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Document 61974CC0080
Opinion of Mr Advocate General Reischl delivered on 19 June 1975. # Francine Henrich v European Parliament. # Case 80-74.
Conclusiones del Abogado General Reischl presentadas el 19 de junio de 1975.
Francine Henrich contra Parlamento Europeo.
Asunto 80-74.
Conclusiones del Abogado General Reischl presentadas el 19 de junio de 1975.
Francine Henrich contra Parlamento Europeo.
Asunto 80-74.
ECLI identifier: ECLI:EU:C:1975:86
OPINION OF MR ADVOCATE-GENERAL REISCHL
DELIVERED ON 19 JUNE 1975 ( 1 )
Mr President,
Members of the Court,
The proceedings with which I am concerned today cover to some extent the same subject as that of the recently decided Case 23/74 (Judgment of 12 March 1975, Küster v European Parliament) that is, the conduct of an internal competition — No A/43 — for filling five posts of Head of Division with the European Parliament, Accordingly I can be quite short in describing the relevant facts.
The present proceedings were instituted by a female official of Parliament, whose progress was quite rapid. On 1 February 1960 she entered the service of Parliament as a member of the auxiliary staff, in 1962 she became a secretary in grade C 2, in the following year administrative assistant in grade B 5 and in 1964 administrator in grade A 7. In 1965 the applicant participated in a competition and as from 1 July 1965 was employed as principal administrator in the Directorate-General for Committees and Inter-parliamentary Delegations, in the Secretariat of the Committee on Relations with the African States and in the Secretariat of the Committee on External Economic Relations. On 1 February 1970 there was an interruption in the applicant's career with the Parliament. As from that date she was seconded to Mr Mansholt's office and thereafter to the Office of the French Minister of Agriculture. From 1 May 1970 she resumed her duties with the Parliament, in the Secretariat of the Committee for Development and Cooperation. Since 1 January 1973 she has been in grade A 4.
Along with other candidates the applicant participated in competition A/43 to which I have referred. The Selection Board did not, however, enter her name on the list of suitable candidates and accordingly she was not considered at the time when, by decisions made in February 1974, the posts in question were filled.
This resulted in the applicant on 1 April 1974 making a formal complaint to the President of the European Parliament under Article 90 (2) of the Staff Regulations. In her complaint she argued that the competition in question had been defective for a variety of reasons — I shall go into these later on — and that the appointments made could not therefore stand.
Not having received a reply to her complaint, she brought an action before the Court on 28 October 1974, claiming that
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the implied rejection of the complaints be declared void |
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Competition A/43 be ruled contrary to law and accordingly the decisions resulting therefrom on the appointment of five heads of division be annulled. |
I would comment as follows on these applications, which in the view of the defendant Parliament ought to be rejected as unfounded:
I — |
In the first place I shall go into the applicant's complaint which directly relates to the conduct of the appointing authority. In these the applicant criticizes
In my views these points give rise to the following conclusions:
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II — |
As regards the applicant's criticism of the work of the Selection Board — a whole series of aspects are relevant here — one must on the basis of inter alia the information obtained by the Court (the report of the Selection Board, the statements of Director-General Opitz) say this:
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III — |
Accordingly I am of the opinion that none of the applicant's criticisms provides evidence that the competition or the appointments that were made were defective. The application must accordingly be rejected as unfounded and the question of costs decided under Article 70 of the Rules of Procedure. |
( 1 ) Translated from the German.