Conclusions
OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
RUIZ-JARABO COLOMER
delivered on 14 December 1995 (1)
Case C-315/94
Peter de Vos
v
Stadt Bielefeld
(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Arbeitsgericht Bielefeld)
((Freedom of movement for persons – Military service in the country of origin – Contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective agreement in the country of employment))
1. The question on which the Court has been asked to give a preliminary ruling in the present case was submitted by the Arbeitsgericht
Bielefeld (Labour Court, Bielefeld) and seeks to ascertain whether a national of one Member State, employed in another Member
State, is entitled to have payment of the employer's contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme
based on a collective agreement continued during the period when he returned to his country of origin to perform his military
service there, in view of the fact that the legislation of the State of employment contains a provision to that effect applicable
to workers performing their military service in that State.
2. In the Federal Republic of Germany, Paragraph 1 of the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz (Law on employment protection on call-up for
military service) provides, in so far as is relevant here, that the employment relationship is to be suspended during the
whole period of compulsory military service. Paragraph 14a provides that an existing insurance policy in the supplementary
old-age and survivors' pension scheme for employees in the public service is not affected by call-up for military service
and that the employer must continue to pay the contributions (employer's and employee's contributions) to that scheme at the
level at which they would have been payable if the employment relationship had not been suspended.
3. At the end of the military service the employer must notify the Federal Ministry of Defence of the amount of the contributions
paid, in order to obtain reimbursement. It appears from the documents in the case that that provision also applies
mutatis mutandis to persons performing civilian service in lieu of military service, save that in their case the sums advanced by the employers
in respect of contributions are reimbursed by the Ministry for Women and Youth.
4. Under the German Law on military service, all German citizens aged 18 years or over must perform military service, whether
or not they are resident in Germany.
5. The plaintiff in the main proceedings, a doctor of Belgian nationality, born in 1958, has been employed in the municipal hospital
in Bielefeld since 1984. He is insured with the Ärzteversorgung, an insurance institution for members of the medical profession,
in Westfalen-Lippe and is also entitled, under the collective agreement applicable to employees of the Federal Republic and
the
Länder and to employees of municipal authorities and undertakings, to subscribe to the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension
scheme of a specific pension fund, namely the Versorgungsanstalt des Bundes und der Länder (Pension Institution of the Federal
Republic and the
Länder ) in Karlsruhe. Under the provisions governing that pension fund, the employer pays monthly contributions for the employee.
6. The plaintiff performed his compulsory military service in the Belgian army from 29 March 1993 to 1 March 1994. During that
period, the municipality of Bielefeld, the defendant in the main proceedings, did not pay contributions to the pension fund;
the suspension began on 28 March 1993, with reinstatement on 2 March 1994.
7. In August 1994, the defendant applied to the competent regional defence administration, in accordance with Paragraph 14a of
the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz, for reimbursement in respect of the plaintiff's contributions to the supplementary old-age and
survivors' pension scheme for the period covered by his military service, amounting to DM 6 121, in case it, the defendant,
should have to pay them itself. In October of that year, the defence administration refused the application on the ground
that the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz applies only to employees who are obliged under German law to perform their military service
in the German armed forces, which the plaintiff was not.
8. The plaintiff in the main proceedings seeks a declaration that his employer is required to pay contributions to the pension
fund in respect of the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme for the period during which he was performing his
military service in the Belgian army.
9. To enable it to deliver judgment in the action brought by Mr de Vos, the Arbeitsgericht Bielefeld submitted the following
question to the Court, pursuant to the first paragraph, (a) and (b), and the second paragraph of Article 177 of the EC Treaty:Must Article 7(1) and (2) of Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement for workers
within the Community be interpreted as meaning that a worker who is a national of one Member State and is employed in the
territory of another Member State is entitled to have payment of contributions (employer's and employee's contributions) to
the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme for workers in the public service continued, at the same level as
would have been payable if the employment relationship had not been suspended because of his call-up for military service,
where nationals of that State employed in the public service are so entitled by law when performing military service in that
State?
10. Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 of the Council of 15 October 1968 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community
(2)
was adopted by the Council, as the second recital in the preamble to the regulation explains, to enable the objectives laid
down in the Treaty in the field of freedom of movement to be achieved. Article 7(1) and (2), which the Court is asked to
interpret in the present case, provides that:
1. A worker who is a national of a Member State may not, in the territory of another Member State, be treated differently from
national workers by reason of his nationality in respect of any conditions of employment and work, in particular as regards
remuneration, dismissal, and should he become unemployed, reinstatement or re-employment.
