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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)
10 July 1997 (1)
(Social policy - Protection of employees in the event of the insolvency of their
employer - Directive 80/987/EEC - Liability of the guarantee institutions limited
- Liability of a Member State arising from belated transposition of a directive -
Adequate reparation)
In Case C-373/95,
REFERENCE to the Court under Article 177 of the EC Treaty by the Pretura
Circondariale, Venice (Italy), for a preliminary ruling in the proceedings pending
before that court between
Federica Maso and Others,
Graziana Gazzetta and Others
and
Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (INPS) ,
Italian Republic
on the interpretation of Articles 2, 3(2), 4(2) and (3) and 10 of Council Directive
80/987/EEC of 20 October 1980 on the approximation of the laws of the Member
States relating to the protection of employees in the event of the insolvency of their
employer (OJ 1980 L 283, p. 23) and of the principle of State liability for loss or
damage caused to individuals by a breach of Community law attributable to the
State,
THE COURT (Fifth Chamber),
composed of: J.C. Moitinho de Almeida, President of the Chamber, L. Sevón,
D.A.O. Edward, P. Jann and M. Wathelet (Rapporteur), Judges,
Advocate General: G. Cosmas,
Registrar: L. Hewlett, Administrator,
after considering the written observations submitted on behalf of:
- the plaintiffs in the main proceedings, by G. Boscolo, of the Venice Bar,
- the Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (INPS), by A. Todaro and
L. Cantarini, of the Rome Bar, and A. Mascia, of the Venice Bar,
- the Italian Government, by Professor U. Leanza, Head of the Legal Affairs
Department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting as Agent, and by D.
Del Gaizo, Avvocato dello Stato,
- the German Government, by E. Röder, Ministerialrat at the Federal
Ministry of Economic Affairs, and S. Maass, Government Adviser pro tem.
in the same Ministry, acting as Agents,
- the United Kingdom Government, by L. Nicoll, of the Treasury Solicitor's
Department, acting as Agent, and by N. Green, Barrister,
- the Commission of the European Communities, by M. Patakia, of its Legal
Service, and E. Altieri, a national civil servant on secondment to that
Service, acting as Agents,
having regard to the Report for the Hearing,
after hearing the oral observations of the plaintiffs in the main proceedings,
represented by G. Boscolo, the Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (INPS),
represented by A. Todaro and R. Sarto, of the Rome Bar, and V. Morielli, of the
Naples Bar, the Italian Government, represented by D. Del Gaizo, the United
Kingdom Government, represented by L. Nicoll, and by N. Green and S. Richards,
Barristers, and the Commission, represented by M. Patakia, E. Altieri and L.
Gussetti, of its Legal Service, acting as Agents, at the hearing on 3 October 1996,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 23 January
1997,
gives the following
Judgment
- By order of 3 November 1995, received at the Court on 29 November 1995, the
Pretura Circondariale (District Magistrate's Court), Venice, referred to the Court
for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the EC Treaty four questions
concerning the interpretation of Articles 2, 3(2), 4(2) and (3) and 10 of Council
Directive 80/987/EEC of 20 October 1980 on the approximation of the laws of the
Member States relating to the protection of employees in the event of the
insolvency of their employer (OJ 1980 L 283, p. 23, hereinafter 'the Directive')
and of the principle of State liability for loss or damage caused to individuals by a
breach of Community law attributable to the State.
- Those questions were raised in proceedings brought by Federica Maso and 11 other
plaintiffs, and by Graziano Gazzetta and 17 other plaintiffs, against the Istituto
Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (hereinafter 'the INPS') for reparation for the
loss or damage sustained as a result of the belated transposition of the Directive.
- The Directive is intended to guarantee to employees a minimum level of protection
under Community law in the event of the insolvency of their employer, without
prejudice to more favourable provisions existing in the Member States. To that
end it provides in particular for specific guarantees of payment of outstanding
claims to remuneration.
- Under Article 11(1) of the Directive, the Member States were required to bring
into force the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply
with the Directive before 23 October 1983.
- The Italian Republic failed to fulfil that obligation, as the Court found in its
judgment in Case 22/87 Commission v Italy [1989] ECR 143.
