
(b) to the vehicle registration
agency.
If the vehicle benefits from the derogation provided for
in Article 4(a) of Directive 72/166/EEC, the information centre shall
inform the injured party of the name of the authority or body
designated in accordance with the second subparagraph of Article 4(a)
of that Directive as responsible for compensating injured parties in
cases where the procedure provided for in the first indent of Article
2(2) of that Directive is not applicable.
If the vehicle benefits
from the derogation provided for in Article 4(b) of Directive
72/166/EEC, the information centre shall inform the injured party of
the name of the body covering the vehicle in the country where it is
normally based.
5. The processing of personal data resulting from
the previous paragraphs must be carried out in accordance with
national measures taken pursuant to Directive 95/46/EC.
Article
6
Compensation bodies
1. Each Member State shall establish or
approve a compensation body responsible for providing compensation to
injured parties in the cases referred to in Article 1.
Such
injured parties may present a claim to the compensation body in their
Member State of residence:
(a) if, within three months of the date
when the injured party presented his claim for compensation to the
insurance undertaking of the vehicle the use of which caused the
accident or to its claims representative, the insurance undertaking
or its claims representative has not provided a reasoned reply to the
points made in the claim; or
(b) if the insurance undertaking has
failed to appoint a claims representative in the State of residence
of the injured party in accordance with Article 4(1). In this case,
injured parties may not present a claim to the compensation body if
they have presented a claim for compensation directly to the
insurance undertaking of the vehicle the use of which caused the
accident and if they have received a reasoned reply within three
months of presenting the claim.
Injured parties may not however
present a claim to the compensation body if they have taken legal
action directly against the insurance undertaking.
The
compensation body shall take action within two months of the date
when the injured party presents a claim for compensation to it but
shall terminate its action if the insurance undertaking, or its
claims representative, subsequently makes a reasoned reply to the
claim.
The compensation body shall immediately inform:
(a) the
insurance undertaking of the vehicle the use of which caused the
accident or the claims representative;
(b) the compensation body
in the Member State of the insurance undertaking's establishment
which issued the policy;
(c) if known, the person who caused the
accident,
that it has received a claim from the injured party and
that it will respond to that claim within two months of the
presentation of that claim.
This provision shall be without
prejudice to the right of the Member States to regard compensation by
that body as subsidiary or non-subsidiary and the right to make
provision for the settlement of claims between that body and the
person or persons who caused the accident and other insurance
undertakings or social security bodies required to compensate the
injured party in respect of the same accident. However, Member States
may not allow the body to make the payment of compensation subject to
any conditions other than those laid down in this Directive, in
particular the injured party's establishing in any way that the
person liable is unable or refuses to pay.
2. The compensation
body which has compensated the injured party in his Member State of
residence shall be entitled to claim reimbursement of the sum paid by
way of compensation from the compensation body in the Member State of
the insurance undertaking's establishment which issued the
policy.
The latter body shall then be subrogated to the injured
party in his rights against the person who caused the accident or his
insurance undertaking in so far as the compensation body in the
Member State of residence of the injured party has provided
compensation for the loss or injury suffered. Each Member State is
obliged to acknowledge this subrogation as provided for by any other
Member State.
3. This Article shall take effect:
(a) after an
agreement has been concluded between the compensation bodies
established or approved by the Member States relating to their
functions and obligations and the procedures for reimbursement;
(b)
from the date fixed by the Commission upon its having ascertained in
close cooperation with the Member States that such an agreement has
been concluded.
The Commission shall report to the European
Parliament and the Council on the implementation of this Article and
on its effectiveness before 20 July 2005 and shall submit proposals
if necessary.
Article 7
If it is impossible to identify the
vehicle or if, within two months following the accident, it is
impossible to identify the insurance undertaking, the injured party
may apply for compensation from the compensation body in the Member
State where he resides. The compensation shall be provided in
accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of Directive 84/5/EEC.
The compensation body shall then have a claim, on the conditions laid
down in Article 6(2) of this Directive:
(a) where the insurance
undertaking cannot be identified: against the guarantee fund provided
for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC in the Member State where
the vehicle is normally based;
(b) in the case of an unidentified
vehicle: against the guarantee fund in the Member State in which the
accident took place;
(c) in the case of third-country vehicles:
against the guarantee fund of the Member State in which the accident
took place.
Article 8
Directive 73/239/EEC shall be amended
as follows:
(a) In Article 8(1) the following point shall be
added:
"(f) communicate the name and address of the claims
representative appointed in each Member State other than the Member
State in which the authorisation is sought if the risks to be covered
are classified in class 10 of point A of the Annex, other than
carrier's liability."
