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Review by Constitutional Courts of the Obligation of National Courts of Last Instance to Refer a Preliminary Question to the Court of Justice of the EU
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Extract
The Constitutional Courts of a number of Member States exert a constitutional review on the obligation of national courts of last instance to make a reference for a preliminary ruling to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).
Pursuant to Article 267(3) TFEU, national courts of last instance, namely courts or tribunals against whose decisions there is no judicial remedy under national law, are required to refer to the CJEU for a preliminary question related to the interpretation of the Treaties or the validity and interpretation of acts of European Union (EU) institutions. The CJEU specified the exceptions to this obligation in CILFIT. Indeed, national courts of last instance have a crucial role according to the devolution to national judges of the task of ensuring, in collaboration with the CJEU, the full application of EU law in all Member States and the judicial protection of individuals’ rights under EU law. With preliminary references as the keystone of the EU judicial system, the cooperation of national judges with the CJEU forms part of the EU constitutional structure in accordance with Article 19(1) TEU.
- Type
- Part Five
- Information
- German Law Journal , Volume 16 , Issue 6: Special issue – Preliminary References to the Court of Justice of The European Union by Constitutional Courts , December 2015 , pp. 1663 - 1700
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2015 by German Law Journal GbR
References
1 The CJEU specified in that regard that courts whose decisions may be reviewed by the Constitutional Court, within the limits of an examination of a potential infringement of the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the national constitution or by an international agreement, are courts of last instance within the meaning of Article 267(3) TFEU. Case C–416/10, Križan and Others, para. 72 (Jan. 15, 2013), http://curia.europa.eu/ and Opinion of Advocate General Kokott at para. 58, Case C–416/10, Križan and Others (Apr. 12, 2012), http://curia.europa.eu/. Moreover, it is worth pointing out that the obligation set out in Art. 267(3) TFEU applies also to Constitutional Courts. The article, however, does not focus on the role of Constitutional Courts as courts of last instance. For the sake of clarity, the references in the case law to ex Arts. 234(3) EC and 177(3) EEC are replaced by Art. 267(3) TFEU.Google Scholar
2 Case C–283/81, CILFIT v. Ministero della Sanità, 1982 E.C.R. 03415. See also Joined Cases C–28-30/62, Da Costa en Schaake NV and Others v. Administratie der Belastingen, 1963 E.C.R. 00061.Google Scholar
3 Opinion 1/09, 2011 E.C.R. I-01137, paras 66–68 and 83–86.Google Scholar
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5 Case C–224/01, Gerhard Köbler v. Republik Österreich, 2003 E.C.R. I–10239. In this regard, it should be pointed out that the judicial liability is not linked to the decision not to refer but to the damages produced by that decision.Google Scholar
6 Case C–173/03, Traghetti del Mediterraneo, 2006 E.C.R. I-05177; Case C–379/10, Commission v. Italy, 2011 E.C.R. I-00180; Case C–160/14, Ferreira da Silva e Brito (Sept. 9, 2015), http://curia.europa.eu/. See also Opinion of Advocate General Léger, Case C–173/03, Traghetti del Mediterraneo (Oct. 11, 2005), 2006 E.C.R. I-05177; Opinion of Advocate General Bot at para. 98, Case C–2/06, Kempter (Apr. 24, 2007), 2008 E.C.R. I–00411.Google Scholar
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9 It is also worth mentioning that similar procedures concerning the judicial review of the duty to refer under Article 267(3) TFEU exist, for instance, in France. The supreme administrative court (Cour de Cassation) pointed out that the omission to refer might constitute a denial of justice (French Cour de cassation, Oct. 26, 2011, Case No. 1002). Moreover, in Sweden, national legislation reinforces the obligation to refer in that a reasoned decision is compulsory (see Lag (2006:502) med vissa bestämmelser om förhandsavgörande från Europeiska unionens domstol, 24 May 2006). These cases, nonetheless, are beyond the scope of this article since they are not based on constitutional complaints for the infringement of constitutional rights. It is also appropriate to point out that the analysis of the case law of the Constitutional Courts in question focuses on the aspects of the judgments that are relevant to the judicial review of the obligation to refer. Moreover, the article does not take into account the follow-up to the decisions of the Constitutional Courts before the concerned national courts.Google Scholar
