International Business Machines Corporation v Commission
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International Business Machines Corporation v Commission (1981) Case 60/81 is an EU law case, concerning judicial review in the European Union.
| IBM Corp. v Commission | |
|---|---|
| Court | European Court of Justice |
| Full case name | International Business Machines Corporation v Commission of the European Communities |
| Citation | (1981) Case 60/81 |
| Keywords | |
| Judicial review | |
Facts
The Commission initiated an investigation into IBM for engaging in anti-competitive practices such as offering bundles of hardware and software and refusing to provide software to customers unless hardware produced by IBM was used with it.
The Commission sent a letter to IBM informing it about the imminent proceedings for abusing its dominant position, under EU competition law, inviting it to put a case. IBM sought to challenge the letter in judicial review proceedings, and the question was whether the letter was a reviewable act.
Judgment
The Court of Justice held this letter was not a reviewable act, just a preliminary decision, and that IBM could only legally challenge the investigation after the Commission made its final decision. IBM was also ordered to cover the legal costs of the case.