News
French court rules on free deliveries
14.05.08 Barbara Casassus
The French Booksellers Association (Syndicat de la Librairie Française, SLF) has lost part of a round in its legal battle to stop online retailers from offering free book deliveries. The supreme court ruled last week that free deliveries with no minimum order offered by France Télécom subsidiary Alapage did not contravene the 1981 single book price Lang law, named after former socialist culture minister Jack Lang.
This reversed last year's decision by the Paris appeal court, which instructed Alapage to pay the SLF €50,000 in damages for unfair competition. The SLF is playing down its first defeat. "Most important was that the supreme court endorsed the earlier ruling that book gift vouchers violated the Lang law," said Benoît Bougerol, SLF president and owner of La Maison du Livre in Rodez in the south of France. "If we had lost on that, it would have been a catastrophe."
The supreme court has asked the appeal court to deliberate again on free deliveries by Alapage, while the SLF is asking the government to define the practice of providing an allied service that is worth more than the product concerned or at least than the retailer's margin. A paperback can sell for three euros, but costs five euros to deliver, Bougerol said. "Is it dumping and if not, what is it ?" The problem is that there are no provisions in the commercial code governing deliveries of items sold electronically, he added.
The SLF said that it had no objection to book sales on the internet. On the contrary, it was working on a portal to enable independent booksellers to sell online, and hoped to be ready to launch next year. But the portal would be doomed if the deliveries issue was not settled first, Bougerol said.
Alapage and other online retailers are obliged to provide free deliveries and sell at a loss in order to keep up with Amazon, he said. The market leader lost its first court case against the SLF last December, and is preparing for a Versailles appeal court hearing on 9th October.
See Also
Related
- Editis crisis set to be resolved
- Schalit quits La Martinière
- Planeta to spur global growth at Editis
- Amazon.fr told to end free delivery
- France launches Google books rival
Book news from the BBC
- Airline collapse hits thousands
- Things aren't what they used to be
- Q&A: Options for Zoom passengers
- City hotel network nets fraudster
- Agency helps over 60s find jobs
Latest Comments
- i would like to nominate: Murder at the the Butt by Ken Mask
- I'm all for sensitivity to horrendous events and feel that official...
- Or, she could read from the book, in which there is no connection. On the...
- If you ask me, it's all a load of monkey business ! I would be very...
- Surely all they need to do is get her to read a disclaimer stating that...
RSS
Subscriber Content