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GRAND
CHAMBER
CASE OF DEMİR AND BAYKARA v. TURKEY
(Application
no. 34503/97)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
12
November 2008
This
judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Demir and Baykara v. Turkey,
The
European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed
of:
Christos
Rozakis,
President,
Nicolas
Bratza,
Françoise
Tulkens,
Josep
Casadevall,
Giovanni
Bonello,
Rıza
Türmen,
Kristaq
Traja,
Boštjan
M. Zupančič,
Vladimiro
Zagrebelsky,
Stanislav
Pavlovschi,
Lech
Garlicki,
Alvina
Gyulumyan,
Ljiljana
Mijović,
Dean
Spielmann,
Ján
Šikuta,
Mark
Villiger,
Päivi
Hirvelä,
judges,
and
Michael O'Boyle, Deputy
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 16 January 2008 and 15 October 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 34503/97) against the Republic
of Turkey lodged with the European Commission of Human Rights (“the
Commission”) under former Article 25 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by two Turkish nationals, Mr Kemal Demir and Mrs
Vicdan Baykara (“the applicants”), the latter in her
capacity as president of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen, on 8
October 1996.
- The
applicants were represented by Mr S. Karaduman, a lawyer practising
in Ankara. The Turkish Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Co-Agent, Mrs Deniz Akçay.
- The
applicants complained that, in breach of Article 11 of the
Convention, by itself or in conjunction with Article 14, that the
domestic courts had denied them, first, the right to form trade
unions and, second, the right to engage in collective bargaining and
enter into collective agreements.
- The
application was transmitted to the Court on 1 November 1998, when
Protocol No. 11 to the Convention came into force (Article 5 § 2
of Protocol No. 11).
- The
application was allocated to the Third Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the
Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 § 1 of the
Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 § 1.
- By
a decision of 23 September 2004 the Chamber declared the application
partly admissible and partly inadmissible.
- On
1 November 2004 the Court changed the composition of its Sections
(Rule 25 § 1). This case was assigned to the newly composed
Second Section (Rule 52 § 1)
- On
21 November 2006 the Chamber, consisting of J.-P. Costa, President,
I. Cabral Barreto, R. Türmen, M. Ugrekhelidze, A. Mularoni,
E. Fura-Sandström, D. Popović, judges, and S. Dollé,
Section Registrar, delivered its judgment. It held, unanimously, that
there had been a violation of Article 11 of the Convention in so far
as the domestic courts had refused to recognise the legal personality
of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen and had considered null and void
the collective agreement between that trade union and Gaziantep
Municipal Council, and that there was no need for a separate
examination of the complaints under Article 14 of the Convention. The
concurring opinion of Mr Türmen, Mrs Fura-Sandström and
Mr Popović was annexed to that judgment.
- On 21 February 2007 the Government requested the
referral of the case to the Grand Chamber in accordance with Article
43 of the Convention and Rule 73.
- A
panel of the Grand Chamber granted that request on 23 May 2007.
- The
composition of the Grand Chamber was determined according to the
provisions of Article 27 §§ 2 and 3 of the Convention
and Rule 24.
- The
applicants and the Government each filed a memorial.
- A
hearing took place in public in the Human Rights Building,
Strasbourg, on 16 January 2008 (Rule 59 § 3).
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the Government
Mrs D.
Akçay, Co-Agent,
Mrs E. Demir,
Mrs Z.G.
Acar,
Mrs İ. Altintaş,
Mrs E. Esin,
Mrs Ö.
Gazialem,
Mr K. Afşin,
Mr L. Savran, Advisers;
(b) for the applicants
Mrs V. Baykara, applicant
and president of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen,
Mrs S.
Karaduman, of the Ankara Bar.
The
Court heard addresses by Mrs S. Karaduman, Mrs V. Baykara and Mrs D.
Akçay.
THE FACTS
- The
applicants, Kemal Demir and Vicdan Baykara, were born in 1951 and
1958 and live in Gaziantep and Istanbul respectively. The first
applicant was a member of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen and the
second applicant was its president.
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
trade union Tüm Bel Sen was founded in 1990 by civil servants
from various municipalities whose employment was governed by the
Public Service Act (Law no. 657). Under Article 2 of its
constitution, the union's objective is to promote democratic trade
unionism and thereby assist its members in their aspirations and
claims. Its head office is located in Istanbul.
- On
27 February 1993 Tüm Bel Sen entered into a collective agreement
with the Gaziantep Municipal Council for a period of two years
effective from 1 January 1993. The agreement concerned all
aspects of the working conditions of the Gaziantep Municipal
Council's employees, such as salaries, allowances and welfare
services.
- As
the Gaziantep Municipal Council had failed to fulfil certain of its
obligations under the agreement, in particular financial obligations,
the second applicant, as president of the union, brought civil
proceedings against it in the Gaziantep District Court (the “District
Court”) on 18 June 1993.
- In
a judgment of 22 June 1994 the District Court found in favour of Tüm
Bel Sen. The Gaziantep Municipal Council appealed on points of law.
- On
13 December 1994 the Court of Cassation (Fourth Civil Division)
quashed the District Court's judgment. It found that, even though
there was no legal bar preventing civil servants from forming a trade
union, any union so formed had no authority to enter into collective
agreements as the law stood.
- In
arriving at this conclusion, the Court of Cassation took into account
the special relationship between civil servants and the public
administration as regards recruitment, the nature and scope of the
work concerned, and the privileges and guarantees afforded to
officials by virtue of their status. It considered that this
relationship was different from that which existed between employers
and ordinary contractual staff (that is to say, employees in the
private sector together with manual workers employed by a public
administration). As a result, Law no. 2322, governing collective
agreements and the right to take strike or lock-out action, could not
apply to relations between civil servants and a public
administration. Any agreement of a “collective” nature
between civil servants' unions and a public administration had to be
grounded in specific legislation.
- In
a judgment of 28 March 1995 the Gaziantep District Court stood by its
original judgment on the ground that, despite the lack of express
statutory provisions recognising a right for trade unions formed by
civil servants to enter into collective agreements, this lacuna had
to be filled by reference to international treaties such as the
conventions of the International Labour Organisation which had
already been ratified by Turkey and which, by virtue of the
Constitution, were directly applicable in domestic law.
- Among
other things the District Court indicated, firstly, that the trade
union Tüm Bel Sen was a legally-established entity which had
filed its constitution with the provincial governor's office a long
time before and which, since then, had carried on its activities
without the slightest intervention by the competent authorities. The
court added that, on this matter, there was no discrepancy between
its judgment and that of the Fourth Civil Division of the Court of
Cassation.
- As
regards the right of civil servants to enter into collective
agreements, the court considered that, even if there was an omission
in Turkish law on this point, the court to which a dispute was
referred had an obligation, under Article 1 of the Civil Code, to
make good the omission itself and to adjudicate the case. In the
court's view, the same obligation also arose from Article 36 of the
Constitution, under which everyone was afforded the right of access
to a court. In this context the relevant provisions of the ILO
international labour conventions ratified by Turkey had to be applied
in the case, even though the specific national laws had not yet been
enacted by the legislature. Directly applying the relevant provisions
of these international instruments ratified by Turkey, the court
considered that the applicant trade union did have the right to enter
into collective agreements.
- As
to the question whether the validity of the collective agreement in
question was affected by the fact that it had not been provided for
by any legislation at the time it was entered into, the court
considered that, since it concerned employer-employee relations, the
agreement was of a private-law nature. In the context of the limits
imposed by Articles 19 and 20 of the Code of Obligations, namely
compliance with statutory provisions, customary law, morals and
public order, the parties had been freely entitled to determine the
content of this collective agreement. An examination of the text of
the collective agreement in question did not reveal any contradiction
with those requirements. Consequently, the court found that the
collective agreement between the applicant union and the Gaziantep
Municipal Council had been a valid legal instrument with binding
effect for the parties.
- The
court awarded Mr Kemal Demir a sum equivalent to the increases in pay
and allowances provided for by the collective agreement in question.
- In
a judgment of 6 December 1995 the Court of Cassation (combined civil
divisions) quashed the District Court's judgment of 28 March
1995. It found that certain rights and freedoms mentioned in the
Constitution were directly applicable to litigants, whereas others
were not. In fact, the Constitution, by the indication “the
exercise of this right shall be governed by legislation”
clearly earmarked the rights and freedoms which, to be used and
applied, required the enactment of specific legislation. Absent such
legislation, these rights and freedoms, which included the freedom to
join a trade union and to bargain collectively, could not be
exercised.
- The
Court of Cassation further considered that the principle of the
individual's free will was not absolute in respect of the
establishment of legal entities. They could acquire legal
personality, distinct from their constituent persons, only by
complying with the formal conditions and procedures laid down by law
for that purpose. The creation of a legal entity was no more than a
legal consequence conferred by the law on an expression of free will
by the founders.
- The
Court of Cassation pointed out that the freedom to form associations,
unions and political parties, even if provided for in the
Constitution, could not be exercised simply by a declaration of the
free will of individuals. As there was no specific law on the
subject, the existence of such a legal entity could not be
recognised. According to the Court of Cassation, this finding was not
at odds with the principles of “the rule of law” and
“democracy” mentioned in the Constitution, since
supervision of legal entities by the State, in order to ensure public
usefulness, was necessary in any democratic legal system.
- The
Court of Cassation further pointed out that the legislation in force
at the time when the trade union was founded did not permit
civil servants to form trade unions. It added that the amendments
subsequently made to the Constitution, recognising the right of civil
servants to form trade unions and bargain collectively, were not such
as to invalidate the finding that Tüm Bel Sen had not acquired
legal personality and, as a result, did not have the capacity to take
or defend court proceedings.
- An
application by representatives of the trade union for rectification
of that decision was rejected by the Court of Cassation on 10 April
1996.
- Following
an audit of the Gaziantep Municipal Council's accounts by the Audit
Court, the members of the union Tüm Bel Sen had to reimburse the
additional income they had received as a result of the defunct
collective agreement. The Audit Court, in a number of decisions that
it gave as the court of last resort in respect of the collective
agreements entered into by the trade union, pointed out that the
rules applicable to civil servants, including the salaries and
allowances to which they were entitled, were laid down by law. It
further considered that, since the amendment on 23 July 1995 of
Article 53 of the Constitution and the enactment on 25 June 2001
of Law no. 4688 on civil servants' trade unions, such unions were
admittedly entitled to engage in collective bargaining under certain
conditions of representation, but were not entitled to enter into
valid collective agreements directly with the authorities concerned,
unlike trade unions of ordinary contractual employees who could enter
into such agreements with their employers. If an agreement was
entered into between the employing authority and the union concerned,
it could only become binding following its approval by the Council of
Ministers. The Audit Court, after finding that the collective
agreement entered into by the applicant union had not fulfilled these
conditions, decided that the accountants who had authorised higher
payments than those provided for by law should reimburse the surplus
amounts to the State's budget.