- Furthermore, in Joined Cases C-6/90 and C-9/90 Francovich and Others [1991] ECR I-5357 (hereinafter 'Francovich I'), the Court held, first, that the provisions of the
Directive which determine the rights of employees must be interpreted as meaning
that the persons concerned could not enforce those rights against the State in
proceedings before the national courts where no implementing measures were
adopted within the prescribed period and, secondly, that the Member State was
required to make good loss or damage caused to individuals by failure to transpose
the Directive.
- On 27 January 1992, the Italian Government adopted Legislative Decree No 80
(GURI No 36, 13 February 1992, hereinafter 'the Legislative Decree'), pursuant
to Article 48 of Enabling Law No 428 of 29 December 1990.
- Article 2(7) of the Legislative Decree lays down the conditions governing
reparation for the loss or damage caused by the belated transposition of the
Directive, by reference to the terms laid down, pursuant to the Directive, for giving
effect to the liability of the guarantee institutions in favour of employees who have
suffered as a result of their employer's insolvency. That provision is worded as
follows:
'For the purposes of determining any compensation to be paid to employees under
the procedures referred to in Article 1(1) (namely, insolvency, composition with
creditors, compulsory administrative liquidation and the extraordinary
administration of large undertakings in periods of crisis) by way of reparation of the
loss or damage resulting from the failure to transpose Directive 80/987/EEC within
the prescribed period, the relevant time-limits, measures and procedures shall be
those referred to in Article 2(1), (2) and (4). The action for reparation must be
brought within a period of one year to run from the date of entry into force of this
Decree.'
- Article 2(1) of the Legislative Decree provides that the guarantee covers:
'wage claims, other than those relating to severance pay, appertaining to the last
three months of the employment relationship falling within the 12 months
preceding:
(a) the date of the measure initiating one of the procedures listed in Article 1(1).'
- It appears from the orders for reference that the period of 12 months to which the
latter provision refers is calculated retroactively from the date of the decision
declaring the undertaking concerned insolvent (or similar measure opening
insolvency proceedings).
- Moreover, under Article 2(2) of the Legislative Decree:
'Payment effected by the (Guarantee) Fund pursuant to the first paragraph may
not exceed a sum equal to three times the maximum amount of the special
supplementary monthly pay net of pension and social security deductions.'
- Article 2(4)(c) adds that the payment may not be aggregated with the indennità di
mobilità (job-seeker's allowance) granted pursuant to Law No 223 of 23 July 1991
in the three months following the termination of the employment relationship.
- The plaintiffs in the main proceedings, whose employers had been declared
insolvent after 23 October 1983 and before the entry into force of the Legislative
Decree, brought an action before the Pretura Circondariale, Venice, seeking
reparation from the INPS for the loss or damage sustained as a result of the
belated transposition of the Directive.
- They claimed that they were entitled to be compensated for all the outstanding
claims which had arisen during the last three months of their contracts of
employment, including for each month, their salary, an amount corresponding to
the monthly fraction of their 13th and 14th months' salary, pay in lieu of unused
holiday entitlement, statutory interest and an adjustment for inflation as from the
date of the insolvency of their employer.
- The national court was uncertain as to the compatibility of the compensation
scheme established by the Legislative Decree with the principle of State liability for
loss or damage caused to individuals by a breach of Community law, as set out by
the Court in Francovich I, cited above, inasmuch as the Legislative Decree
retroactively reduces, in some cases to a considerable degree, the extent of the
reparation to which individuals who have suffered harm could lay claim. The
national court also had doubts as to the compatibility of several provisions of the
Legislative Decree with the Directive implemented by it.
- In that connection the relevant provisions of the Directive are set out below.
- Under Article 2(1) of the Directive, an employer is deemed to be in a state of
insolvency:
(a) where a request has been made for the opening of proceedings to satisfy
collectively the claims of the employer's creditors and which make it
possible to take into consideration the claims of employees against the
employer; and
(b) where the competent authority has either decided to open the proceedings,
or established that the employer's undertaking or business has been
definitively closed down and that the available assets are insufficient to
warrant the opening of the proceedings.
- Article 3(1) of the Directive provides that Member States are to take the measures
necessary to ensure that guarantee institutions guarantee payment of employees'
outstanding claims resulting from contracts of employment or employment
relationships and relating to pay for the period prior to a given date; under Article
3(2), that date is, at the choice of the Member States, to be either the date of the
onset of the employer's insolvency, or that of the notice of dismissal issued on
account of the employer's insolvency, or, alternatively, that of the onset of the
employer's insolvency or that on which the contract of employment or the
employment relationship was discontinued on account of the employer's insolvency.
