DLP Insights

Court of Justice of the European Union: Jobs Acts and collective dismissal

Categories: DLP Insights, Legislation | Tag: Dismissal, Collective dismissals, Jobs Act

31 Mar 2021

The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), with its ruling of 17 March 2021 (case C-652/2019), decided on prejudicial issues raised by the Court of Milan on 5 August 2019 on the legitimacy of the collective dismissal provisions contained in the Jobs Act.

Facts of the case

The case regards an employee hired with a fixed term contract before the Jobs Acts became effective, changed to open-ended at the end of March 2015 and then dismissed in 2017 in a collective dismissal procedure.

The employees involved in the procedure in question, including the employee, petitioned the Court of Milan which declared the challenged dismissals as unlawful, due to violation of the selection criteria. The Court granted the worker – unlike her colleagues who had been reinstated because hired with open-ended contract before the enactment of Legislative Decree no. 23/20215 (so-called Jobs Act), i.e. before 7 March 2015 – only the indemnity protection.

The Court, noting the existence of two different disciplinary systems in the event of unlawful collective dismissal resulting from the introduction the seniority-based protection contract, asked the Court of Strasbourg if a similar treatment difference was against European Union Law.

The ruling of the CJEU

The Court of Justice recognised the conformity of Legislative Decree no. 23/2015 with European Union law, clarifying that a regime that has only one indemnity (and not also reinstatement) is not discriminatory for the worker hired with fixed-term contract before 7 March 2015 and becoming permanent afterwards. This is because the different treatment is justified by the fact that the workers involved in the seniority-based protection obtain, in exchange for a regime with less protection, a form of employment stability.

According to the Court of Strasbourg it is a type of incentive aimed at fostering the conversion of fixed-term contracts into open contracts which constitutes a legitimate objective of social and employment policy, the selection of which is fully within the discretion granted to Member States.

According to the Court of Strasbourg this consideration is in line with a decision made by the Court in 2018, which, involving basically the same issue, had considered it legitimate that the remedial legislation could be differentiated based on the hiring date.

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