- The
Audit Court refused to apply section 4 of Law no. 4688, which
required the discontinuance of any administrative, financial or
judicial proceedings brought against accountants who were responsible
for such payments. It considered that this provision did not render
the collective agreements valid and did not release the accountants
in question from the obligation to reimburse the State for any losses
sustained by it as a result of payments made in accordance with those
agreements.
- The
accountants concerned in turn brought proceedings against the civil
servants who were members of the unions and had benefited from the
additional payments granted under the defunct collective agreements.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
A. Domestic law
- The
relevant provisions of the Turkish Constitution read as follows:
Article 51
(at
the material time)
“Ordinary contractual employees (işçi)
and employers shall have the right to form trade unions and
federations of unions, without prior permission, in order to
safeguard and develop their economic and social rights and interests
in the context of their labour relations.
In order to form a union or a federation of unions, it
shall suffice to submit the information and documents prescribed by
law to the competent authority designated by law. If it finds that
this information and documentation are not in conformity with the
law, the competent authority shall apply to the appropriate court for
the suspension of activities or the dissolution of the union or
federation of unions.
Everyone shall be entitled to join or resign from a
trade union.
No one shall be compelled to become a member, remain a
member, or resign from a trade union.
Ordinary contractual employees and employers shall not
be entitled to join more than one trade union at a time.
Employment in a particular workplace shall not be made
conditional on membership or lack of membership of a trade union of
ordinary contractual employees.
In order to hold an executive post in a trade union or
federation of trade unions of ordinary contractual employees, it is
necessary to have effectively been employed as such an employee for
at least ten years.
The constitution, administration, and functioning of
trade unions and federations of trade unions shall not be
inconsistent with the characteristics of the Republic or with
democratic principles as defined in the Constitution.”
Article 51
(as
amended by Law no. 4709 of 3 October 2001)
“Employees and employers shall have the right to
form trade unions and federations of unions, without prior
permission, in order to safeguard and develop the economic and social
rights and interests of their members in the context of their labour
relations, and to join or withdraw from such entities of their own
free will. No one shall be compelled to join or resign from a trade
union.
The right to form a union may only be limited as
prescribed by law in the interests of national security or public
order, for the prevention of crime, for the protection of public
health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of
others.
The formalities, conditions and procedures applicable to
the right to form a trade union shall be prescribed by law.
Membership of more than one trade union within the same
sector of activity shall be prohibited.
The scope of the rights in this sphere of public
officials other than those who have the status of ordinary
contractual employee, and the exceptions and limitations applicable
to them, shall be prescribed by law in a manner appropriate to the
nature of the services they provide.
The constitution, administration and functioning of
trade unions and federations of unions shall not be inconsistent with
the fundamental characteristics of the Republic or with democratic
principles.”
Article 53
(at
the material time)
“Ordinary contractual employees and employers
shall be entitled ... to enter into collective agreements in order to
regulate their economic and social position and conditions of work.
Collective agreements shall be entered into in
accordance with the statutory procedure.
It shall be prohibited to enter into or apply more than
one collective agreement in a single workplace at any given time.”
Article 53
(as
amended by Law no. 4121 of 23 July 1995)
“Ordinary contractual employees and employers
shall be entitled ... to enter into collective agreements in order to
regulate their economic and social position and conditions of work.
Collective agreements shall be entered into in
accordance with the statutory procedure.
The trade unions and federations of unions which the
public officials referred to in the first paragraph of Article 128
shall be entitled to form and which do not fall within the scope of
the first and second paragraphs of the present Article, nor that of
Article 54, shall be entitled to take or defend court proceedings and
to bargain collectively with the public administration in accordance
with their objectives and on behalf of their members. If an agreement
is reached as a result of collective bargaining, the text of the
agreement shall be signed by the parties. This text shall be
submitted to the Council of Ministers so that legal or administrative
arrangements can be made for its implementation. If no such agreement
is reached through collective bargaining, a record of the points of
agreement and disagreement shall be drawn up and signed by the
relevant parties and submitted for consideration by the Council of
Ministers. The procedure for the implementation of this paragraph
shall be laid down by law.
It shall be prohibited to enter into or apply more than
one collective agreement in a single workplace at any given time.”
Article 90
“... International treaties that are duly in force
are directly applicable in domestic law. Their constitutionality
cannot be challenged in the Constitutional Court.
In the event of conflict as to the scope of fundamental
rights and freedoms between an international agreement duly in force
and a domestic statute, the provisions of the international agreement
shall prevail.” (Second sub-paragraph added by Law no. 5170 of
7 May 2004)
Article 128
“The essential and permanent duties necessitated
by the public services that the State, public economic undertakings
and other public-law entities are required to provide, in accordance
with general principles of public administration, shall be performed
by civil servants and other public officials.
The qualifications, appointment, duties and powers,
rights and responsibilities, and salaries and allowances of civil
servants and other public officials, and other matters related to
their status, shall be provided for by law.
The procedure and principles governing the training of
senior civil servants shall be specially provided for by law.”
- Section
22 of the Public Service Act (Law no. 657 of 14 July 1965)
stated that civil servants were authorised to form and join trade
unions and professional organisations, in accordance with the
conditions set out in special legislation. The second subsection of
that provision stated that the said professional organisations were
authorised to defend the interests of their members before the
competent authorities.
Section
22 was repealed by Article 5 of Legislative Decree no. 2 of
23 December 1972. It was reinstated by section 1 of Law no. 4275
of 12 June 1997. The text now reads:
“In accordance with the provisions of the
Constitution and of the special legislation, civil servants shall be
permitted to form and to become members of trade unions and
federations of trade unions.”
- The
Civil Servants' Trade Union Act (Law no. 4688 – which was
enacted on 25 June 2001 and entered into force on 12 July 2001)
applies, according to section 2, to public officials, other than
those who have the status of ordinary contractual employee, working
for Government agencies and other public-law entities providing a
public service, organisations operating on a general, supplementary
or special budget, public administrations and municipal authorities
in provinces and services attached thereto, publicly owned
enterprises, banks and other private-law undertakings and
establishments attached thereto, and for all other public
organisations and establishments.
Section
30 of the Act provides as follows:
“The trade union with the greatest number of
members in each branch of public administration and the federations
to which those unions are affiliated shall have the capacity to
bargain collectively. The delegate from the most representative trade
union shall chair the delegation taking part in the negotiations.”
The
determination of which civil servants' trade unions and federations
are competent to bargain collectively is made by the Minister for
Labour and Social Security on the basis of lists that are co-signed
and presented by the public administrations and the trade unions
(section 30 of Law no. 4688).
During
the collective bargaining, the employer is represented by the Public
Employers' Committee. Civil Servants and other public officials are
represented by the trade union that is recognised as competent and
the federation to which it is affiliated.
The
Public Employers' Committee and the trade unions and federations
concerned are required to meet on 15 August every year. The parties
then submit their proposals, which will form the starting-point and
agenda of the collective bargaining. The principles governing the
negotiations are determined by the parties (section 32 of Law no.
4688).
The
collective negotiations must be concluded within fifteen days. If
agreement is reached within that time, the parties concerned sign a
collective agreement which is sent to the Council of Ministers to
enable the legal and administrative steps required for its
implementation to be taken. The Council of Ministers takes the
appropriate measures within a period of three months and presents its
draft law to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey (section 34 of Law
no. 4688).
If
the parties concerned are unable to reach an agreement within the
time-limit thus fixed, each one may refer the matter to the Arbitral
Board, which is made up of academics who are not members of political
parties. If the parties approve the decision of the Arbitral Board,
an agreement is signed and sent to the Council of Ministers. If there
is still no agreement, the parties sign a record indicating the
points on which they have agreed and disagreed. This record is also
sent to the Council of Ministers (section 35 of Law no. 4688).
B. International Law
1. Universal instruments
(a) Right to organise and civil servants
- Article 2 of Convention No. 87 of the
International Labour Organisation (ILO) on Freedom of Association and
Protection of the Right to Organise (adopted in 1948 and ratified by
Turkey on 12 July 1993) provides as follows:
“Workers and employers, without distinction
whatsoever, shall have the right to establish and, subject only to
the rules of the organisation concerned, to join organisations of
their own choosing without previous authorisation.”
- In
its Individual Observation to the Turkish Government concerning
Convention No. 87, adopted in 2005, the Committee of Experts on the
Application of Conventions and Recommendations stated as follows:
“The Committee underlines that Article 2 of the
Convention provides that workers without distinction whatsoever
should have the right to form and join organizations of their own
choosing and that the only admissible exception under the Convention
concerns the armed forces and the police. ...”
- The
ILO Committee on Freedom of Association declared as follows
concerning municipal civil servants (see Digest of Decisions 1996,
paragraph 217):
“Local public service employees should be able
effectively to establish organizations of their own choosing, and
these organizations should enjoy the full right to further and defend
the interests of the workers whom they represent.”
- Article
22 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
provides as follows:
“1. Everyone shall have the right to freedom of
association with others, including the right to form and join trade
unions for the protection of his interests.
2. No restrictions may be placed on the exercise of this
right other than those which are prescribed by law and which are
necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national
security or public safety, public order (ordre public), the
protection of public health or morals or the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others. This article shall not prevent the imposition
of lawful restrictions on members of the armed forces and of the
police in their exercise of this right.”
- Article
8 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights provides as follows:
“1. The States Parties to the present
Covenant undertake to ensure:
(a) The right of everyone to form trade unions and join
the trade union of his choice, subject only to the rules of the
organization concerned, for the promotion and protection of his
economic and social interests. No restrictions may be placed on the
exercise of this right other than those prescribed by law and which
are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national
security or public order or for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others;
...
(c) The right of trade unions to function
freely subject to no limitations other than those prescribed by law
and which are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of
national security or public order or for the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others;
...
2. This article shall not prevent the
imposition of lawful restrictions on the exercise of these rights by
members of the armed forces or of the police or of the administration
of the State.”
(b) Collective bargaining law and civil
servants
- The
relevant articles of ILO Convention No. 98 concerning the Application
of the Principles of the Right to Organise and to Bargain
Collectively (adopted in 1949 and ratified by Turkey on 3 January
1952) read as follows:
Article 4
“Measures appropriate to national conditions shall
be taken, where necessary, to encourage and promote the full
development and utilisation of machinery for voluntary negotiation
between employers or employers' organisations and workers'
organisations, with a view to the regulation of terms and conditions
of employment by means of collective agreements.”
Article 5
“1. The extent to which the guarantees provided
for in this Convention shall apply to the armed forces and the police
shall be determined by national laws or regulations.
2. In accordance with the principle set forth in
paragraph 8 of Article 19 of the Constitution of the International
Labour Organisation the ratification of this Convention by any Member
shall not be deemed to affect any existing law, award, custom or
agreement in virtue of which members of the armed forces or the
police enjoy any right guaranteed by this Convention.”
