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Document 62002CO0023

Order of the Court (Second Chamber) of 12 February 2003.
Office national de l'emploi v Mohamed Alami.
Reference for a preliminary ruling: Cour de cassation - Belgium.
Article 104(3) of the Rules of Procedure - EEC-Morocco Cooperation Agreement - Article 41 - Principle of non-discrimination in the field of social security - Scope - Unemployment benefit.
Case C-23/02.

European Court Reports 2003 I-01399

ECLI identifier: ECLI:EU:C:2003:89

Ordonnance de la Cour

Case C-23/02


Office national de l'emploi
v
Mohamed Alami



(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Belgian Cour de cassation)

«(Article 104(3) of the Rules of Procedure – EEC-Morocco Cooperation Agreement – Article 41 – Principle of non-discrimination in the field of social security – Scope – Unemployment benefit)»

Order of the Court (Second Chamber), 12 February 2003
I - 0000
    

Summary of the Order

International agreements – EEC-Morocco Cooperation Agreement – Moroccan workers employed in a Member State – Social security – Equal treatment – Refusal to grant to an unemployed Moroccan worker, on account of the lack of an international agreement providing that account is to be taken of work carried out in another Member State, a seniority supplement intended to increase unemployment benefit – Not permissible

(EEC-Morocco Cooperation Agreement, Art. 41(1))

On its proper construction, Article 41(1) of the Cooperation Agreement between the EEC and Morocco precludes a host Member State from refusing to grant a worker of Moroccan nationality resident in its territory the benefit of a seniority supplement increasing the basic amount of unemployment benefit on the sole ground that there is no international agreement providing that account is to be taken of work carried out by that worker in another Member State, even though no such condition is imposed on workers who are nationals of that host Member State.Article 41(1), which has direct effect enabling the persons to whom it applies to rely on it in proceedings before national courts, lays down the principle of freedom from any discrimination based on nationality in the field of social security against Moroccan migrant workers and members of their family living with them in relation to nationals of the Member States in which they are or have been employed. That principle requires that persons falling within the scope of that article of the Agreement may claim social security benefits under the same conditions as nationals of the host Member State without its being possible for the legislation of that Member State to impose upon those persons more or stricter conditions than those applicable to its nationals. Accordingly, the imposition on persons covered by Article 41(1) not only of the requirement that they must be nationals of the Member State concerned but also of any other condition which is not required in respect of nationals, such as a condition, laid down in national legislation on seniority supplements increasing the basic amount of unemployment benefit, which makes the taking into account of work carried out abroad subject to the existence of an international agreement only in respect of foreign or stateless workers, must be regarded as incompatible with that principle.see paras 22, 30-33, 41, operative part




ORDER OF THE COURT (Second Chamber)
12 February 2003 (1)


((Article 104(3) of the Rules of Procedure – EEC-Morocco Cooperation Agreement – Article 41 – Principle of non-discrimination in the field of social security – Scope – Unemployment benefit))

In Case C-23/02,

REFERENCE to the Court under Article 234 EC by the Belgian Cour de cassation for a preliminary ruling in the proceedings pending before that court between

Office national de l'emploi

and

Mohamed Alami,

on the interpretation of Article 41 of the Cooperation Agreement between the European Economic Community and the Kingdom of Morocco signed at Rabat on 27 April 1976 and approved on behalf of the Community by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2211/78 of 26 September 1978 (OJ 1978 L 264, p. 1),



THE COURT (Second Chamber),



composed of: R. Schintgen (Rapporteur), President of the Chamber, V. Skouris and N. Colneric, Judges,

Advocate General: S. Alber,
Registrar: R. Grass, the national court having been informed that the Court intends to give its decision by way of a reasoned order in accordance with Article 104(3) of the Rules of Procedure, the persons referred to in Article 20 of the EC Statute of the Court of Justice having been invited to submit any observations which they might wish to make in this regard,

after hearing the Advocate General, makes the following



Order



1
By order of 6 November 2000, received at the Court on 31 January 2002, the Belgian Cour de cassation (Court of Cassation) referred to the Court for a preliminary ruling under Article 234 EC a question concerning the interpretation of Article 41 of the Cooperation Agreement between the European Economic Community and the Kingdom of Morocco, signed at Rabat on 27 April 1976 and approved on behalf of the Community by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2211/78 of 26 September 1978 (OJ 1978 L 264, p. 1, the Agreement).