- However, under Article 4(2) of the Directive, payment may be limited to
outstanding claims relating to pay for certain periods, according to the choice made
by the Member States pursuant to Article 3(2), namely:
- the last three months of the contract of employment or employment
relationship occurring within a period of six months preceding the date of
the onset of the employer's insolvency;
- the last three months of the contract of employment or employment
relationship preceding the date of the notice of dismissal issued to the
employee on account of the employer's insolvency;
- the last 18 months of the contract of employment or employment
relationship preceding the date of the onset of the employer's insolvency or
the date on which the contract of employment or the employment
relationship was discontinued on account of the employer's insolvency, in
which case Member States may limit the liability to make payment to pay
corresponding to a period of eight weeks or to several shorter periods
totalling eight weeks.
- Article 4(3) of the Directive further allows Member States to set a ceiling on
payments in order to avoid the payment of sums going beyond the social objective
of the Directive.
- Under Article 9 of the Directive, the Member States may apply or introduce
provisions which are more favourable to employees.
- Lastly, Article 10 of the Directive preserves in particular the option of Member
States 'to take the measures necessary to avoid abuses'.
- In view of the foregoing, the national court decided to refer the following questions
to the Court for a preliminary ruling:
'1. Is a domestic rule (Article 2(7) in conjunction with Article 2(4) of Italian
Legislative Decree No 80 of 27 January 1992), which reduces ex post facto
the amount of the compensation for damage which has already occurred,
compatible with the system established by the EC Treaty, as described in
the judgment in Francovich concerning the liability to individuals of a
Member State which has breached Community obligations?
2. Does the expression "onset of insolvency" in the first indent of Article 3(2)
and the first indent of Article 4(2) of Directive 80/987/EEC correspond to
the date on which the request was made for insolvency proceedings to be
opened or to the date on which such proceedings opened (both of which are
mentioned in Article 2)?
3. Can Article 4(3) and Article 10 of the Directive be interpreted as meaning
that the Member State may preclude the payment of employment claims
which accrued before dismissal where a different benefit (namely the
indennità di mobilità (job-seeker's allowance) provided for by Articles 4 and
16 of Italian Law No 223 of 23 July 1991) covers the needs of workers
remaining unemployed during the months following dismissal?
4. Must the expression "the last three months of the contract of employment"
in Article 4(2) be interpreted as the "the last three solar months" or "the
three months preceding the termination of the employment relationship",
even if this occurred on a date at some intermediate point in the month?'
Admissibility of the questions submitted
- The INPS contends that Community law can furnish no information to assist the
national court in determining the dispute in the main proceedings other than that
which the Court of Justice has already had occasion to provide in Joined Cases
C-6/90 and C-9/90 Francovich I, cited above.
- The INPS adds that the Court has no jurisdiction to interpret the provisions of a
directive which do not have direct effect and that any conflict between Community
law and national law must be resolved by the Corte Costituzionale (Constitutional
Court) which has already adjudicated on the validity of Article 2(7) of the
Legislative Decree.
- According to settled case-law, it is solely for the national courts before which
actions are brought, and which must bear the responsibility for the subsequent
judicial decision, to determine in the light of the particular facts of each case both
the need for a preliminary ruling in order to enable them to deliver judgment and
the relevance of the questions which they submit to the Court (see, in particular,
Case C-297/94 Bruyère and Others v Belgian State [1996] ECR I-1551, paragraph
19). Only where it is quite obvious that the interpretation of Community law or
examination of the validity of a Community rule sought by a national court bears
no relation to the actual facts of the main action or its purpose may a reference for
a preliminary ruling be held to be inadmissible (see, in particular, Case C-415/93
Bosman [1995] ECR I-4921, paragraph 61).
- In this case, it need merely be noted that the scheme established by the Legislative
Decree to compensate employees for the belated transposition of the Directive
refers expressly to the provisions of the Legislative Decree transposing the
Directive into the Italian legal system, and that the national court considered it
necessary to seek a ruling from the Court concerning the interpretation of
Community law in order to enable it to assess the compatibility therewith of the
national provisions at issue and their application to this case by the INPS.
