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Case C-233/23, Android Auto (II): how the judgment departs from Magill/IMS Health (and Bronner)

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The first instalment of this series on the judgment in Android Auto discussed the metamorphosis of the case before the Court: a preliminary reference concerning the interpretation of the indispensability condition was turned into an analysis of whether the Bronner criteria were applicable in the relevant circumstances.

Beyond institutional issues, the judgment is notable in that it introduces a number of substantive innovations that represent a move away from Magill (which was the first providing a structured framework to refusals to deal), Bronner (which extended this framework to tangible property) and IMS Health. One may add to this list Slovak Telekom and Google Shopping, which did not depart from (in fact, they embraced) the same approach.

One can identify three main areas where Android Auto carves its own path and reframes the case law. To begin with, the judgment departs from the logic underpinning the legal framework introduced in Magill. Second, it changes the interpretation of a crucial point of law, which has the effect of significantly reducing the scope of Magill and Bronner. Third, it allows for more far-reaching intervention.

Android Auto and the logic underpinning the refusal to deal case law

The rationale underlying the refusal to deal case law and, specifically, the indispensability condition had been clear from the outset, and were effectively summarised by Advocate General Jacobs in his Opinion in Bronner. If anything, the Court has been more explicit about this logic in recent years.

There are two main reasons why Magill, and then Bronner, set the bar so high. The first relates to the fact that imposing a duty to deal on firms amounts to a major interference with their right to property and their freedom of contract. It should therefore only happen, the Court has consistently explained, in genuinely ‘exceptional circumstances’.

The second reason has to do with the consequences that such interference has on firms’ incentives to invest and innovate (that is, on dynamic competition). The fundamental premise behind Magill and Bronner is that dynamic competition is more beneficial for citizens and society than its short-term counterpart. Against this background, requiring evidence of indispensability was deemed to be a reasonable means to ensure that the latter does not impact negatively the former.

The Court moves away from this logic in Android Auto. Indispensability is not an element of the legal test even though intervention in the case amounts not just to compelling a firm to deal with a third party, but even to changing the operation of its platform.

The indispensability condition, therefore, is no longer universally applied as a filter to ensure that intervention does not affect dynamic competition. By the same token, the judgment strikes a new, different balance between static rivalry and firms’ incentives to invest and innovate.

How Magill and Bronner are reinterpreted in Android Auto

The Court, in Android Auto, attaches a great deal of importance to the fact that the platform had not been solely developed for the ‘needs of [Google’s] own business but with a view to enabling third-party undertakings to use that infrastructure’ (paras 44 and 49). Where the platform is a partially open one, the ECJ concludes, the indispensability condition is not an element of the legal test. This is so, the judgment suggests, even when access to ‘third-party undertakings’ has been given for purposes other than the one for which access is requested.

It is sufficient to take a cursory look at Magill to realise how this position departs from the preceding three decades of case law, including Bronner. The TV operators in Magill had enabled ‘third-party undertakings’ to use the programming listings at issue in the case. As explained by the Commission in its decision, RTE, BBC and ITV had not kept their inputs for their ‘own use’. They were already licensing their intellectual property to newspapers, free of charge, when the Commission started its investigation. What TV operators kept for the ‘needs of [their] own business’ was not the input generally speaking but a particular application of the input (the publication of weekly listings, as opposed to daily ones).

In spite of the above, indispensability was found to be an element of the legal test in Magill. What mattered was not whether the TV operators had licensed the listings to ‘third-party undertakings’ in a market unrelated to the one at issue in the case (daily listings), but whether the dominant firm had kept for the ‘needs of its own business’ the activity for which access was requested (weekly listings).

Android Auto introduces a new interpretation of Article 102 TFEU. It suggests that if access is requested for application A, indispensability will not be an element of the legal test when access is requested for application B. Once the platform is partially open to ‘third-party undertakings’, Magill and Bronner will no longer be the relevant framework to assess the abusive nature of a refusal, irrespective of the adjacent market concerned.

The implications of this rereading of the case law are significant. It necessarily reduces the scope of the Magill and Bronner doctrines, which are now confined to instances where the integrated dominant firm has not dealt with rivals in any market or in relation to any actual or potential use of the input or infrastructure to which access is requested.

Crucially, it is not obvious that this new interpretation is limited to digital platforms. It is easy to think of instances where an input or platform can be used for a variety of purposes, and nothing suggests that the new reading of Bronner will vary based on the relevant sector.

This interpretation was not expressly acknowledged or contrasted with the facts at stake in Magill, whether by the Court of by Advocate General Medina in her Opinion. It was treated as a novel point of law in the judgment. This technique reminded me of some recent refinements of the case law in the context of Article 101 TFEU (and discussed here).

How Android Auto goes beyond Magill and Bronner

It is worth mentioning, finally, that the judgment in Android Auto goes beyond Magill and Bronner, in the sense that it allows for a deeper and more significant interference with a dominant firm’s right to property.

In both Magill and Bronner, the Court ruled that there may be circumstances where a firm can be compelled to deal with rivals. Android Auto suggests that a firm may be forced not just to deal with third parties, but to change the operation of its infrastructure to accommodate rivals (and this, without the need to establish that the said infrastructure is indispensable).

