OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
STIX-HACKL
delivered on 5 February 2004(1)
Case C-400/02Gérard MeridavFederal Republic of Germany
(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Bundesarbeitsgericht (Germany))
(Freedom of movement for workers – Equal treatment in collective agreements – Interim assistance – Discrimination against persons formerly employed in Germany and resident in France)
I – Introduction
1.
These proceedings are concerned with the calculation of a particular benefit (‘Überbrückungsbeihilfe’; hereinafter: ‘interim
assistance’) provided for under a collective agreement and paid upon termination of employment.
II – Relevant legislation
A –
Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68
(2)
of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community (hereinafter: ‘Regulation No 1612/68’)
2.
Article 7(4) reads:
‘Any clause of a collective or individual agreement or of any other collective regulation concerning eligibility for employment,
employment, remuneration and other conditions of work or dismissal shall be null and void in so far as it lays down or authorises
discriminatory conditions in respect of workers who are nationals of the other Member States.’
B –
National law
3.
According to the uncontested particulars supplied by the referring court in the order for reference and by the representative
of the Federal Republic of Germany at the hearing, the applicable provisions of German law are set out below.
4.
Civilian workers were employed by the French forces stationed in Germany until those forces were withdrawn; the French armed
forces had been their employer. Earnings from such employment were paid by the German authorities by order and for account
of the French armed forces. In accordance with the double taxation convention between Germany and France, the tax law applicable
to the earnings was determined by the employee’s place of residence. On that basis, instead of deducting wage tax (‘Lohnsteuer’)
from the gross earnings of employees resident in France, the German authorities in fact paid to them a sum greater than that
paid to employees resident in Germany. That amount paid by the former employer was subject to tax in France.
5.
Interim assistance is a social benefit paid by the Federal Republic of Germany on its own account and out of its budgetary
resources to persons formerly employed with the French armed forces stationed in Germany pursuant to the Collective Agreement
of 31 August 1971 on social security for persons employed with the armed forces stationed in the Federal Republic of Germany
(hereinafter: ‘Collective Agreement on Social Security’) where their employment was terminated on account of the withdrawal
of those forces from Germany.
6.
Under the provisions of the Collective Agreement on Social Security relevant to the main proceedings, the amount of interim
assistance is calculated uniformly for all recipients. That amount is essentially calculated so that, on the basis of the
collectively agreed basic remuneration to which the employee was entitled for a full calendar month at the time of cessation
of employment, allowance is also made – in addition to the unemployment benefits actually received – for notional German income
tax which, of course, is considered in the light of the tax criteria applicable at the time of payment of interim assistance.
Thus, an allowance is also made for notional German income tax in the case of former employees resident in France whose earnings
during the period of their employment suffered no deductions for wage tax under German law.
7.
Interim assistance calculated by that method is taxable above a certain tax-free allowance where its recipients live in Germany.
Recipients living in France are required to pay French taxes on interim assistance. The second sentence of Paragraph 4(4)
of the Collective Agreement on Social Security provides: ‘Where interim assistance is paid in addition to the benefits provided
by the Bundesanstalt für Arbeit (Federal Employment Office), it shall be increased by the amount required to cover the wage
tax’. At the hearing, the representative of the German Government maintained that ‘by topping up in that way …, any form of
tax burden is effectively cancelled out, in which case it makes no difference which Member State … levies this tax … In Germany,
beneficiaries are invariably in a position so as not to be economically burdened by the tax. In the present case, the tax
which [the plaintiff] has to pay in France on interim assistance could … be reimbursed. Proof of the amount of tax paid is
the sole prerequisite for such reimbursement. Residents and non-residents are … treated strictly in the same manner at all
times … with regard to … taxes actually payable.’
III – Facts, main proceedings and question referred for a preliminary ruling
8.
Mr Merida is a French national and resides in France. Until his employment was terminated, he worked for the French armed
forces stationed in Germany. Once his employment had been terminated, Mr Merida received interim assistance pursuant to the
Collective Agreement on Social Security. The amount of benefit received was calculated in accordance with that collective
agreement, that is to say, on the basis of his former gross salary, an allowance being made for the unemployment benefits
actually received in France and for notional German wage tax. In Mr Merida’s case, interim assistance calculated by that method
was taxable in France as earnings, under the relevant double taxation convention, and was therefore subject to French tax.
