Rethinking the liability of package tour operators in Spain by Inmaculada G. Cabrera PRE-PRINT of International Journal of Tourism, Travel and Hospitality Law

irrespective of their area of management, would be liable to the consumer for lack of conformity or breach of contract? In my opinion, the wording of article 11 of the LVC, contrary to the majority of the jurisprudence of those years, allowed the defence that the liability of the various operators (travel agencies at that time) involved in the package was joint , each one being liable to the consumer in its own area of management, 9 allowing joint liability only when several organisers or retailers were party to the same contract . 10 This assertion is supported, on the one hand, by the consistent interpretation of the two paragraphs and, on the other hand, by the fact that it was made clear during the parliamentary procedure, since the bill in principle established the joint and several liability of the organiser and the retailer vis-à-vis the consumer in both Articles 9 and 11; however, the Senate modified the rule of joint and several liability, distributing the liability of both bodies according to the scope of their management and establishing joint and several liability as an exception in cases where different organisers or retailers are involved in the same contract . 11 However, this has not prevented the rule from being the subject of intense debate and from giving rise to a plurality and antagonistic minor jurisprudence, which in some cases has recognised the joint and several liability of all the agencies involved, sometimes the joint and several liability of these or one of them and the service providers who are the subject of the claim, and in other cases, which in my opinion are more in line with the Gómez Calle, 2011, p. 518, clarifies that in this field, although the concept of joint liability is accepted 9 without problem, even in the judgment of 20 January 2010, it is strictly speaking "that in which the duty of performance must be fulfilled jointly by a plurality of debtors", whereas the thesis defended in the aforementioned judgment and that supported by a large part of the doctrine actually defends "the delimitation of liability between organiser and retailer according to a certain criterion". We defended this in Cárdenas Negro, and González Cabrera, 2000, pp. 185 ff; González Cabrera, and 10 Cárdenas Negro, 2006 and 2009, pp. 79 and 81 f., respectively; as well as in González Cabrera, 2012, p. 119. This position was defended by the majority of the doctrine at that time. In this respect, see Algaba Ros, 2006 b, p. 58; Boldó Roda, 2000, pp. 225 ff; García Rubio, 1999, pp. 157 ff; Gómez Calle, 1998, pp. 225 ff; González Fernández, 2008, p. 1072; Martínez Espín, 1999, p. 1072; Martínez Espín, 1999, p. 1072. 1072; Martínez Espín, 1999, pp. 198 ff; Morillas Jarillo, 2006, pp. 473 ff; Navarro Belda, 2003, pp. 65 ff; Soler Valdés-Bango, 2005, pp. 369 ff; and, Vicent Chuliá, 1999, pp. 283 ff. Along these lines Pérez Escolar, 2013, pp. 139 ff. 11

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