Article 6
“This Convention does not deal with the position
of public servants engaged in the administration of the State, nor
shall it be construed as prejudicing their rights or status in any
way.”
- The
ILO's Committee of Experts interpreted this provision as excluding
from the scope of the Convention only those officials who are
directly employed in the administration of the State. With that
exception, all other persons employed by the government, by public
enterprises or by autonomous public institutions should benefit,
according to the Committee, from the guarantees provided for in
Convention No. 98 in the same manner as other employees, and
consequently should be able to engage in collective bargaining in
respect of their conditions of employment, including wages (General
Survey 1994, freedom of association and collective bargaining, on
Conventions No. 87 and No. 98 [ILO, 1994a], § 200).
- The
relevant provisions of ILO Convention No. 151 (adopted in 1978 and
ratified by Turkey on 12 July 1993) concerning Protection of the
Right to Organise and Procedures for Determining Conditions of
Employment in the Public Service read as follows:
Article 1
“1. This Convention applies to all persons
employed by public authorities, to the extent that more favourable
provisions in other international labour Conventions are not
applicable to them.
2. The extent to which the guarantees provided for in
this Convention shall apply to high-level employees whose functions
are normally considered as policy-making or managerial, or to
employees whose duties are of a highly confidential nature, shall be
determined by national laws or regulations.
3. The extent to which the guarantees provided for in
this Convention shall apply to the armed forces and the police shall
be determined by national laws or regulations.”
Article 7
“Measures appropriate to national conditions shall
be taken, where necessary, to encourage and promote the full
development and utilisation of machinery for negotiation of terms and
conditions of employment between the public authorities concerned and
public employees' organisations, or of such other methods as will
allow representatives of public employees to participate in the
determination of these matters.”
The
General Conference of the International Labour Organisation, in the
preamble to Convention No. 151, noted “the terms of the Freedom
of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention,
1948, [and] the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining
Convention, 1949” and took into account:
“the particular problems arising as to the scope
of, and definitions for the purpose of, any international instrument,
owing to the differences in many countries between private and public
employment, as well as the difficulties of interpretation which have
arisen in respect of the application of relevant provisions of the
Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949, to
public servants, and the observations of the supervisory bodies of
the ILO on a number of occasions that some governments have applied
these provisions in a manner which excludes large groups of public
employees from coverage by that Convention”.
2. European instruments
(a) Right to organise and civil servants
- Article
5 of the European Social Charter (revised), not yet ratified by
Turkey, provides as follows:
Article 5 - The right to organise
“With a view to ensuring or promoting the freedom
of workers and employers to form local, national or international
organisations for the protection of their economic and social
interests and to join those organisations, the Contracting Parties
undertake that national law shall not be such as to impair, nor shall
it be so applied as to impair, this freedom. The extent to which the
guarantees provided for in this Article shall apply to the police
shall be determined by national laws or regulations. The principle
governing the application to the members of the armed forces of these
guarantees and the extent to which they shall apply to persons in
this category shall equally be determined by national laws or
regulations.”
- Principle
no. 8 of Recommendation No. R (2000) 6 of the Committee of Ministers
of the Council of Europe on the status of public officials in Europe
reads as follows:
“Public officials should, in principle, enjoy the
same rights as all citizens. However, the exercise of these rights
may be regulated by law or through collective agreement in order to
make it compatible with their public duties. Their rights,
particularly political and trade union rights, should only be
lawfully restricted in so far as it is necessary for the proper
exercise of their public functions.”
- Article
12(1) of the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights provides
as follows:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful
assembly and to freedom of association at all levels, in particular
in political, trade union and civic matters, which implies the right
of everyone to form and to join trade unions for the protection of
his or her interests.”
- As
to European practice, it can be observed that the right of public
servants to join trade unions is now recognised by all Contracting
States. This right applies to public servants under a career or
contractual system and to employees of publicly owned industrial or
commercial enterprises, whether national or municipal. Civil
servants, whether they work for central government or a local
authority, are generally entitled to join the trade union of their
choosing. The density of trade-union membership is generally higher
in the public sector than in the private sector, which constitutes a
manifest indication of a favourable legal and administrative
environment created by member States. In the majority of member
States, the few restrictions that can be found are limited to
judicial offices, to the police and to the fire services, with the
most stringent restrictions, culminating in the prohibition of union
membership, being reserved for members of the armed forces.
(b) The right to bargain collectively and
civil servants
- Article
6 of the European Social Charter (revised), not yet ratified by
Turkey, contains the following provision concerning the right to
bargain collectively:
“With a view to ensuring the effective exercise of
the right to bargain collectively, the Parties undertake:
1. to
promote joint consultation between workers and employers;
2. to
promote, where necessary and appropriate, machinery for voluntary
negotiations between employers or employers' organisations and
workers' organisations, with a view to the regulation of terms and
conditions of employment by means of collective agreements;
3. to
promote the establishment and use of appropriate machinery for
conciliation and voluntary arbitration for the settlement of labour
disputes;
and recognise:
4. the
right of workers and employers to collective action in cases of
conflicts of interest, including the right to strike, subject to
obligations that might arise out of collective agreements previously
entered into.”
- According
to the meaning attributed by the Charter's Committee of Independent
Experts (now the European Committee of Social Rights – ECSR) to
Article 6 § 2 of the Charter, which in fact fully applies to
public officials, States which impose restrictions on collective
bargaining in the public sector have an obligation, in order to
comply with this provision, to arrange for the involvement of staff
representatives in the drafting of the applicable employment
regulations (see, for example, in respect of Germany, Conclusions
III, pp. 34-35).
- Article
28 of the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights provides as
follows:
Right of collective bargaining and action
“Workers and employers, or their respective
organisations, have, in accordance with Community law and national
laws and practices, the right to negotiate and conclude collective
agreements at the appropriate levels and, in cases of conflicts of
interest, to take collective action to defend their interests,
including strike action.”
- As
to the practice of European States, it can be observed that, in the
vast majority of them, the right for public servants to bargain
collectively with the authorities has been recognised, subject to
various exceptions so as to exclude certain areas (disciplinary
procedures, pensions, medical insurance, wages of senior civil
servants) or certain categories of civil servants who hold exclusive
powers of the State (members of the armed forces and of the police,
judges, diplomats, career civil servants at federal level). The right
of public servants working for local authorities and not holding
State powers to engage in collective bargaining in order to determine
their wages and working conditions has been recognised in the vast
majority of Contracting States. The remaining exceptions can be
justified by particular circumstances.
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT'S PRELIMINARY OBJECTIONS
- The
Government raised two objections to admissibility before the Grand
Chamber: one to the effect that it was impossible to rely against
them on international instruments other than the Convention,
particularly instruments that Turkey had not ratified; and the other
to the effect that Article 11 of the Convention was not
applicable to the applicants as they were civil servants and not
ordinary contractual employees.
- As
to the first objection, the Government contended that the Court, by
means of an interpretation of the Convention, could not create for
contracting States new obligations that were not provided for in the
Convention. In particular, considering that the Chamber had attached
great importance to the European Social Charter (Articles 5 and 6 of
which had not been ratified by Turkey) and to the case-law of its
supervisory organ, they requested the Grand Chamber to declare the
application inadmissible as being incompatible ratione materiae
with the Convention, in view of the impossibility of relying against
the Government on international instruments that Turkey had not
ratified.
- As
to the second objection, the Government, relying for the most part on
the restriction provided for in the last sentence of Article 11 of
the Convention in respect of the applicability of this provision to
“members ... of the administration of the State”, argued
that Turkish civil servants, including municipal civil servants, were
covered by a specific and highly detailed set of legal rules under
the Public Service Act (Law no. 657), thus being distinguished from
other employees. The Government requested the Court to dismiss the
application as being incompatible ratione materiae with the
provisions of Article 11.
- The
applicants disputed the objections submitted by the Government.
- The
Court observes that the Government's objection to the Court's
consideration of the European Social Charter cannot be regarded as a
preliminary objection. Even supposing that the Government's objection
was well-founded, an application does not become inadmissible solely
by the effect of instruments in the light of which a Section of the
Court has assessed its merits. In reality, this objection by the
Government relates more to the examination of the substantive
questions raised by the case and will be dealt with in that context.
- As
to the objection concerning the scope of the Convention ratione
materiae, the Court first observes that the Government are not
estopped from raising it since they submitted before the Chamber,
prior to the examination of admissibility, an essentially similar
argument. That being said, the Court notes that, even if there had
been estoppel, it could not have avoided examining this issue, which
goes to its jurisdiction, the extent of which is determined by the
Convention itself, in particular by Article 32, and not by the
parties' submissions in a particular case (see, mutatis mutandis,
Blečić v. Croatia [GC], no. 59532/00, §§ 63-69,
ECHR 2006 ....).
This
objection by the Government nevertheless requires the Court to
examine the notion of “members ... of the administration of the
State”, which appears in the last sentence of Article 11. The
Court therefore finds it appropriate to join it to the merits.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 11 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that the domestic courts had denied them the
right to form trade unions and to enter into collective agreements.
In this connection they relied on Article 11 of the Convention, which
reads as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom
of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others,
including the right to form and to join trade unions for the
protection of his interests.
2. No restrictions shall be placed on the
exercise of these rights other than such as are prescribed by law and
are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national
security or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others. This Article shall not prevent the
imposition of lawful restrictions on the exercise of these rights by
members of the armed forces, of the police or of the administration
of the State.”
A. Interpretation of the Convention in the light of
other international instruments
- The
Court decided above to examine at the merits stage the Government's
submission to the effect that, in adjudicating a case, it was
impossible to rely against Turkey on international instruments other
than the Convention, particularly instruments that Turkey had not
ratified. As it relates more to the methodology to be adopted in an
examination of the merits of the complaints submitted under Article
11 of the Convention, the Court considers it necessary to dispose of
this submission before turning to any other question.
1. Parties' submissions
(a) The Government
- The
Government argued that the Court was not entitled to create, by way
of interpretation, any new obligations not already provided for in
the Convention. They contended, among other submissions, that an
international treaty to which the party concerned had not acceded,
could not be relied upon against it. Whilst the Government accepted
that the Court had always taken into account, when necessary, “any
relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations
between the parties” (see Al Adsani v. the United
Kingdom [GC], no. 35763/97, § 55, ECHR 2001 XI),
they considered that this approach was only legitimate if it complied
with the criteria set out in Article 31 § 3 of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties, and in particular, if account was
taken only of those instruments by which the State concerned was
bound.
- Turkey
was not a party to Article 5 (the right to organise) or Article 6
(the right to bargain collectively) of the European Social Charter,
which it ratified in 1989. An interpretation that rendered these
provisions binding on an indirect basis was even more problematic
where, as in the present case, the absence in the Convention of an
express provision guaranteeing the right to enter into collective
agreements was counterbalanced by consideration of other instruments
to which the State concerned was not a party.
