Conclusions
OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
TIZZANO
delivered on 5 February 2002 (1)
Case C-187/00
Dr Helga Kutz-Bauer
v
Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg
(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Arbeitsgericht Hamburg (Germany))
((Social policy – Directives 76/207/EEC and 79/7/EEC – Collective agreement – Pre-retirement scheme – Discrimination between employees based on sex – Possible consequent incompatibility with the directives))
1. By order of 3 May 2000, which was received at the Registry of the Court on 19 May, the Arbeitsgericht Hamburg (Labour Court,
Hamburg, Federal Republic of Germany) submitted two questions for a preliminary ruling under Article 234 EC regarding the
interpretation of Directives 76/207/EEC
(2)
and 79/7/EEC
(3)
in the context of a dispute between a female employee who has reached pensionable age (60 years) and her public sector employer.
In particular, the employee in question complains that for reasons of age she was not admitted to the German pre- retirement
scheme, whereas male employees of the same age would have the right to participate in that scheme.
I ─ Legal background
A ─
Community law
2. Under Article 1 of Directive 76/207:
1. The purpose of this Directive is to put into effect in the Member States the principle of equal treatment for men and women
as regards access to employment, including promotion, and to vocational training and as regards working conditions and, on
the conditions referred to in paragraph 2, social security. This principle is hereinafter referred to as
the principle of equal treatment.
2. With a view to ensuring the progressive implementation of the principle of equal treatment in matters of social security,
the Council, acting on a proposal from the Commission, will adopt provisions defining its substance, its scope and the arrangements
for its application.
3. Article 2 of Directive 76/207 provides that:
1. For the purposes of the following provisions, the principle of equal treatment shall mean that there shall be no discrimination
whatsoever on grounds of sex either directly or indirectly by reference in particular to marital or family status.
2. This Directive shall be without prejudice to the right of Member States to exclude from its field of application those occupational
activities and, where appropriate, the training leading thereto, for which, by reason of their nature or the context in which
they are carried out, the sex of the worker constitutes a determining factor.
3. This Directive shall be without prejudice to provisions concerning the protection of women, particularly as regards pregnancy
and maternity.
4. This Directive shall be without prejudice to measures to promote equal opportunity for men and women, in particular by removing
existing inequalities which affect women's opportunities in the areas referred to in Article 1(1).
4. Pursuant to Article 5 of Directive 76/207:
1. Application of the principle of equal treatment with regard to working conditions, including the conditions governing dismissal,
means that men and women shall be guaranteed the same conditions without discrimination on grounds of sex.
2. To this end, Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that:
(a) any laws, regulations and administrative provisions contrary to the principle of equal treatment shall be abolished;
(b) any provisions contrary to the principle of equal treatment which are included in collective agreements, individual contracts
of employment, internal rules of undertakings or in rules governing the independent occupations and professions shall be,
or may be declared, null and void or may be amended;
(c) those laws, regulations and administrative provisions contrary to the principle of equal treatment when the concern for protection
which originally inspired them is no longer well founded shall be revised; and that where similar provisions are included
in collective agreements labour and management shall be requested to undertake the desired revision.
5. Under Article 6 of Directive 76/207:Member States shall introduce into their national legal systems such measures as are necessary to enable all persons who consider
themselves wronged by failure to apply to them the principle of equal treatment within the meaning of Articles 3, 4 and 5
to pursue their claims by judicial process after possible recourse to other competent authorities.
6. Directive 79/7 was adopted on the basis of Article 1(2) of Directive 76/207
(4)
with a view to ensuring the progressive implementation of the principle of equal treatment in matters of social security.
7. Article 3(1) of Directive 79/7 provides that:
1. This Directive shall apply to:
(a) statutory schemes which provide protection against the following risks:
-
- ─
sickness,
-
- ─
invalidity,
-
- ─
old age,
-
- ─
accidents at work and occupational diseases,
-
- ─
unemployment;
(b) social assistance, in so far as it is intended to supplement or replace the schemes referred to in (a).
8. Under Article 4 of Directive 79/7:
1. The principle of equal treatment means that there shall be no discrimination whatsoever on grounds of sex either directly,
or indirectly by reference in particular to marital or family status, in particular as concerns:
─
the scope of the schemes and the conditions of access thereto,
─
the obligation to contribute and the calculation of contributions,
─
the calculation of benefits including increases due in respect of a spouse and for dependants and the conditions governing
the duration and retention of entitlement to benefits.
2. The principle of equal treatment shall be without prejudice to the provisions relating to the protection of women on the grounds
of maternity.
9. By virtue of Article 5 of Directive 79/7:Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that any laws, regulations and administrative provisions contrary
to the principle of equal treatment are abolished.
10. Article 6 of Directive 79/7 provides that:Member States shall introduce into their national legal systems such measures as are necessary to enable all persons who consider
themselves wronged by failure to apply the principle of equal treatment to pursue their claims by judicial process, possibly
after recourse to other competent authorities.
11. Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7 provides that:
1. This Directive shall be without prejudice to the right of Member States to exclude from its scope:
(a) the determination of pensionable age for the purposes of granting old-age and retirement pensions and the possible consequences
thereof for other benefits.
B ─
National law
12. The conditions for entitlement to old-age pension are laid down in the Sozialgesetzbuch der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, 6. Buch
(Social Code of the Federal Republic of Germany, Vol. 6; hereinafter
SGB VI), which on the basis of a series of variables
(5)
lays down various possible pensionable ages, all of which, however, are between 60 and 65 years (Paragraphs 35 to 40). In
particular, it provides that employees of both sexes acquire entitlement at the latest upon completion of their 65th year
of age (Paragraph 35 of the SGB VI), but at the age of 63 if they have a minimum contribution period of 35 years (Paragraph 36
of the SGB VI) or as early as 60 if for 24 months they have benefited from the pre-retirement scheme, which I shall describe
in detail below (Paragraph 38 of the SGB VI). Pension entitlement may also be acquired at the age of 60, but only by female
employees, if they meet other conditions that are particularly advantageous for the persons concerned (for example, a minimum
period of insurance cover of only 15 years; Paragraph 39 of the SGB IV).
(6)
Naturally, early retirement has to be applied for by the person concerned, who could therefore also decide to continue working.
In this regard, it emerged in the course of the proceedings that once pensionable age has been reached, female employees in
the Federal Republic of Germany who have completed their 60th year of age and meet the conditions laid down in Paragraph 39
of the SGB VI may, as an alternative to drawing the old-age pension, continue to work either full-time or part-time, but in
the latter case obviously on pay proportionate to the actual number of hours worked.
13. As I have just said, the date of entitlement to pension may be brought forward if the employee has benefited from the scheme
for part-time employment on grounds of age (the so-called pre-retirement scheme; Paragraph 38 of the SGB VI). That scheme
is governed by the Altersteilzeitgesetz (Law on part-time employment for older employees; hereinafter the
AltTZG) of 23 July 1996, which has the dual objective of enabling employees of a certain age to make a gradual transition from working
life to retirement and helping to reduce the unemployment rate (Paragraph 1 of the AltTZG), given that the employer is required
at the same time to engage an unemployed person to work alongside the employee working under the pre-retirement scheme (Paragraph 3(1)(2)
of the AltTZG).