2. He shall enjoy the same social and tax advantages as national workers.
11. Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of the Council 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
(3)
(hereinafter
Regulation No 1408/71), provides in Article 1(j)
(4)
that: legislation means in respect of each Member State statutes, regulations and other provisions and all other implementing measures, present
or future, relating to the branches and schemes of social security covered by Article 4(1) and (2) or those special non-contributory
benefits covered by Article 4(2a).The term excludes provisions of existing or future industrial agreements, whether or not they have been the subject of a decision
by the authorities rendering them compulsory or extending their scope. However, in so far as such provisions
(i) serve to put into effect compulsory insurance imposed by the laws and regulations referred to in the preceding subparagraph;
or
(ii) set up a scheme administered by the same institution as that which administers the schemes set up by the laws and regulations
referred to in the preceding subparagraph, the limitation on the term may at any time be lifted by a declaration of the Member State concerned specifying the schemes
of such a kind to which this Regulation applies. Such a declaration shall be notified and published in accordance with the
provisions of Article 97. (...)
.Article 4, which specifies the matters covered, provides that:
1. This Regulation shall apply to all legislation concerning the following branches of social security:(...)
(c) old-age benefits;
(d) survivor's benefits;
(...)
.Article 13, which sets out the general rules for determining the legislation applicable, provides that:
1. Subject to Article 14c, persons to whom this Regulation applies shall be subject to the legislation of a single Member State
only. That legislation shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this Title.
2. Subject to Articles 14 to 17:(...)
(e) a person called up or recalled for service in the armed forces, or for civilian service, of a Member State shall be subject
to the legislation of that State. (...) The employed or self-employed person called up or recalled for service in the armed
forces or for civilian service shall retain the status of employed or self-employed person;
.
12. Observations have been submitted in these proceedings by the defendant, the German Government, the Swedish Government and
the Commission.
13. The municipality, the defendant in the main proceedings, contends that the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz, Paragraph 14a of which
requires the employer to continue, when the employee is on military service, to pay contributions (employer's and employee's
contributions) to the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme for workers in the public service ─ for which he
will subsequently be reimbursed by the Federal authorities ─ as if the employment relationship were not suspended, applies
only to military service performed on the basis of the German Law on military service. As the plaintiff performed his military
service in the Belgian army, he is not entitled to have contributions advanced by the employer on his behalf.
14. The defendant further contends that, although the Court ruled in a judgment delivered in 1969
(5)
that a worker who is a national of a Member State employed in Germany and who had to interrupt his employment with an undertaking
in order to fulfil his military service obligations in the country of which he is a national, is entitled in accordance with
the principle of equal treatment to have the period of his military service taken into account in the calculation of his seniority
in that undertaking, a right conferred on workers under the same Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz, that ruling cannot be applied without
further ado in the present case.
15. It adds that it is necessary to determine in every case whether Regulation No 1612/68 applies to a specific provision of that
law, since that law does not solely impose on the employer obligations vis-à-vis the employee which may be regarded as conditions
of employment or work, namely that an employment relationship cannot be deemed to be terminated by absence on account of military
service, that the employment relationship must be suspended and the post kept open, and that the period of absence on military
service must be taken into account in the calculation of his professional seniority and his seniority in the undertaking.
A good example is the provision at issue in this case, according to which the employer is only required to advance contributions
for which he will subsequently be reimbursed by the Federal authorities. The defendant concludes that the contributions at
issue cannot therefore be regarded as conditions of employment or work, as they are not benefits accruing to the employee
as a result of the employment relationship but an advantage granted by the State to those called up for military service.
16. The Swedish Government argues in its observations that the contributions paid, directly or indirectly, when a worker performs
his military service must be regarded as compensation for that service and on no account as a condition of employment or work
or as a social advantage applicable to workers of other Member States in the same circumstances as a Member State's nationals.
17. The German Government states that the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz was adopted in order to fulfil the obligation of assistance
and protection incumbent on the State as employer during the period when its nationals are performing their military service,
an obligation based on the relationship between the Federal Republic of Germany and its soldiers arising from the fact that
they are part of its armed forces. Anyone called up for military service must be insured during that period and the relevant
contributions must be paid by the Federal authorities, either directly, or indirectly by reimbursing the person concerned,
for example in the case of self-employed persons. That applies to the contributions in the present case, which are initially
advanced by the employer but ultimately charged to the Federal authorities. For that reason, only persons required under
German law to perform military service enjoy those rights.