- Moreover, under Article 177 of the Treaty, the Court has jurisdiction to give
preliminary rulings concerning the interpretation of acts of the Community
institutions, regardless of whether they are directly applicable (Case 111/75
Mazzalai v Ferrovia del Renon [1976] ECR 657, paragraph 7).
- The objections raised by the INPS regarding the admissibility of the questions
referred for a preliminary ruling and the jurisdiction of the Court cannot therefore
be upheld.
- For its part, the Italian Government considers that the order for reference does not
contain the factual information necessary to enable the Court to provide a useful
answer and the Governments of the Member States and other interested parties
to submit their observations in accordance with Article 20 of the Statute of the
Court of Justice. On that ground the reference for a preliminary ruling should be
held to be inadmissible.
- It is clear from paragraphs 1 to 14 of this judgment and from the observations
submitted to the Court, in particular by the Italian Government itself, that the
latter and the Governments of the other Member States, the institutions and other
interested parties have been adequately informed by the order for reference of the
factual and legislative background to the questions referred for a preliminary ruling.
- Consequently, the objections raised by the Italian Government regarding the
admissibility of the reference for a preliminary ruling must be rejected. The
questions submitted must therefore be answered.
First question
- By its first question the national court asks, essentially, whether, in making good
loss or damage sustained by employees as a result of the belated transposition of
the Directive, a Member State is entitled to apply retroactively to such employees
belatedly adopted implementing measures, including the rules against aggregation
or other limitations on the liability of the guarantee institution provided for by
those measures.
- In that connection, the Court has repeatedly held that the principle of State liability
for loss and damage caused to individuals as a result of breaches of Community law
for which the State can be held responsible is inherent in the system of the Treaty
(Francovich I, cited above, paragraph 35; Joined Cases C-46/93 and C-48/93
Brasserie du Pêcheur and Factortame [1996] ECR I-1029, paragraph 31; Case
C-392/93 British Telecommunications [1996] ECR I-1631, paragraph 38; and Case
C-5/94 Hedley Lomas [1996] ECR I-2553, paragraph 24; Joined Cases C-178/94,
C-179/94, C-188/94, C-189/94 and C-190/94 Dillenkofer and Others [1996] ECR I-4845, paragraph 20).
- With regard to the conditions under which a Member State is required to make
good the loss or damage thus caused, it follows from the case-law cited above that
these are three in number, namely that the rule of law infringed must have been
intended to confer rights on individuals; the breach must be sufficiently serious; and
there must be a direct causal link between the breach of the obligation resting on
the State and the damage sustained by the injured parties (Brasserie du Pêcheur and
Factortame, paragraph 51; British Telecommunications, paragraph 39; Hedley Lomas,
paragraph 25; and Dillenkofer and Others, paragraph 21). Those conditions are to
be applied according to each type of situation (Dillenkofer and Others, paragraph
24).
- As for the extent of the reparation payable by the Member State responsible for
the breach of Community law, it follows from Brasserie du Pêcheur and Factortame,
cited above, paragraph 82, that reparation must be commensurate with the loss or
damage sustained, that is to say so as to ensure effective protection for the rights
of the individuals harmed.
- Lastly, it follows from consistent case-law since Francovich I, cited above, at
paragraphs 41 to 43, that, subject to the foregoing, it is on the basis of the rules of
national law on liability that the State must make reparation for the consequences
of the loss or damage caused; further, the conditions for reparation of loss or
damage laid down by national law must not be less favourable than those relating
to similar domestic claims and must not be so framed as to make it virtually
impossible or excessively difficult to obtain reparation.
- In the event, the Court has already held in Francovich I, cited above, paragraph 46,
that the Member State concerned was required to make good loss or damage
caused to individuals by the failure to transpose the Directive within the prescribed
period.
- As regards the extent of the reparation for the loss or damage arising from such
failure, it should be noted that retroactive application in full of the measures
implementing the Directive to employees who have suffered as a result of belated
transposition enables in principle the harmful consequences of the breach of
Community law to be remedied, provided that the Directive has been properly
transposed. Such application should have the effect of guaranteeing to those
employees the rights from which they would have benefited if the Directive had
been transposed within the prescribed period (see also the judgment of today's date
in Joined Cases C-94/95 and C-95/95 Bonifaci and Others and Berto and Others
[1997] ECR I-0000, paragraphs 51 to 54).