9.
Taking the view that, as a result of the deduction of notional German wage tax, he had been placed – unlawfully – at a disadvantage
in relation to employees resident in Germany, Mr Merida instituted proceedings against the Federal Republic of Germany. The
competent Arbeitsgericht (Labour Court) and the Landesarbeitsgericht (Regional Labour Court) both dismissed the action. Mr
Merida then brought an appeal on a point of law against the judgment of the Landesarbeitsgericht before the Bundesarbeitsgericht
(Federal Labour Court). The latter court is uncertain whether the Collective Agreement on Social Security is compatible with
the Community principle of freedom of movement for workers as regards the method for calculating interim assistance in circumstances
such as those arising in the main proceedings. For that reason the Bundesarbeitsgericht stayed the proceedings by order of
27 June 2002 and referred the following question to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
Is Article 39 EC infringed by the fact that, for the purposes of determining the basis of assessment for interim assistance
in a case arising under Paragraph 4(1)(b) of the Collective Agreement on Social Security, account must be taken of notional
German wage tax (second sentence of Paragraph 4(3)(b) of that collective agreement) if the former employee lives and is subject
to tax abroad?
IV – The question referred for a preliminary ruling
A –
Essential submissions of the parties
10.
Mr
Merida and the
Commission take the view that recipients of interim assistance who live in France are indirectly discriminated against by virtue of
the deduction of notional German wage tax. They submit that the method by which interim assistance is calculated means that
those recipients in effect receive less in total than they used to be paid by their former employer. Indeed, apart from the
deduction of notional German wage tax and unemployment benefits, employees governed by German tax law by reason of their residence
in Germany did not suffer any further deduction in respect of interim assistance. However, for recipients living in France,
not only was account taken of notional German wage tax but, in addition, French tax was actually payable on interim assistance.
However, interim assistance was, they claim, intended to maintain payment during the first year following termination of employment
of the full salary that had been paid by the former employer. Achievement of that objective was guaranteed in the case of
recipients resident in Germany. On the basis of the double taxation convention, recipients resident in France, on the other
hand, received a higher salary because the amounts paid by the employer were still chargeable to wage tax in France. Indeed,
for the purposes of interim assistance, the amount of gross earnings was in that case reduced not only by notional German
wage tax but also by actual French tax. Such discrimination could not, in their view, be justified on grounds of administrative
simplification. The Community principle of freedom of movement for workers under Article 39 EC could not be restricted by
that measure.
11.
The
Federal Republic of Germany considers that calculating the amount of interim assistance by deducting notional German wage tax is not discriminatory in
circumstances such as those pertaining to Mr Merida. In that regard it raises inter alia grounds of administrative simplification
and asserts that interim assistance does not serve to maintain payment of a salary in the event of unemployment. At the hearing,
the representative of the German Government maintained that such assistance was in fact a voluntary social benefit paid by
the Federal Republic of Germany to former employees from other States which was designed to ‘soften the social welfare impact
of the readjustment process’ in the event of unemployment and was ‘a particular type of assistance in the form of a social
benefit’. Interim assistance, it submits, was therefore calculated in the same way for all beneficiaries. Community law did
not create a right to more favourable treatment for frontier workers than for employees resident in the State concerned. At
the hearing, the Federal Republic of Germany further contended that, in principle, interim assistance was in itself still
subject to tax even for recipients resident in Germany. Nevertheless, any taxes accruing were ‘cancelled out’ for the purpose
of calculating interim assistance by a corresponding increase in the benefit paid. That arrangement also applied, it concludes,
in relation to taxes payable in France on interim assistance.
B –
Assessment
1. Wording of the question referred
12.
The referring court entertains doubts as to whether the second sentence of Paragraph 4(3)(b) of the Collective Agreement on
Social Security is compatible with Article 39 EC inasmuch as that provision of the collective agreement is concerned with
‘determining the basis of assessment’ (clearly meaning the calculation of the amount) for interim assistance – even for recipients
resident in France – by deduction of notional German wage tax. It is therefore seeking an interpretation of Article 39 EC.