(b) The applicants
- The
applicants criticised the manner in which the Government had raised
the question concerning interpretation of the Convention. They
pointed out that the Chamber had not applied the above-mentioned
provisions of the Social Charter in the present case, but that it had
taken into account, in its interpretation of Article 11 of the
Convention, an opinion of the Committee of Independent Experts
concerning the connection between the right to organise and
collective bargaining.
2. The Chamber
- The
Chamber did not have cause to rule on the objection in question. It
referred, as a supplementary argument, to the opinion of the Social
Charter's Committee of Independent Experts when pointing out the
organic link between freedom of association and freedom to bargain
collectively (Chamber judgment, § 35). In its judgment, the
Chamber used references to conventions of the International Labour
Organisation (ILO) in assessing whether the impugned measure was
necessary in a democratic society, and in particular whether the
trade union Tüm Bel Sen had been acting in good faith when it
chose collective bargaining as a means to defend its members'
interests (ibid., § 46).
3. The practice of interpreting Convention provisions
in the light of other international texts and instruments
(a) Basis
- In order to determine the meaning of the terms and
phrases used in the Convention, the Court is guided mainly by the
rules of interpretation provided for in Articles 31 to 33 of the
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (see, for example, Golder
v. the United Kingdom, 21 February 1975, § 29, Series A
no. 18; Johnston and Others v. Ireland, 18 December
1986, §§ 51 et seq., Series A no. 112;
Lithgow and Others v. the United Kingdom, 8 July 1986,
§§ 114 and 117, Series A no. 102; and Witold
Litwa v. Poland, no. 26629/95, §§ 57-59, ECHR
2000 III). In accordance with the Vienna Convention the Court is
required to ascertain the ordinary meaning to be given to the words
in their context and in the light of the object and purpose of the
provision from which they are drawn (see Golder, cited above,
§ 29; Johnston and Others, cited above, § 51; and
Article 31 § 1 of the Vienna Convention). Recourse may also
be had to supplementary means of interpretation, either to confirm a
meaning determined in accordance with the above steps, or to
establish the meaning where it would otherwise be ambiguous, obscure,
or manifestly absurd or unreasonable (Article 32 of the Vienna
Convention; see Saadi v. the United Kingdom [GC], no.
13229/03, § 62, ECHR 2008 ....).
- Since
the Convention is first and foremost a system for the protection of
human rights, the Court must interpret and apply it in a manner which
renders its rights practical and effective, not theoretical and
illusory. The Convention must also be read as a whole, and
interpreted in such a way as to promote internal consistency and
harmony between its various provisions (see, among other authorities,
Stec and Others v. the United Kingdom (dec.) [GC],
nos. 65731/01 and 65900/01, §§ 47-48, ECHR 2005 X).
- In
addition, the Court has never considered the provisions of the
Convention as the sole framework of reference for the interpretation
of the rights and freedoms enshrined therein. On the contrary, it
must also take into account any relevant rules and principles of
international law applicable in relations between the Contracting
Parties (see Saadi, cited above, § 62; Al-Adsani,
cited above, § 55; and Bosphorus Hava Yolları Turizm ve
Ticaret Anonim Şirketi v. Ireland [GC], no. 45036/98, §
150, ECHR 2005 VI; see also Article 31 § 3 (c) of the
Vienna Convention).
- The
Court further observes that it has always referred to the “living”
nature of the Convention, which must be interpreted in the light of
present-day conditions, and that it has taken account of evolving
norms of national and international law in its interpretation of
Convention provisions (see Soering v. the United Kingdom, 7
July 1989, § 102, Series A no. 161; Vo
v. France [GC], no. 53924/00, § 82, ECHR
2004 VIII; and Mamatkulov and Askarov v. Turkey [GC],
nos. 46827/99 and 46951/99, § 121, ECHR 2005 I).
(b) Diversity of international texts and
instruments used for the interpretation of the Convention
(i) General international law
- The
precise obligations that the substantive provisions of the Convention
impose on Contracting States may be interpreted, firstly, in the
light of relevant international treaties that are applicable in the
particular sphere (thus, for example, the Court has interpreted
Article 8 of the Convention in the light of the United Nations
Convention of 20 November 1989 on the Rights of the Child and the
European Convention on the Adoption of Children of 24 April 1967 –
see Pini and Others v. Romania, nos. 78028/01 and
78030/01, §§ 139 and 144, ECHR 2004 V; and Emonet
and Others v. Switzerland, no. 39051/03, §§ 65-66,
ECHR 2007 ...).
- In
another case where reference was made to international treaties other
than the Convention, the Court, in order to establish the State's
positive obligation concerning “the prohibition on domestic
slavery” took into account the provisions of universal
international conventions (the ILO Forced Labour Convention, the
Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave
Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery, and the
International Convention on the Rights of the Child – see
Siliadin v. France, no. 73316/01, §§ 85-87,
ECHR 2005 VII). After referring to the relevant provisions of
these international instruments, the Court considered that limiting
the question of compliance with Article 4 of the Convention only to
direct action by the State authorities would be inconsistent with the
international instruments specifically concerned with this issue and
would amount to rendering it ineffective (ibid. § 89).
- Moreover,
as the Court indicated in the Golder case (cited above, § 35),
the relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations
between the parties also include “general principles of law
recognized by civilized nations” (see Article 38 § 1 (c)
of the Statute of the International Court of Justice). The Legal
Committee of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe
foresaw in August 1950 that “the Commission and the Court
[would] necessarily [have to] apply such principles” in the
execution of their duties and thus considered it to be “unnecessary”
to insert a specific clause to this effect in the Convention
(Documents of the Consultative Assembly, working papers of the 1950
session, Vol. III, no. 93, p. 982, para. 5).
- In
the Soering judgment (cited above), the Court took into
consideration the principles laid down by texts of universal scope in
developing its case-law concerning Article 3 of the Convention in
respect of extradition to third countries. Firstly, it considered,
with reference to the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and the 1969 American Convention on Human Rights,
that the prohibition of treatment contrary to Article 3 of the
Convention had become an internationally accepted standard. Secondly,
it considered that the fact that the United Nations Convention
Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment prohibited the extradition of a person to another State
where he would be in danger of being subjected to torture did not
mean that an essentially similar obligation was not already inherent
in the general terms of Article 3 of the European Convention.
- Furthermore,
the Court found in its Al-Adsani judgment, with reference to
universal instruments (Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, Articles 2 and 4 of the United Nations Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment or
Punishment) and their interpretation by international criminal courts
(judgment of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia in Furundzija, 10 December 1998) and domestic
courts (judgment of the House of Lords in the case of ex parte
Pinochet (No. 3)), that the prohibition of torture had attained
the status of a peremptory norm of international law, or jus
cogens, which it incorporated into its case-law in this sphere
(Al-Adsani, cited above, § 60).
(ii) Council of Europe instruments
- In
a number of judgments the Court has used, for the purpose of
interpreting the Convention, intrinsically non-binding instruments of
Council of Europe organs, in particular recommendations and
resolutions of the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary
Assembly (see, among other authorities, Öneryıldız
v. Turkey [GC], no. 48939/99, §§ 59, 71, 90
and 93, ECHR 2004 XII).
- These
methods of interpretation have also led the Court to support its
reasoning by reference to norms emanating from other Council of
Europe organs, even though those organs have no function of
representing States Parties to the Convention, whether supervisory
mechanisms or expert bodies. In order to interpret the exact scope of
the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Convention, the Court has,
for example, made use of the work of the European Commission for
Democracy through Law or “Venice Commission” (see, among
other authorities, Russian Conservative Party of Entrepreneurs and
Others v. Russia, nos. 55066/00 and 55638/00, §§ 70-73,
ECHR 2007 ...; Basque Nationalist Party –
Iparralde Regional Organisation v. France,
no. 71251/01, §§ 45-52, ECHR 2007 ...; and
Çiloğlu and Others v. Turkey, no. 73333/01, § 17,
6 March 2007) of that of the European Commission against Racism
and Intolerance (see, for example, Bekos and Koutropoulos
v. Greece, no. 15250/02, §§ 33 36,
ECHR 2005 ... ; Ivanova v. Bulgaria, no. 52435/99,
§§ 65-66, ECHR 2007 ...; Cobzaru v. Romania,
no. 48254/99, §§ 49-50, 26 July 2007; and
D.H. and Others v. the Czech Republic [GC], no. 57325/00,
§§ 59-65, 184, 192, 200 and 205, ECHR 2007 ...)
and of the reports of the European Committee for the Prevention of
Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) (see,
for example, Aerts v. Belgium, 30 July 1998, § 42,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998 V; Slimani v.
France, no. 57671/00, §§ 22 et seq., ECHR
2004 IX; Nazarenko v. Ukraine, no. 39483/98,
§§ 94-102, 29 April 2003; Kalashnikov v.
Russia, no. 47095/99, § 97, ECHR 2002 VI; and
Kadiķis v. Latvia (no. 2), no. 62393/00,
§ 52, 4 May 2006).
(iii) Consideration by the Court
- The
Court recently confirmed, in the Saadi v. the United Kingdom
judgment (cited above, § 63), that when it considers the
object and purpose of the Convention provisions, it also takes into
account the international law background to the legal question before
it. Being made up of a set of rules and principles that are accepted
by the vast majority of States, the common international or domestic
law standards of European States reflect a reality that the Court
cannot disregard when it is called upon to clarify the scope of a
Convention provision that more conventional means of interpretation
have not enabled it to establish with a sufficient degree of
certainty.
- By
way of example, in finding that the right to organise had a negative
aspect which excluded closed-shop agreements, the Court considered,
largely on the basis of the European Social Charter and the case-law
of its supervisory organs, together with other European or universal
instruments, that there was a growing measure of agreement on the
subject at international level (see Sigurður A. Sigurjónsson
v. Iceland, 30 June 1993, § 35, Series A no. 264;
and Sørensen and Rasmussen v. Denmark [GC],
nos. 52562/99 and 52620/99, §§ 72-75, ECHR 2006 ...).
- The
Court observes in this connection that in searching for common ground
among the norms of international law it has never distinguished
between sources of law according to whether or not they have been
signed or ratified by the respondent State.
- Thus,
in the Marckx v. Belgium case, concerning the legal status of
children born out of wedlock, the Court based its interpretation on
two international conventions of 1962 and 1975 that Belgium, like
other States Parties to the Convention, had not yet ratified at the
time (Marckx v. Belgium, 13 June 1979, §§ 20
and 41, Series A no. 31). The Court considered that the
small number of ratifications of these instruments could not be
relied on in opposition to the continuing evolution of the domestic
law of the great majority of the member States, together with the
relevant international instruments, towards full juridical
recognition of the maxim “mater semper certa est”.