(7)
Admission to that scheme is subject to two conditions: that the employee has completed his or her 55th year of age and that
there is a pre-retirement agreement (whether individual, collective or company) between the employer and the employee (Paragraph
2(1) of the AltTZG). Participation in the pre-retirement scheme is encouraged on the one hand by provision for a higher wage,
equal to 70% of the full-time net salary even if the employee's working hours are reduced to one-half (See Paragraph 3(1)(1)
of the AltTZG) and on the other by financial support from the Bundesanstalt für Arbeit (Federal Labour Office; hereinafter
the
Bundesanstalt) to reimburse the employer (out of public funds earmarked to combat unemployment)
(8)
for 20% of the net basic salary and related social security contributions (Paragraph 4 of the AltTZG). The funding from the
Bundesanstalt is subject to certain limits, however: in particular, it cannot continue for more than 5 years (Paragraph 4(1)
of the AltTZG) and ceases when the employee becomes entitled to a pension, and in any case at the latest when the employee
reaches the age of 65 (Paragraph 5(1)(1) and (2) of the AltTZG). In addition, the parties may agree that the pre-retirement
agreement shall also cease to apply when the employee becomes entitled to a pension (Paragraph 8(3) of the AltTZG).
14. Under the relevant collective agreement on pre-retirement employment in effect at the time of the events to which the main
proceedings relate (the Tarif-vertrag zur Regelung der Altersteilzeitarbeit of 5 May 1995; hereinafter the
collective agreement), the employer may, on conditions similar to those laid down in the AltTZG, allow full-time employees of either sex who have
reached the age of 55 to join the pre-retirement scheme (Paragraph 2(1) of the collective agreement). Those who have already
completed their 60th year and meet the requirements of Paragraph 2(1) may participate in the scheme as of right (Paragraph
2(2)), provided that there are no serious impediments on account of service or company organisation. Pre-retirement working,
which must last for at least two years (Paragraph 2(3)),
(9)
may consist of full-time employment for half of the normal period (
Blockmodell, or block model) or part-time employment for the duration of the arrangement (
Teilzeitmodell, or part-time model; Paragraph 3(2)).
15. Under Paragraph 9(1) of the collective agreement, the pre-retirement employment relationship terminates on the date agreed
in each individual agreement. However, subparagraph 2(a) of the same paragraph lays down, inter alia, that the relationship
shall terminate in any case at the end of the month preceding that in which the employee becomes entitled to an old-age pension.
In this way, as the German Government and the defendant in the main proceedings illustrated, the relationship terminates when,
under Paragraph 5(1)(2) of the AltTZG, public financing from the Bundesanstalt ceases. This is to ensure that the employer
does not have to bear the increased cost of employing workers of pensionable age under a pre-retirement scheme.
16. This is the complex German framework of law and agreements, which I have attempted to reconstruct on the basis of the documents
supplied by the parties. If it is correct, I believe it is possible to summarise further and deduce for present purposes that
the pre-retirement scheme leads to early retirement for an employee intending to take advantage of the scheme after reaching
the age of 55 and at the latest until becoming entitled to pension. It must be borne in mind that the pensionable age, although
normally 60 for women and 65 for men, may in certain circumstances be reached as late as age 65 by women and as early as 60
by men. Moreover, the scheme in question is not an end in itself, but is linked, for the purpose of pursuing its objective
of combating unemployment, to the employer's obligation to engage an unemployed person. Furthermore, I wish to emphasise that
for entitlement to an early pension the minimum period in a pre-retirement scheme must be 24 months, with the consequence
that if an employee, of either sex, opts for the scheme at around the age of 60 or after that age, after 24 months he or she
will automatically retire because, as we have seen, the pre-retirement employment relationship comes to an end as soon as
entitlement to pension is reached (see Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective agreement). Finally, I would point out that the
collective agreement provides that when the employee becomes entitled to pension any employment contract in force terminates
(Paragraph 9(2)(a), consistent with Paragraph 8(3) of the AltTZG), which means that an employee, of either sex, cannot participate
in the pre-retirement scheme if he or she is already entitled to a pension.
II ─ Facts and questions for a preliminary ruling
17. Dr Helga Kutz-Bauer, the claimant in the main proceedings, was born on 21 August 1939. She works for the Freie und Hansestadt
Hamburg, the defendant, as manager of the Landeszentrale für Politische Bildung (Political Education Centre). In the belief
that she could increase her pension by paying additional contributions after reaching the age of 60, Dr Kutz-Bauer applied
to her employer between October and November 1998 for a pre-retirement employment contract that would enable her to work on
a part-time basis from 1 September 1999 (at the age of 60) until 31 August 2004 in accordance with the
block model formula, in other words to work full-time from 1 September 1999 until 28 February 2002 and then to abstain from any employment
from 1 March 2002 until 31 August 2004.
18. On 21 December 1998 the defendant rejected the application, proposing instead ordinary part-time employment on a salary proportionate
to the work performed, a form of employment that was, however, of no interest to Dr Kutz-Bauer. The defendant justified its
refusal by pointing out that, although upon reaching the age of 60 Dr Kutz-Bauer was in principle entitled to a part-time
employment agreement on grounds of age,
(10)
her contract of employment would in any case have to end immediately before commencement of the pre-retirement employment
relationship in view of the limits imposed by Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective agreement. As the person concerned met the
conditions laid down in Paragraph 39 of the SGB VI, cited above, she was already entitled to pension at the age of 60.
19. Considering herself to be a victim of unfair discrimination of grounds of sex, Dr Kutz-Bauer brought proceedings before the
Arbeitsgericht Hamburg, complaining that she was denied the right to part-time employment on grounds of age during the period
from her 60th to 65th years of age, whereas male employees of the same age enjoy that right, given that during that period
they can choose the pre-retirement formula instead of continuing to work full-time. The reason for this, according to the
claimant, is that the majority of women become entitled to pension at the age of 60, whereas for men the pensionable age is
generally 65.
20. The national court expressed some understanding for the claimant's arguments and stated that employees affected by the limit
set out in Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective agreement are, assuming equal age, almost exclusively women, and therefore
submitted the following questions to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling:
1. Does a provision of a collective agreement for the public service which allows male and female employees to take advantage
of a scheme of part-time work for older employees infringe Articles 2(1) and 5(1) of Council Directive 76/207/EEC if under
that provision the scheme of part-time work applied only until the time when the person concerned first becomes eligible for
a full pension under the statutory old-age insurance scheme, and if the class of persons entitled to draw a full pension at
the age of 60 consists almost exclusively of women, while the class entitled to draw a full pension only from the age of 65
consists almost exclusively of men?
2. Are national courts empowered, where provisions of collective agreements and legislative provisions are in breach of Directive
76/207/EEC or Directive 79/7/EEC, to apply the corresponding provisions in favour of the disadvantaged class, disregarding
the restrictions which are contrary to Community law, until non-discriminatory rules are created by the parties to the collective
agreement and/or the legislature?
