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Summary
1.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Actions – Conditions of admissibility – Exhaustion of previous conciliation phase – Prior lodging of a request or a complaint – Excluded – Optional nature of such a procedure
(Staff Regulations, Arts 90 and 91)
2.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Organisation of departments – Measures to comply with a judgment of the Court of First Instance – Discretion of the administration – Scope – Judicial review – Limits
3.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – General working conditions adopted by the Bank – Code of conduct – Whether applicable without prior consent of staff concerned
4.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Powers of the President – Decisions with implications for employment relationships – Delegation – Whether permissible – Conditions
(Statute of the European Investment Bank, Art. 13(7))
5.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Actions – Act adversely affecting an official – Concept – Decision ordering suspension of a member of staff
(Staff Regulations, Arts 88, 90 and 91)
6.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Disciplinary measures – Observance of the rights of the defence – Obligation to hear an individual before suspending him under Article 39 of the Staff Regulations
7.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Actions – Action against a measure of general application – Article 39 of the Staff Regulations – Inadmissibility
(Art. 236 EC)
8.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Actions – Subject-matter – Issue of directions to the administration – Inadmissibility
9.Officials – Actions – Action for damages – Annulment of the contested unlawful measure – Sufficient remedy
10.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Disciplinary measures – Sanction – Dismissal – Discretion of the administration – Judicial review – Scope – Limits
11.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Disciplinary measures – Disciplinary proceedings – Burden of proof
12.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Disciplinary measures – Sanction – Disclosure, by a member of staff, of confidential information and spreading of allegations damaging to the reputation of the Bank and certain of his colleagues – Mitigating circumstances – Not taken into account – Manifest error of assessment
(Art. 280 EC)
13.Officials – Disciplinary measures – Sanction – Errors in the recording or assessment of the facts complained of – Judicial review – Scope – Limits
14.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Actions – Determination of sums due by way of remuneration – Unlimited jurisdiction
15.Procedure – Oral procedure – Report for the Hearing drawn up by the Judge-Rapporteur – Observations of the parties – Purpose
16.Procedure – Measures of inquiry – Expert report – Determination of sums due by way of remuneration in the course of proceedings in a staff case – Not permissible – Jurisdiction of the Court of First Instance
17.Officials – Remuneration – Order for payment of arrears of remuneration – Default interest – Calculation – Starting point
18.Officials – Actions – Unlimited jurisdiction – Claim for payment – Payment of default interest – Purpose – Calculation
19.Officials – Staff of the European Investment Bank – Resignation – Compensation for sums due between the parties following a judgment annulling the refusal to accept a retraction – Scope
20.Officials – Non-contractual liability of the institutions – Conditions – Unlawfulness – Damage – Causal link – Cumulative conditions
21.Officials – Non-contractual liability of the institutions – Unlawful decision imposing summary dismissal for grave misconduct – Assessment of financial and professional damage – Account taken of refusal by member of staff to accept proposals intended to limit damage
In that connection, it should be borne in mind that, by excluding the application of Article 283 EC which gives the Council the authority to lay down the provisions of the Staff Regulations of Officials and the Conditions of Employment of Other Servants of the European Communities, the Statute of the EIB confers on it functional autonomy as regards the arrangements applying to its staff, which it exercises in opting for a contractual system rather than a system governed by public service regulations, so that the provisions of the Staff Regulations cannot be applied as such to employment relationships between the EIB and its staff.