2
That question was raised in proceedings between the Belgian Office national de l'emploi (National Employment Office, ONEM) and Mr Alami, a Moroccan national, concerning the refusal to grant the latter an unemployment benefit.

Legal framework

The Agreement

3
Article 41 of the Agreement, which is part of Title III of that agreement concerning cooperation in the field of labour, provides:

1.
Subject to the provisions of the following paragraphs, workers of Moroccan nationality and any members of their families living with them shall enjoy, in the field of social security, treatment free from any discrimination based on nationality in relation to nationals of the Member States in which they are employed.

2.
All periods of insurance, employment or residence completed by such workers in the various Member States shall be added together for the purpose of pensions and annuities in respect of old age, invalidity and death and also for that of medical care for the workers and for members of their families resident in the Community.

3.
The workers in question shall receive family allowances for members of their families who are resident in the Community.

4.
The workers in question shall be able to transfer freely to Morocco, at the rates applied by virtue of the law of the debtor Member State or States, any pensions or annuities in respect of old age, death, industrial accident or occupational disease, or of invalidity resulting from industrial accident or occupational disease.

...

National law

4
In Belgium, under Article 126 of the Royal Decree of 25 November 1991 laying down rules in respect of unemployment ( Moniteur belge of 31 December 1991, p. 29888, the Royal Decree), the basic daily amount of unemployment benefit referred to in Article 114 of that decree is to be increased by the addition of a supplement for seniority, provided that the unemployed person satisfies certain conditions.

5
Thus, the person seeking the supplement must, inter alia :

be wholly unemployed;

have reached the age of 50 by the last day of the relevant month; and

demonstrate 20 years' occupational experience as an employee within the meaning of Article 114(4) of the Royal Decree.

6
Article 70(1) of the Ministerial Decree of 26 November 1991 governing the modes of application of the rules in respect of unemployment ( Moniteur belge of 25 January 1992, p. 1593) provides: For the purposes of Article 114(4) of the Royal Decree, occupational experience as an employee means:

1.
the work days referred to in Article 37 of the Royal Decree ... ;

2.
the equivalent days referred to in Article 38 of the Royal Decree, save for days of full unemployment ...

.

7
Articles 37 and 38 of the Royal Decree are to be found under Title II of that decree, entitled Unemployment Benefit, Chapter II, which deals with Conditions of admissibility, Section 1 concerning Training, subsection 3, entitled Working days and equivalent days.

8
Article 37(2) of the Royal Decree provides: Work carried out abroad shall be taken into account if it was carried out in employment which, in Belgium, would give rise to social security deductions, including those for unemployment.

9
Article 38(2) of the Royal Decree provides: The days during which the worker was unable to perform his or her work abroad in consequence of a situation referred to in paragraph 1 shall be taken into account in so far as they are regarded as equivalent days in Belgium.

10
Article 43(1), which forms Section 3, entitled Foreign and Stateless Workers, of Chapter II of Title II of the Royal Decree, provides, inter alia : Articles ... 37(2) and 38(2) shall only apply within the limits of an international agreement ...

The main proceedings and the question referred for a preliminary ruling

11
It is apparent from the case-file in the main proceedings that Mr Alami is a Moroccan migrant worker resident in Belgium where he receives unemployment benefit.

12
Being over 50 years old, Mr Alami requested payment of the seniority supplement provided for in Article 126 of the Royal Decree.

13
By decision of 12 October 1993, ONEM refused that request on the ground that Mr Alami was unable to demonstrate 20 years' occupational experience as an employee within the meaning of Article 114(4) of the Royal Decree, as required by Article 126 of that decree. He had not worked for that length of time in Belgium and his work experience in France ─ likewise as an employee ─ could not be taken into account in the absence of a relevant international agreement, which is a condition expressly required by Article 43(1) of that decree.