10 The review by the Austrian Constitutional Court is confined to administrative decisions and this excludes the judgments of administrative or ordinary courts. However, it exerts its review on decisions of administrative bodies that may be regarded as court of last instance within the meaning of Article 267(3) TFEU. See, infra, section B.I.Google Scholar
11 The word “arbitrary” is used by these courts in order to define a refusal to refer to the CJEU which is based on reasons other than the criteria established by law.Google Scholar
12 Certainly, one may argue that Constitutional Courts do not enjoy jurisdiction to solve a conflict which arises between EU and national law. Constitutional Courts, in fact, have the power to decide in proceedings involving the protection of fundamental constitutional rights and to review the compliance of domestic law and, prior to their ratification, of the Treaties with the Constitution. However, they do not have jurisdiction to assess the compliance of the decisions of domestic courts of last instance with the duty provided for in Article 267(3) TFEU.Google Scholar
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15 This possibility also exists before the Hungarian Constitutional Court. Although a constitutional complaint against a national court's refusal to refer to the CJEU was filed, the Constitutional Court dismissed it according to domestic procedural provisions. Therefore, it did not assess whether the complaint's right to a fair trial under Article XXVIII of the Fundamental Law of Hungary was violated. See Alkotmánybíróság [Hungarian Constitutional Court], May 19, 2014, Case No 3165/2014. Georgina Naszladi, The Hungarian Constitutional Court's Judgment Concerning the Preliminary Ruling Procedure—Comments on a Rejection Order, Pécs J. Int'l & Eur. L. 37–43 (2015), available at http://epa.oszk.hu/02600/02691/00002/pdf/EPA02691_pjiel_2015_1_037-043.pdf.Google Scholar
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20 CILFIT, Case C–283/81; Da Costa, Joined Cases 28–30/62.Google Scholar
21 Case C–314/85, Foto-Frost v. Hauptzollamt Lübeck-Ost, 1987 E.C.R. I–04199.Google Scholar
22 These two approaches diverge in their starting point concerning the assessment of whether the refusal to refer of a domestic court of last instance infringes a constitutional right. However, they both reach the same outcome: under certain circumstances, the (arbitrary) refusal to refer to the CJEU may violate the constitutional right under consideration.Google Scholar
23 For a comment on the approaches of a number of Constitutional Courts as regards their relationship with the CJEU after the Treaty of Lisbon. See Kruma, Kristine, Constitutional Courts and the Lisbon Treaty: The future on mutual trust, in The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice Ten Years on. Successes and Future Challenges Under the Stockholm Programme, CEPS 38, 48 (Guild, Carrera & Eggenschwiler eds., 2010).Google Scholar
24 This Constitutional Court has developed extensive case law concerning its relationship with the CJEU. In this context, the role of the preliminary reference procedure to the CJEU is particularly interesting. See, e.g., Asterios Pliakos & Georgios Anagnostaras, Who is the Ultimate Arbiter? The Battle over Judicial Supremacy in EU law, 36 ELR, 109-23 (2011); Luebbe-Wolff, Gertrude, Who has the last word? National and Transnational Courts—Conflict and Cooperation, 30 Y.B. Eur. L. (2011); Kumm, Mattias, Who is the final arbiter of Constitutionality in Europe?: Three conceptions of the relationship between the German Federal Constitutional Court and the European Court of Justice, 36 Common Mkt. L. Rev. 351, 386 (1999). For a critical view as regards the reasoning of the German Federal Constitutional Court inasmuch as it considers that the CJEU is to be seen as a lawful judge, see Meij, supra note 18, at 265. Meij stresses that, since the preliminary reference procedure constitutes an incident in the proceeding before the national court and it is for the latter to decide the dispute, it is questionable whether one may distinguish two lawful judges in one case.Google Scholar
25 See Art. 93, § 1, sentence 4 bis, Basic Law; Arts. 13, sentence 8 bis, and 90, § 1, Bundersverfassungsgerichtsgesetz (the Federal Law concerning the procedural rules before the Constitutional Court). Renate Jaeger and Siegfried Broß, The relations between the Constitutional courts and the other national courts, including the interference in this area of the action of the European Court. Report of the Constitutional Court of the Federal Republic of Germany, Conference of European Constitutional Courts XIIth Congress (Warsaw 16–17 May 1999), http://www.confcoconsteu.org/reports/rep-xii/Duitsland-EN.pdf; Rupp, Hans G., Judicial Review in the Federal Republic of Germany, Vol. 9, n. 1, The American Journal of Comparative Law, 29–30 (1960).Google Scholar
26 Beyer-Katzenberger, Malte, Judicial activism and judicial restraint at the Bundesverfassungsgericht: Was the Mangold judgement of the European Court of Justice an ultra vires act?, 11(4), ERA-Forum 517, 521 (2011).Google Scholar