- Retroactive application in full of the measures implementing the Directive
necessarily implies that any rules against aggregation contained in the transposition
measure may also be applied, provided they do not affect the rights conferred on
individuals by the Directive, as well as limitations on the guarantee institution's
liability, in accordance with the conditions and rules laid down in the Directive,
where the Member State has in fact limited that liability when transposing the
Directive into national law.
- However, it is for the national court to ensure, in the proceedings before it, having
regard to the principles set out in the Court's case-law, as recorded in paragraphs
34 to 37 of this judgment, that reparation of the loss or damage sustained by the
beneficiaries is adequate. Retroactive and proper application in full of the
measures implementing the Directive will suffice for that purpose unless the
beneficiaries establish the existence of complementary loss sustained on account of
the fact that they were unable to benefit at the appropriate time from the financial
advantages guaranteed by the Directive with the result that such loss must also be
made good.
- The answer to the first question must therefore be that, in making good the loss
or damage sustained by employees as a result of the belated transposition of the
Directive, a Member State is entitled to apply retroactively to such employees
belatedly adopted implementing measures, including rules against aggregation or
other limitations on the liability of the guarantee institution, provided that the
Directive has been properly transposed. However, it is for the national court to
ensure that reparation of the loss or damage sustained by the beneficiaries is
adequate. Retroactive and proper application in full of the measures implementing
the Directive will suffice for that purpose unless the beneficiaries establish the
existence of complementary loss sustained on account of the fact that they were
unable to benefit at the appropriate time from the financial advantages guaranteed
by the Directive with the result that such loss must also be made good.
Second question
- In its second question, the national court seeks essentially to ascertain the meaning
of the term 'onset of the employer's insolvency' used in Articles 3(2) and 4(2) of
the Directive. It asks, in particular, whether the onset of the employer's insolvency,
within the meaning of those provisions, corresponds to the date of the request that
proceedings for satisfying collectively the claims of creditors be opened or to the
date of the decision to open such proceedings, which are both referred to in Article
2(1) of the Directive.
- In Case C-479/93 Francovich v Italian Republic [1995] ECR I-3843 (hereinafter
'Francovich II'), paragraph 18, the Court considered that it was clear from the
terms of Article 2(1) that in order for an employer to be deemed to be in a state
of insolvency, it is necessary, first, that the laws, regulations and administrative
provisions of the Member State concerned provide for proceedings involving the
employer's assets to satisfy collectively the claims of creditors; secondly, that
employees' claims resulting from contracts of employment or employment
relationships may be taken into consideration in such proceedings; thirdly, that a
request has been made for the proceedings to be opened; and, fourthly, that the
authority competent under the said national provisions has either decided to open
the proceedings or established that the employer's undertaking or business has
been definitively closed down and that the available assets are insufficient to
warrant the opening of the proceedings.
- It therefore appears that, for the Directive to apply, two events must have
occurred: first, a request for proceedings to be opened to satisfy collectively the
claims of creditors must have been lodged with the competent national authority
and, secondly, there must have been either a decision to open those proceedings,
or a finding that the business has been closed down where the available assets are
insufficient.
- Although the occurrence of those two events referred to in Article 2(1) of the
Directive is a condition precedent for the guarantee provided for in the Directive
to come into play, nevertheless it cannot serve to identify the outstanding claims
which are subject to the guarantee. That question is governed by Articles 3 and
4 of the Directive, which necessarily refer to a single date prior to which the
reference periods specified in those articles must run.
- Thus, Article 3 of the Directive offers Member States the option to choose from
among several possibilities the date prior to which unpaid remuneration will be
guaranteed. It is by taking account of the choice thus made by Member States that
Article 4(2) of the Directive determines the outstanding claims which in any event
will have to be covered by the guarantee obligation if, as in this case, a Member
State has decided, pursuant to Article 4(1), to limit liability to a specific period.
- In the event, the Italian State opted for the date of the onset of the employer's
insolvency referred to in Article 3(2), first indent, and Article 4(2), first indent, and
extended the reference period from six to twelve months.
