Eu Gambling Case Law

01.12.20170

By Joe Ewens

A German court has found that the country’s numerous state lottery monopolies are operating in defiance of EU law, emboldening eager private lottery companies seeking to establish a foothold in the lucrative market.

  1. Last 30th June another remarkable judgment on the matter of online gambling was delivered by the European Court of Justice. The case (C-212/08, Zeturf Ltd v. Premier ministre) involved a Maltese company offering gambling services via the Internet.
  2. Ukraine is going to review a new law that will reduce licensing costs for operators willing to launch in the re-regulated gambling market in the country. As per the new bill, Ukraine would no longer expect from license holders to pay triple fees in the absence of a monitoring system which is still being.
  3. Furthermore, the compliance of draft national legislation on on-line gambling with EU law will continue to be assessed under the so-called notification procedure12. The Commission will Accelerate completion of its assessment of national provisions in the pending infringements cases and complaints and take enforcement action wherever necessary.
  4. The supreme court on Monday struck down a federal law that bars gambling on football, basketball, baseball and other sports in most states, giving states the go-ahead to legalize betting on sports.
Laws

In a judgment announced late last week, the Administrative Court of Munich declared that the land-based lottery monopolies currently in operation in all of the country’s 16 states breached EU’s principles of “freedom to provide services” and the “constitutionally guaranteed freedom of choice”.

European Union Law, Gambling, and Sport Betting: European Court of Justice Jurisprudence, Member States Case Law, and Policy Anastasios Kaburakis It is the mark of an inexperienced man not to believe in luck. —Joseph Conrad Fortune knocks at every man’s door once in a lifetime, but in a good many cases the man is in a neighbouring saloon.

The decision has sparked fresh hope for private lottery operators, many of whom have long hoped to establish their operations in Germany, and provoked a fightback from the trade group that represents Germany’s state-run lotteries.

In March of this year, secondary lottery operator Lottoland applied for a licence to run its own lottery in a number of states, a move that was met with disdain from many of Germany’s monopolies.

Lottoland yesterday welcomed the Munich ruling. In a statement to GamblingCompliance, the operator said that the court, “confirms our position that the German lottery monopoly is conflicting with Article 56 of the Treaty on the functioning of the EU in regards of the freedom to provide services”.

“Therefore, the respective German legislation is not applicable and online operators licensed in other EU jurisdictions can rely on Article 56 TFEU and legally operate in Germany. This once again shows that the German gambling regulation is in urgent need of modernisation and a far-reaching reform.”

Frankfurt-listed lottery operator ZEAL Group said that the ruling “clearly highlights the illegality of the current monopoly system”.

“For too long, the lottery industry has been closed to competition — denying customers choice and stifling innovation,” said Sebastian Blohm, head of corporate and legal affairs at ZEAL.

“In a world where we can book a holiday with one click and buy music at the touch of a button, the lottery industry is stuck in a time-warp. It’s time the industry was opened up to competition,” he said.

Speaking for the lottery trade group European Lotteries, secretary general Arjan van’t Veer countered that the German lotteries had been forced into non-EU compliant advertising in order to keep players out of the hands of the grey market.

“Confronted with a growing illegal offer of games of chance, the legal operators must take the necessary steps to keep the consumers in the protected area where games of chance are strictly controlled,” he said. “This channeling obligation is very important under EU law.”

According to van’t Veer, the future of the state monopolies is in no way in jeopardy and that the “concerned states need to take some measures … to better define the applicable advertising standards so that the monopolies can operate further in a legal manner”.

Lawyers

The contentious and potentially seismic ruling is an unintended consequence of a rejected lottery licence application made in 2010 by an individual to the Government of the Upper Palatinate.

Having been deemed not a fit and proper person, the applicant took the issue before the Administrative Court of Munich in 2012. Under questioning as part of the case, a government representative defended the state’s lottery regulations by arguing that they were compliant with EU law.

The court took five years to consider this claim, eventually ruling that the advertising practices of state lotteries, while permitted by the current State Treaty on Gambling, are expressly outlawed by EU legislation. Offending examples cited by the court included ads tying gambling to financial success and happiness.

Despite damning Germany’s lottery legislation in its 30-page decision, the court’s final decision in fact went against the plaintiff — agreeing with the Bavarian government that the lack of sufficient financial backing means they cannot operate a lottery.

