The Luxembourg Court examines contactless cards in light of Directive 2015/2366 on Payment Services (PSD2) ; El Tribunal de Luxemburgo examina las tarjetas contactless a la luz de la Directiva 2015/2366 de Servicios de Pago (PSD2)

In answer to the questions for a preliminary ruling refer from the Supreme Court of Austria, the CJEU rules, in its judgment of 11 November 2020 (C-287/19), that the validity of contractual clause, which provides for possibility of changes the contractual conditions of a framework contract of payment services through tacit consent of user-consumer, has to make under Directive 93/13/EEC and not under articles 52 and 54 of Directive 2015/2366. Furthermore, the CJEU considers that the NFC function of a personalised multifunctional bank card constitutes an anonymous payment instrumen and it’s nati... Mehr ...

Verfasser: MARTÍNEZ GÓMEZ, SHEILA
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Verlag/Hrsg.: Centro de Estudios de Consumo
Schlagwörter: Servicios de pago / función NFC / instrumento de pago / autorización de pago / titular de la tarjeta / consumidores / Payment services / NFC function / payment instrument / payment authorization / cardholder / consumers
Sprache: Spanish
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29111854
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://revista.uclm.es/index.php/cesco/article/view/2632

In answer to the questions for a preliminary ruling refer from the Supreme Court of Austria, the CJEU rules, in its judgment of 11 November 2020 (C-287/19), that the validity of contractual clause, which provides for possibility of changes the contractual conditions of a framework contract of payment services through tacit consent of user-consumer, has to make under Directive 93/13/EEC and not under articles 52 and 54 of Directive 2015/2366. Furthermore, the CJEU considers that the NFC function of a personalised multifunctional bank card constitutes an anonymous payment instrumen and it’s national courts that have to verify the card doesn’t allow its blocking. ; En respuesta a las cuestiones prejudiciales planteadas por el Tribunal Supremo de Austria, el TJUE declara, en la sentencia de 11 de noviembre de 2020 (C-287/19), que la validez de la cláusula contractual que prevé la posibilidad de modificar las condiciones de un contrato marco de servicios de pago mediante el consentimiento tácito del usuario-consumidor debe efectuarse a la luz de la Directiva 93/13/CEE y no de los arts. 52 y 54 de la Directiva 2015/2366. Además, considera que la función NFC de una tarjeta bancaria multifuncional personalizada constituye un instrumento de pago anónimo y son los tribunales nacionales los que tienen que verificar que la tarjera no permite su bloqueo.