27 According to Article 92 of the Federal Constitutional Act, the reasons for the complaint shall specify the right which is claimed to have been violated, and the act or omission of the organ or authority by which the complainant claims to have been harmed. In other words, an individual, who believes that an ordinary court has violated its duty to refer to the CJEU under Article 267(3) TFEU, can challenge such a decision before the Federal Constitutional Court, by claiming a violation of the constitutional right to a lawful judge within the limits of Article 101, section 1, sentence 2 of the Basic Law.Google Scholar
28 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], July 25, 1979, Steinike & Weinlig (‘Vielleicht'), Case No. 2 BvL 6/77.Google Scholar
29 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], Oct. 22, 1986, Solange II, Case No. 2 BvR 197/83; Arnold, Ranier, Review by constitutional courts of proceedings before ordinary courts applying community law: The experience of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, Venice Commission, Report CCS 2006/05, 2-4 (2005), available at http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDLJU%282006%29026-e; see also E R. Lanier, Solange, Farewell: The Federal German Constitutional Court and the Recognition of the Court of Justice of the European Communities as Lawful Judge, 11 B. C. Int'l & Comp. L. Rev. 20 (1988); Jochen Abraham Frowein, Solange II. Constitutional complaint Firma W., 25 Common Mkt. L. Rev. 201-06 (1988).Google Scholar
30 See, e.g., Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], Jan. 9, 2001, NJW, Case No. BvR 1036/99. In particular, the Federal Constitutional Court stated that the right to a lawful judge was violated as the national court of last instance interpreted EU legislation in contrast to EU fundamental rights. Consequently, the refusal to refer violated the protection of the fundamental rights of individuals, which the CJEU would have taken into account in its preliminary ruling. It is interesting to note that as far as fundamental rights are concerned, the constitutional review seems to limit, more than when other interests are involved, the margin of discretion of the court of last instance when deciding whether or not to refer.Google Scholar
31 Lanier, supra note 29, at 26; BVerfG, Case No. 2 BvR 197/83.Google Scholar
32 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], May 31, 1990, Case No. 2 BvR 89/159, para. 131.Google Scholar
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34 Verfassungsgerichtshof [VfGH] [Austrian Constitutional Court], Dec. 11, 1995, Case No. VfSlg. 14.390; Valutyté, Regina, Legal Consequences for the infringement of the obligation to make a reference for a preliminary ruling under constitutional law, 19 Mykolo Romerio Universitetas 1171, 1174 (2012); Marktler, Tanja, The European Court of Justice as Lawful Judge, Austrian Constitutional Court Judgment from December 11th, 1995 VfSlg. 14.390, 2 Vienna Online J. Int'l Const. L. 294 (2008), available at http://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/vioincl2&div=37&id=&page. It is noteworthy that in the judgment VfSlg U 466/11 (VfGH, March 2012, Case No. VfSlg U 466/11) the Austrian Constitutional Court held, in essence, that its constitutional review applies to the provisions of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (Charter). Concerning the effect of this judgment on the duty of national courts to refer a preliminary question to the CJEU, a national court submitted a reference to the CJEU. The latter delivered its ruling in September 2014. Cf. A v. B and Others, Case C–112/13. See, infra section D.M.Google Scholar
35 This court gives a broad interpretation to this right, including public authority, in order to preserve the division of competences at both judiciary and administrative level. Alexander Pelzl, Rapport autrichien, in L'obligation de renvoi prejudiciel a la Cour de Justice. Une obligation sanctionnee?, 83, 90 (Laurent Coutron & Jean-Claude Bonichot eds., 2014).Google Scholar
36 Id. at 83, 91–92.Google Scholar
37 VfGH, Case No. VfSlg. 14.390.Google Scholar
38 Tomás Dumbrovský, Constitutional Pluralism and Judicial Cooperation in the EU after the Eastern Enlargements: A Case Study of the Czech and Slovak Courts, in Constitutional Evolution in Central and Eastern Europe. Expansion and Integration in the EU 89, 100 (Kyriaki Topidi & Alexander H.E. Morawa eds., 2010); Valutyté, supra note 34, at 1177–78.Google Scholar
39 Ústavní soud [ÚS] [Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic], Jan. 8, 2009, Pfizer, Case No. II. ÚS 1009/08, English version available at http://www.usoud.cz/en/decisions.Google Scholar
40 In the Czech legal order, the Charter is a constitutional act, which focuses on the protection of human and civil rights, while the Constitution concerns state sovereignty, territorial integrity, and the institutions. Both are constitutional acts of equivalent hierarchical level.Google Scholar