However, collectively agreed benefits such as interim assistance also come under the principle of non-discrimination laid
down in Article 7(4) of Regulation No 1612/68. In similar cases the Court has thus far examined the EC Treaty and Regulation
No 1612/68 jointly and has established that the regulation sets out in detail the rights enjoyed by migrant workers pursuant
to Article 39 EC where obligations arising from employment and/or from a collective agreement are concerned.
(3)
13.
I therefore propose rewording the question referred as follows:
Are Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement
for workers within the Community to be interpreted as precluding a provision of a notional collective agreement under which
the amount of a social benefit such as the ‘interim assistance’ at issue in the main proceedings is calculated, in the case
of recipients resident in another Member State and subject to tax there, in such a way that, on the basis of former gross
earnings, account is taken of the notional wage tax of the first Member State although, under a double taxation convention,
wage tax was not deducted by that State from the pay of the abovementioned recipients during the currency of their employment?
2. Interpretation of Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation No 1612/68
a) Whether or not discrimination has arisen by virtue of actual double taxation
14.
Mr Merida and the Commission regard as unlawful discrimination the fact that, for the purpose of calculating interim assistance
for recipients resident in France, account is taken of notional German wage tax although the interim assistance is still taxable
in France. Plainly the question referred by the national court also has regard to that consideration, in focusing on liability
to tax in France.
15.
In that respect, it should first be pointed out that, given that the Collective Agreement on Social Security is said to form
the basis of any discrimination occurring, the referring court did not provide comprehensive particulars of it. It was not
until the hearing that the Federal Republic of Germany argued – without challenge – on the basis of the relevant passage from
the collective agreement, that interim assistance is in fact taxable in the hands of its recipients in Germany but that the
taxes were reimbursable and recipients resident in France could also claim that reimbursement. Thus the argument that recipients
resident in France are treated unfavourably in that they are subject to ‘quasi’ double taxation (notional taxation in Germany
and actual taxation in France), put forward by Mr Merida and the Commission and rated as possible by the referring court does
not hold true.
b) Whether discrimination might arise owing to the fact that the amount of interim assistance intended for recipients resident
in France does not correspond to the amount paid to them by their former employer
16.
For the purpose of calculating interim assistance for all recipients – that is to say, whether or not they are resident in
Germany – on the basis of individual gross earnings, account is taken of notional German wage tax for which any comparable
person resident in Germany is liable. Recipients resident in France are consequently at a disadvantage in relation to recipients
resident in Germany in so far as the amount of interim assistance that they receive, unlike the amount granted to recipients
in Germany, does not correspond to the actual amount paid by their former employer.
17.
It is uncertain whether that constitutes indirect discrimination prohibited by Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation
No 1612/68.
18.
Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation No 1612/68 prohibit not only discrimination by reason of nationality but also
all covert forms of discrimination which, by the application of other distinguishing criteria, lead in fact to the same result.
(4)
It is clear from the Court’s case-law that, unless it is objectively justified and proportionate to the objective pursued,
a provision of national law is to be regarded as indirectly discriminatory if it is intrinsically liable to affect migrant
workers more than national workers and if there is a consequent risk that it will place the former at a particular disadvantage.
(5)
19.
Although the Collective Agreement on Social Security does not distinguish between recipients of interim assistance by nationality,
it may still impact differently depending on whether the employee lives in Germany or France at the time of receipt of interim
assistance. However, a State’s own nationals are far more likely to be resident in that State than former migrant workers
and, consequently, a criterion of that kind demonstrates a tendency to disadvantage former frontier workers.
(6)
This could therefore constitute indirect discrimination.
20.
Indirect discrimination arises through the application of different rules to comparable situations or the application of the
same rule to different situations and where the measure concerned cannot be justified by an objective difference or as a measure
proportionate to its aim.
(7)
The method for calculating interim assistance could be regarded as a provision under which the same rule is being applied
to different situations.
21.
In most cases the Court has assessed whether indirect discrimination exists by examining the objective of the measure at issue
in a given case.
(8)
22.
In line with the arguments – which were indeed plausible in that regard – advanced by the Federal Republic of Germany at the
hearing, the objective of interim assistance is not to maintain an individual’s level of income in the event of his unemployment.
