I imagine what I want to write in my case, I write it in the search engine and I get exactly what I wanted. Thank you!
Valentina R., lawyer
European Court reports 1994 Page I-03567 Swedish special edition Page I-00035 Finnish special edition Page I-00035
++++
Mr President, Members of the Court, 1. The question referred to the Court by the House of Lords for a preliminary ruling concerns the interpretation of certain provisions 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. (1) The national court seeks in particular to establish whether the principle of equal treatment for men and women, as expounded in the directive, precludes the dismissal of a pregnant woman who has been recruited on the basis of a contract for an indeterminate period but for the specific purpose ° initially ° of replacing another female employee during the latter' s maternity leave.
Still on the subject of conditions relating to dismissal, mention should be made of Article 10 of Council Directive 92/85/EEC of 19 October 1992 on the introduction of measures to encourage improvements in the safety and health at work of pregnant workers and workers who have recently given birth or are breastfeeding. (2) That article prohibits the dismissal of female workers "during the period from the beginning of their pregnancy to the end of the maternity leave ..., save in exceptional cases not connected with their condition which are permitted under national legislation and/or practice and, where applicable, provided that the competent authority has given its consent". However, that directive has not yet entered into force; its transposition into national law is to be accomplished by 19 October 1994.
Two weeks after starting work, Mrs Webb realized that she too was pregnant, a state of affairs which led the managing director of EMO to tell her that he had no choice but to dismiss her. On 30 July 1987 Mrs Webb accordingly received a letter which, after reminding her that the position she held had become vacant on account of the pregnancy of another employee, stated: "Since you have only now told me that you are also pregnant I have no alternative other than to terminate your employment with our company."
5. The Industrial Tribunal, before which Mrs Webb brought proceedings contesting her dismissal, dismissed her claim that she had been the victim of direct discrimination on grounds of sex, holding instead that the real reason for her dismissal had been the fact that it would have been impossible for her to carry out the primary task for which she had been recruited, namely to replace Mrs Stewart during the latter' s absence on maternity leave. The national court reached that conclusion on the ground that a male employee, engaged for the purpose of replacing a female employee during the latter' s pregnancy, would also have been dismissed if he had requested leave of absence during the period in question. Mrs Webb' s subsequent appeals, first to the Employment Appeal Tribunal and then to the Court of Appeal, were both unsuccessful. She finally appealed to the House of Lords which decided that it would be appropriate to seek a preliminary ruling from the Court on the following question: "Is it discrimination on grounds of sex contrary to Council Directive 76/207/EEC for an employer to dismiss a female employee (' the appellant' )
(a) whom he engaged for the specific purpose of replacing (after training) another female employee during the latter' s forthcoming maternity leave, (b) when, very shortly after appointment, the employer discovers that the appellant herself will be absent on maternity leave during the maternity leave of the other employee, and the employer dismisses her because he needs the job holder to be at work during that period, (c) had the employer known of the pregnancy of the appellant at the date of appointment, she would not have been appointed, and (d) the employer would similarly have dismissed a male employee engaged for this purpose who required leave of absence at the relevant time for medical or other reasons? 6. Before we turn to the substance of that question, some attention should be given to the issue, raised on several occasions in the course of the proceedings, of the applicability of the directive to the case under consideration, bearing in mind that the dispute is between two persons governed by private law and the Court has not so far held that directives have horizontal direct effect. In that connection, the first point to note is that in applying national law, regardless of whether the provisions in question were adopted before or after the directive, "the national court called upon to interpret it is required to do so, as far as possible, in the light of the wording and the purpose of the directive in order to achieve the result pursued by the latter and thereby comply with the third paragraph of Article 189 of the Treaty". (3) In view of the fact that the national court seeks the interpretation of a directive which has already been transposed into national law, the answer may be of assistance to it for the purposes of interpreting and applying the relevant provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. Moreover, the House of Lords itself stated in the order for reference that "it is for a United Kingdom court to construe domestic legislation in any field covered by a Community directive so as to accord with the interpretation of the directive as laid down by the Court of Justice of the European Communities".