(see paras 54-57, 60)
See: 110/75 Mills v EIB [1976] ECR 955, para. 22; 133/88 Del Amo Martinez v Parliament [1989] ECR 689, para. 9; T‑7/98, T‑208/98 and T‑109/99 De Nicola v EIB [2001] ECR-SC I‑A‑49 and II‑185, paras 90, 91, 95 and 96; T‑385/00 Seiller v EIB [2003] ECR-SC I‑A‑161 and II‑801, paras 50, 51, 65 and 73
(see paras 83-86)
See: 161/80 and 162/80 Carbognani and Others v Commission [1981] ECR 543, para. 28; T‑80/92 Turner v Commission [1993] ECR II‑1465, para. 53; T‑28/97 Hubert v Commission [1998] ECR-SC I‑A‑435 and II‑1255, para. 76; T‑143/98 Cendrowicz v Commission [1999] ECR-SC I‑A‑273 and II‑1341, para. 23; T‑120/01 R De Nicola v EIB [2001] ECR-SC I‑A‑171 and II‑783, para. 28; T‑178/00 and T‑341/00 Pflugradt v ECB [2002] ECR II‑4035, para. 54
(see para. 92)
(see paras 97-98)
5. The case-law according to which a decision to suspend an official under Article 88 of the Staff Regulations is an act adversely affecting him, which may form the subject-matter of an application for annulment in the conditions laid down in Articles 90 and 91 of the Staff Regulations, may be applied to decisions which the President of the EIB may adopt on the basis of Article 39 of the Staff Regulations of the EIB. That applies a fortiori since the fourth paragraph of that provision provides that dismissal is to take effect from the day of suspension.
(see paras 113-115)
See: 18/65 and 35/65 Gutmann v Commission of the EAEC [1966] ECR 103, 116; T‑203/95 Connolly v Commission [1999] ECR-SC I‑A‑83 and II‑443, para. 33
A decision to suspend a member of staff of the EIB adopted under Article 39 of the Staff Regulations of the EIB constitutes an act adversely affecting that official and, while the adoption of a decision to suspend an official where there is an allegation of serious misconduct should be a matter of urgency, such a decision must be adopted with due observance of the rights of the defence. Consequently, unless special circumstances are duly established, a decision to suspend an official may be adopted only after the official has been given the opportunity to express his point of view on the evidence against him and on which the appointing authority proposes to base that decision. It is only in special circumstances that it might prove impossible in practice, or incompatible with the interest of the service, to hold a hearing before adopting a decision suspending an official. In such circumstances, the requirements flowing from the principle of observance of the rights of the defence may be satisfied if the official concerned is heard within a very short time of the decision to suspend him being adopted.
(see paras 121-124)
See: Gutmann v Commission of the EAEC , cited above, 116; C‑32/95 P Commission v Lisrestal and Others [1996] ECR I‑5373, para. 24; Connolly v Commission , cited above, para. 33; T‑211/98 F v Commission [2000] ECR-SC I‑A‑107 and II‑471, para. 26 et seq.; T‑333/99 X v ECB [2001] ECR II‑3021, para. 183
7. As a provision of the Staff Regulations of the EIB adopted by the EIB in exercise of the regulatory powers conferred on it under its Statute, Article 39 of those regulations constitutes a measure of general application and, therefore, cannot be the subject of a direct action before the Court of First Instance.
(see paras 131-132)
See: T‑192/99 Dunnett and Others v EIB [2001] ECR II‑813, para. 62
8. It is not for the Community Court to make findings of principle or to issue directions to the administration so that a request by a member of staff of the EIB for a declaration that the code of conduct approved by the Management Committee of the EIB does not apply to him must be declared inadmissible.
(see paras 136-137)
See: X v ECB , cited a bove, para. 48
9. Non-contractual liability on the part of the European Community requires that the applicant prove the illegality of the allegedly wrongful act committed by the Community institution, the actual harm suffered and the existence of a causal link between the act and the damage alleged to have been suffered.
The condition concerning the existence of unlawful conduct is satisfied where the Court of First Instance annuls, on the ground of breach of the rights of the defence, a decision to suspend a member of staff adopted without his being heard beforehand. However, the annulment of the decision to suspend is in itself appropriate and, in principle, adequate compensation for the non-material damage suffered by the person concerned in that respect.
(see paras 140-142)
See: T‑177/96 Costacurta v Commission [1998] ECR-SC I‑A‑225 and II‑705; T‑7/98, T-208/98 and T-109/99 De Nicola v EIB , cited above, para. 332
10. A decision imposing on a member of staff of the EIB the penalty of summary dismissal for grave misconduct without notice and without a severance grant necessarily implies fine consideration on the part of the institution in view of the serious and irrevocable consequences for the person concerned of such a decision. The EIB has wide discretion in that respect and the Court’s role is limited to ascertaining whether the facts on which the decision is based are materially accurate and whether there has been any manifest error in the assessment of the facts.