- It follows from the foregoing that although application of the system for protecting
employees established by the Directive requires both a request to open proceedings
to satisfy collectively the claims of creditors as laid down by the legislation of the
Member State concerned and a formal decision opening such proceedings,
determination of outstanding claims which must be guaranteed by the Directive is
made in accordance with Articles 3(2), first indent, and 4(2) in relation to the onset
of the employer's insolvency, which does not necessarily coincide with the date of
that decision.
- As is clear, moreover, from the circumstances of the case, the decision to open
proceedings to satisfy collectively the claims of creditors or, more precisely, in this
case the judgment declaring the firm insolvent, may be given long after the request
to open the proceedings or the discontinuation of the periods of employment to
which the unpaid remuneration relates, so that, if the onset of the employer's
insolvency were subject to fulfilment of the conditions set out in Article 2(1) of the
Directive, payment of that remuneration might, given the temporal limits referred
to in Article 4(2), never be guaranteed by the Directive, for reasons wholly
unconnected with the conduct of the employees. That last consequence would be
contrary to the purpose of the Directive which is, as the first recital in its preamble
makes clear, to provide a minimum level of Community protection for employees
in the event of the insolvency of the employer.
- The definition of the onset of the employer's insolvency cannot, nevertheless, be
equated purely and simply, as the plaintiffs in the main proceedings maintain, with
the date when payment of remuneration ceases. For the purpose of identifying the
outstanding claims which must be guaranteed by the Directive, Articles 3 and 4(2)
refer to a period prior to the date of the onset of insolvency. If the argument of
the plaintiffs in the main proceedings were accepted, the necessary conclusion
would be that, prior to that date, the employer had not, by definition, ceased paying
remuneration, with the result that Articles 3 and 4(2) would be rendered nugatory.
- In view of both the social purpose of the Directive and the need to settle precisely
the reference periods to which the Directive attaches legal effects, the term 'onset
of the employer's insolvency' used in Articles 3(2) and 4(2) must be interpreted as
designating the date of the request that proceedings to satisfy collectively the claims
of creditors be opened, since the guarantee cannot be provided prior to a decision
to open such proceedings or to a finding that the business has been definitively
closed down where the assets are insufficient.
- That definition of the term 'onset of the employer's insolvency' cannot, however,
preclude the option available to the Member States, acknowledged in Article 9 of
the Directive, of applying or introducing provisions that are more favourable to
employees, in particular for the purpose of including unpaid remuneration during
a period subsequent to the lodging of a request that proceedings to satisfy
collectively the claims of creditors be opened (see also the judgment of today's date
in Joined Cases C-94/95 and C-95/95 Bonifaci and Others and Berto and Others,
cited above, at paragraphs 36 to 43).
- The answer to the second question must therefore be that the 'onset of the
employer's insolvency', referred to in Articles 3(2) and 4(2) of the Directive,
corresponds to the date of the request that proceedings to satisfy collectively the
claims of creditors be opened, since the guarantee cannot be provided prior to the
decision to open such proceedings or to a finding that the business has been
definitively closed down where the assets are insufficient.
Third question
- By its third question, the national court asks essentially whether Articles 4(3) and
10 of the Directive must be interpreted as meaning that a Member State may
prohibit the aggregation of amounts guaranteed by the Directive with an allowance
such as the indennità di mobilità, provided for in Articles 4 and 16 of Law No 223
of 23 July 1991, which is aimed at meeting the needs of an employee who has been
dismissed during the three months following termination of the employment
relationship.
- Article 4(3) of the Directive offers the Member States the option of setting a
ceiling to the liability for employees' outstanding claims in order to avoid the
payment of sums going beyond the social objective of the Directive. That objective
consists, as was recalled in paragraph 50 of this judgment, in guaranteeing
employees a minimum level of Community protection in the event of the
employer's insolvency through payment of outstanding claims resulting from
contracts of employment or employment relationships and covering remuneration
relating to a specific period.
- It appears from the file on the case that the allowance which Article 2(4)(c) of the
Legislative Decree prohibits from being aggregated with the claims guaranteed by
the Directive does not arise from contracts of employment or employment
relationships since it is paid by definition only after the employee has been
dismissed and therefore is not aimed at remunerating the services performed in an
employment relationship.
