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IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The source of this judgment is the web site of the Court of Justice of the European Communities. The information in this database has been provided free of charge and is subject to a Court of Justice of the European Communities disclaimer and a copyright notice. This electronic version is not authentic and is subject to amendment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Fifth Chamber)
9 October 1997(1)
(Social security - Invalidity - Old-age pensions - Article 47(1) of Regulation No
1408/71 - Calculation of benefits)
In Joined Cases C-31/96, C-32/96 and C-33/96,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Tribunal
Superior de Justicia de la Comunidad de Extremadura, Cáceres (Spain) for a
preliminary ruling in the proceedings pending before that court between
Antonio Naranjo Arjona
and
Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (INSS),
and between Francisco Vicente Mateos
and
Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (INSS)
Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social (TGSS),
and between
Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (INSS)
and
Laura García Lázaro,
on the interpretation of Article 47(1) of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of
14 June 1971 on the application of social security schemes to employed persons,
to self-employed persons and to members of their families moving within the
Community, as amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2001/83
of 2 June 1983 (OJ 1983 L 230, p. 6) and as adapted by Annex I, Part VIII, of the
Act concerning the Conditions of Accession of the Kingdom of Spain and the
Portuguese Republic and the adjustments to the Treaties (OJ 1985 L 302, p. 23),
and subsequently amended by Council Regulation (EEC) No 1248/92 of 30 April
1992 (OJ 1992 L 136, p. 7),
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of: J.C. Moitinho de Almeida, acting for the President of the Chamber,
D.A.O. Edward, J.-P. Puissochet (Rapporteur), P. Jann and L. Sevón, Judges,
Advocate General: A. La Pergola,
Registrar: H. von Holstein, Deputy Registrar,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- Naranjo Arjona, Vicente Mateos and Laura García Lázaro by Abelardo
Vázquez Conde, of the Orense Bar,
- the Spanish Government, by Alberto José Navarro González, Director
General of Community Legal and Institutional Coordination, and Rosario
Silva de Lapuerta, Abogado del Estado, of the State Legal Service, acting
as Agents,
- the Commission of the European Communities, by Isabel Martínez del Peral
and Maria Patakia, of its Legal Service, acting as Agents,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of Naranjo Arjona, Vicente Mateos and Laura
García Lázaro, of the Spanish Government and of the Commission at the hearing
on 17 April 1997,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 17 June 1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By orders of 15 and 17 January 1996, received at the Court on 7 February 1996,
the Tribunal Superior de Justicia de la Comunidad de Extremadura, Cáceres (High
Court of Justice of the Community of Extremadura, Cáceres) referred to the Court
for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty a question on the
interpretation of Article 47(1) of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of 14 June
1971 on the application of social security schemes to employed persons, to self-employed persons and to members of their families moving within the Community,
as amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2001/83 of 2 June 1983
(OJ 1983 L 230, p. 6) and as adapted by Annex I, Part VIII, of the Act concerning
the Conditions of Accession of the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic
and the adjustments to the Treaties (OJ 1985 L 302, p. 23; hereinafter 'the
regulation'), and subsequently amended by Council Regulation (EEC) No 1248/92
of 30 April 1992 (OJ 1992 L 136, p. 7).
- The question was raised in three disputes between, first, Mr Naranjo Arjona and
the Instituto Nacional de la Seguridad Social (National Social Security Institute;
'the INSS'), secondly, Mr Vicente Mateos and the INSS and the Tesorería
General de la Seguridad Social (General Social Security Revenue Authority; 'the
TGSS'), and, finally, the INSS and Mrs García Lázaro, concerning the calculation
of old-age and invalidity pensions.
- By order of the President of 12 March 1996, these three cases were joined for the
purposes of the written and oral procedure and of the judgment.
- The documents supplied by the national court show that, under Spanish legislation,
the amount of employed persons' old-age and permanent invalidity pensions does
not vary in amount according to the number of contribution periods or the length
of employment of the person concerned, but is calculated from an average
contribution basis corresponding to the salary received over a certain number of
years preceding the retirement or the onset of the invalidity. More particularly,
pursuant to Article 3(1) of Law No 26/85 of 31 July 1985, which was in force at the
relevant time, 'The basis of assessment for pensions in respect of retirement and
of permanent invalidity arising from an ordinary illness shall be equal to the
quotient obtained by dividing by 112 the contribution bases of the person
concerned during the 96 months immediately preceding the month in which the risk
materialized'. Under that provision, the bases for the 24 months prior to the
month in which the risk materialized are calculated at their face value, whilst the
others are updated in accordance with the consumer price index. Article 3(4) of
the Law provides that, if a contribution obligation is lacking for all or part of the
period under consideration, the gaps are filled by applying the minimum bases
applicable to workers aged over 18 years.