18. The German Government adds that this is not contrary to the principle of equal treatment to which the host Member State is
subject under Article 7(1) and (2) of Regulation 1612/68 and which it must accord to workers who are nationals of other Member
States in respect of conditions of employment and work and social and tax advantages.
19. With regard to conditions of employment and work, it contends, first, that the obligation on the employer to advance contributions
cannot be regarded as part of remuneration, since it is not payment which the employee receives from the employer as a result
of the employment relationship and the obligation to pay the contributions rests ultimately with the Federal Ministry of Defence,
and, second, that the case-law of the Court, embodied in the judgment in
Ugliola ,
(6)
is not applicable, since the employer's obligation is closely bound up with that of the Federal Ministry of Defence. If
these two obligations could be separated, that is to say if the employer's obligation was not accompanied by the right to
reimbursement, it would lead to indirect discrimination against workers who are nationals of other Member States, since employers
would be reluctant to recruit foreigners who had not yet performed their military service in their country of origin.
20. The German Government submits that the employer's obligation to advance contributions has nothing to do with the fact that
the beneficiary is a worker or that he is entitled to enjoy freedom of movement but is based on the fulfilment of military
obligations, that is to say an obligation under public law which is not within the scope of Regulation No 1612/68, and it
claims that, in the words of Advocate General Gand in his Opinion in
Ugliola ,
(7)
the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz includes measures of a widely differing nature, some of which are connected with the problems
of national defence, while others do indeed concern questions of employment, these being the only ones to fall within the
scope of Regulation No 1612/68. Consequently, the abovementioned legal obligation cannot be regarded as a
social advantage either, within the meaning of Article 7(2) of that regulation, in the light of the Court's ruling that a benefit cannot be
considered as a social advantage if the main reason for it is the services which those in receipt of the benefit have rendered
in wartime to their own country and the hardships suffered.
(8)
21. The Commission takes the view that Regulation No 1408/71 does not apply in the present case, which is concerned with supplementary
old-age and survivors' insurance to which the worker is entitled under a collective agreement and, under Article 1(j), provisions
of industrial agreements are not regarded as
legislation for the purposes of the regulation. There is therefore, in its opinion, no need to consider either the possible implications
of applying Article 13(2)(e) or whether both regulations may be applicable in parallel.
22. The Commission then considers whether the national provisions at issue are part of conditions of employment or work for the
purposes of Article 7(1) of Regulation No 1612/68 or social advantages for the purposes of Article 7(2). On the basis of
the judgment in
Ugliola ,
(9)
it contends, first, that a law which protects a worker from any disadvantages occasioned by his performance of military service
falls within the context of conditions of employment. And, second, in the light of the Court's ruling that for the purposes
of Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68 social advantages should be interpreted as meaning all advantages which are generally
granted to national workers primarily because of their objective status as workers or by virtue of the mere fact of their
residence on the national territory, it concludes that the advantage granted to German workers, namely reimbursement of the
employer by the Federal authorities in respect of contributions paid when they were on military service, does not fulfil that
requirement, since the provision at issue is essentially linked to the performance of military service and not to their status
as workers or residents.
23. Having regard to the objective of Article 7 of Regulation No 1612/68, which is to secure equal treatment for workers who are
nationals of Member States in respect of any provisions of collective agreements or legislation governing their situation
and, in particular, their economic rights, the Commission considers that the provision of national law at issue, which applies
in principle only to German workers who perform their military service in the German army, should also apply to workers of
other Member States in the same circumstances, since, otherwise, it would lead to discrimination on grounds of nationality
which, in the Commission's view, could not be justified by the need to preserve the integrity of the rules.
24. Lastly, the Commission points out that certain aspects of the present case do nevertheless raise the question whether Regulation
No 1612/68 may be applicable, for example the fact that the employer is required to advance contributions only when the employment
relationship is suspended because the employee is on military service, the fact that such contributions are ultimately chargeable
to the Federal Ministry of Defence or the Ministry for Women and Youth, depending on whether the German worker is performing
military or civilian service, that is, to the institution benefiting directly from the services of those who have been called
up, the fact that matters directly connected with the performance of military service are outside the scope of Community law
and the fact that if the provision at issue were to apply to workers performing their military service in another Member State,
it would impose a heavy burden on employers, who would be unable to recover the sums they had paid. In conclusion, the Commission
claims that, as Community law now stands, unless bilateral agreements on the reimbursement of contributions under an insurance
scheme based on a collective agreement exist or are concluded, the question submitted by the national court must be answered
in the negative.