- Moreover,
in the cases of Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom ([GC],
no. 28957/95, ECHR 2002 VI), Vilho Eskelinen and Others
v. Finland ([GC], no. 63235/00, ECHR 2007 ...) and
Sørensen and Rasmussen v. Denmark (cited above), the
Court was guided by the European Union's Charter of Fundamental
Rights, even though this instrument was not binding. Furthermore, in
the cases of McElhinney v. Ireland ([GC], no. 31253/96,
ECHR 2001 XI), Al-Adsani v. the United Kingdom (cited
above) and Fogarty v. the United Kingdom ([GC], no. 37112/97,
ECHR 2001 XI), the Court took note of the European Convention on
State Immunity, which had only been ratified at the time by eight
member States.
- In
addition, in its Glass v. the United Kingdom judgment, the
Court took account, in interpreting Article 8 of the Convention, of
the standards enshrined in the Oviedo Convention on Human Rights and
Biomedicine of 4 April 1997, even though that instrument had not been
ratified by all the States parties to the Convention (see Glass v.
the United Kingdom, no. 61827/00, § 75, ECHR
2004 II).
- In
order to determine the criteria for State responsibility under
Article 2 of the Convention in respect of dangerous activities, the
Court, in the Öneryıldız v. Turkey judgment,
referred among other texts to the Convention on Civil Liability for
Damage resulting from Activities Dangerous to the Environment
(ETS no. 150 – Lugano, 21 June 1993) and the
Convention on the Protection of the Environment through Criminal Law
(ETS no. 172 – Strasbourg, 4 November 1998). The majority of
member States, including Turkey, had neither signed nor ratified
these two Conventions (see Öneryıldız, cited
above, § 59).
- In the Taşkın and Others v.
Turkey case, the Court built on its case law concerning
Article 8 of the Convention in matters of environmental protection
(an aspect regarded as forming part of the individual's private life)
largely on the basis of principles enshrined in the Aarhus Convention
on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and
Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (ECE/CEP/43) (see Taşkın
and Others v. Turkey, no. 49517/99, §§ 99
and 119, 4 December 2003). Turkey had not signed the Aarhus
Convention.
- The
Court notes that the Government further invoked the absence of
political support on the part of member States, in the context of the
work of the Steering Committee for Human Rights, for the creation of
an additional protocol to extend the Convention system to certain
economic and social rights. The Court observes, however, that this
attitude of member States was accompanied, as acknowledged by the
Government, by a wish to strengthen the mechanism of the Social
Charter. The Court regards this as an argument in support of the
existence of a consensus among contracting States to promote economic
and social rights. It is not precluded from taking this general wish
of contracting States into consideration when interpreting the
provisions of the Convention.
4. Conclusion
- The
Court, in defining the meaning of terms and notions in the text of
the Convention, can and must take into account elements of
international law other than the Convention, the interpretation of
such elements by competent organs, and the practice of European
States reflecting their common values. The consensus emerging from
specialised international instruments and from the practice of
contracting States may constitute a relevant consideration for the
Court when it interprets the provisions of the Convention in specific
cases.
- In
this context, it is not necessary for the respondent State to have
ratified the entire collection of instruments that are applicable in
respect of the precise subject matter of the case concerned. It will
be sufficient for the Court that the relevant international
instruments denote a continuous evolution in the norms and principles
applied in international law or in the domestic law of the majority
of member States of the Council of Europe and show, in a precise
area, that there is common ground in modern societies (see, mutatis
mutandis, Marckx, cited above, § 41).
B. The right for municipal civil servants to form trade
unions
1. Chamber judgment
- The
Chamber considered that it had not been shown before it that the
absolute prohibition on forming trade unions imposed on civil
servants by Turkish law, as it was applied at the material time, met
a “pressing social need”. It found that the mere fact
that the “legislation [had] not provide[d] for such a
possibility” was not sufficient to warrant a measure as radical
as the dissolution of a trade union.
- Referring
to the judgment in Tüm Haber Sen and Çınar v.
Turkey (no. 28602/95, §§ 36-39, ECHR
2006 ...), the Chamber considered that, absent any concrete
evidence to show that the activities of the trade union Tüm Bel
Sen represented a threat to society or to the State, the respondent
State, in refusing to recognise the legal personality of the
applicants' union, had failed to comply with its obligation to secure
the enjoyment of the rights enshrined in Article 11 of the
Convention. It held that there had been a violation of Article 11 of
the Convention on this point.
2. The parties' submissions
(a) The Government
- Before
the Grand Chamber, the Government raised a plea of incompatibility
ratione materiae with the provisions of the Convention: Article
11 of the Convention not being applicable to “members ... of
the administration of the State”, it could not be applied to
the applicants in the present case as they belonged to that category
of worker. The Court has decided to join this objection to the merits
(see paragraph 56 above).
- In
support of their argument, the Government observed that all public
officials in Turkey were covered by a specific set of rules. The
situation of municipal civil servants was no different from that of
other civil servants, as local-government bodies were clearly
governmental organisations performing public duties.
- The
Government were of the opinion that it was impossible to render
ineffective, by means of interpretation or use of case-law, the
express terms of Article 11 in fine, which authorised States
to impose, in respect of members of the armed forces, the police or
the administration of the State, restrictions other than those that
had to pass the test of necessity in a democratic society.
- The
Government further argued before the Grand Chamber that the cassation
judgment of 6 December 1995 had had no repercussions on the intensive
union activities of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen, because it had
subsequently displayed an undeniable organisational efficiency and
had been able to enter into hundreds of collective agreements,
currently for the benefit of some ten thousand municipal employees.
(b) The applicants
- As
regards the fact that civil servants were prohibited from forming
trade unions, the applicants agreed with the view of the Chamber, but
pointed out that their main grievance related to the annulment of the
collective agreement. They observed that the prohibition as applied
in the present case did not take into account the fact that certain
civil servants performed exactly the same work as employees in the
private sector.
- As
to the effects that the cassation judgment of 6 December 1995 had had
on the activities of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen, the applicants
observed in the first place that the Ministry of the Interior had
brought criminal and civil proceedings, for abuse of authority,
against mayors who had entered into collective agreements with trade
unions. Even though, more recently, such proceedings had been
abandoned, the municipal authorities, fearing fresh proceedings, had
ceased to engage in collective bargaining with trade unions. The
activities of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen had thus been
considerably limited.
- The
applicants also claimed, in this connection, that the Audit Court,
following the cassation judgment of 6 December 1995, had invalidated
the collective agreements signed by the trade union Tüm Bel Sen
and that civil servants belonging to the union had had to reimburse
all the additional wages or allowances they had received as a result
of the defunct agreements. This development, which in itself
constituted interference with the trade union's activities, had also
prevented the union from persuading other municipal authorities to
sign new collective agreements.
3. The Court's assessment
(a) Can the applicants, as municipal civil
servants, be afforded the guarantees of Article 11 of the Convention?
- The
Court must now deal with the Government's objection that the
application is incompatible ratione materiae with the
provisions of the Convention on the ground that Article 11 of the
Convention is not applicable to “members ... of the
administration of the State”.
It is
true that paragraph 2 in fine of this provision clearly
indicates that the State is bound to respect the freedom of
association of its employees, subject to the possible imposition of
lawful restrictions on the exercise by members of its armed forces,
police or administration of the rights protected in that Article (see
Swedish Engine Drivers' Union v. Sweden, § 37,
Series A no. 20).
- In
this connection, the Court considers that the restrictions imposed on
the three groups mentioned in Article 11 are to be construed strictly
and should therefore be confined to the “exercise” of the
rights in question. These restrictions must not impair the very
essence of the right to organise. On this point the Court does not
share the view of the Commission that the term “lawful”
in the second sentence of Article 11 § 2 requires no more than
that the restriction in question should have a basis in national law,
and not be arbitrary and that it does not entail any requirement of
proportionality (see Council of Civil Service Unions and Others v.
the United Kingdom, no. 11603/85, Commission decision of 20
January 1987, Decisions and Reports 50, p. 241). Moreover, in the
Court's view, it is incumbent on the State concerned to show the
legitimacy of any restrictions to such persons' right to organise.
The Court further considers that municipal civil servants, who are
not engaged in the administration of the State as such, cannot in
principle be treated as “members of the administration of the
State” and, accordingly, be subjected on that basis to a
limitation of their right to organise and to form trade unions (see,
mutatis mutandis, Tüm Haber Sen and Çınar,
cited above, §§ 35-40 and 50).
- The
Court observes that these considerations find support in the majority
of the relevant international instruments and in the practice of
European States.
- Whilst
paragraph 2 of Article 8 of the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, which concerns the same subject matter,
includes members of the administration of the State among the
categories of persons who may be subject to restrictions, Article 22
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the
wording of which is similar to that of Article 11 of the Convention,
provides that the State is entitled to restrict the exercise of the
right to freedom of association only of members of the armed forces
and of the police, without referring to members of the administration
of the State.
- The
Court points out that the principal instrument guaranteeing,
internationally, the right for public officials to form trade unions
is ILO Convention No. 87 on Freedom of Association, Article 2 of
which provides that all workers, without distinction whatsoever, have
the right to establish and to join organisations of their own
choosing (see paragraph 37 above).
- The
Court observes that the right of public officials to join trade
unions has been confirmed on a number of occasions by the Committee
of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations.
This Committee, in its Individual Observation to the Turkish
Government concerning Convention No. 87, considered that the only
admissible exception to the right to organise as contemplated by that
instrument concerned the armed forces and the police (see
paragraph 38 above).
- The
Court further notes that the ILO Committee on Freedom of Association
adopted the same line of reasoning as regards municipal civil
servants. In the Committee's view, local public service employees
should be able effectively to establish organisations of their own
choosing, and these organisations should enjoy the full right to
further and defend the interests of the workers whom they represent
(see paragraph 39 above).
- The
instruments emanating from European organisations also show that the
principle whereby civil servants enjoy the fundamental right of
association has been very widely accepted by the member States. For
example, Article 5 of the European Social Charter guarantees the
freedom of workers and employers to form local, national or
international organisations for the protection of their economic and
social interests and to join those organisations. National
legislation may impose partial restrictions on the police and total
or partial restrictions on members of the armed forces, but no
possibility of restriction is provided for in respect of other
members of the administration of the State.
- The
right of association of civil servants has also been recognised by
the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe in its
Recommendation R (2000) 6 on the status of public officials in
Europe, Principle no. 8 of which declares that public officials
should, in principle, enjoy the same rights as all citizens, and that
their trade-union rights should only be lawfully restricted in so far
as that is necessary for the proper exercise of their public
functions (see paragraph 46 above).
- Another
European instrument, the European Union's Charter of Fundamental
Rights, has adopted an open approach to the right to organise,
declaring, in its Article 12(1), among other things, that “everyone”
has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of
his or her interests (see paragraph 47 above).