14
Mr Alami brought an appeal against that decision before the Tribunal de travail (Labour Court), Liège, Belgium.

15
However, that court, which raised of its own motion the question of the application of the Agreement, dismissed Mr Alami's appeal. In its judgment of 25 May 1998, it held that the aggregation of periods of insurance or employment in relation to unemployment, which is not provided for in Article 41(2) of the Agreement, is not required by the principle of non-discrimination in the field of social security laid down in Article 41(1) either.

16
Mr Alami then brought the matter before the Cour du travail (Higher Labour Court), Liège, Belgium, which, by judgment of 19 November 1999, reversed the judgment at first instance and ruled that, in a case such as that in the main proceedings, where a worker relies on work carried out in another Member State for the purpose of obtaining the seniority supplement in Belgium, that benefit may be granted only on the basis of Article 41(1) of the Agreement, as interpreted by the Court in Case C-18/90 Kziber [1991] ECR I-199. It found that, while Article 41(2) of the Agreement does not provide for the aggregation of periods of insurance or employment completed in various Member States in relation to unemployment benefit, the prohibition of discrimination in the field of social security laid down in Article 41(1) is, in the present case, sufficient to enable Mr Alami's employment in another Member State to be taken into account for the purpose of granting the seniority supplement under the same conditions as those applicable to workers who are nationals of the host Member State, irrespective of the existence of an international agreement in that regard.

17
In support of its application for review of that judgment, ONEM submits essentially that, under Article 43(1) of the Royal Decree, the seniority supplement may be granted to a foreign worker only if that right is conferred on him by an international agreement. That is not the case as regards the Agreement since Article 41(2) does not provide for the aggregation of periods completed in other Member States in relation to unemployment benefit. Since Article 41(1) states that it applies only subject to the provisions of the following paragraphs and since that reservation means that the prohibition of discrimination which is the subject of paragraph 1 applies only within the limits of the conditions laid down in paragraph 2 et seq. of that article, the rule that Moroccan workers employed in the territory of a Member State are to be treated in the same way as workers who are nationals of that State is not applicable to unemployment benefit, Consequently, the judgment of the Cour du travail, Liège, is inconsistent with Article 41 of the Agreement.

18
The Cour de cassation therefore decided to stay proceedings and refer the following question to the Court for a preliminary ruling: Does the Agreement ... preclude a Member State from taking account only of work periods as an employee completed on its territory by workers of Moroccan nationality for the purposes of determining whether they are entitled to benefit from a supplement for seniority increasing the basic amount of their unemployment benefit?

The question referred for a preliminary ruling

19
By that question, the national court asks essentially whether, on its proper construction, Article 41(1) of the Agreement precludes a host Member State from refusing to grant a worker of Moroccan nationality resident in its territory the benefit of a seniority supplement increasing the basic amount of unemployment benefit on the sole ground that there is no international agreement providing that account is to be taken of work carried out in another Member State, even though no such condition is imposed on workers who are nationals of that host Member State.

20
Since it considered that the answer to that question may be clearly deduced from its existing case-law, the Court, in accordance with Article 104(3) of the Rules of Procedure, informed the national court that it intended to give its decision by reasoned order and invited the persons referred to in Article 20 of the EC Statute of the Court of Justice to submit any observations which they might wish to make in that regard.

21
Only the United Kingdom Government and the Commission submitted observations within the time allowed. They approve the Court's intention to give its decision by reasoned order.

22
In order to answer the question referred, it should first be observed that the Court has consistently held that Article 41(1) of the Agreement has direct effect, with the result that persons to whom that provision applies are entitled to rely on it in proceedings before the national courts (see Kziber , cited above, paragraphs 15 to 23; Case C-58/93 Yousfi [1994] ECR I-1353, paragraphs 16 to 19; and Case C-126/95 Hallouzi-Choho [1996] ECR I-4807, paragraphs 19 and 20; and, by analogy, Case C-103/94 Krid [1995] ECR I-719, paragraphs 21 to 24; and Case C-113/97 Babahenini [1998] ECR I-183, paragraphs 17 to 18, dealing with Article 39(1) of the Cooperation Agreement between the European Economic Community and the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria, signed in Algiers on 26 April 1976 and concluded on behalf of the Community by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2210/78 of 26 September 1978 (OJ 1978 L 263, p. 1), an article drafted in the same terms as Article 41(1) of the Agreement).