(b) In Article 23(2) the following
point shall be added:
"(h) communicate the name and address
of the claims representative appointed in each Member State other
than the Member State in which the authorisation is sought if the
risks to be covered are classified in class 10 of point A of the
Annex, other than carrier's liability."
Article
9
Directive 88/357/EEC shall be amended as follows:
In Article
12a(4) the following subparagraph shall be added:"If the
insurance undertaking has failed to appoint a representative, Member
States may give their approval to the claims representative appointed
in accordance with Article 4 of Directive 2000/26/EC(13) assuming the
function of the representative appointed according to this
paragraph."
Article 10
Implementation
1. Member
States shall adopt and publish before 20 July 2002 the laws,
regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with
this Directive. They shall forthwith inform the Commission
thereof.
They shall apply these provisions before 20 January
2003.
2. When these measures are adopted by the Member States,
they shall contain a reference to this Directive or be accompanied by
such a reference on the occasion of their official publication. The
methods of making such a reference shall be laid down by the Member
States.
3. Without prejudice to paragraph 1, the Member States
shall establish or approve the compensation body in accordance with
Article 6(1) before 20 January 2002. If the compensation bodies have
not concluded an agreement in accordance with Article 6(3) before 20
July 2002, the Commission shall propose measures designed to ensure
that the provisions of Articles 6 and 7 take effect before 20 January
2003.
4. Member States may, in accordance with the Treaty,
maintain or bring into force provisions which are more favourable to
the injured party than the provisions necessary to comply with this
Directive.
5. Member States shall communicate to the Commission
the text of the main provisions of domestic law which they adopt in
the field governed by this Directive.
Article 11
Entry into
force
This Directive shall enter into force on the day of its
publication in the Official Journal of the European
Communities.
Article 12
Penalties
The Member States
shall fix penalties for breaches of the national provisions which
they adopt in implementation of this Directive and take the steps
necessary to secure their application. The penalties shall be
effective, proportional and dissuasive. The Member States shall
notify these provisions to the Commission not later than 20 July 2002
and any subsequent amendments thereof as soon as possible.
Article
13
Addressees
This Directive is addressed to the Member
States.
Done at Brussels, 16 May 2000.
For the European
Parliament
The President
Nicole Fontaine
For the
Council
The President
Manuel Carrilho
(1) OJ C 343,
13.11.1997, p. 11 and OJ C 171, 18.6.1999, p. 4.
(2) OJ C 157,
25.5.1998, p. 6.
(3) Opinion of the European Parliament of 16 July
1998 (OJ C 292, 21.9.1998, p. 123), confirmed on 27 October 1999,
Council Common Position of 21 May 1999 (OJ C 232, 13.8.1999, p. 8)
and Decision of the European Parliament of 15 December 1999 (not yet
published in the Official Journal). Decision of the Council of 2 May
2000 (not yet published in the Official Journal) and Decision of the
European Parliament of 16 May 2000.
(4) OJ L 103, 2.5.1972, p. 1.
Directive as last amended by Directive 84/5/EEC (OJ L 8, 11.1.1984,
p. 17).
(5) OJ L 172, 4.7.1988, p. 1. Directive as last amended by
Directive 92/49/EEC (OJ L 228, 11.8.1992, p. 1).
(6) OJ C 308,
20.11.1995, p. 108.
(7) Second Council Directive (84/5/EEC) of 30
December 1983 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States
relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use
of motor vehicles (OJ L 8, 11.1.1984, p. 17). Directive as last
amended by Directive 90/232/EEC (OJ L 129, 19.5.1990, p. 33).
(8)
Third Council Directive (90/232/EEC) of 14 May 1990 on the
approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to insurance
against civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles (OJ L
129, 19.5.1990, p. 33).
(9) First Council Directive (73/239/EEC)
of 24 July 1973 on the coordination of laws, regulations and
administrative provisions relating to the taking-up and pursuit of
the business of direct insurance other than life assurance (OJ L 228,
16.8.1973, p. 3). Directive as last amended by Directive 95/26/EC (OJ
L 168, 18.7.1995, p. 7).
(10) Council Directive (92/49/EEC) of 18
June 1992 on the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative
provisions relating to direct insurance other than life assurance and
amending Directives 73/239/EEC and 88/357/EEC (third non-life
insurance Directive) (OJ L 228, 11.8.1992, p. 1). Directive as
amended by Directive 95/26/EC (OJ L 168, 18.7.1995, p. 7).
(11) OJ
L 281, 23.11.1995, p. 31.
(12) OJ C 27, 26.1.1998, p. 1
(consolidated version).
(13) Directive 2000/26/EC of the European
Parliament and of the Council of 16 May 2000 on the approximation of
the laws of the Member States relating to insurance against civil
liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles and amending
Council Directives 73/239/EEC and 88/357/EEC (OJ L 181, 20.7.2000, p.
65).
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