III ─ Legal analysis
A ─
The first question
1. Arguments of the parties
21. Dr Kutz-Bauer and the Commission maintain first of all that the case falls within the scope of Directive 76/207 and in particular,
in the view of the Commission, that of Article 5(1) of that directive, in that the pre-retirement scheme affects working conditions,
which are the subject of that provision.
(11)
On that premiss, both contend that in the light of that provision the German law in question, and hence the collective agreement
as well, is to be considered discriminatory because it differentiates in the granting of pre-retirement employment on the
basis of pensionable age, which differs according to the sex of the employee. In particular, in the opinion of the Commission,
it is
indirect discrimination against female employees, that is to say discrimination that
although worded in neutral terms, work[s] to the disadvantage of a much higher percentage of women than men.
(12)
As such, except that the conditions for the derogations permitted by the directive (Article 2(2) to (4))
(13)
are not met, I would point out that discrimination could be justified by objective factors unrelated to any discrimination
on grounds of sex.
(14)
22. Dr Kutz-Bauer, by contrast, considers this to be a case of direct discrimination, albeit concealed or disguised. In her opinion,
although it is true that the collective agreement contains neutral rules, it is equally true that it makes reference to provisions
which clearly distinguish the pensionable age on the basis of the employee's sex. For this reason she holds that there is
no need to make a statistical comparison between groups of employees to determine the discriminatory nature of the provisions
in question. For the same reason, according to the claimant in the main proceedings, discrimination also cannot be justified
on the grounds that, first, the difference in pensionable age favours female employees and, secondly, that the difference
is lawful on the basis of Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7, which authorises the Member States to maintain different age-limits
for entitlement to old-age and retirement pensions. As to possible objective justifications, the claimant maintains that they
cannot be relevant here, as the case involves direct discrimination. In any event, Dr Kutz-Bauer excludes the possibility
of objective factors unrelated to sex that can justify the discrimination in question. In particular, this applies to the
argument based on the abovementioned difference in treatment between employees of one or other sex as regards the retirement
age, given that that difference is based precisely on sex. Finally, the claimant objects that the discrimination in question
was introduced in the collective agreement of 1995, and is therefore subsequent to Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7, the
provision which safeguards the right of the Member States to determine a different pensionable age.
23. I return now to the observations from the Commission summarised above and point out that these are the arguments submitted
during the written stage of the procedure. As I have said, at that time the Commission was working on the premiss that the
pre-retirement scheme relates to the working conditions of employees who have reached a certain age and hence comes within
the scope of Directive 76/207. On the other hand, in the Commission's opinion, the scheme could not be considered a pension
benefit under the old-age insurance system, so that in the present case the conditions were not met for the application of Directive
79/7, whose field of application is limited to the social security sector.
24. During the hearing before the Court and in the light of further explanations provided on that occasion by the German Government,
however, the Commission modified its position in this regard, maintaining that although the pre-retirement scheme is not part
of the old-age insurance system it could nevertheless fall under the provisions of Directive 79/7 and, in particular, could
be classified as an
other benefit within the meaning of Article 7(1)(a) of that directive, in that it is a social security benefit linked to the risk of unemployment
(see Article 3(1)(a) of Directive 79/7). Consequently, the derogation under Article 7(1)(a) could also in principle be relied
upon in the present case.
25. In concrete terms, however, the Commission also reached a negative conclusion on this point, in that it held that in the present
case the conditions indicated by the Court in the
Thomas case
(15)
for applying the derogation in question are not met. I would recall that in that judgment the Court stated that
forms of discrimination provided for in benefit schemes other than old-age and retirement pension schemes can be justified,
as being the consequence of determining a different retirement age according to sex, only if such discrimination is objectively
necessary in order to avoid disrupting the complex financial equilibrium of the social security system or to ensure consistency
between retirement pension schemes and other benefit schemes (paragraph 12). According to the Commission, however, the granting of pre-retirement employment arrangements to female employees
who have reached the age of 60 would not have serious repercussions on the financial equilibrium of the pension scheme, nor
on the consistency of the German social security system, because there is no necessary and indissoluble link between the various
pensionable ages authorised by Article 7(1)(a), which favour women, and the pre-retirement scheme, which does not favour them.
It is true that to admit a female employee of the age of Dr Kutz-Bauer to such a scheme could jeopardise the effectiveness
of the system, in that a job that could otherwise be given to an unemployed person would continue to be occupied, albeit partially,
but the fact remains, as both the defendant in the main proceedings and the German Government confirmed at the hearing, that
in the Federal Republic of Germany female employees who are entitled to a pension at the age of 60 have the option, instead
of retiring, to continue to work either full-time or part-time (although in the latter case on a salary that does not include
any financial incentive from public funds). It is therefore not apparent how admitting such female employees to the pre-retirement
scheme can seriously jeopardise the objective of reducing unemployment.
26. In conclusion, therefore, both Dr Kutz-Bauer and the Commission consider that the reply to the first question submitted by
the national court should be in the affirmative.
27. The Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg, the defendant in the main proceedings, reposts that in the present case there is no discrimination
against women, either direct or indirect, because, on the one hand it is not true that employees are treated differently according
to sex, and, on the other hand, neither is it true that the linkage between the cessation of the pre-retirement scheme and
the provisions on pension entitlement works to the disadvantage of female employees, because by permitting women to retire
as early as 60 years of age those provisions are intended to favour their situation in the context of a legal framework intended
precisely to protect women.
28. In particular, the defendant in the main proceedings states with regard to the first point that the order for reference does
not contain facts or statistics showing that the employees affected by the limit under Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective
agreement are primarily women. Furthermore, the defendant continues, the comparison of the situation of employees of each
sex carried out by the national court was based solely on age as the determinant for acquiring entitlement to pension, whereas
the Sozialgesetzbuch makes entitlement to a pension for women at the age of 60 conditional on other factors as well, such
as a minimum contribution period. Moreover, the order for reference sets out from the premiss that the persons affected by
the abovementioned limit imposed by the collective agreement are solely women, in other words without taking account either
of all those employees would retire (early) at different ages owing to serious invalidity or occupational incapacity or of
male workers who become entitled to a pension before the age of 65 under provisions that apply to employees of both sexes.
(16)
Lastly, according to the defendant, the assertion in the order for reference that employees entitled to a pension at the
age of 60 are almost exclusively female while those who are not entitled to retire until 65 are almost exclusively male is
incorrect.
(17)
29. According to the defendant, the more favourable treatment accorded to women as a whole is also confirmed at the level of legislation
by Article 2(3) of Directive 76/207 (see paragraph 3) and is explained by the dual role of women, as workers and as housewives,
which leads to an earlier erosion of their energy and hence to earlier occupational incapacity.
30. However, if the Court were to conclude that there is discrimination in the present case, the defendant in the main proceedings
points out that, in accordance with the case-law of the Court, it is for the Member States to determine whether and how to
pursue an objective of social policy, such as combating unemployment; indeed, according to the Court, precisely because the
Member States enjoy wide discretion in defining their social policy, Directive 79/7 does not preclude national legislation
which, although indirectly discriminatory, is aimed at attaining the objectives of that policy and are necessary for that
purpose.
(18)
31. In conclusion, the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg suggests that the reply to the first question should be in the negative, as
the German legislation appears to be justified by the derogation under Article 2(3) of Directive 76/207 and by the objectives
of the pre-retirement scheme itself.
