
The case has see-sawed so far. The Criminal Court of First Instance, and the Court of Appeal in Paris had said that Total and others were responsible, though the Court of Appeal did not make this finding in respect of the civil claims. Next, the prosecutor, Advocate-General Boccon-Gibod, expressed his view to the Cour de Cassstion that Total was not liable at all. But his view was not shared by 80 parties who appeared before the court, including the affected communes Now, the court has finally ruled in favour of those polluted, both under the criminal and civil laws, as against Total and other responsible parties – all these issues have been decided in the same decision, in a way which may seem a bit odd to UK lawyers who generally put criminal and civil law in different boxes.
The judgment is pretty weighty, some 330 pages of legal French – as is standard, this is all written as one huge sentence – broken up by multitudinous semi-colons. it is not easy to digest, to say the least, but I shall try and give the bare bones of the decision.
So the upshot is that Total has been fined 375,000 euros and held liable for very substantial damages and interest (over 200 million euros, of which most if not all has already been paid by it), at the suit of the 80 involved civil parties. Some 13 million euros was awarded for environmental damage
Total’s response has been to say that it is considering an application to the European Court of Human Rights. If it does so, the case will really have done the rounds. An initial case (whether spilled fuel oil was waste under European waste legislation) got to the EU European Court of Justice in Luxembourg: see Mesquer. The case has now been up and down the French courts. And will it be capped by an outing to Strasbourg?
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