- Moreover, although Article 10 of the Directive allows Member States to take the
measures necessary to avoid abuses, neither the order for reference nor the
observations submitted to the Court furnish any indications which might establish
the existence of any abuse which the rule against aggregation in question could be
intended to forestall.
- The answer to the third question must therefore be that Articles 4(3) and 10 of the
Directive must be interpreted as meaning that a Member State may not prohibit
the aggregation of amounts guaranteed by the Directive with an allowance such as
the indennità di mobilità, provided for in Articles 4 and 16 of Law No 223 of 23
July 1991, which is aimed at meeting the needs of an employee who has been
dismissed during the three months following termination of the employment
relationship.
Fourth question
- By its fourth question, the national court seeks to ascertain the meaning of the
phrase 'the last three months of the contract of employment or employment
relationship' used in Article 4(2) of the Directive.
- It should be noted that Article 4(2) of the Directive guarantees payment of
outstanding claims relating to pay
- for the last three months of the contract of employment or employment
relationship either occurring within a period of six months preceding the
date of the onset of the employer's insolvency or preceding the date of the
notice of dismissal issued to the employee on account of the employer's
insolvency,
- or again, for the last eighteen months of the contract of employment or
employment relationship preceding either the date of the onset of the
employer's insolvency or the date on which the contract of employment or
the employment relationship with the employee is discontinued, the
Member States being entitled to limit that period to eight weeks or to
several shorter periods totalling eight weeks.
- It follows from the purpose of the Directive that the period of three months to
which the pay guaranteed by Article 4(2) relates is expressed in calendar months
in that it represents a period of time between the day of the month corresponding
to the event referred to in Article 4(2) of the Directive and the same day in the
third preceding month.
- As the German and United Kingdom Governments have observed, limitation of the
guarantee to the last three months, whatever the date on which the event referred
to in Article 4(2) of the Directive occurred, could have damaging consequences for
the beneficiaries of the Directive if the onset of the insolvency did not occur on the
last day of the month.
- Accordingly, the answer to the fourth question must be that the phrase 'the last
three months of the contract of employment or employment relationship' used in
Article 4(2) of Directive 80/987 must be interpreted as meaning three calendar
months.
Costs
65. The costs incurred by the Italian, German and United Kingdom Governments and
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 action 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 questions referred to it by the Pretura Circondariale, Venice, by
order of 3 November 1995, hereby rules:
1. In making good the loss or damage sustained by employees as a result of
the belated transposition of Council Directive 80/987/EEC of 20 October
1980 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to the
protection of employees in the event of the insolvency of their employer, a
Member State is entitled to apply retroactively to such employees belatedly
adopted implementing measures, including rules against aggregation or
other limitations on the liability of the guarantee institution, provided that
the Directive has been properly transposed. However, it is for the national
court to ensure that reparation of the loss or damage sustained by the
beneficiaries is adequate. Retroactive and proper application in full of the
measures implementing the Directive will suffice for that purpose unless
the beneficiaries establish the existence of complementary loss sustained on
account of the fact that they were unable to benefit at the appropriate time
from the financial advantages guaranteed by the Directive with the result
that such loss must also be made good.
2. The 'onset of the employer's insolvency', referred to in Articles 3(2) and
4(2) of Directive 80/987, corresponds to the date of the request that
proceedings to satisfy collectively the claims of creditors be opened, since
the guarantee cannot be provided prior to a decision to open such
proceedings or to a finding that the business has been definitively closed
down where the assets are insufficient.
3. Articles 4(3) and 10 of Directive 80/987 must be interpreted as meaning
that a Member State may not prohibit the aggregation of amounts
guaranteed by the Directive with an allowance such as the indennità di
mobilità (job-seeker's allowance), provided for in Articles 4 and 16 of Law
No 223 of 23 July 1991, which is aimed at meeting the needs of an
employee who has been dismissed during the three months following
termination of the employment relationship.
4. The phrase 'the last three months of the contract of employment or
employment relationship' used in Article 4(2) of Directive 80/987 must be
interpreted as meaning three calendar months.
Moitinho de AlmeidaSevón
Edward
Jann Wathelet
|
Delivered in open court in Luxembourg on 10 July 1997.
R. Grass
J.C. Moitinho de Almeida
Registrar
President of the Fifth Chamber
1: Language of the case: Italian.
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