(see paras 167-168)
See: T‑140/97 Hautem v EIB [1999] ECR-SC I‑A‑171 and II‑897, para. 66
11. In a disciplinary procedure initiated against a member of staff of the EIB the burden of proving the allegations made against him fall on the competent authority.
(see para. 180)
Although it is true that such circumstances do not in themselves justify the conclusion that the facts alleged do not constitute breaches of the obligations as regards conduct laid down by the EIB, the fact remains that the EIB is bound to take account of them as mitigating circumstances in order to decide on an appropriate disciplinary measure, as it would otherwise commit a manifest error of assessment as regards the seriousness of the facts complained of.
(see paras 208-214)
See: C‑15/00 Commission v EIB [2003] ECR I‑7281, para. 125
13. Where the Court of First Instance upholds a plea of errors in the findings or assessment of facts relied on to impose a penalty on an official, the decision imposing the penalty must be annulled in its entirety having regard to the unitary and indivisible nature of the disciplinary penalty contained in that decision and the fact that that penalty is based on the claims upheld in that decision considered as a whole. Under those circumstances, it is not for the Court of First Instance to put itself in the place of the disciplinary authority to decide on the disciplinary penalty which might be appropriate, if need be, for the claims which are established following examination of the plea in question.
(see para. 219)
See: T‑21/01 Zavvos v Commission [2002] ECR-SC I‑A‑101 and II‑483, para. 316; T‑89/01 Willeme v Commission [2002] ECR-SC I‑A‑153 and II‑803, para. 83
14. Disputes between the EIB and its staff regarding the determination of sums due under the rules applicable to the remuneration and benefits payable to staff are of a pecuniary nature so that the Court of First Instance has unlimited jurisdiction in that regard.
(see para. 257)
See: C‑449/99 P EIB v Hautem [2001] ECR I‑6733, paras 94 and 95
15. In accordance with the essential principles governing the procedure before the Court of First Instance, the purpose of the observations of the parties on the Report for the Hearing is solely to correct any errors or inaccuracies in the report sent to the parties before the hearing and not to allow them to respond to the arguments of their opponent and still less to put forward new arguments.
(see para. 261)
(see para. 265)
17. Where an institution has been ordered to pay an official arrears of remuneration with default interest, the starting point for the calculation of such interest is the moment when the sums at issue should have been paid to the official in accordance with the applicable provisions. In the absence of clear indications in that regard in those provisions, it is for the Court of First Instance to determine at what point they ought reasonably to have been paid to him.
(see para. 272)
18. As the purpose of default interest is to make good damage suffered by a party by the failure of another party to pay certain sums, it continues to be payable until those sums are actually paid.
(see para. 273)
19. Where the Court of First Instance annuls ex tunc the effects of a refusal by the EIB to accept the retraction of the resignation of a member of its staff, the EIB is entitled to offset the amounts due by way of arrears of remuneration and default interest by the full amount of the sums paid to the member of staff on his departure, that is to say, the net amount of the severance grant and the resettlement allowance, since there is no longer any reason for payment of those sums and therefore their return is justified.
On the other hand, in the absence of requests for repayment of the severance grant and the resettlement allowance, the EIB cannot require that default interest be paid on those amounts.
(see paras 282-283)
(see paras 303-304)
See: C‑257/98 P Lucaccioni v Commission [1999] ECR I‑5251, para. 14; T‑165/95 Lucaccioni v Commission [1998] ECR-SC I‑A‑203 and II‑627, para. 57; T‑205/96 Bieber v Parliament [1998] ECR-SC I‑A‑231 and II‑723, para. 48; T‑338/00 and T‑376/00 Morello v Commission [2002] ECR-SC I‑A‑301 and II‑1457, para. 150
21. A decision imposing summary dismissal for grave misconduct is a measure of such gravity that it is liable to hamper seriously the chances of the member of staff concerned of finding appropriate employment on the job market and is, therefore, liable to cause him financial and professional damage. However, in the assessment of that damage, account must be taken of the proposals of his employer with a view to facilitating his return to the job market and thus reducing that damage. In such a case, the annulment of the decision to dismiss was in itself adequate compensation for that damage.
(see para. 306)