- As
to European practice, the Court reiterates that the right of public
servants to join trade unions is now recognised by all Contracting
States (see paragraph 48 above). This right applies to public
servants under a career or contractual system and to employees of
publicly owned industrial or commercial enterprises, whether national
or municipal. Civil servants, whether they work for central
government or a local authority, are generally entitled to join the
trade union of their choosing. The Court also takes note of the fact
that the density of trade-union membership is generally higher in the
public sector than in the private sector, which constitutes a
manifest indication of a favourable legal and administrative
environment created by member States. In the majority of member
States, the few restrictions that can be found are limited to
judicial offices, to the police and to the fire services, with the
most stringent restrictions, culminating in the prohibition of union
membership, being reserved for members of the armed forces.
- The
Court concludes from this that “members of the administration
of the State” cannot be excluded from the scope of Article 11.
At most the national authorities are entitled to impose “lawful
restrictions” on those members, in accordance with Article 11 §
2. In the present case, however, the Government have failed to show
how the nature of the duties performed by the applicants, as
municipal civil servants, requires them to be regarded as “members
of the administration of the State” subject to such
restrictions. Accordingly, the applicants may legitimately rely on
Article 11 of the Convention and any interference with the exercise
of the right concerned must satisfy the requirements of paragraph 2
of that Article.
- Accordingly,
the applicants may legitimately rely on Article 11 of the Convention
and the objection raised by the Government on this point must
therefore be dismissed.
(b) General principles
- The
Court reiterates that Article 11 § 1 presents trade-union
freedom as one form or a special aspect of freedom of association
(see National Union of Belgian Police v. Belgium, 27
October 1975, § 38, Series A no. 19; and Swedish
Engine Drivers' Union, cited above, § 39). The Convention
makes no distinction between the functions of a Contracting State as
holder of public power and its responsibilities as employer. Article
11 is no exception to that rule. On the contrary, paragraph 2 in
fine of this provision clearly indicates that the State is bound
to respect freedom of assembly and association, subject to the
possible imposition of “lawful restrictions” in the case
of members of its armed forces, police or administration (see Tüm
Haber Sen and Çınar, cited above, § 29). Article
11 is accordingly binding upon the “State as employer”,
whether the latter's relations with its employees are governed by
public or private law (see Swedish Engine Drivers' Union,
cited above, § 37).
- The
Court further reiterates that, although the essential object of
Article 11 is to protect the individual against arbitrary
interference by public authorities with the exercise of the rights
protected, there may in addition be positive obligations on the State
to secure the effective enjoyment of such rights. In the specific
context of the present case, the responsibility of Turkey would be
engaged if the facts complained of by the applicants – that is
to say, principally, the non-recognition of their union by the State
at the material time – resulted from a failure on its part to
secure to the applicants under domestic law the rights set forth in
Article 11 of the Convention (see Wilson, National Union of
Journalists and Others v. the United Kingdom, nos. 30668/96,
30671/96 and 30678/96, § 41, ECHR 2002-V; and Gustafsson v.
Sweden, 25 April 1996, § 45, Reports 1996-II).
- However,
as the Court has pointed out in the context of Article 8 of the
Convention, whether the case is analysed in terms of a positive duty
on the State to take reasonable and appropriate measures to secure
the rights of an applicant under the Article or in terms of an
interference by a public authority, to be justified in accordance
with paragraph 2 of the Article, the applicable principles are
broadly similar (see Hatton and Others v. the United
Kingdom [GC], no. 36022/97, § 98, ECHR 2003 VIII).
(c) Effects of State action or inaction on
Tüm Bel Sen's activities
- The
Court must ascertain in the first place whether the Government's
argument that the cassation judgment of 6 December 1995 had no
effects on the union activities of Tüm Bel Sen is confirmed by
the facts of the case.
- It
observes in this connection that the said judgment, to the extent
that it was found therein that the applicant trade union had not
acquired legal personality when it was created and, accordingly, that
it was not entitled to take or defend legal proceedings, had two
effects on the union's activities, one retrospective, the other
prospective.
- The
judgment in question had the retrospective effect of rendering null
and void ab initio all the activities and actions that Tüm
Bel Sen had undertaken between 1991 and 1993 in relation to the
Gaziantep Municipal Council for the purpose of protecting its
members' interests, including the collective agreement involved in
the present case. That effect was compounded by the decisions of the
Audit Court requiring the reimbursement of the advantages obtained by
members of the trade union as a result of negotiations with the
employing authority.
- As
to the prospective effect of the cassation judgment in question, the
Court regards as credible the applicants' argument that the trade
union Tüm Bel Sen had seen its activities considerably
restricted as a result of the reluctance on the part of the heads of
local authorities to enter into negotiations with it. It can be seen
from the case file, firstly, that heads of municipal authorities who
had agreed to grant advantages to civil servants under collective
agreements had faced administrative, financial and judicial
proceedings prior to the enactment of Law no. 4688 on 25 June 2001,
and, secondly, that even after that date they were themselves obliged
to reimburse to the State any additional sums that had been paid at
the material time and then in turn bring proceedings against the
civil servants who had received them.
- As
noted above (paragraph 88), the Chamber not only considered that
there had been an unjustified interference with the rights of the
applicants under Article 11 but that, in refusing to recognise the
legal personality of the applicants' union, the State had failed to
comply with its positive obligation to secure the enjoyment of the
rights enshrined in that Article. Like the Chamber, the Grand Chamber
considers that the present case can be analysed either as an
interference with Article 11 or as a failure by the State to comply
with its positive obligation to secure the applicants' rights under
this provision. In the particular circumstances of the present case
the Court considers that both approaches are possible given the
mixture of action and inaction on the part of the authorities with
which it is confronted. Accordingly it will proceed on the basis that
this part of the case should be analysed from the standpoint of
whether there was an interference with the applicants' rights but it
will also have regard to the State's positive obligations in so
doing.
(d) Compliance with Article 11
(i) Prescription by law and pursuit of a
legitimate aim
- Such
interference will constitute a breach of Article 11 unless it was
“prescribed by law”, pursued one or more legitimate aims
and was “necessary in a democratic society” for the
achievement of those aims.
- The
Court notes that the impugned interference was in accordance with the
domestic law as interpreted by the combined civil divisions of the
Court of Cassation. Moreover, it is not in dispute that the judgment
in question, in so far as it sought to prevent discrepancy between
legislation and practice, was intended to prevent disorder (see Tüm
Haber Sen and Çınar, cited above, §§ 33-34).
(ii) Necessity in a democratic society
- As
to the necessity of such interference in a democratic society, the
Court reiterates that lawful restrictions may be imposed on the
exercise of trade-union rights by members of the armed forces, of the
police or of the administration of the State. However, it must also
be borne in mind that the exceptions set out in Article 11 are to be
construed strictly; only convincing and compelling reasons can
justify restrictions on such parties' freedom of association. In
determining in such cases whether a “necessity” –
and therefore a “pressing social need” – within the
meaning of Article 11 § 2 exists, States have only a limited
margin of appreciation, which goes hand in hand with rigorous
European supervision embracing both the law and the decisions
applying it, including those given by independent courts (see, for
example, Sidiropoulos and Others v. Greece, 10 July 1998, §
40, Reports 1998 IV). The Court must also look at the
interference complained of in the light of the case as a whole and
determine whether it was “proportionate to the legitimate aim
pursued” and whether the reasons adduced by the national
authorities to justify it were “relevant and sufficient”.
In so doing, the Court has to satisfy itself that the national
authorities applied standards which were in conformity with the
principles embodied in the appropriate provision of the Convention
and, moreover, that they based their decisions on an acceptable
assessment of the relevant facts (see, for example, Yazar and
Others v. Turkey, nos. 22723/93, 22724/93 and 22725/93,
§ 51, ECHR 2002 II).
- As
to whether, in the present case, the non-recognition of the
applicants' union was justified by a “pressing social need”,
the Grand Chamber endorses the following assessment of the Chamber:
“it has not been shown before it that the absolute
prohibition on forming trade unions imposed on civil servants ... by
Turkish law, as it applied at the material time, met a 'pressing
social need'. The mere fact that the 'legislation did not provide for
such a possibility' is not sufficient to warrant as radical a measure
as the dissolution of a trade union.”
- The
Court further considers that at the material time there were a number
of additional arguments in support of the idea that the
non-recognition of the right of the applicants, as municipal civil
servants, to form a trade union did not correspond to a “necessity”.
- Firstly,
the right of civil servants to form and join trade unions was already
recognised by instruments of international law, both universal (see
paragraphs 98-102 above) and regional (see paragraphs 103-105 above).
In addition, an examination of European practice shows that the
freedom of association of public officials was generally recognised
in all member States (see paragraph 106 above).
- Secondly,
Turkey had already, at the material time, ratified (by an instrument
deposited on 12 July 1993) ILO Convention No. 87, the fundamental
text securing, internationally, the right of public officials to form
trade unions. This instrument was already, by virtue of the Turkish
Constitution, directly applicable in domestic law (see paragraph 34
above).
- Lastly,
Turkey confirmed by its subsequent practice its willingness to
recognise the right to organise of civil servants – a
willingness already expressed by the ratification of ILO Convention
No. 87 in 1993 – by the amendment of the Constitution in 1995
and by the practice of the judicial organs from the early 1990s
onwards. That latter practice is illustrated by the decisions taken
in the present case by the District Court and the Fourth Civil
Division of the Court of Cassation. Moreover, in 2000 Turkey signed
the two United Nations instruments recognising the right in question
(see paragraphs 40 and 41 above).
- The
Court observes that, in spite of these developments in international
law, the Turkish authorities were unable to secure to the applicants
the right to form a trade union, mainly for two reasons. Firstly, the
Turkish legislature, after the ratification in 1993 of ILO Convention
No. 87 by Turkey, did nothing more until 2001, the year in which
it enacted the Civil Servants' Trade Union Act (Law no. 4688), which
governs the practical application of this right. Secondly, during
this transitional period, the combined civil divisions of the Court
of Cassation refused to follow the solution proposed by the Gaziantep
District Court, which had been guided by developments in
international law, and gave a restrictive and formalistic
interpretation of the domestic legislation concerning the forming of
legal entities. This interpretation prevented the combined civil
divisions from assessing the specific circumstances of the case and
from ascertaining whether a fair balance had been struck between the
respective interests of the applicants and of the employing
authority, Gaziantep Municipal Council (see, mutatis mutandis,
Sørensen and Rasmussen, cited above, § 58).
- The
Court thus considers that the combined effect of the restrictive
interpretation by the Court of Cassation and the legislature's
inactivity between 1993 and 2001 prevented the State from fulfilling
its obligation to secure to the applicants the enjoyment of their
trade-union rights and cannot be justified as “necessary in a
democratic society” within the meaning of Article 11 § 2
of the Convention.