23
Second, with respect to the scope of Article 41(1) of the Agreement, the Court has repeatedly held ( Kziber , paragraph 25, Yousfi , cited above, paragraph 24, and Hallouzi-Choho , cited above, paragraph 25, and, by analogy, Krid , cited above, paragraph 32, and Babahenini , cited above, paragraph 26), first of all, that the term social security contained in that provision must be deemed to bear the same meaning as the identical term used in Council Regulation (EEC) No 1408/71 of 14 June 1971 on the application of social security schemes to employed persons, to self-employed persons and to members of their families moving within the Community, as amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2001/83 of 2 June 1983 (OJ 1983 L 230, p. 6, Regulation No 1408/71).

24
Article 4(1) of Regulation No 1408/71 lists, among the branches of social security falling within the scope of that regulation, unemployment benefits, of which the seniority supplement at issue in the main proceedings merely constitutes a subsidiary element (see, to that effect, Kziber , paragraph 25).

25
The fact that Article 41(2) of the Agreement, unlike Regulation No 1408/71, does not mention unemployment benefits among the schemes to which the aggregation of insurance or employment periods applies cannot result in the exclusion from the concept of social security, within the meaning of the Agreement, of those unemployment benefits, which are traditionally regarded as a branch of social security (see, to that effect, Kziber , paragraph 26).

26
Consequently, benefits such as the supplement at issue in the main proceedings fall within the scope of Article 41(1) of the Agreement.

27
Next, the Court has also held that the concept of worker in Article 41(1) of the Agreement encompasses both active workers and those who have left the labour market after reaching the age required for receipt of an old-age pension or after becoming the victims of one of the risks creating entitlement to allowances falling under other branches of social security (see, inter alia , Kziber , paragraph 27).

28
It is undisputed that Mr Alami is a Moroccan national who last worked in Belgium where he is now resident and where he receives unemployment benefit after having lost his job.

29
Such a worker is therefore among those covered by Article 41(1) of the Agreement.

30
Finally, it is also settled case-law that the principle, laid down in Article 41(1) of the Agreement, of freedom from any discrimination based on nationality in the field of social security against Moroccan migrant workers and members of their family living with them in relation to nationals of the Member States in which they are or have been employed means that the persons referred to by that provision must be treated as if they were nationals of the Member States concerned (see, inter alia , Hallouzi-Choho , paragraph 35).

31
That principle therefore requires that persons falling within the scope of that article of the Agreement may claim social security benefits under the same conditions as nationals of the host Member State without its being possible for the legislation of that Member State to impose upon those persons more or stricter conditions than those applicable to its nationals (see, inter alia , Hallouzi-Choho , paragraph 36, and, by analogy, Babahenini , paragraph 29, and Case C-262/96 Sürül [1999] ECR I-2685, paragraph 97).

32
Accordingly, the imposition on persons covered by that provision not only of the requirement that they must be nationals of the Member State concerned but also of any other condition which is not required in respect of nationals must be regarded as incompatible with that principle (see Hallouzi-Choho , paragraph 37, and, by analogy, Babahenini , paragraph 30).

33
In the present case, it is apparent that the national legislation on the seniority supplement at issue in the main proceedings makes the taking into account of work carried out abroad subject to the existence of an international agreement only in respect of foreign or stateless workers, since that requirement does not apply to workers with Belgian nationality who have been employed in a Member State other than the Kingdom of Belgium.

34
Such national legislation is therefore incompatible with the principle of freedom from discrimination laid down in Article 41(1) of the Agreement, which precludes a Member State from refusing to grant a Moroccan national entitlement to a benefit such as the seniority supplement increasing the basic amount of unemployment benefit, provided for by the national legislation for unemployed persons over the age of 50 who are able to demonstrate a period of 20 years as an employee, if that benefit may be granted to a national in the same situation.