25. In order to answer the question submitted by the national court, I shall consider first whether Regulation No 1408/71 is applicable
to a worker in the situation of the plaintiff in the main proceedings and then whether the right of German workers employed
in the public service to have contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective
agreement advanced by their employer on behalf of the Federal authorities when they are on military service falls within the
scope of Article 7(1) or (2) of Regulation No 1612/68, in which case it would be applicable to workers of other Member States
employed in Germany on the same conditions as to German citizens.
The applicability of Regulation No 1408/71
26. Under Article 13 of Regulation No 1408/71, the persons to whom the regulation applies are to be subject to the legislation
of a single Member State only. Article 13(2)(e) provides that a person called up for service in the armed forces, or for
civilian service, of a Member State must be subject to the legislation of that State. However, account must also be taken
of the definition of the term
legislation in Article 1(j) of the regulation, as meaning, in respect of each Member State, statutes, regulations and other provisions
and all other implementing measures, present or future, relating to the branches and schemes of social security covered by
Article 4(1) and (2) ─ including old-age and survivor's benefits ─ or those special non-contributory benefits covered by Article
4(2a), but excluding provisions of existing or future industrial agreements, whether or not they have been the subject of
a decision by the authorities rendering them compulsory or extending their scope. In other words, for the purposes of applying
the regulation, legislation in a social security context includes only provisions laid down by law or regulation and excludes
the provisions of industrial agreements.
27. It follows that Mr de Vos was subject to Belgian social security legislation during the period when he was performing his
military service in Belgium, but only to the branches and schemes governed by law or regulation. As the supplementary old-age
and survivors' pension scheme to which he was affiliated in Germany is based on a collective agreement, it cannot be regarded
as
legislation within the meaning of Regulation No 1408/71. Consequently, I concur with the view expressed by the Commission in its written
observations, that Mr de Vos's relations with that scheme are unaffected by the provisions of Regulation No 1408/71, as it
was not applicable and the fact that he was called up for military service in his country of origin did not mean that the
insurance was automatically suspended, as schemes governed by law or regulation would have been.
The applicability of Article 7(1) and (2) of Regulation No 1612/68
28. Under Article 7(1) of Regulation No 1612/68, a worker who is a national of a Member State may not, in the territory of another
Member State, be treated differently from national workers by reason of his nationality in respect of any conditions of employment
and work. It must therefore be considered whether the scheme provided for under the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz, namely that
the employer's and employee's contributions to the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective
agreement are advanced by the employer, who may subsequently claim full reimbursement from the Federal authorities, is a condition
of employment or work.
29. This is not the first time the Court has been asked to interpret Article 7(1) in connection with the provisions of the Arbeitsplatzschutzgesetz.
In its judgment in
Ugliola,
(10)
it answered a question submitted by another German court, which sought to ascertain whether the article must be interpreted
to mean that a worker who is a national of a Member State and who is employed in another Member State, is entitled to have
the period of his military service in his country of origin taken into account in the calculation of the duration of his service
with his employer, in accordance with the legislation of the country of employment, when he interrupts his employment to perform
his military service obligations.
30. The Court held that the Community rules on social security are based on the principle that the law of each Member State must
ensure that nationals of other Member States employed within its territory receive all the benefits which it grants to its
own nationals, that the fulfilment by migrant workers of a military service obligation owed to their own State is liable to
affect their conditions of work and employment in another Member State, and that the nature of those consequences remains
substantially the same whether the worker is called up by the State in which he is employed or by the Member State of which
he is a national. It concluded that a national provision intended to protect a worker who resumes his employment with his
former employer from any disadvantages occasioned by his absence on military service, by providing in particular that the
period spent in the armed forces must be taken into account in calculating the period of his service with that employer, falls
within the context of conditions of employment and must consequently also be applied to the nationals of other Member States
employed in the State in question who are subject to military service in their countries of origin.
31. In the present case, the Court has to decide whether another provision of the same German law, which states that the existence
of supplementary old-age and survivors' pension insurance for employees in the public service is not to be affected by call-up
for military service and introduces the abovementioned arrangements for that purpose, also falls within the context of conditions
of employment and work. It is therefore necessary to consider precisely how call-up affects the employment relationship,
irrespective of the Member State in which the worker is to perform his military service.