10. The Court' s recent judgment in Habermann-Beltermann (8) is of considerable significance with regard to the point at issue. In that case, the Court was asked to rule on the lawfulness of the termination of an employment relationship ° whether by annulment or avoidance of the contract ° in circumstances in which the unequal treatment was not based directly on the woman' s pregnancy but was the result of the prohibition on night-time work during pregnancy, laid down by Article 2(3) of the aforementioned directive. The Court established that in the circumstances the questions submitted for a ruling related to a contract without a fixed term in relation to which, consequently, the prohibition on night-time work by pregnant women could take effect only for a limited period, and concluded that "the termination of a contract without a fixed term on account of the woman' s pregnancy ... cannot be justified on the ground that a statutory prohibition, imposed because of pregnancy, temporarily prevents the employee from performing night-time work" (paragraph 25), that is to say, the work for which she had been specifically engaged. 11. In my view, the circumstances of the present case call with even greater justification for a similar conclusion, in view of the fact that the termination of the employment relationship is not connected with a statutory prohibition, as in the case just mentioned, but was occasioned simply by the employer' s concern to avoid possible financial (9) or in any event organizational burdens arising from the need to engage an employee to perform ° on a temporary basis ° the tasks which the female employee who was subsequently dismissed had been recruited to carry out. It follows that the dismissal of the employee in question owing to the fact that, because of her pregnancy, she would not have been able to fulfil one of the (express or implied) terms of the relevant contract ° an inability which is, however, temporary in relation to the duration of the contract ° must therefore be considered incompatible with the principle of equal treatment, as laid down in the directive. From that point of view it is of no significance whatever, even though the national court lays emphasis on it in the question submitted, that the employer would not have recruited the person in question if he had been aware of her pregnancy. In that connection, suffice it to say that the dismissal cannot in any case be considered lawful when the appellant herself, as the order for reference reveals clearly enough, was not aware of her condition. (10) That is the corollary, although only implicitly, of the judgment in Habermann-Beltermann, in which the Court had been called upon to take that factor into account for the purposes of its ruling.
12. It has been argued, however, that in the present case the question of unequal treatment does not even arise, inasmuch as the employer would also have dismissed a male employee who had asked for leave of absence, whether for medical or other reasons, over the same period in which he was meant to replace the female employee absent on maternity leave. Such "proof" purports to confirm that the dismissal arose exclusively from the need for the holder of the post in question to be at work during the period in question. In other words, in a case such as this, dismissal should not be classified as (direct) discrimination on grounds of sex, inasmuch as the underlying cause (inability to perform the contract during a predetermined period of time) would lead to the same consequences with respect to a male employee in the same situation. That line of reasoning presupposes, however, that the circumstances of a pregnant woman are comparable to those of a male employee who is unable, for medical or other reasons, to work during a given period. 13. That possibility is expressly contemplated in the question submitted by the national court. What is more, it is clear from the order for reference that the problem has been raised in precisely those terms by the various national courts who have had occasion to deal with the case, precisely in order to verify in accordance with Section 5(3) of the Sex Discrimination Act whether there exists treatment which is in effect accorded only to men that can serve as a basis for comparison with that accorded to a woman in the appellant' s situation, and, more particularly, whether it is permissible to compare a woman' s inability to work on account of maternity and a man' s inability to work, whether or not on medical grounds. In that connection it seems to me of no avail to rely on the judgment in Hertz, (11) in which the Court considered that the dismissal of a female employee on account of repeated absences through illness, even though the illness may be attributable to pregnancy or confinement, does not constitute direct discrimination on grounds of sex if those absences occur after the period of maternity leave and would also lead in the same circumstances to the dismissal of a male employee. (12) In that case, the same conditions (a number of absences over a certain period) were applied to workers of both sexes. In the present case, on the other hand, the termination of the employment relationship resulted from a condition (pregnancy) which indisputably affects women alone.
14. The judgment in Hertz serves to demonstrate, if anything, that absence through illness may not be equated with absence on maternity leave. To the extent to which that judgment holds that it is not discriminatory to dismiss an employee on account of absences through an illness which, while it may be attributable to pregnancy or confinement, began after the end of the maternity leave, it follows a fortiori that pregnancy may not be equated with illness. An inference which can be drawn, however obvious it may sound, is that a sick woman is to be treated in the same way as a sick man, whatever the cause of her illness. A pregnant woman, on the other hand, may not simply on account of her pregnancy be placed at a disadvantage to such an extent as to be excluded from the employment sector.