On the contrary, its objective is to grant a State-funded social benefit which is independent from the employment concerned
and serves to soften the social welfare impact in the event of unemployment. This is apparent from the fact that the benefit
is paid on behalf of a third party, namely the Federal Republic of Germany, from its own resources and without consideration,
rather than at the expense of the former employer.
23.
It appears entirely consistent with that objective to calculate that social benefit uniformly for comparable recipients who
are resident either in the national territory or in another Member State, that is to say, taking account in this instance
of notional German wage tax.
24.
It is true that the amount of interim assistance payable to recipients resident in France does not correspond to the amount
paid by their former employer. However, the latter nominally greater amount payable to employees resident in France was no
more than the natural consequence of the fact that their earnings during the currency of their employment were exempt from
German wage tax on the basis of the relevant double taxation convention.
25.
Under the Court’s case-law, a difference of that kind in the respective situations of taxpayers resident in different Member
States under double taxation conventions, is compatible with Community law inasmuch as it is the consequence, primarily, of
differing rates of taxation of the Member States concerned, which is a matter for the individual Member States.
(9)
However, it cannot be inferred from the fact that a difference in treatment, as occurred in the main proceedings in the case
of active employees resident in Germany and France, is compatible with Community law that this must also be reflected in the
calculation of a State-funded social benefit, granted independently of the employer, the objective of which is to soften the
social welfare impact in the event of unemployment.
26.
Therefore, it must be ruled that Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation No 1612/68 do not preclude the calculation of
interim assistance in accordance with the Collective Agreement on Social Security in the case of recipients resident in France
provided that interim assistance is a State-funded social benefit granted independently of the employer, the objective of
which is to soften the social welfare impact in the event of unemployment.
V – Conclusion
27.
In light of all the foregoing considerations, I propose that the Court should answer the question referred for a preliminary
ruling as follows:
Article 39 EC and Article 7(4) of Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement for
workers within the Community must be interpreted as not precluding a provision of a collective agreement of a Member State
under which the amount of a social benefit such as the ‘interim assistance’ at issue in the main proceedings is calculated,
in the case of recipients resident in another Member State and liable to tax there, in such a way that, on the basis of former
gross earnings, account is taken of the notional wage tax of the first Member State on former gross earnings, although, under
a double taxation convention, wage tax was not deducted by that State from the pay of the abovementioned recipients during
the currency of their employment, if a tax imposed on interim assistance in another Member State is reimbursed in precisely
the same manner as any tax imposed in the first Member State.
1 –
Original language: German.
2 –
OJ, English Special Edition 1968 (II), p. 475.
3 –
Case
C-175/88 Biehl [1990] ECR I-1779, Case
C-419/92 Scholz [1994] ECR I-505 and Case
C-15/96 Schöning-Kougebetopoulou [1998] ECR I-47.
4 –
Case 152/73
Sotgiu [1974] ECR 153, paragraph 11, Case
C-237/94 O’Flynn [1996] ECR I-2617, paragraph 17, and Case
C-57/96 Meints [1997] ECR I-6689, paragraph 44.
5 –
Case
C-278/94 Commission v
Belgium [1996] ECR I-4307 and the
O’Flynn case (cited in footnote 4).
6 –
.
Meints judgment (cited in footnote 4) and Case
C-35/97 Commission v
France [1998] ECR I-5325.
7 –
See, for purposes of illustration, the judgments on the tax treatment of non-residents in Cases
C-279/93 Schumacker [1995] ECR I-225,
C-80/94 Wielockx [1995] ECR I-2493,
C-107/94 Asscher [1996] ECR I-3089 and
C-391/97 Gschwind [1999] ECR I-5451, paragraph 21 et seq.; see further the judgments in
Meints (cited in footnote 4), at paragraph 45, and
O’Flynn (cited in footnote 4), at paragraph 20.
8 –
See, for instance, the Court’s recent case-law in Joined Cases
C-4/02 and
C-5/02 Schönheit and Becker [2003] ECR I-0000, paragraphs 84 and 95.
9 –
Case
C-336/96 Gilly [1998] ECR I-2793 and Case
C-385/00 deGroot [2002] ECR I-11819.