32. In my view, there is no doubt that, when the employment contract is fully operative, the employer's contribution to a supplementary
insurance scheme of this kind must be regarded as remuneration, since it is a consideration accorded indirectly by the employer
to the employee on account of the employment relationship. However, the employment contract is suspended while the employee
is performing military or civilian service and the parties to the contract are consequently released from their reciprocal
obligations to perform and to pay remuneration for work. It follows that when employees are called up, the employer's obligation
to pay contributions to the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective agreement is also suspended
until such time as they return to work on completion of their period of military service, whether they are German nationals
or nationals of other Member States.
33. Thus in the present case, unlike the
Ugliola case where the same law required the employer to take account of a period of military service in calculating an employee's
service with that employer, there cannot be said to be any discrimination between German nationals and nationals of other
Member States, since the employer pays no contributions for either. His role is merely to cooperate with the Federal authorities
by advancing on their behalf, for technical and administrative reasons, both the employer's contributions which he is required
to pay when the contract of employment is operative and the employee's contributions which the employee would be required
to pay if the employment contract had not been suspended.
34. However, there is also no doubt that, as the Federal authorities assume responsibility for paying those contributions, a German
national returning to his post on completion of his military service has continued, unlike nationals of other Member States,
to acquire pension rights under the supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme. Does this constitute discrimination,
prohibited under Community law?
35. To answer this question, it is necessary to consider whether that advantage, accorded to German employees but not to nationals
of other Member States employed in Germany, is a social advantage within the meaning of Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68.
36. The Court has defined the concept of social advantage for the purposes of that provision. According to its case-law,
social advantages should be interpreted as meaning all advantages which, whether or not linked to a contract of employment, are generally granted
to national workers because of their objective status as workers or by virtue of the mere fact of their residence on the national
territory, and whose extension to workers who are nationals of other Member States therefore seems likely to facilitate the
mobility of such workers within the Community.
(11)
37. It must be determined, in the light of that definition, whether the right of German workers employed in the public service
to have contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme paid by the Federal authorities when they are
on military or civilian service is granted to them because of their objective status as workers or by virtue of the mere fact
of their residence on the national territory ─ in which case it ought to be granted on the same conditions to nationals of
other Member States employed in the public service in Germany for the period during which they are on military service in
their country of origin. Or is it granted for some other reason ─ in which case there would be no obligation to grant them
that right.
38. Over the years, the Court has held that various benefits must be regarded as social advantages for the purposes of Article
7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68 and must consequently be granted to workers who are nationals of other Member States or to members
of their families on the same conditions as to nationals of that State. They include, for example, interest-free loans granted
on childbirth by a credit institution incorporated under public law to families with a low income with a view to stimulating
the birth rate,
(12)
a social benefit guaranteeing a minimum income for old persons,
(13)
a social benefit guaranteeing a minimum means of subsistence in a general manner to any person who does not have adequate
means and is unable to obtain them,
(14)
cash benefits for young job-seekers,
(15)
the possibility for a migrant worker of obtaining permission for his unmarried companion to reside with him where that companion
is not a national of the host Member State,
(16)
assistance granted for maintenance and training with a view to the pursuit of university studies leading to a professional
qualification,
(17)
birth grants and maternity allowances,
(18)
and allowances for handicapped persons.
(19)
39. I consider that, unlike those examples, the German workers' right at issue in the present case is not granted to them because
of their objective status as workers or by virtue of the mere fact of their residence on the national territory but is granted
by the German Government, as it explains in its written observations, in partial compensation for the consequences of their
obligation to perform military or civilian service.
40. The Court has already held, in
Even ,
(20)
that the right granted under the legislation of a Member State to nationals of that State who have served in the allied forces
between 1940 and 1945 and are in receipt of a war service invalidity pension granted by an allied nation for incapacity for
work attributable to an act of war, entitling them to draw an employed person's retirement pension during the period of 5
years preceding the normal pension age without the reduction of 5% per year of early retirement, cannot be regarded as a social
advantage within the meaning of Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68. The benefit in that case was claimed by a migrant
worker who fulfilled all the conditions except that of nationality. The Court held that the main reason for that benefit
was the services which those in receipt of the benefit had rendered in wartime to their own country and its essential objective
was to give those nationals an advantage by reason of the hardships suffered for that country.