- Accordingly,
there has been a violation of Article 11 of the Convention on account
of the failure to recognise the right of the applicants, as municipal
civil servants, to form a trade union.
C. Annulment of a collective agreement between the
trade union Tüm Bel Sen and the authority which had been applied
for the previous two years
1. The Chamber judgment
- The
Chamber examined this point separately from the complaint concerning
the refusal of the Court of Cassation to recognise the right of civil
servants to form trade unions.
- As
to the question whether there had been a breach of the applicants'
trade-union rights, the Chamber considered that the Court's case-law
did not exclude the possibility that the right to enter into a
collective agreement might represent, in the particular circumstances
of a case, one of the principal means – even the foremost of
such means – for trade unionists to protect their interests. It
noted the organic link between freedom of association and freedom to
bargain collectively, as previously referred to by the Social
Charter's Committee of Independent Experts.
- The
Chamber, after observing that, in the present case, the trade union
Tüm Bel Sen had persuaded the authority to engage in collective
bargaining and to enter into a collective agreement, and that this
agreement had for a period of two years governed all working
relations between municipal-council staff and their employer,
considered that this collective agreement represented for the trade
union the principal, if not only, means of promoting and safeguarding
its members' interests (see §§ 30-40 of the Chamber
judgment).
- The
Chamber also considered that the interference in question was
prescribed by law and that the prevention of discrepancy between
practice and the current domestic law could be regarded as a
legitimate aim within the meaning of paragraph 2 of Article 11 (see §
42 of the Chamber judgment). As regards the justification for the
interference, the Chamber found that no pressing need in this
connection had been shown by the Government. It also found that
Turkey had failed in its positive obligation under Article 11 to
assist the applicants' union in defending its members' interests.
2. The parties' observations
- The
parties agreed that the Grand Chamber had to examine the complaint
concerning the annulment of the collective agreement separately from
the complaint concerning the applicants' right to form trade unions.
(a) The Government
- The
Government argued that the complaint relating to the annulment of the
collective agreement had to be examined separately, in so far as, in
their opinion, it raised separate legal questions from those raised
by the applicants' right to form a trade union.
- In
the Government's opinion, it was not appropriate to modify the
case-law established in the 1970s to the effect that the right to
enter into collective agreements was not a right guaranteed as such
by Article 11. Going beyond the early classical cases of National
Union of Belgian Police v. Belgium or Swedish Engine
Drivers' Union v. Sweden, this case-law had been reiterated more
recently in inadmissibility decisions (see Francesco Schettini and
Others v. Italy (dec), no. 29529/95, 9 November 2000; and UNISON
v. the United Kingdom (dec.), no. 53574/99, ECHR 2002 I).
- The
Government pointed out in this connection that trade-union rights
could be implemented in a number of different forms and they argued
that the State was free to select those that were to be used by trade
unions. They claimed that it was not for the Court to impose any
particular form on Contracting States for the purposes of Article 11.
- They
contended, moreover, that it was impossible to establish a common
European practice as regards the right of civil servants to enter
into collective agreements. In certain Contracting States, only
contractual State employees (as opposed to career civil servants)
enjoyed such a right, whilst in others only those civil servants who
held senior posts were excluded.
- Lastly,
the Government considered that the ILO Conventions ratified by Turkey
were not pertinent in the context of Article 11 of the
Convention. They argued that the Court should not make use of them to
create new rights that could be relied upon under the Convention.
(b) The applicants
- The
applicants explained that their principal complaint concerned the
annulment of the collective agreement between them and the Gaziantep
Municipal Council. They stated that they shared the Chamber's
analysis of this question, whilst pointing out that the Court of
Cassation's position totally disregarded their rights in this
connection.
- They
further agreed with the concurring opinion of three judges in the
Chamber who had stated that the right to bargain collectively should
be regarded nowadays as one of the essential elements inherent in the
right to form trade unions, within the meaning of Article 11 of the
Convention.
3. Whether there was interference
(a) General principles concerning the
substance of the right of association
(i) Evolution of case-law
- The
development of the Court's case-law concerning the constituent
elements of the right of association can be summarised as follows:
the Court has always considered that Article 11 of the Convention
safeguards freedom to protect the occupational interests of
trade-union members by the union's collective action, the conduct and
development of which the Contracting States must both permit and make
possible (see National Union of Belgian Police, cited above, §
39; Swedish Engine Drivers' Union, cited above, § 40; and
Schmidt and Dahlström v. Sweden, 6 February 1976, §
36, Series A no. 21).
- As to the substance of the right of association
enshrined in Article 11 of the Convention, the Court has taken
the view that paragraph 1 of that Article affords members of a trade
union a right, in order to protect their interests, that the trade
union should be heard, but has left each State a free choice of the
means to be used towards this end. What the Convention requires, in
the Court's view, is that under national law trade unions should be
enabled, in conditions not at variance with Article 11, to strive for
the protection of their members' interests (see National Union of
Belgian Police, cited above, § 39; Swedish Engine
Drivers' Union, cited above, § 40; and Schmidt and
Dahlström, cited above, § 36).
- As
regards the right to enter into collective agreements, the Court
initially considered that Article 11 did not secure any particular
treatment of trade unions, such as a right for them to enter into
collective agreements (see Swedish Engine Drivers' Union,
cited above, § 39). It further stated that this right in no way
constituted an element necessarily inherent in a right guaranteed by
the Convention (see Schmidt and Dahlström, cited above, §
34).
- Subsequently,
in the case of Wilson, National Union of Journalists and Others,
the Court considered that even if collective bargaining was not
indispensable for the effective enjoyment of trade-union freedom, it
might be one of the ways by which trade unions could be enabled to
protect their members' interests. The union had to be free, in one
way or another, to seek to persuade the employer to listen to what it
had to say on behalf of its members (Wilson, National Union of
Journalists and Others, cited above, § 44).
- As
a result of the foregoing, the evolution of case-law as to the
substance of the right of association enshrined in Article 11 is
marked by two guiding principles: firstly, the Court takes into
consideration the totality of the measures taken by the State
concerned in order to secure trade-union freedom, subject to its
margin of appreciation; secondly, the Court does not accept
restrictions that affect the essential elements of trade-union
freedom, without which that freedom would become devoid of substance.
These two principles are not contradictory but are correlated. This
correlation implies that the Contracting State in question, whilst in
principle being free to decide what measures it wishes to take in
order to ensure compliance with Article 11, is under an obligation to
take account of the elements regarded as essential by the Court's
case-law.
- From
the Court's case-law as it stands, the following essential elements
of the right of association can be established: the right to form and
join a trade union (see, as a recent authority, Tüm Haber Sen
and Çınar, cited above), the prohibition of
closed-shop agreements (see, for example, Sørensen and
Rasmussen, cited above) and the right for a trade union to seek
to persuade the employer to hear what it has to say on behalf of its
members (Wilson, National Union of Journalists and Others,
cited above, § 44).
- This
list is not finite. On the contrary, it is subject to evolution
depending on particular developments in labour relations. In this
connection it is appropriate to remember that the Convention is a
living instrument which must be interpreted in the light of
present-day conditions, and in accordance with developments in
international law, so as to reflect the increasingly high standard
being required in the area of the protection of human rights, thus
necessitating greater firmness in assessing breaches of the
fundamental values of democratic societies. In other words,
limitations to rights must be construed restrictively, in a manner
which gives practical and effective protection to human rights (see,
mutatis mutandis, Refah Partisi (the Welfare Party) and
Others v. Turkey [GC], nos. 41340/98, 41342/98, 41343/98 and
41344/98, § 100, ECHR 2003 II; and Selmouni
v. France [GC], no. 25803/94, § 101, ECHR
1999 V).
(ii) The right to bargain collectively
- The
Court observes that in international law, the right to bargain
collectively is protected by ILO Convention No. 98 concerning the
Right to Organise and to Bargain Collectively. Adopted in 1949, this
text, which is one of the fundamental instruments concerning
international labour standards, was ratified by Turkey in 1952. It
states in Article 6 that it does not deal with the position of
“public servants engaged in the administration of the State”.
However, the ILO's Committee of Experts interpreted this provision as
excluding only those officials whose activities were specific to the
administration of the State. With that exception, all other persons
employed by government, by public enterprises or by autonomous public
institutions should benefit, according to the Committee, from the
guarantees provided for in Convention No. 98 in the same manner as
other employees, and consequently should be able to engage in
collective bargaining in respect of their conditions of employment,
including wages (see paragraph 43 above).
- The
Court further notes that ILO Convention No. 151 (which was adopted in
1978, entered into force in 1981 and has been ratified by Turkey) on
labour relations in the public service (“Convention concerning
Protection of the Right to Organise and Procedures for Determining
Conditions of Employment in the Public Service”) leaves States
free to choose whether or not members of the armed forces or of the
police should be accorded the right to take part in the determination
of working conditions, but provides that this right applies
everywhere else in the public service, if need be under specific
conditions. In addition, the provisions of Convention No. 151, under
its Article 1 § 1, cannot be used to reduce the extent of the
guarantees provided for in Convention No. 98 (see paragraph 44
above).
- As
to European instruments, the Court finds that the European Social
Charter, in its Article 6 § 2 (which Turkey has not ratified),
affords to all workers, and to all unions, the right to bargain
collectively, thus imposing on the public authorities the
corresponding obligation to promote actively a culture of dialogue
and negotiation in the economy, so as to ensure broad coverage for
collective agreements. The Court observes, however, that this
obligation does not oblige authorities to enter into collective
agreements. According to the meaning attributed by the European
Committee of Social Rights (ECSR) to Article 6 § 2 of the
Charter, which in fact fully applies to public officials, States
which impose restrictions on collective bargaining in the public
sector have an obligation, in order to comply with this provision, to
arrange for the involvement of staff representatives in the drafting
of the applicable employment regulations.
- As
to the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights, which is one
of the most recent European instruments, it provides in Article 28
that workers and employers, or their respective organisations, have,
in accordance with Community law and national laws and practices, the
right to negotiate and conclude collective agreements at the
appropriate levels.
- As
to the practice of European States, the Court reiterates that, in the
vast majority of them, the right of civil servants to bargain
collectively with the authorities has been recognised, subject to
various exceptions so as to exclude certain areas regarded as
sensitive or certain categories of civil servants who hold exclusive
powers of the State. In particular, the right of public servants
employed by local authorities and not holding State powers to engage
in collective bargaining in order to determine their wages and
working conditions has been recognised in the majority of Contracting
States. The remaining exceptions can be justified only by particular
circumstances (see paragraph 52 above).
- It
is also appropriate to take into account the evolution in the Turkish
situation since the application was lodged. Following its
ratification of Convention No. 87 on freedom of association and the
protection of the right to organise, Turkey amended, in 1995, Article
53 of its Constitution by inserting a paragraph providing for the
right of unions formed by public officials to take or defend court
proceedings and to engage in collective bargaining with authorities.
