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The Apple logo is shown atop an Apple store at a shopping mall in La Jolla, California

The Apple logo is shown atop an Apple store at a shopping mall in La Jolla, California, U.S., December 17, 2019, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

LUXEMBOURG, Nov 9 (Reuters) – A lower tribunal which sided with Apple in its challenge against a 13-billion-euro ($14 billion) EU tax order made a series of legal errors and should review the case again, an adviser to Europe’s top court said on Thursday, in a potential setback for the iPhone maker.

The tax case against Apple was part of EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager’s crackdown against deals between multinationals and EU countries which regulators saw as unfair state aid.

The European Commission in its 2016 decision said Apple benefited from two Irish tax rulings for more than two decades which artificially reduced its tax burden to as low as 0.005% in 2014.

The General Court in 2020 upheld Apple’s challenge, saying that regulators had not met the legal standard to show Apple had enjoyed an unfair advantage.

Advocate General Giovanni Pitruzzella at the EU Court of Justice (CJEU) said CJEU judges should set aside the General Court ruling and refer the case back to the lower tribunal.

“The judgment of the General Court on ‘tax rulings’ adopted by Ireland in relation to Apple should be set aside,” he said in a non-binding opinion.

He said the General Court committed a series of errors in law and had also failed “to assess correctly the substance and consequences of certain methodological errors that, according to the Commission decision, vitiated the tax rulings”.

The CJEU, which will rule in the coming months, usually follow four out of five such recommendations.

The case is C-465/20 P Commission v Ireland and Others.

($1 = 0.9346 euros)

Reporting by Foo Yun Chee and Bart Meijer; editing by Jason Neely

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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An agenda-setting and market-moving journalist, Foo Yun Chee is a 20-year veteran at Reuters. Her stories on high profile mergers have pushed up the European telecoms index, lifted companies’ shares and helped investors decide on their move. Her knowledge and experience of European antitrust laws and developments helped her broke stories on Microsoft, Google, Amazon, numerous market-moving mergers and antitrust investigations. She has previously reported on Greek politics and companies, when Greece’s entry into the eurozone meant it punched above its weight on the international stage, as well as Dutch corporate giants and the quirks of Dutch society and culture that never fail to charm readers.

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