- In Case C-31/96, Mr Naranjo Arjona, a worker of Spanish nationality, was
employed in Spain from 1952 until 1965, and then in Germany from 1966 until
1991, while continuing to contribute to the Spanish social security system until
- In 1994, the INSS awarded him, with effect from 1 April 1991, a retirement pension
calculated on the basis of contributions paid in Spain between 1962 and 1968, the
amount of which Mr Naranjo Arjona disputes on the ground that the reference
period to be taken into account should be the period between 1982 and 1991, that
is to say the end of his career in Germany.
- In Case C-32/96, Mr Vicente Mateos, a worker of Spanish nationality, was likewise
employed in Spain from 1942 until 1962, and then in Germany from 1963 until
1989. The competent German institution acknowledged his entitlement to a
permanent invalidity pension with effect from 1 February 1989. In Spain, the INSS
granted him an invalidity pension only under the old Spanish security system,
corresponding to an exclusively national base and at a permanently fixed amount.
Mr Mateos disputes the amount of that pension, maintaining that account should
be taken of his contribution periods in Germany.
- In Case C-33/96, Mrs García Lázaro, of Spanish nationality, was also employed in
Spain between 1961 and 1964, then in Germany from 1961 until 1987. The
competent German institution having acknowledged her entitlement to an invalidity
pension in 1987, she applied to the INSS for a permanent invalidity pension, which
was refused her in 1992. However, she brought an action challenging that decision,
and the court acknowledged her entitlement to a total permanent invalidity pension
in respect of her normal occupation, the amount being calculated on the basis of
the contribution ceilings applicable to her occupational category in Spain in respect
of the contribution periods in Germany.
- Hearing those three disputes on appeal, the Tribunal Superior de Justicia de la
Comunidad de Extremadura referred the following question to the Court for a
preliminary ruling:
'Where Article 47(1)(e) of Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 - now Article 47(1)(g)
- uses the phrase "shall determine that average by reference only to those periods
of insurance completed under the legislation of the said State", is it to be construed
as referring to:
1. the theoretical maximum, minimum or average basis for the time being laid
down by the legislation of a Member State for payment of the relevant
social security contributions; or
2. the average of the actual bases of what was actually contributed by the
person concerned, regardless of what he would have had to contribute in
the periods worked in Spain in accordance with the legislation of that
State?'
Legislative background
- Before replying to the question, it will be useful to recall the provisions of the
regulation at issue in the main actions.
- As the documents before the Court show, the legislations of the two Member
States in which the persons concerned are to draw invalidity benefits are not of the
same type. The Spanish legislation is mentioned in Annex IV to the regulation as
one of those referred to in Article 37(1), according to which the amount of
invalidity benefits is independent of the duration of periods of insurance. The
German legislation, on the other hand, is not among their number.
- Article 40(1) of the regulation provides that for invalidity in the case of workers
who have been successively subject to both types of legislation the provisions of the
chapter of the regulation on old-age and death benefits, that is, Articles 44 to 51,
are to apply by analogy. Those provisions are therefore applicable both to Case
C-31/96, which concerns a retirement pension, and to Cases C-32/96 and C-33/96,
which concern invalidity pensions.
- Article 46 of the regulation lays down the rules for the award of benefits. Article
46(2) provides, inter alia, as follows:
'(a) the institution shall calculate the theoretical amount of benefit that the
person concerned could claim if all the insurance periods completed under
the legislation of the Member States to which the employed or self-employed person has been subject had been completed in the Member
State in question and under the legislation administered by it on the date
the benefit is awarded. If, under that legislation, the amount of the benefit
does not depend on the length of the periods completed, then that amount
shall be taken as the theoretical amount referred to in this subparagraph.'
- Article 47 lays down additional rules for calculating benefits. Article 47(1) deals
specifically with the calculation of the theoretical amount referred to in Article
46(2)(a), and includes the following provision:
'(e) where, under the legislation of a Member State, benefits are calculated on
the basis of average contributions, the competent institution shall determine
that average exclusively by reference to those periods of insurance
completed under the legislation of the said State.'
- Finally, it should be noted that, in the version of the regulation resulting from
Regulation No 1248/92, Article 47(1)(e) has become Article 47(1)(g). In addition,
Annex VI which, in accordance with Article 89 of the regulation, refers to special
procedures for applying the legislations of certain Member States, has had the
following wording added under heading D. Spain:
'4. (a) Under Article 47 of the Regulation, the calculation of the theoretical
Spanish benefit shall be carried out on the basis of the actual
contributions of the insured person during the years immediately
preceding payment of the last contribution to the Spanish social
security.
(b) The amount of the pension obtained shall be increased by the amount
of the increases and revalorizations calculated for each year after and
up to the year preceding the materialization of the risk for pensions
of the same kind.'