32. Finally, with regard to the arguments put forward by the German Government, I would point out first that in the opinion of
that Government only Directive 79/7 is applicable to the present case in view of the purpose of the pre-retirement scheme
and the way in which it is organised. On that premiss, the German Government recognises that the problem under discussion
stems from the difference in pensionable age but points out that that difference is lawful pursuant to Article 7(1)(a) of
Directive 79/7, as the Court has confirmed.
(19)
What is more, according to the German Government, the majority of women take a favourable view of the difference; moreover,
if in the case of Dr Kutz-Bauer the difference turns into a disadvantage, it is because the person involved does not wish
to avail herself of it so that she may benefit from the pre-retirement scheme. In balancing the various interests at stake,
priority should therefore be given, according to the German Government, to the legitimate expectations of the majority of
female employees, who count on being able to retire earlier than men.
33. Nevertheless, in order to provide justification for the discrimination at issue, the German Government lays emphasis primarily
on the aforesaid objectives of the pre-retirement scheme, stressing in particular that of combating unemployment. For the
purposes of that objective, according to the German Government, it seems entirely logical that public funding of part of the
salary of the worker participating in a pre-retirement scheme ends when the worker becomes entitled to a pension because it
is not possible to use resources intended to combat unemployment to encourage a worker who has already acquired that entitlement
to continue working and occupying a post that would otherwise be available for an unemployed person. The present system, the
German Government continues, ensures that the scheme for protecting against unemployment, which includes the pre-retirement
employment arrangements (and the related financial support), is consistent with the old-age pension scheme, which sets the
pensionable age. By preventing workers who are already entitled to a full old-age pension from benefiting from the funding
from the Bundesanstalt, the system avoids an overlap between the various social security schemes directed towards the same
social policy objectives.
34. In the opinion of the German Government, all this is fully consistent with the case-law developed by the Court with regard
to Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7 in the
Thomas judgment, cited above, in particular where it states that the forms of discrimination under discussion can be justified,
as being the consequence of determining a different retirement age according to sex, only if such discrimination
is objectively necessary in order to avoid disrupting the complex financial equilibrium of the social security system or to
ensure consistency between retirement pension schemes and other benefit schemes.
(20)
The German Government points out that in the
Graham judgment,
(21)
in which the Court had to rule on the overlap between pension benefits and other State benefits, the Court also laid down
that
where, pursuant to Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7, a Member State has set the pensionable age for women at 60 and that
for men at 65, that provision also allows it, first, to provide that the rate of invalidity pension payable to persons becoming
incapacitated for work before they reach pensionable age is to be limited to the actual rate of retirement pension from the
age of 60 in the case of women and from the age of 65 in the case of men and, second, to reserve entitlement to invalidity
allowance, paid in addition to invalidity pension, to those persons who are aged under 55, in the case of women, and under
60, in the case of men, at the time when they first become incapacitated for work (paragraph 21).
35. Hence, while acknowledging the existence of a difference in treatment, the German Government argues that such a difference
is fully justified in the light of the general considerations set out above, which affect the German social security system
as a whole.
2. Assessment
36. By its first question the court of reference asks essentially whether the principle of equal treatment as defined in Directive
76/207 is infringed by a collective agreement which excludes from the pre-retirement scheme established under German law workers
who have reached pensionable age, taking into account the fact that those who become entitled to a pension at the age of 60
are almost exclusively women whereas those who cannot retire until the age of 65 are almost exclusively men.
37. As I have already stated, even before entering into the merit of the question, the parties discussed at length whether in
fact the present case came under Directive 76/207 on access to employment and working conditions or whether instead it is
Directive 79/7 on social security that should be applied. I have to say, however, that despite the arguments put forward in
this regard both in the written procedure and at the hearing it does not seem to me that the terms of the question have been
fully clarified, both because the complex German legal framework was mostly explained verbally and hence in a necessarily
summary form and because, as I pointed out earlier, the characteristics of the pre-retirement scheme under discussion here
are truly unusual.
38. That said, I have to admit that before hearing the clarifications regarding the pre-retirement scheme that the German Government
provided at the hearing I too was more convinced by the arguments put forward by the Commission in its written observations,
which are referred to several times above (see point 21), for treating the case in point as concerning the concept of working
conditions under Article 5(1) of Directive 76/207. The further information provided at the hearing by the German Government,
especially regarding the objectives of the pre-retirement scheme in question and the financial involvement of the Bundesanstalt,
lead me, as they have also led the Commission, to consider that the pre-retirement scheme is a benefit that could come under
either the old-age or unemployment schemes, depending on the emphasis placed on one or other objective of the pre-retirement
scheme and that therefore, either way, the scheme must be considered to fall within the scope of Directive 79/7 (see Article 3(1)(a)),
which is also mentioned by the court of reference and is the express subject of the second question. Consequently, I too consider
that the questions brought to our attention are to be examined from the point of view of the prohibition on discrimination
contained in Article 4(1) of the latter directive (which moreover corresponds to Article 5(1) of Directive 76/207); I would
point out that this article relates that prohibition, inter alia, to
the scope of the [social security] schemes and the conditions of access thereto.
39. As I have stated several times, the central issue in the present case stems from the fact that Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective
agreement, in accordance with the provisions of the AltTZG, explicitly links the time-limit beyond which it is not possible
to continue or commence a pre-retirement employment relationship to the date on which the worker becomes entitled to a pension.
The court of reference and Dr Kutz-Bauer (and, when all is said and done, the Commission too) adopt the premiss that it is
mainly women who become entitled to a pension at the age of 60 whereas for men pensionable age normally comes at the age of
65, and conclude therefrom that the reference in the collective agreement to pensionable age is discriminatory in that among
workers aged between 60 and 65 it penalises almost exclusively women. On the other hand, that form of discrimination is contested
in view of the fact that, as we have seen at point 12, the SGB VI sets the moment of entitlement to pension at different ages
on the basis of various factors, including sex but not only that.
40. Furthermore, the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg adds that the order for reference contains no statistics or other factual information
to support the assertion by the Arbeitsgericht that it is primarily female employees who, upon reaching the age of 60, are
excluded from the pre-retirement scheme by Paragraph 9(2)(a) of the collective agreement. On this point, however, I wish merely
to observe that in the context of a procedure under Article 234 EC it is not for the Court of Justice but for the national
court to assess, on the basis of the information at its disposal, whether in point of fact the abovementioned provision of
the collective agreement does or does not affect a considerably larger percentage of women than men.
(22)
On the other hand, the issue of interest in the present case is whether the reference in the collective agreement to pensionable
age for determining the date beyond which it is not possible to take up the scheme in question has different repercussions
depending on the sex of the employee, regardless of the (much) larger or (much) smaller number of persons in one or other
class affected by the said provision.
41. That aspect aside, however, I am bound to note that there is no real disagreement among the parties about the different treatment
of employees depending on their sex. The disagreement relates rather to other aspects of the question, which I shall now proceed
to examine.