35
However, ONEM submits that, in paragraph 18 of the Kziber judgment, the Court held that the fact that Article 41(1) of the Agreement states that the prohibition of discrimination laid down by it applies only subject to the following paragraphs means that, as regards the aggregation of periods of insurance, employment or residence, the grant of family benefits and the transfer to Morocco of pensions and annuities, that prohibition of discrimination is guaranteed only within the limits of the conditions laid down in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of that article. The limits within which the aggregation may be applied are laid down in Article 41(2), according to which the aggregation of periods of insurance, employment or residence is permissible only for pensions, annuities and medical care; that article does not, on the other hand, provide for aggregation in relation to unemployment benefits. ONEM concludes that the Agreement does not extend the prohibition of discrimination of Moroccan workers to those benefits.

36
That argument cannot be upheld.

37
First, paragraph 18 of the Kziber judgment, on which ONEM bases its argument, appears in the part of the judgment dealing with the direct effect of Article 41(1) of the Agreement and the Court expressly stated, in the same paragraph of the judgment, that the reservation laid down in that article may not be interpreted as divesting the prohibition of discrimination of its unconditional character in respect of any question which arises in the field of social security other than those which are the subject of paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of that article.

38
As is clear from paragraphs 33 and 34 of the present order, the case in the main proceedings is not concerned with technical problems relating to the aggregation of the periods of work carried out in different Member States but solely with the application of the principle of freedom from discrimination on grounds of nationality, laid down in Article 41(1) of the Agreement, for the purpose of enabling Mr Alami to obtain, in the host Member State and under its legislation, entitlement to a social security benefit under the same conditions as those laid down for the nationals of that Member State (see, by analogy, Sürül , cited above, paragraph 55). That principle merely requires that persons falling within the scope of the Agreement be treated in the same way as nationals of the host Member State.

39
Moreover, not only is the interpretation advocated by ONEM inconsistent with the findings in paragraphs 25 and 26 of the present order ─ findings derived directly from paragraph 26 of the Kziber judgment, according to which unemployment benefits fall within the scope of Article 41(1) of the Agreement ─ but it would also deprive that article of a substantial part of its effectiveness.

40
Finally, the case which gave rise to the judgment in Kziber is in all respects comparable to the one pending before the Cour de cassation. Thus, in both cases, unemployment benefits are at issue and the relevant Belgian legislation provides that foreign and stateless workers are entitled to those benefits only within the limits of an international agreement, even though that condition does not apply to nationals. It follows that the answer given by the Court in Kziber must be applied by analogy to the case in the main proceedings.

41
In light of the above considerations, the answer to the question referred must be that, on its proper construction, Article 41(1) of the Agreement precludes a host Member State from refusing to grant a worker of Moroccan nationality resident in its territory the benefit of a seniority supplement increasing the basic amount of their unemployment benefit on the sole ground that there is no international agreement providing that account must be taken of work carried out by that worker in another Member State, even though no such condition is imposed on workers who are nationals of that host Member State.


Costs

42
The costs incurred by the United Kingdom Government and by the Commission, which have submitted observations to the Court, are not recoverable. Since these proceedings are, for the parties to the main proceedings, a step in the proceedings pending before the national court, the decision on costs is a matter for that court.

On those grounds,

THE COURT (Second Chamber),

in answer to the question referred to it by the Cour de cassation, by order of 6 November 2000, hereby rules:

On its proper construction, Article 41(1) of the Cooperation Agreement between the European Economic Community and the Kingdom of Morocco signed at Rabat on 27 April 1976 and approved on behalf of the Community by Council Regulation (EEC) No 2211/78 of 26 September 1978 precludes a host Member State from refusing to grant a worker of Moroccan nationality resident in its territory the benefit of a seniority supplement increasing the basic amount of unemployment benefit on the sole ground that there is no international agreement providing that account is to be taken of work carried out by that worker in another Member State, even though no such condition is imposed on workers who are nationals of that host Member State.

Luxembourg, 12 February 2003.

R. Grass

R. Schintgen

Registrar

President of the Second Chamber


1
Language of the case: French.

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