Owing to their limited financial resources it is considered unlikely that the applicant will appeal the decision. Additionally, as it technically won the case, the state of Bavaria is not in a position to challenge the ruling.

The binding nature of this decision in Bavaria is likely to have a dramatic effect on the future of the debate surrounding nationwide German gambling legislation, according to Wulf Hambach, partner at Hambach & Hambach law firm.

Law

“The political dimension is bigger than the purely legal dimension in this single case,” he told GamblingCompliance.

Although a new interstate treaty that would establish minor gambling reforms has been mooted for some time, it does not update rules around land-based lotteries and so, in the Munich court’s view, would still fail to meet the standards of the European Commission.

Dissenting state Schleswig-Holstein, which wants to liberalise and license the entire gambling market, notified its own gambling regulations to the European Commission and has been told that they do meet EU standards.

Schleswig-Holstein has so far refused to sign the amended interstate treaty despite constant pressure from Germany’s other states on the grounds that it does not go far enough in reforming gambling legislation.

The Munich lottery ruling is only likely to strengthen the state Prime Minister’s hand when he meets representatives from the other 15 states at a gathering to discuss the Interstate Treaty on Gambling next February.

“Next year the prime ministers have to sit together and decide what to do,” said Hambach. “What they cannot do is ignore this decision, because if they want to regulate online gambling in Germany they really have to do it in a EU compliant way.”

Source: Gambling Compliance

Learn about EU Gambling Legislation and current state of affairs in this field.

The gambling legality is an issue of great complexity. Each of twenty-seven member countries decides for itself whether to give gambling a legal status. Several EU countries outlawed all types of online gambling, others legalized it and reap tax revenues from this profitable business, but for the majority online gambling remains in a grey area of the law - neither legal nor illegal.

EU Gambling Laws and Regulations

Eu Gambling Case Lawyers

Case

European Union officials have pro-gambling position, the majority of EU member states do not prohibit online gambling, on the contrary it is regulated and taxed. The EU countries are unable to impose a ban on the online gambling because this will run counter to EU law which must feature conformity across the EU but still at least 10 member states have opted to enact local legislation banning online gambling (for example, France and Germany).

Eu Gambling Case Laws

Nowadays online casinos attract sustained interest in European countries. Norway, Germany, Austria, Sweden, Denmark and Ireland undergo the highest growth in terms of online casino creation. Of course, European countries oblige online casinos to obtain licenses and impose specific rules about online gambling activities. In the Netherlands online casinos are legal but the Dutch Gaming Act allows the Dutch to gamble at the casinos that have a Dutch lincense.

To cut a long story short, online gambling is generally legal in Europe, nevertheless we strongly recommend you to find out more about the attitude of the government of your country towards online gambling before playing online. We remind you the information presented should not be treated as a legal advice but we sincerely hope that it will be of use to you.

Germany
Germany banned all forms of online gambling except for horse racing by 2011 with The German Interstate Treaty on Gambling signed in 2008. EU considers such legislation illegal as Germany allows state-owned online gambling but restricts foreign competition. This ban is threatened as this type of legislation needs all 16 states in Germany to support the law. One of the states recently stated its opposition to this legislation.
Italy is the second member state of EU to legalize online gambling namely online casinos, poker rooms, sports betting operators and online bingo halls. Together with the toleration of legal online gambling, comes a strong focus on battling and dismantling illegal gambling operators.
France
In France online gambling and thus all games of chance are prohibited. There is a tentative goal to open France's online gambling market to competitors by January 1st, 2010 and license online gambling operators which offer sporting bets, horse racing and poker and it has already been approved by MPs in the National Assembly. French legislators are discussing a bill that would end a state monopoly on online gambling. The proposed law allows web companies to obtain a license to operate in France, even if they already hold licenses in other EU countries. Currently, Française des Jeux, PMU and casinos can legally offer gambling services.
UK was the first member country to legalize online gambling. The Gambling Act of 2005 allows UK residents to gamble online, and gave online gambling operators the ability to apply for licenses given out by the state.
Spain
Spanish Ministry of Interior announced that online gambling legislation would soon be completed and presented in January 2010. The legalization of a collectively regulated online gambling market is closer than ever, and international gambling giants are ready to integrate into massive Spanish gambling market.

Disclaimer

CasinosDoc is not a legal authority. We remind you the information presented should not be treated as a legal advice but we sincerely hope that it will be of use to you. To get accurate information or advice on online gambling, consult the laws of the country where you reside or jurisdiction in which you are playing.