42. Above all, as we have seen, there was discussion among the parties on the question whether the discrimination in question
was to be classified as direct or indirect. It seems obvious to me, however, that here we have a case of indirect discrimination
because, as the Commission observes, although it is true that in setting the limits within which it is possible to conclude
pre-retirement employment contracts the collective agreement refers explicitly to the different ages laid down in the SGB VI
for pension entitlement, it does not make a direct distinction according to sex. I would add that in my view this solution
is also consistent with the case-law of the Court, which recently described as indirect a case of discrimination in which
the different treatment was not overtly based on the sex of the employees but the distinction was nevertheless based on criteria
which in turn were closely and directly linked to that factor.
(23)
43. Hence, given that the present case involves a form of indirect discrimination which is based on sex, and is thus in principle
contrary to the prohibition laid down in Article 4(1) of Directive 79/7, it is now necessary to verify whether such discrimination
can be justified by the reasons adduced by some of the parties intervening in the present proceedings.
44. In this connection, I note first that in the course of the case mention has been made of the derogations under Article 2(2)
to (4) of Directive 76/207, which some parties have considered applicable, as we have seen. However, whereas both Dr Kutz-Bauer
and the Commission cite the derogations under Article 2(2) to (4) but dismiss them as not relevant, albeit for different reasons,
the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg appears to consider that the derogation under paragraph 3 of that article is applicable,
on the ground that the different pensionable age corresponds to the need to protect women that underlies that provision.
45. As I consider that it is Directive 79/7 and not Directive 76/207 that is applicable in the present case, I could refrain from
discussing the applicability of the said derogations. I shall examine them as well, however, both in case the Court does not
share my assessment and because the last-mentioned derogation has an obvious affinity with the derogation under Article 4(2)
of Directive 79/7.
46. To me it is obvious that the derogations indicated in Article 2(2) and (4) of Directive 76/207 have no bearing on the case
under examination, the first because it relates to occupational activities for which the sex of the worker constitutes a determining
factor, and the second because it concerns measures to promote equal opportunity for men and women. Nor, in my opinion, is
there any relevance in the derogation under Article 2(3) of Directive 76/207 (and hence the similar one contained in Article 4(2)
of Directive 79/7). The case-law of the Court has made it plain that the said derogation has no connection, as the Freie und
Hansestadt Hamburg claims, with social reasons linked to the condition of the woman, who is often called upon to perform a
dual activity as a worker and as a housewife; it is aimed instead at protecting a woman's biological condition during and
after pregnancy and protecting the special relationship between a woman and her child.
(24)
47. Moving on to the derogations under Directive 79/7, I recall that all the parties intervening in the present proceedings rightly
focus their attention on Article 7(1)(a) of that directive, which, as we have seen, establishes a derogation from the principle
of equal treatment as regards
the determination of pensionable age for the purposes of granting old-age and retirement pensions and the possible consequences
thereof for other benefits.
48. In this connection, I consider it necessary first to refute Dr Kutz-Bauer's assertion that the cited derogation is not applicable
in the present case because the collective agreement was not signed until 1995 and therefore after the passage of the legislation
which, on the basis of precisely that derogation, sets different ages for entitlement to old-age pension on the basis of sex.
If in fact the pre-retirement scheme is regarded as a social benefit coming under one of the social security headings mentioned
in Article 3 of Directive 79/7, Article 7(1)(a) provides that the reservation regarding the different pensionable ages can
also be applied, in principle, to the consequences thereof for other benefits. Moreover, the fact that the collective agreement
was introduced after the provisions setting those age-limits were created and, in particular, after the directive entered
into force is of no relevance in itself. According to the case-law of the Court, the
maintenance of different retirement ages according to sex may necessitate the
subsequent adoption, after expiry of the period prescribed for transposition of the Directive , of measures indissociable from that derogation and also amendments to such measures,
(25)
even if such measures do not form part of the system for insurance against old age.
(26)
The Court explained that
to prohibit a Member State which has set different retirement ages for men and women from adopting or subsequently amending,
after expiry of the period prescribed for transposition of the Directive, measures linked to that age difference would be
tantamount to depriving the derogation for which Article 7(1)(a) of the Directive provides of its practical effect.
(27)
49. Hence, given that the pre-retirement scheme not only comes within the scope of Directive 79/7 but also qualifies in principle
as an
other benefit within the meaning of Article 7(1)(a) of that directive, let us see whether the scheme in question can in fact be justified
on the basis of that provision. To that end, I must point out that, according to settled case-law of the Court,
where, pursuant to Article 7(1)(a) of the Directive [79/7], a Member State prescribes different pensionable ages for men and
women for the purposes of granting old-age and retirement pensions, the scope of the permitted derogation, defined by the
words 'possible consequences thereof for other benefits', contained in Article 7(1)(a), is limited to the forms of discrimination
existing under other benefit schemes which are necessarily and objectively linked to the difference in pensionable age.
(28)
On that occasion, the Court also stated that that may be the position
where such forms of discrimination are objectively necessary in order to avoid disturbing the financial equilibrium of the
social-security system or to ensure coherence between the retirement-pension scheme and other benefit schemes.
(29)
50. In truth, none of the parties intervening in the present case maintains that the pre-retirement scheme at issue can be justified
in terms of the first objective indicated by the Court, in other words in order to avoid upsetting the financial equilibrium
of the German social security system. Nevertheless, as I have reported at length above, the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg and
the German Government invoke the other objective, insisting on the fact that the aim of the scheme in question is precisely
to ensure coherence between the pension scheme and the unemployment insurance scheme. In particular, citing the objectives
of the system under examination and the public sector financing of part of the salary of workers admitted to the scheme, they
maintain that it is objectively necessary to exclude from the pre-retirement scheme female workers aged 60 or over who are
already entitled to pension in order to avoid jeopardising the unemployment insurance scheme, which is itself one of those
covered by Directive 79/7 (see Article 3(1)(a)), and undermining the coherence between that scheme and the pension system.
51. However, the Commission, for its part, disputes that there is any such relationship between the two schemes in question. In
particular, as I have indicated, at the hearing the Commission pointed out that in the current state of German law female
workers who have reached the age of 60, that is to say pensionable age,
(30)
may choose not to retire but to continue to work full-time or part-time (albeit in the latter case on a salary that is normally
linked to the hours worked). If that is the case, I cannot see how allowing such female employees to work beyond the age of
60 and
at the same time to benefit from the pre-retirement scheme could undermine the coherence between the two schemes in question and, in particular,
jeopardise the fight against unemployment, given that in any case, even in the absence of the pre-retirement scheme, female
workers can continue to work and thus occupy a job.
52. I have to say, however, that things are not as simple as this. Above all, I do not believe that hypotheses which in reality
are very different from one another can be placed on the same footing: on the one hand what one may term ordinary full-time
or part-time employment, and on the other the pre-retirement scheme, which as we have seen has significant and substantial
characteristics at least as far as its objectives, functioning and financing are concerned. One has only to consider that
in the two cases I have indicated the salary is not the same (it is higher under the pre-retirement scheme), nor is the cost
to the Bundesanstalt (which must pay all of the higher salary to the employer). Hence, to allow a female worker who is already
entitled to pension at the age of 60 to opt for the pre-retirement scheme would be tantamount to encouraging her to continue
working in view of the more favourable conditions under that scheme. In this way, as the defendant and the German Government
emphasise, first the social security scheme would incur additional costs, drawing resources away from its other objectives,
and secondly a job that the scheme in question intended for an unemployed worker would remain occupied. In other words, the
result would be the opposite of that sought by the German legislature, which specifically in the light of the fight against
unemployment intended to bring forward as far as possible the retirement of workers who have not yet reached pensionable age.