The Commission had already suggested expanding the scope of Article 102 TFEU to require firms to invest to adjust their property and accommodate rivals (in particular in energy markets, as in ENI). Its approach is now vindicated. In a sense, in fact, the shift heralded in Android Auto has been decades in the making. I will elaborate on this issue in the next instalment. In the meantime, your comments would be very much welcome.

Written by Pablo Ibanez Colomo

12 March 2025 at 11:56 am

Posted in Uncategorized

7 Responses

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  1. Will this, in your opinion, have the perverse effect that dominant firms will now not open their markets even partially to ‘third-party undertakings’, bc they want indispensability to stay a requirement of the legal test?

    julesculot's avatar

    julesculot

    13 March 2025 at 9:12 am

    • Thanks for the comment. It is difficult to say for certain. If the ruling has this effect, it may not be easy to evaluate and detect.

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo's avatar

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo

      13 March 2025 at 10:54 am

  2. Pablo, I do not think it is accurate to say that Google is obliged “to change the operation of its infrastructure to accommodate rivals”. It must just develop a so-called “template”, as it is doing for many other apps. As the AG noted, this type of requitement to technically accommodate a rival’s product is not new, see note 56: “See, in that regard, judgment of 9 September 2009, Clearstream v Commission (T‑301/04, EU:T:2009:317, paragraph 106), where the General Court considered that the mere fact that significant changes in computer systems, detailed preparations and numerous series of tests were necessary for the dominant undertaking to allow access did not in itself justify a delay of two years in the provision of access.” Are you suggesting that the mere fact that to terminate an abuse the dominant undertaking needs to take some technical steps (or that the abuse consists in not taking them) triggers automatically the Bronner test?

    GOAT's avatar

    GOAT

    13 March 2025 at 10:37 am

    • Hi there, thanks so much for the comment. I am not suggesting anything of the kind (indeed, I am not taking a view on what the law should be).

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo's avatar

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo

      13 March 2025 at 10:57 am

  3. Many thanks for this great post. In contradistinction, it is quite fascinating to read the EC’s stance in Slovak Telekom (e.g., paras 10-11, 18, 35, 39): t-851-14-commission-rejoinder_en_redacted.pdf

    BE's avatar

    BE

    13 March 2025 at 2:49 pm

  4. One shouldn’t lose sight of the kind of infrastructure we’re talking about: it’s the car version of Android OS. Obviously, this infrastructure was specifically developed to also invite 3P apps on the platform, that’s what makes it two-sided, adds value and furthers innovation. Thousands of 3P apps are on Android, and many will also be present on Android auto. The same is true for Apple iOS. Windows already functioned that way back in the 1990s. In those circumstances, the Court looked at the platform as such, and not checking which categories of apps Google might have opened up or not, because the relevant investment is in the platform itself, which Goggle has designed to be open and in fact opened up. Now, on different facts one may have to distinguish between different parts of an infrastructure, but treating Android OS as a single infrastructure seems straightforward. (You suggest it might be difficult to distinguish other cases from Android Auto – we shall see.)

    The CJEU appears to have followed the same test in Google Shopping (for equally good reasons) (see paras 100 and 105): “the infrastructure at issue was Google’s general results pages which generated traffic to other websites, including those of competing comparison shopping services, and that that infrastructure was, in principle, open” and “even if they are highlighted on Google’s general results page, boxes do not constitute an infrastructure that is separate from that page in the sense of an independent results page.”

    That approach makes sense to me in both cases – let’s not allow DomCos to get away with gerrymandering the infrastructure in clear-cut cases. The same applies to the question of defining the relevant downstream market in Android Auto: on the facts of the case, the CJEU rejected Alphabet’s formalistic arguments and only required a potential market (the Court also speaks of a product or service “capable of being supplied by the undertaking in a dominant position”) – but you may get to that in your next post.

    Robert's avatar

    Robert

    14 March 2025 at 3:26 pm

    • Thanks for the insightful comment, which, I believe, gets to the heart of this debate.

      The fundamental factual aspect to consider, in my view, is that Android Auto was only partially open (and the whole analysis is expressly premised on Android Auto, as opposed to Android OS in general, being the relevant infrastructure). As explained by the Court of Justice in its judgment, only a subset of third-party apps in unrelated markets (media and messaging) were available on the platform at the time of the refusal. It is, in that sense, different from Android OS.

      The Court held in Android Auto that once the infrastructure is open to third parties in relation to these unrelated applications (media and messaging), Bronner and Magill are no longer applicable.

      As I see it, this position entails a shift in the case law that is more consequential and transformative than you appear to suggest.

      In Magill, the TV operators were licensing their intellectual property to newspapers. In spite of this fact, the Commission had to show that access to the intellectual property was indispensable.

      Following Android Auto, evidence of indispensability would no longer be required in a similar scenario. Suppose that the developer of a mobile operating system chooses to keep the payment function for itself, but not other functions (as in the Apple Mobile Payment case).

      The fact that the operating system is partially open means that the developer would not be able to rely on Magill or Bronner to keep the payment function for itself. Such a restrictive interpretation of both doctrines is unquestionably new (and will necessarily have implications beyond the world of digital platforms).

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo's avatar

      Pablo Ibanez Colomo

      14 March 2025 at 6:20 pm


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