Two Codes to rule them all: the Borders and Visa Codes
Steve Peers
In today’s judgment in Air Baltic, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has taken the
next logical step following its judgment late last year in Koushkaki, where it ruled that the EU’s visa code set out an
exhaustive list of grounds for refusing a visa application. Today the Court has confirmed that the same
is true of the Schengen Borders Code. Moreover, the Court has clarified a
number of general and specific points about the nature and interpretation of
the two codes.
Facts and judgment
This case concerned an Indian citizen who flew from Moscow
to Riga. He had a valid multiple-entry Schengen visa, which was attached to a
cancelled Indian passport. He also had a second Indian passport, which was
valid but which did not contain a visa. The Latvian border guards then refused
him entry into Latvia, on the grounds that the valid visa had to be attached to
the valid passport, not to the cancelled passport.
For good measure, the Latvian authorities also fined the
airline, Air Baltic, for transporting him without the necessary travel
documents. The airline appealed the fine, and lost at first instance. But an
appeal court then sent questions to the Court of Justice to clarify the legal
position.
The CJEU ruled first of all that the cancellation of a
passport by a third country did not mean that the visa attached to the passport
was invalid. This was because only a Member State authority could annul or
revoke a visa, and because the visa code did not allow for the annulment of a
visa in such cases anyway. The Court extended its ruling in Koushkaki to confirm that the grounds
for annulling a visa were exhaustive;
the same must be true of the grounds for revoking a visa.
Secondly, the Court ruled that the Schengen Borders Code did
not require entry to be refused in cases like these. The different language
versions of that code suggested different interpretations, but as always, the
Court seeks a uniform interpretation of EU law regardless. In this case, the
standard form to be given to persons who were refused entry at the border to
explain why they were refused does not provide for refusal on the grounds that
a valid visa was not attached to a valid passport.
Also, the Court pointed out that the idea of separate visas
and passports was not unknown to EU law, since the visa code provides that in
cases where a Member State refuses to recognise a passport as valid, a visa
must be issued as a separate document. Checking two separate documents was not
a huge burden for border guards, and refusing entry simply on the grounds that
the valid passports and visas were in two separate documents would infringe the
principle of proportionality.
Continue reading here for the comments of Steve Peers on this case:
http://eulawanalysis.blogspot.co.uk/2014/09/two-codes-to-rule-them-all-borders-and.html
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