53. It is precisely the latter observation that in my opinion provides the key to understanding the question under examination
by setting it in its correct context, which has been obscured, partly by a degree of confusion in the debate and partly by
the objective complexity of the relevant German legislation, which for that very reason I wished to describe at length. In
other words, it has to be emphasised that although in the debate the accent was placed only on the age of female employees
and the consequent differentiation between men and women stemming from the difference in pensionable age, in reality the pre-retirement
scheme is linked to the time at which female employees become entitled to pension and it is therefore organised and designed
in an extremely flexible manner corresponding to the multitude of possibilities for which the German legislation provides
in this regard (see point 12). These may relate to the different pensionable ages set for men and women, but they may also
relate to other aspects, such as, depending on the case and equally for both sexes, the psychological and physical condition
of the worker (serious invalidity and occupational incapacity), the type of work (the case of miners), the required minimum
insurance period, the payment of compulsory contributions for a certain number of years, the fact of being unemployed.
54. All of this demonstrates that, as the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg emphasises, the logic of the scheme in question is a perfect
instrument for the legitimate social policy objective of the scheme, which is to bring forward as far as possible the retirement
of female workers who are not yet entitled to a pension so that unemployed persons can fill the posts they vacate. In accordance
with this logic, the point of reference can only be the date on which the person involved becomes entitled to pension, with
all the consequences this entails, including any forms of discrimination as a consequence of that decision: discrimination
on grounds of sex, but also, as we have seen, based on the other situations that I have just described. If that is so, however,
such forms of discrimination cannot be judged to be arbitrary; on the contrary, given what I have stated above and in accordance
with the cited case-law of the Court in
Hepple , they are to be considered as
objectively necessary in order to avoid disturbing the financial equilibrium of the social-security system or to ensure coherence
between the retirement-pension scheme and other benefit schemes.
55. Consequently, I feel able to conclude that a form of discrimination such as that to which the dispute in the main proceedings
relates is necessarily and objectively linked to the different retirement ages for men and for women and can therefore be
justified in accordance with the derogation under Article 7(1)(a) of Directive 79/7 and, in more general terms, by the aims
of the pre-retirement scheme and the objective requirements on which it is based.
56. The reply to the first question from the national court should therefore be that Article 4(1) of Council Directive 79/7 does
not stand in the way of a collective agreement for the public service which permits employees of both sexes to apply to work
part-time on grounds of age only until the time when they may claim a full pension under the statutory old-age insurance scheme
when the class of persons who may already draw such a pension at the age of 60 consists almost exclusively of women, while
the class who may draw it only from the age of 65 consists almost exclusively of men.
B ─
The second question
57. Given the conclusions which I have reached regarding the first question, it would be unnecessary to dwell at length on the
second, as although the court of reference framed it in abstract terms it nevertheless clearly posed the question for the
sole eventuality that the reply to the first was in the affirmative. I shall nevertheless proceed to examine it in case the
Court does not share my conclusions regarding the first question.
58. By its second question, the court of reference asks essentially whether national courts are empowered to disregard provisions
of legislation or collective agreements that are incompatible with Directives 76/207 and 79/7 because they are discriminatory
until provisions which abide by the principle of equal treatment have been introduced.
1. Arguments of the parties
59. Setting out from the initial premiss that Directive 76/207 is applicable to the present case (see point 21), and without returning
to this issue at the hearing apart from drawing attention to Directive 79/7, the Commission maintained during the written
procedure that the reply to the second question would normally be found in the national legislation transposing the directive
(in particular, those provisions implementing Article 5(2) of Directive 76/207) whereby, in the Commission's view, the Federal
Republic of Germany incorporated the two directives concerned into national law. I wish to point out, however, that neither
the court of reference nor the German Government nor the Commission has indicated which measures, if any, the Federal Republic
of Germany adopted to transpose Article 5(2) of Directive 76/207.
60. More particularly, on the premiss that the pre-retirement scheme is essentially governed only by the collective agreement,
(31)
the Commission states that if the German legislature had opted for the first of the three solutions indicated in subparagraph (b)
of that provision, in other words for abolition of the relevant provisions of the collective agreements that contravene the
principle of equal treatment, the problem raised in the second question from the national court would not even arise. If,
on the other hand, the national legislature had chosen one of the other two solutions, that is to say the possibility of declaring
null and void or amending the discriminatory provisions of the collective agreements, the full and immediate effect of the
relevant Community law could have been jeopardised because of the difficulties that the person concerned might have encountered
in obtaining the declaration of nullity or the amendment of those provisions. In the present case, however, such difficulties
should not be particularly serious, because Dr Kutz-Bauer is a public employee. In that case, the national legislature should,
by virtue of the principle of the direct effect of directives, give retroactive effect to the declaration of nullity or amendment
of the discriminatory provisions, at least as regards cases for which legal action is already under way. Indeed, the Commission
observes, any attempt to enforce the rights enshrined in Directive 76/207 by judicial process against the State in its capacity
as an employer would be ineffectual if the declaration of nullity or amendment did not produce its effects from the outset
(see Article 6 of Directive 76/207). If then, the Commission adds, for practical reasons it was not possible to give retroactive
effect to the declaration of nullity or the amendment of the discriminatory provisions, the legislature should provide for
compensation, for example in the form of the payment of additional contributions, in order to satisfy the claims of the interested
party in the present case.
61. If, by contrast, the German legislature did not implement Directive 76/207 in full, the national provisions contrary to the
principle of equal treatment must, according to the Commission, be disregarded in compliance with the case-law in the
Marshall case, in which the Court recognised the direct effect of the directive in question in a case in which the female employee
enforced her rights against the State in its capacity as employer. Nor is it relevant that the discriminatory provisions were
adopted only in part by the State and in part also in agreement with the trade unions (the collective agreement), given that
it is for the trade unions to protect workers' rights. Hence if, the Commission observes, they defended articles of collective
agreements that were contrary to fundamental provisions of employment law, they were acting in a manner inconsistent with
their vocation.
62. The German Government does not express an opinion on the second question from the national court, while the Freie und Hansestadt
Hamburg merely makes a general reference to the case-law of the Court. In particular, with regard to the question of collective
agreements incompatible with Community law, it cites the
Nimz judgment,
(32)
in which the Court extended to such cases the case-law from the
Simmenthal judgment,
(33)
by virtue of which the national court, in applying provisions of Community law, is under a duty to give full effect to those
provisions, if necessary refusing to apply any conflicting provision of national legislation.