41 ÚS Case No. 1009/08 at para. 21; Navratilova, Markéta, The preliminary ruling before the Constitutional Courts 2012, http://www.law.muni.cz/sborniky/dp08/files/pdf/mezinaro/navratilova.pdf.Google Scholar
42 See Dissenting Opinion of Judge Dagmar Lastovecká; Malenovský, supra note 13, at 219; Petrlík, David, Rapport tchèque, in L'obligation de renvoi préjudiciel à la Cour de Justice. Une obligation sanctionnée? 409, 416 (Laurent Coutron & Jean-Claude Bonichot eds., 2014).Google Scholar
43 In the English translation of the judgment there is the word “statutory” instead of “lawful.” However, the meaning does not differ.Google Scholar
44 ÚS, Nov. 29, 2011, Case No. II. ÚS 1658/1, http://www.usoud.cz/fileadmin/user_upload/ustavni_soud_www/Aktualne_prilohy/2012_01_03.pdf.Google Scholar
45 ÚS 1009/08 at paras. 20, 22. The Czech Constitutional Court referred to the practice of the German Federal Constitutional Court “for the sake of comparison and information”.Google Scholar
46 II ÚS 1658/11 at para 18.Google Scholar
47 Ústavný súd Slovenskej republiky [Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic], July 3, 2008, Case No. IV. ÚS 206/08-50, available at http://www.concourt.sk/rozhod.do?urlpage=dokument&id_spisu=214397. Dumbrovský, supra note 38, at 101.Google Scholar
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49 Cristina Izquierdo Sans, Cuestión prejudicial y artículo 24 de la constitución española, 23 Revista General de Derecho Europeo 18 (2011).Google Scholar
50 This reasoning is inspired by the constitutional complaint brought for a violation of Article 24 of the Constitution due to the fact that a national judge does not raise a constitutional issue before the Constitutional Court. In fact, when an ordinary court decides by its own authority to set aside a national law as unconstitutional, its ruling undermines the sources of law and leads to a violation of the right to effective judicial protection. Ricardo Alonso García, Spanish Constitutional Court. Judgment 58/2004, of 19 April 2004. Tax on the use of gambling machines. “Recurso de amparo” (individual appeal for constitutional protection) and EC preliminary ruling. Failure to request an EC preliminary ruling considered as a violation of the fundamental right to effective judicial protection, 42 Common Mkt. L. Rev. 535, 538, 2005; Valutyté, supra note 34, at 1181; Sarmiento, Daniel, Rapport espagnol, in L'obligation de renvoi préjudiciel à la Cour de Justice. Une obligation sanctionnée? 165, 168 (Laurent Coutron & Jean-Claude Bonichot eds., 2014).Google Scholar
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53 Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Dec. 1993, Case No. STC 372/1993 of December 1993; Valutyté, supra note 34, at 1180.Google Scholar
54 See Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Cases No. STC 180/1993; STC 201/1996; STC 203/1996.Google Scholar
55 Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Cases No. STC 111/1993.Google Scholar
56 Id. Google Scholar
57 Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Feb. 11, 2002, Case No. STC 35/2002.Google Scholar
58 Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Case No. STC 180/1993. In this judgment the Spanish Constitutional Court stressed that national judges are not obliged to provide explanations concerning an issue raised by the parties. It should be observed that in judgment 35/2002, the Constitutional Court pointed out that the decision to ask or not for a ruling on constitutionality should be sufficiently explained. The Constitutional Court kept applying this practice, e.g., Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Nov. 29, 1999, Case No. STC 214/1999; March 27, 2006, Case No. STC 96/2006; May 4, 2009, Case No. STC 105/2009; and June 3, 2013, Case No. STC 127/2013.Google Scholar
59 Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], April 19, 2004, Case No. STC 58/2004. This is also due to the fact that in 2004 the Spanish Constitutional Court delivered Opinion 1/2004 on the constitutionality of the Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe in which it began to recognize the status of EU law. Daniel Sarmiento, Reinforcing the (domestic) constitutional protection of primacy of EU law: Tribunal Constitucional, 50 Common Mkt. L. Rev. 875, 881 (2013). Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen, La déclaration du 13 décembre 2004 (DTC n°1/2004): «un Solage II à l'espagnole», 18 Cahiers du Conseil Constitutionnel 154, 161 (2005).Google Scholar
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61 Joined Cases C–370-372/95, Careda and Others v. Administración General del Estado, 1997 E.C.R. I–03721.Google Scholar