41. As Community law now stands, the question whether or not a person is under an obligation to perform military service is entirely
a matter of nationality and as such is outside the scope of Community law. Member States' practice in this connection differs
as between those that have an exclusively professional army, in which case none of their nationals are subject to that obligation,
and those whose army consists mainly of conscripts, in which case there is a general obligation incumbent on all their nationals
to contribute to the defence of their country. A Member State which imposes that general obligation on its nationals and
in return, for that reason alone, pays them at a certain rate for their services, for example, or allows them to travel on
public transport at concessionary rates or, as in Germany, decides to assume responsibility for paying the employer's and
the employee's contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective agreement, is
not granting them a social advantage within the meaning of Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68, since the fact that the
persons concerned may in some cases have the objective status of workers is less important than the fact that they are performing
a compulsory personal service for that State.
42. As I have already said, German nationals are in a very different position, as regards such supplementary old-age and survivors'
pensions insurance based on a collective agreement, from the nationals of other Member States returning to work in Germany
on completion of their military service. But I would agree with the Commission that, as Community law now stands, that inequality
cannot be removed by application of Regulation No 1612/68. The only remedy is to conclude the necessary bilateral agreements,
providing that contributions to insurance schemes of this kind must be paid by the State if it requires its nationals to perform
military service.
43. I therefore take the view that when, as in the present case, the legislation of a Member State grants a recompense to its
nationals for the period during which they are on military service, whereby the employer continues during that period to pay
the employer's and the employee's contributions to a supplementary old-age and survivors' pension scheme based on a collective
agreement, for which he will subsequently be reimbursed out of the State budget, that recompense does not constitute either
a condition of work or employment or a social advantage for the employee during that period; consequently, Community law,
as it now stands, does not require that Member State to grant that recompense on the same conditions to an employee who is
a national of another Member State and who performs his military service in the State of which he is a national.
Conclusion
44. In the light of the foregoing, I propose that the Court give the following answer to the question submitted by the Arbeitsgericht
Bielefeld:Article 7(1) and (2) 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 meaning that a worker who is a national of one Member State and is employed in the territory
of another Member State is not entitled to have payment of the employer's and the employee's contributions to the supplementary
old-age and survivors' pension scheme for workers in the public service continued, at the same level as would have been payable
if the employment relationship had not been suspended because of his call-up for military service, even where nationals of
that State employed in the public service are so entitled when performing military service in that State.
- 1 –
- Original language: Spanish.
- 2 –
- OJ, English Special Edition 1968 (II), p. 475.
- 3 –
- OJ 1983 L 230, p. 6.
- 4 –
- In the version contained in Council Regulation (EEC) No 1247/92 of 30 April 1992 (OJ 1992 L 136, p. 1). In its observations,
the Commission quotes a version of this provision as amended by the Act of Accession of the Kingdom of Denmark, Ireland and
the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Adjustments to the Treaties (OJ, English Special Edition
1972 (27 March ─ L 73) IX, Social Policy, p. 100.
- 5 –
- Case 15/69
Südmilch v
Ugliola [1969] ECR 363.
- 6 –
- Cited in note 4 above.
- 7 –
- Cited above, ECR p. 374.
- 8 –
- Judgment in Case 207/78
Ministère Public v
Even [1979] ECR 2019.
- 9 –
- Cited in note 4 above.
- 10 –
- Cited in note 4 above.
- 11 –
- Case C-310/91
Schmid v
Belgian State [1993] ECR I-3011, paragraph 18.
- 12 –
- Case 65/81
Reina v
Landeskreditbank Baden-Württemberg [1982] ECR 33.
- 13 –
- Case 261/83
Castelli v
ONPTS [1984] ECR 3199 and Case 157/84
Frascogna v
Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations [1985] ECR 1739.
- 14 –
- Case 249/83
Hoeckx v
Openbaar Centrum voor Maatschappelijk Welzijn Kalmthout [1985] ECR 973 and Case 122/84
Scrivner v
Centre Public d'Aide Sociale de Chastre [1985] ECR 1027.
- 15 –
- Case 94/84
ONEM v
Deak [1985] ECR 1873.
- 16 –
- Case 59/85
Netherlands v
Reed [1986] ECR 1283.
- 17 –
- Case 39/86
Lair v
Universität Hannover [1988] ECR 3161.
- 18 –
- Case C-111/91
Commission v
Luxembourg [1993] ECR I-817.
- 19 –
- . Schmid , cited in note 10 above.
- 20 –
- Cited in note 7 above.