2. Assessment
63. In order to reply to the question under examination, I set out from the premiss that Directive 79/7 is applicable in the present
case, for the reasons I have explained at length above. That directive, like Directive 76/207, requires the Member States
to abolish any laws, regulations and administrative provisions contrary to the principle of equal treatment (see respectively
Article 5 and Article 5(2)(a)), and to take such measures as are necessary to enable all persons who consider themselves discriminated
against on grounds of sex to pursue their claims by judicial process (see Article 6 in both directives). Given its subject-matter,
however, Directive 79/7 does not contain a provision corresponding to Article 5(2)(b) of Directive 76/207, which extends the
said obligation to provisions in other acts, and in particular, as far as concerns us here, in collective agreements. However,
it seems to me that that provision contains useful indications for identifying the means that will effectively ensure that
the principal of equal treatment is also respected with reference to Directive 79/7.
64. Indeed, as I have mentioned, the absence in the latter directive of provisions similar to Article 5(2)(b) of Directive 76/207
manifestly derives from the fact that by reason of its subject-matter Directive 79/7 refers as a matter of principle to statutory
schemes. Nevertheless, where the substance of such schemes is defined, complemented or implemented by means of a collective
agreement, as in the present case, the rationale underlying that provision regains its full effectiveness, and hence the associated
solutions must be taken into account here too as possible means of ensuring full compliance with the principles enshrined
in the directives, as Directive 79/7 intends. Moreover, the Court has stated, in case-law of general validity, that
a national court which is called upon, within the limits of its jurisdiction, to apply provisions of Community law is under
a duty to give full effect to those provisions, if necessary by refusing of its own motion to apply any conflicting provision
of national legislation, and it is not necessary for the court to request or await the prior setting aside of such provision
by legislative or other constitutional means,
(34)
even in cases
where the provision at variance with Community law is derived from a collective labour agreement.
(35)
Not only that: the Court has also stated, precisely with regard to the prohibition on discrimination under Article 4(1) of
Directive 79/7, that this also applies to collective agreements,
(36)
because
the fact that the ... Government [of the Member State involved] does not take part in the negotiation of collective agreements
cannot absolve it of its obligation to adopt such
complementary provisions as may be required to ensure compliance with the requirements of Community rules.
(37)
65. That having been clarified, it remains for me to ascertain the concrete powers available to the national courts to safeguard
the principle of equal treatment in a case such as the one before the Court. I wish to recall yet again, however, that in
the absence of indications of the measures adopted by the Federal Republic of Germany to transpose Article 5(2)(b) of Directive
76/207 it is necessary to examine all the possible alternatives in this regard, bearing in mind that whatever solution was
chosen by the German legislature must ensure full compliance with the principles enshrined in the directives.
66. Hence, assuming first of all that the German legislature opted for solutions of the type envisaged in Article 5(2)(b) of Directive
76/207, in particular in the sense of providing for the abolition or amendment of the discriminatory paragraphs of collective
agreements, it is clear that, as the Commission asserts, the employee involved should not be placed at a disadvantage because
of the time which in that case is necessary to pursue her claims by judicial process. This means that abolition or amendment
must be capable of having retroactive effect. On this point I believe it is important to recall the judgment of the Court
in Case C-187/98, in which it was stated, with regard to Directive 79/7, that the obligation for the Member States
of ensuring, by appropriate legislative and administrative provisions, that all workers in the Community are afforded the
full protection provided for by the directive (paragraph 47, emphasis added) also includes the obligation to provide for the retroactive elimination of discrimination
on grounds of sex (see point 48).
67. If, on the other hand, the Federal Republic of Germany did not correctly transpose the directives in question, it is nevertheless
under an obligation to ensure the protection of the rights guaranteed by those directives. In accordance with settled case-law
of the Court,
wherever the provisions of a directive appear, as far as their subject-matter is concerned, to be unconditional and sufficiently
precise, those provisions may be relied upon by an individual against the State where that State fails to implement the directive
in national law by the end of the period prescribed or where it fails to implement the directive correctly,
(38)
because the State
may not plead, as against individuals, its own failure to perform the obligations which the directive entails.
(39)
In the present case, I wish to point out that, in accordance with established case-law, Article 4(1) of Directive 79/7 has
direct effect because it
is sufficiently precise and unconditional for individuals to rely upon it before the national courts in order to preclude
the application of any national provision inconsistent with that article.
(40)
68. It is true that the provision of a directive having direct effect may be relied upon only against a Member State,
(41)
but the Court has also ruled that
where a person involved in legal proceedings is able to rely on a directive as against the State he may do so regardless of
the capacity in which the latter is acting, whether
employer or public authority. In either case it is necessary to prevent the State from taking advantage of its own failure to comply
with Community law.
(42)
Since in the present case the employer is the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg, in other words a local public authority and hence,
in the final analysis, the State, Dr Kutz-Bauer is entitled to rely on the prohibition of discrimination under Article 4(1)
of Directive 79/7 and thus to obtain satisfaction of her rights, even retrospectively.
(43)
69. In conclusion, I am of the opinion that the reply to the second question from the national court should be in the affirmative.
VI ─ Conclusion
70. In the light of the foregoing considerations, I propose that the Court rule as follows:Article 4(1) of Council Directive 79/7/EEC of 19 December 1978 on the progressive implementation of the principle of equal
treatment for men and women in matters of social security does not stand in the way of a collective agreement for the public
service which permits employees of both sexes to apply to work part-time on grounds of age only until the time when they may
claim a full pension under the statutory old-age insurance scheme when the class of persons who may already draw such a pension
at the age of 60 consists almost exclusively of women, while the class who may draw it only from the age of 65 consists almost
exclusively of men.
71. In the alternative, in other words if the Court holds that the described pre-retirement scheme provided for under German law
is incompatible with the principle of equal treatment for men and women, with regard to the second question from the national
court I propose that the Court rule as follows:Where provisions of collective agreements and legislative provisions are in breach of Council Directive 76/207/EEC of 9 February
1976 on the implementation of the principle of equal treatment for men and women as regards access to employment, vocational
training and promotion, and working conditions and with Council Directive 79/7/EEC, national courts are empowered to apply
the corresponding provisions in favour of the disadvantaged class, disregarding the restrictions which are contrary to Community
law, until non-discriminatory rules are created by the parties to the collective agreement and/or the legislature.
- 1 –
- Original language: Italian.
- 2 –
- Council Directive 76/207/EEC of 9 February 1976 on the implementation of the principle of equal treatment for men and women
as regards access to employment, vocational training and promotion, and working conditions (OJ 1976 L 39, p. 40, hereinafter
Directive 76/207).
- 3 –
- Council Directive 79/7/EEC of 19 December 1978 on the progressive implementation of the principle of equal treatment for men
and women in matters of social security (OJ 1978 L 6, p. 24, hereinafter
Directive 79/7).
- 4 –
- See the first recital of Directive 79/7.
- 5 –
- Such as the length of insurance cover, the payment of compulsory social security contributions for a certain number of years,
certain psychological and physical conditions (sex, serious invalidity or occupational incapacity), unemployment, the performance
of a particular occupational activity (in the case of miners).
- 6 –
- The same pensionable age is laid down for those with serious disabilities or an occupational incapacity, unemployed persons
and miners, given the particularly wearing nature of their work (Articles 37, 38 and 40 of the SGB VI).