The question referred
- In its question, the national court essentially asks whether the average contribution
basis referred to in Article 47(1)(e) (now Article 47(1)(g)) of the regulation, in the
version resulting from Regulation No 1248/92, is to be determined by reference to
theoretical contribution bases (maximum, minimum or average), or by reference to
the actual contribution bases of the insured.
- Mr Naranjo Arjona, Mr Vicente Mateos and Mrs García Lázaro maintain that the
various options put forward by the national court are impossible to put into effect,
especially because the concept of 'salary-dependent bases' was unknown to
Spanish legislation until 1974 and migrant workers to whom a reference period
prior to that date applies are thereby penalized. They therefore propose that the
Court should rule that Article 47(1)(e) of the regulation, which has become Article
47(1)(g) since the entry into force of Regulation No 1248/92, and Annex VI, D
(Spain), paragraph 4(a) of the same amended regulation are contrary to Article 51
of the Treaty in so far as they establish a system of calculating benefits which
differs from that laid down by Spanish legislation and does not take into account
periods of insurance or employment in another Member State.
- The Spanish Government, on the other hand, argues that it is obvious from the
clarifications for applying Article 47 of the regulation made in paragraph 4 of
heading D of Annex VI that it is necessary to take into account the insured's actual
contribution bases during the years immediately preceding payment of the last
contribution to the Spanish social security system and adjust the amount of the
pension thus obtained to the level applicable on the date the risk materialized.
- The Commission maintains that none of the provisions of Article 47(1) applies to
the calculation of the amount of an invalidity benefit under a system whereby such
amount does not depend on the length of the insurance periods. As regards old-age and death benefits, it considers that the provision in question must be
interpreted in such a way as to take account of the amount of actual salary
payments immediately prior to the materialization of the risk, irrespective of the
Member State where they were received, so that the application of national
legislation interpreted in the light of the objectives of Articles 48 and 51 of the
Treaty does not result in penalizing workers who have exercised the right of free
movement compared with those who have not.
- Contrary to what the Commission maintains, and as the Court ruled in Case C-251/94 Lafuente Nieto v INSS and TGSS [1996] ECR I-4187, Article 47(1)(e) of the
regulation, renumbered as Article 47(1)(g) in the version currently in force, covers
a system for calculating invalidity benefits on an average basis for contributions, as
laid down by the Spanish legislation. That rule applies not only to old-age and
death benefit schemes but also, by analogy pursuant to Article 40(1) of the
regulation, to invalidity benefit schemes where the worker concerned has, as in
these cases, been subject successively to legislations of different types (judgment in
Lafuente Nieto, paragraph 28).
- It should also be noted that the same rule constitutes an additional provision for
the calculation of the theoretical amount referred to in Article 46(2)(a) of the
regulation. It must therefore be interpreted in the light of that provision and, as
the Court held in Case C-406/93 Reichling v INAMI [1994] ECR I-4061, in the light
of the objective laid down by Article 51 of the Treaty, which implies in particular
that migrant workers must not suffer a reduction in the amount of their social
security benefits as a result of having availed themselves of their right of free
movement.
- Nevertheless, contrary to what the individuals concerned maintain, such an
obligation does not mean that the contested provision is necessarily contrary to the
above objective because it does not allow the amount of contributions paid in
another Member State to be taken into account in order to determine the average
contribution basis. It merely implies that that basis must be the same for the
migrant worker as it would have been if he had not availed himself of his right of
free movement.
- Thus, in circumstances such as those at issue in the main proceedings, although in
accordance with Article 47(1)(e) of the regulation (Article 47(1)(g) by virtue of the
effect of Regulation No 1248/92) account is to be taken only of contributions paid
under the legislation concerned, that amount must be updated and revalorized so
as to correspond to what the persons concerned would have paid had they
continued to work under the same conditions in the Member State in question
(judgment in Lafuente Nieto, paragraphs 39 and 40).
- That interpretation is confirmed by the new provisions which Regulation No
1248/92 introduced into Annex VI, heading D, paragraph 4 of the regulation,
whereby 'the calculation of the theoretical Spanish benefit shall be carried out on
the basis of the actual contributions of the insured person during the years
immediately preceding payment of the last contribution to the Spanish social
security' and 'the amount of the pension obtained shall be increased by the
amount of the increases and revalorizations calculated for each year after and up
to the year preceding the materialization of the risk for pensions of the same kind'.
- Those new provisions are not in principle applicable to pensions awarded before
1 June 1992, subject only to the possibility which the new Article 95a of the
regulation confers upon the persons concerned to request revision of their rights
to take account of those rules. But in any event, as the Court held in paragraph
42 of the Lafuente Nieto judgment, the provisions in question do no more than set
out the detailed rules for determining the average basis for contributions with sole
reference to insurance periods completed under the legislation concerned, whilst
leaving the content of Article 47(1)(e) unaltered, and are intended only to ensure
the compatibility thereof with the principles set out in Article 51 of the Treaty.