62 In the Spanish constitutional literature, various scholars have pointed out the similarity between preliminary references on constitutionality to the Constitutional Court and preliminary references to the CJEU. In this regard, in order to explain the practice developed by this Constitutional Court concerning the recurso de amparo for a breach of Article 24 of the Constitution due to the refusal to refer under Article 267(3) TFEU, it is worth exploring briefly the case law regarding the constitutional complaint for a breach of Article 24 of the Constitution due to the decision of a national judge of last instance, which has a duty to refer a preliminary question to the Constitutional Court. One may distinguish two hypotheses. On the one hand, when national courts make a negative assessment of constitutionality and do not apply a national law due to its unconstitutionality, the Constitutional Court stressed that there is an obligation to ask the Constitutional Court to rule on that matter. In other words, the failure to request a preliminary ruling on constitutionality produces an “abuse of authority”, notwithstanding a reasoned decision of the relevant ordinary court. On the other hand, the positive assessment of constitutionality falls within the “exclusive and non-reviewable” margin of appreciation of national judges, even if the parties to the proceeding raise arguments of unconstitutionality of the relevant legislative provisions. García, supra note 50, at 535-39; see, e.g., Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Case No. STC 173/2002; Tribunal Constitucional [TC] [Spanish Constitutional Court], Case No. STC 151/1991.Google Scholar
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70 For the first time, in a decision of 8 April 1987, see Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], April 8, 1987, Case No. 2 BvR 687/85; Arnold, supra note 29.Google Scholar
71 BVerfG, Case No. 2 BvR 687/85; Valutyté, (note 34), 1774.Google Scholar
72 29 BVerfGE 198 (207); BVerfG, Case No. 2 BvR 687/85 at para. 62.Google Scholar
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75 The Federal Constitutional Court consists of two Senates, each of which comprises eight judges and appoints several chambers. Which of the two Senates is competent to decide is stated in Articles 13 and 14 of the Federal Constitutional Court Act. Concerning the contradictory interpretation in the two Senates, see Mahlmann, Matthias, The Politics of Constitutional Identity and its Legal Frame—the Ultra Vires Decision of the German Federal Constitutional Court 11 German L. J. 1407, 1413 (2010); Malenovský, supra note 13, at 214, 224.Google Scholar
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77 Id. at para. 92; Wiesbrock, Anja, The implication of Mangold for domestic legal system: The Honeywell case, 18 Maastricht J. Eur. & Comp. L. 201-15 (2011).Google Scholar
78 BVerfG, Case No. 1 BvR 1631/08.Google Scholar
79 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], Feb, 25, 2010, Case No. 1 BvR 230/09; Case No. 1 BvR 1036/99; Case No. 1 BvR 1631/08. When applying the constitutional review concerning the obligation to ask for a preliminary reference to the CJEU, the German Federal Constitutional Court considered, on the one hand, if the national courts took into account EU law and the preliminary reference procedure, and on the other hand, the attitude of the courts of other Member States deciding on the same issue. Mahlmann, supra note 75, at 1413; Valutyté, supra note 34, at 1176.Google Scholar
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122 How can national judges be sure that other national judges in another Member State will follow the same view? Or, how can they be convinced that the CJEU will interpret the issue in the same sense, bearing in mind the dynamic nature of its case law? See, Broberg & Fenger, supra note 116, at 237-38; Sarmiento, Daniel, CILFIT and Foto-Frost: Constructing and Deconstructing Judicial Authority in Europe, in The Past and Future of EU Law 192, 196 (Miguel Poiares Maduro & Loïc Azoulai eds., 2010).Google Scholar
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126 It is certainly possible that the decision of a national judge will be corrected beforehand. However, since these Constitutional Courts have elaborated a link between the obligation under Art. 267(3) TFEU and a constitutional right, it must be stressed that the duty to refer under EU law provides the same obligation for courts of last instance and for all the courts where a question of validity arises. See also Craig, Paul, The Classics of EU Law Revisited: CILFIT and Foto-Frost, in The Past and Future of EU Law 185, 189 (Miguel Poiares Maduro & Loïc Azoulai eds., 2010).Google Scholar
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131 Nicolas Cartiat & Arnaud Hoc, Arrět « Križan »: dans quelle mesure le juge national est-il tenu de poser une question préjudicielle?, Journal de Droit Europeen 97 (2013). It is also interesting to observe that this case law reverses the hierarchy between superior and lower courts in that the lower court enjoys an autonomous jurisdiction concerning the decision to refer to the CJEU and the superior court cannot overturn its ruling and prevent it from referring. Broberg & Fenger, supra note 116, at 328.Google Scholar
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