- 7 –
- That obligation also applies if, as in the case of the applicant in the main proceedings, the employee opts for the
block model pre-retirement formula (full-time work for half of the period for which he would otherwise have worked part-time); in that
case, the unemployed person must be engaged after the employee retires (Paragraph 3(3) of the AltTZG).
- 8 –
- According to the explanation given at the hearing by the German Government.
- 9 –
- This provision obviously depends on Paragraph 38 of the SGB VI, mentioned above, which permits early retirement on condition
that the employee has participated in a pre-retirement arrangement for 24 months.
- 10 –
- See Paragraph 2(2) of the collective agreement.
- 11 –
- See the judgment in Case 152/84
Marshall [1986] ECR 723.
- 12 –
- Judgment in Case C-322/98
Kachelmann [2000] ECR I-7505, paragraph 23.
- 13 –
- Which the Commission considers inapplicable, however, in the present case.
- 14 –
- To that effect, see, for example, the judgments in Cases C-189/91
Kirsammer-Hack [1993] ECR I-6185, paragraph 32, C-1/95
Gerster [1997] ECR I-5253, paragraph 34 (which contains further references), C-100/95
Kording [1997] ECR I-5289, paragraph 25, C-226/98
Jørgensen [2000] ECR I-2447, paragraph 41 (which contains further references), and
Kachelmann , paragraph 23. The same principle applies in cases of indirect discrimination in contravention of Article 4(1) of Directive
79/7, which corresponds to Article 5(1) of Directive 76/207 (see, for example, the judgments in Cases 30/85
Teuling [1987] ECR 2497, paragraph 13, C-102/88
Ruzius-Wilbrink [1989] ECR 4311, paragraph 17, C-229/89
Commission v
Belgium [1991] ECR I-2205, paragraphs 19 and 26, C-343/92
De Weerd, née Roks, and Others [1994] ECR I-571, paragraph 33, and C-444/93
Megner and Scheffel [1995] ECR I-4741, paragraph 24).
- 15 –
- Judgment in Case C-328/91
Thomas and Others [1993] ECR I-1247; in the same vein, see the judgment in Case C-196/98
Hepple and Others [2000] ECR I-3701.
- 16 –
- See Articles 36 to 38 of the SGB VI and paragraph 12 above.
- 17 –
- In order to show that there is no discrimination in the present case, the defendant also states that, if one disregards the
special situation of
Land Hamburg and considers instead Germany as a whole, the number of women who cannot take advantage of the pre-retirement scheme
at the age of 60 is considerably smaller. In fact, in most cases female employees are indeed entitled to retire at age 60,
but on a reduced pension. Under the interpretative declaration of Paragraph 9 of the collective agreement, in that situation
they retain their right to join the pre-retirement scheme. The only exception is
Land Hamburg, in view of the more favourable treatment accorded to women by the Hamburgisches Ruhegeldgesetz (Hamburg Pension
Law). However, as stated above, this is a special situation which is diluted in the national figures.
- 18 –
- See the judgment in
De Weerd, née Roks, and Others and in Case C-317/93
Nolte [1995] ECR I-4625.
- 19 –
- See the judgment in Case C-9/91
Equal Opportunities Commission [1992] ECR I-4297. In order to resolve the problem of different pensionable ages, the intervening Government also states that
the national legislature has now made provision for the difference between men and women to be gradually reduced and to reach
a single pensionable age for all workers, and at the same time has laid down transitional arrangements that reconcile the
ultimate objective of equal treatment with the legitimate expectation of the majority of female workers involved, on the basis
of which women born before 1941 become entitled to pension upon completing their 60th year.
- 20 –
- See paragraph 25 above. However, the German Government also cites the judgments in Cases C-137/94
Richardson [1995] ECR I-3407, paragraphs 18 and 19, and C-139/95
Balestra [1997] ECR I-549, paragraphs 33 and 35.
- 21 –
- Case C-92/94
Graham and Others [1995] ECR I-2521.
- 22 –
- See, to this effect, the judgment in Case C-167/97
Seymour-Smith and Perez [1999] ECR I-623 with regard to the problem of determining whether indirect discrimination on grounds of sex exists or not;
see also
Jørgensen , paragraphs 33 to 35.
- 23 –
- I refer in particular to the recent
Schnorbus judgment, in which the Court held that national legislation which made priority access to practical legal training conditional
on the completion of compulsory military or civilian service (which in the case in point only men were required to perform)
constituted indirect discrimination (judgment in Case C-79/99
Schnorbus [2000] ECR I-10997, paragraph 32).
- 24 –
- Among the many judgments, see those in Case 184/83
Hofmann [1984] ECR 3047, paragraphs 25 and 26, Case 312/86
Commission v
France [1988] ECR 6315, paragraph 13, Case C-345/89
Stoeckel [1991] ECR I-4047, paragraph 13, Case C-136/95
Thibault [1998] ECR I-2011, paragraph 25, and Case C-66/96
Høj Pedersen and Others [1998] ECR I-7327, paragraph 54.
- 25 –
- . Hepple , paragraph 23 (emphasis added); in the same vein, see Case C-104/98
Buchner and Others [2000] ECR I-3625, paragraph 23.
- 26 –
- . Hepple , paragraph 20.
- 27 –
- . Hepple , paragraph 24.
- 28 –
- . Hepple , paragraph 25, which includes further references.
- 29 –
- . Hepple , paragraph 26, which includes further references, including one to the
Thomas judgment that I have already cited several times.
- 30 –
- Provided, of course, that they meet the conditions laid down in Article 39 of the SGB VI.
- 31 –
- And this on the basis of the rather limited indications in the order for reference, where there is not even mention of the
AltTZG.
- 32 –
- Case C-184/89
Nimz [1991] ECR I-297.
- 33 –
- Case 106/77
Simmenthal [1978] ECR 629.
- 34 –
- . Nimz , paragraph 19, where, as I have said, reference is made to the
Simmenthal judgment.
- 35 –
- . Nimz , paragraph 20.
- 36 –
- See the judgment in Case C-187/98
Commission v
Greece [1999] ECR I-7713, paragraph 44.
- 37 –
- . Commission v
Greece , paragraph 50 (emphasis added).
- 38 –
- . Marshall , paragraph 46, which also contains other references.
- 39 –
- . Marshall , paragraph 47.
- 40 –
- . Balestra , paragraph 32 (which contains further references); see also the judgments in
Ruzius-Wilbrink , paragraph 19 (which contains further references), Case C-154/92
Van Cant [1993] ECR I-3811, paragraph 17 (which contains further references) and Case C-337/91
Van Gemert-Derks [1993] ECR I-5435, paragraph 31 et seq. (which contain further references). In the same vein, with regard to Article 5(1)
of Directive 76/207, see, for all, the judgments in
Marshall , paragraph 52, and Case C-188/89
Foster and Others [1990] ECR I-3313, paragraph 21.
- 41 –
- . Marshall , paragraph 48, and the judgment in Case C-91/92
Faccini Dori [1994] ECR I-3325, paragraphs 19 to 25.
- 42 –
- . Marshall , paragraph 49 (emphasis added).
- 43 –
- On the basis of the doctrine derived from the judgment in Case C-187/98 (see in particular paragraph 55).