- The Commission maintained at the hearing, however, that application of those rules
should not entail the loss of advantages which would result from the inapplicability,
following the entry into force of such rules, of the social security convention
concluded between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Kingdom of Spain
on 4 December 1973, which entered into force on 1 November 1977 ('the
convention'). The Commission points out that application of Article 25(1)(b) of
that convention, which would allow the contribution basis level attained by the
worker at the end of his career in Germany to be taken into account whilst
referring to the contribution bases in force in Spain for the occupational category
concerned, would lead to a more favourable result for the persons concerned than
that flowing from the provisions of the regulation.
- In that respect, the Court held in Case C-227/89 Rönfeldt v
Bundesversicherungsanstalt für Angestellte [1991] ECR I-323 that Articles 48 and 51
of the Treaty preclude the loss of social security advantages which would result
from the inapplicability, following the entry into force of Regulation No 1408/71,
of conventions operating between two or more Member States and incorporated
in their national law. However, the Court stated in Case C-475/93 Thévenon v
Landesversicherungsanstalt Rheinland-Pfalz [1995] ECR I-3813 that that principle
cannot be applied to workers who did not exercise their right of free movement
until after that regulation came into force.
- In the main proceedings, there is no dispute that the persons concerned were
already employed in Germany before 1 January 1986, when the regulation, whose
provisions were substituted for those of the bilateral convention in the normal way
pursuant to Article 6 of the regulation, came into force in Spain. That substitution
cannot be allowed, where the issue arises, to deprive those persons of their rights
and advantages under that convention.
- It should be noted, however, that, at the hearing, the Spanish Government
challenged the Commission's argument that application of the convention would be
more advantageous for the persons concerned than application of the regulation.
As the Advocate General points out at paragraph 37 of his Opinion, the updating
of the contributions, in accordance with the provisions of the regulation as
interpreted by the Court and referred to in paragraph 21 of this judgment, pursues
the same objectives as the convention and should normally permit them to be
attained.
- It is therefore for the national court to verify whether application of that
convention would in practice be more or less advantageous for the workers
concerned than application of the regulation. In the former case, by way of
exception and in accordance with the principle stated in the Rönfeldt judgment
cited above, the rules laid down by the convention should be applied. In the latter
case, it is the rules laid down by the regulation, as interpreted by the Court, that
must be applied.
- The answer to the question referred must therefore be that Article 47(1)(e) of the
regulation, which has become Article 47(1)(g) in the version resulting from
Regulation No 1248/92, implies that, in situations such as that at issue in the main
proceedings, calculation of the average basis for contributions rests solely on the
amount of contributions actually paid under the legislation concerned, and the
theoretical amount of the benefit thus obtained is to be duly revalorized and
increased as if the persons concerned had continued to work under the same
conditions in the Member State in question. However, where application of that
provision so interpreted proves less advantageous, for workers who were already
employed in another Member State before the regulation entered into force in the
first Member State, than the application of a previous convention between those
two States, the competent court should, by way of exception, apply the rules laid
down by that convention.
Costs
- The costs incurred by the Spanish Government and by the Commission of the
European Communities, which have submitted observations to the Court, are not
recoverable. Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings,
a step in the proceedings pending before the national court, the decision on costs
is a matter for that court.
On those grounds,THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
in answer to the question referred to it by the Tribunal Superior de Justicia de la
Comunidad de Extremadura, Cáceres, by orders of 15 and 17 January 1996, hereby
rules:
Article 47(1)(e) of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of 14 June 1971 on the
application of social security schemes to employed persons, to self-employed
persons and to members of their families moving within the Community, as
amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2001/83 of 2 June 1983
and as adapted by Annex I, Part VIII, of the Act concerning the Conditions of
Accession of the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic and the
adjustments to the Treaties, and which has become Article 47(1)(g) following the
entry into force of Council Regulation (EEC) No 1248/92 of 30 April 1992, implies
that, in situations such as that at issue in the main proceedings, calculation of the
average basis for contributions rests solely on the amount of contributions actually
paid under the legislation concerned, and the theoretical amount of the benefit
thus obtained is to be duly revalorized and increased as if the persons concerned
had continued to work under the same conditions in the Member State in question.
However, where application of that provision so interpreted proves less
advantageous, for workers who were already employed in another Member State
before the regulation entered into force in the first Member State, than the
application of a previous convention between those two States, the competent court
should, by way of exception, apply the rules laid down by that convention.
Moitinho de AlmeidaEdward
Puissochet
Jann Sevón
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 9 October 1997.
R. Grass
J.C. Moitinho de Almeida
Registrar
For the President of the Fifth Chamber
1: Language of the case: Spanish.
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