• The extension of the sanitary pass to restaurants and bars - including on terraces - not only arouses criticism: it also questions its legal scope.

  • According to the lawyer specializing in public health Fabrice Di Vizio, very critical of the government management of the health crisis, the requirement of the pass on the terrace would imply that it applies in the street.

  • Does this legal reasoning hold up?

    20 Minutes

    takes stock with Louis le Foyer de Costil, lawyer specializing in public law.

Would the opponents of the decried health pass have found a legal loophole making it all the more questionable?

This is what seem to hope the many Internet users sharing a reflection of the lawyer specializing in public health Fabrice Di Vizio, very critical of the government management of the health crisis.

"Maître Di Vizio, in his daily live, raises an interesting point on the terraces and the sanitary pass: [of] the terraces [whose access is conditioned by the] sanitary pass would imply an occupation of the street with the sanitary pass", affirms thus a Twitter user by relaying, in the process, the extract concerned.

Maître @ DIVIZIO1 in his daily live brings up an interesting point on the terraces and the sanitary pass: Terraces with sanitary pass would imply occupation of the street with the sanitary pass.


Full video: https://t.co/to3z55IF6X pic.twitter.com/CK7aqmPCgD

- Mouâd Boutaour Kandil (@boutaour) July 18, 2021

In this sequence, Fabrice Di Vizio unfolds his reasoning: “A good number [of the terraces] occupy the public domain.

They occupy it not by virtue of an authorization to occupy the public domain but by virtue of a tolerance of occupation of the public domain […].

Me, to access the terrace, I must have a health pass.

It does not fit this story!

Because the terrace is in the public domain.

"

“Where does the occupation of the public domain have to generate a health pass?

That poses a real question, because if we accept the idea that I must occupy the public domain with a health pass, well that means that we can do it in the street too, ”he concludes.

FAKE OFF

Does such a demonstration make legal sense?

No, explains

 Louis le Foyer de Costil, a lawyer specializing in public law

, to

20 Minutes

.

“A terrace is part of the public domain but it comes under the authority of the establishment which has obtained the authorization to occupy it, in the same way as a puppet theater or a merry-go-round set up in a garden.

The operator who occupies it is responsible for it.

The law is clear, so there is no reason to wonder, nor to make a penalizing interpretation of it.

"

As the Servicepublic.fr site reminds us, the occupation of the public domain by a business must be the subject of a temporary occupation authorization (AOT), with clearly defined characteristics: - rented to someone else, nor sold on the occasion of the sale of the business.

[…] It is generally valid for one year or one season.

The start and end dates are specified in the authorization order […].

It can be suspended or withdrawn at any time by the municipality, without notice or compensation ”.

"The real question is whether it is proportionate"

"If the terrace is installed without authorization, the problem is elsewhere, the town hall must not allow free use of its public domain, since any occupation is subject to a fee", specifies Louis le Foyer de Costil - the offenders are exposed to a fine of 1,500 euros. And if several cities have set up, exceptionally, ephemeral terraces in the summer of 2020 that do not require authorization or fees, most of them have changed their regulations for the 2021 season, like the city from Paris.

For the lawyer specializing in public law, the extension of the sanitary pass to the terraces of bars and restaurants rather raises another problem: “The real question that arises, in my opinion, is whether it is proportionate. The Council of State or the Constitutional Council could for example say: "The sanitary pass is authorized, but only indoors because it has no meaning outside, where the risks of contamination are more limited". We should rather ask ourselves about this than about the public domain. "

The Minister of Health, Olivier Véran, also recognized himself, on July 20, the practical reasons justifying according to him to require the sanitary pass on the terrace of establishments: "If we apply the pass indoors but not outside, that means that all the people who are outside on the terrace cannot enter the place.

So they don't use the toilets, don't come home to pay […].

The thing, I tell you with a bit of hindsight, is absolutely unmanageable, including for restaurateurs.

"

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