Later on, Law no. 4688 of 25 June 2001 laid down the terms governing
the exercise by civil servants of their right to bargain
collectively.
- In
the light of these developments, the Court considers that its
case law to the effect that the right to bargain collectively
and to enter into collective agreements does not constitute an
inherent element of Article 11 (Swedish Engine Drivers' Union,
cited above, § 39, and Schmidt and Dahlström, cited
above, § 34) should be reconsidered, so as to take account of
the perceptible evolution in such matters, in both international law
and domestic legal systems. While it is in the interests of legal
certainty, foreseeability and equality before the law that the Court
should not depart, without good reason, from precedents established
in previous cases, a failure by the Court to maintain a dynamic and
evolutive approach would risk rendering it a bar to reform or
improvement (see Vilho Eskelinen and Others, cited above,
§ 56).
- Consequently,
the Court considers that, having regard to the developments in labour
law, both international and national, and to the practice of
Contracting States in such matters, the right to bargain collectively
with the employer has, in principle, become one of the essential
elements of the “right to form and to join trade unions for the
protection of [one's] interests” set forth in Article 11 of the
Convention, it being understood that States remain free to organise
their system so as, if appropriate, to grant special status to
representative trade unions. Like other workers, civil servants,
except in very specific cases, should enjoy such rights, but without
prejudice to the effects of any “lawful restrictions”
that may have to be imposed on “members of the administration
of the State” within the meaning of Article 11 § 2 –
a category to which the applicants in the present case do not,
however, belong (see paragraph 108 above).
(b) Application in the present case of the
foregoing principles
- In
the light of the foregoing principles, the Court considers that the
trade union Tüm Bel Sen, already at the material time, enjoyed
the right to engage in collective bargaining with the employing
authority, which had moreover not disputed that fact. This right
constituted one of the inherent elements in the right to engage in
trade-union activities, as secured to that union by Article 11 of the
Convention.
- As
to the impugned collective agreement entered into after collective
bargaining, the Grand Chamber, like the Chamber, takes note of the
following facts:
“In the first place, the trade union Tüm Bel
Sen persuaded the employer, Gaziantep Municipal Council, to engage in
collective bargaining over questions that it regarded as important
for the interests of its members and to reach an agreement in order
to determine their reciprocal obligations and duties.
Subsequently, following those negotiations, a collective
agreement was entered into between the employer and the union Tüm
Bel Sen. All the rights and obligations of its members were provided
for and protected under that agreement.
Moreover, the collective agreement was implemented. For
a period of two years, with the exception of certain financial
provisions that were in dispute between the parties, the collective
agreement governed all employer-employee relations within Gaziantep
Municipal Council.”
- Accordingly, the Court observes that the collective
bargaining in the present case and the resulting collective agreement
constituted, for the trade union concerned, an essential means to
promote and secure the interests of its members. The absence of the
legislation necessary to give effect to the provisions of the
international labour conventions already ratified by Turkey, and the
Court of Cassation judgment of 6 December 1995 based on that absence,
with the resulting de facto annulment ex tunc of the
collective agreement in question, constituted interference with the
applicants' trade-union freedom as protected by Article 11 of the
Convention.
- As to the applicants' arguments concerning the
insufficiency of the new legislation with regard to the trade-union
rights of civil servants, the Court points out that the object of the
present application does not extend to the fact that the new Turkish
legislation fails to impose on the authorities an obligation to enter
into collective agreements with civil servants' trade unions, or to
the fact that those unions do not have the right to strike in the
event that their collective bargaining should prove unsuccessful.
4. Whether the interference was justified
- The
Court considers that the interference in question, namely the
annulment ex tunc of the collective agreement that the trade
union Tüm Bel Sen had entered into following collective
bargaining with the authority that employed the applicants, should be
regarded as having breached Article 11, unless it can be shown that
it was “prescribed by law”, that it pursued one or more
legitimate aims, in accordance with paragraph 2, and that it was
“necessary in a democratic society” to fulfil such aims.
(a) Prescription by law
- The
Government and the applicants agreed with the Chamber's finding that
the interference in question was prescribed by law. For the purposes
of the present case, the Grand Chamber can accept that the
interference was prescribed by law, as interpreted by the combined
civil divisions of the Court of Cassation, the highest judicial body
to have ruled on the case.
(b) Pursuit of a legitimate aim
- The
Court can also accept, like the Chamber and the parties themselves,
that the interference in question, in so far as it aimed to prevent
discrepancy between law and practice, pursued a legitimate aim: the
prevention of disorder. As to the fact that the risk of such
discrepancy was the result of the time taken by the legislature to
adapt the legislation to Turkey's international commitments in the
field of international labour standards, the Court considers that its
assessment must likewise relate to the question whether such a
measure was necessary in a democratic society.
(c) Necessity in a democratic society
- The
Court refers in this connection to the case-law set out above
concerning the negative and positive obligations imposed on the
Government by Article 11 of the Convention (see paragraphs 119 and
110 above).
- As
to the application of these principles in the present case, the Court
notes that the Government have omitted to show how the impugned
restriction was necessary in a democratic society, standing by their
principal argument to the effect that the applicants, in their
capacity as civil servants, did not have the right to bargain
collectively or enter into collective agreements.
- The
Court, performing its own examination, considers that at the material
time a number of elements showed that the refusal to accept that the
applicants, as municipal civil servants, enjoyed the right to bargain
collectively and thus to persuade the authority to enter into a
collective agreement, did not correspond to a “pressing social
need”.
- Firstly,
the right for civil servants to be able, in principle, to bargain
collectively, was recognised by international law instruments, both
universal (see paragraphs 147-148 above) and regional (see paragraphs
149 150 above). Moreover, an examination of European practice
shows that this right was recognised in the majority of member States
(see paragraphs 52 and 151 above).
- Secondly,
Turkey had in 1952 ratified ILO Convention No. 98, the principal
instrument protecting, internationally, the right for workers to
bargain collectively and enter into collective agreements (see
paragraphs 42-43 and 151 above). There is no evidence in the case
file to show that the applicants' union represented “public
servants engaged in the administration of the State”, that is
to say, according to the interpretation of the ILO's Committee of
Experts, officials whose activities are specific to the
administration of the State and who qualify for the exception
provided for in Article 6 of ILO Convention No. 98.
- In
these circumstances, the Grand Chamber shares the following
consideration of the Chamber:
“The Court cannot accept that the argument based
on an omission in the law – caused by a delay on the part of
the legislature – was sufficient in itself to make the
annulment of a collective agreement which had been applied for the
past two years satisfy the conditions for any restriction of the
freedom of association.”
- Moreover,
the Grand Chamber observes that the Government failed to adduce
evidence of any specific circumstances that could have justified the
exclusion of the applicants, as municipal civil servants, from the
right, inherent in their trade-union freedom, to bargain collectively
in order to enter into the agreement in question. The explanation
that civil servants, without distinction, enjoy a privileged position
in relation to other workers is not sufficient in this context.
- The
Court thus finds that the impugned interference, namely the annulment
ex tunc of the collective agreement entered into by the
applicants' union following collective bargaining with the authority
was not “necessary in a democratic society”, within the
meaning of Article 11 § 2 of the Convention.
- There
has therefore been a violation of Article 11 of the Convention on
this point also, in respect of both the applicants' trade union and
the applicants themselves.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants argued that the restrictions imposed on their freedom to
form trade unions and enter into collective agreements constituted a
discriminatory distinction for the purposes of Article 14 of the
Convention taken in conjunction with Article 11.
- However,
in view of its findings under Article 11, the Court, as did the
Chamber, does not consider it necessary to examine this complaint
separately.
IV. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- Before
the Chamber, Mr Kemal Demir claimed that he had sustained pecuniary
damage in the sum of 551 euros (EUR), on account of the additional
pay that he would have received over a thirteen-year period if the
collective agreement had not been annulled. He also claimed
EUR 14,880 in respect of non-pecuniary damage resulting from his
disappointment at being deprived of the means to assert his rights.
- Mrs
Vicdan Baykara, on behalf of the trade union that she represented and
of its members, claimed compensation for non-pecuniary damage in the
sum of EUR 148,810.
- The
Chamber awarded EUR 20,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage to Mrs
Vicdan Baykara, in her capacity as representative of the trade union
Tüm Bel Sen, to be shared between the members of the union,
together with EUR 500 to Mr Kemal Demir for all heads of damage
combined.
- The
applicants requested the Grand Chamber to award them exactly the same
amounts.
- The
Government disputed these claims. They submitted that there was no
causal link between the pecuniary damage alleged by the two
applicants and the cassation judgment in question, which concerned
the legal capacity of the trade union Tüm Bel Sen. They moreover
indicated that no documentary evidence had been adduced in support of
the claims submitted on that basis. They lastly argued that Mrs
Vicdan Baykara, in her capacity as President of the trade union Tüm
Bel Sen, had simply been discharging her duty as its representative
and on that basis could not receive compensation for non-pecuniary
damage.
- As
to the claim submitted by Mr Kemal Demir in respect of pecuniary
damage, the Court considers that the sum which the applicant was
obliged to pay back to the State following the annulment of the
relevant collective agreement must be returned to him. Admittedly,
the claim is not entirely supported by documentary evidence. However,
the calculations produced in a simplified form by the applicants
enable its accuracy to be verified. Making its assessment on an
equitable basis, the Court awards Mr Kemal Demir EUR 500 for all
heads of damage combined.
- As
to the claim submitted in respect of non-pecuniary damage by Mrs
Vicdan Baykara on behalf of the trade union she represented, the
Court draws attention to its case-law to the effect that the
frustration felt by members of an organ that has been dissolved or
prevented from acting can be taken into account in this connection
(see, for example, Dicle for the Democratic Party (DEP) of Turkey
v. Turkey, no. 25141/94, § 78, 10 December
2002; and Presidential Party of Mordovia v. Russia,
no. 65659/01, § 37, 5 October 2004). The Court
observes that at the material time the trade union Tüm Bel Sen
was the principal union of municipal-council staff. Its dissolution
and the annulment of its collective agreement with the Gaziantep
Municipal Council must have caused deep feelings of frustration among
its members, as they were thus deprived of their principal means of
defending their occupational interests.
- Making
its assessment on an equitable basis, the Court awards the sum of EUR
20,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage to the trade union Tüm
Bel Sen. This sum is to be paid to Mrs Vicdan Baykara, who will be
responsible for making it sum available to the trade union, which she
represents.
B. Costs and expenses
- Before
the Grand Chamber, as before the Chamber, the applicants did not
submit any claim for costs and expenses. The Court thus considers
that there is no cause to make any award under this head.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Joins to the merits the Government's
preliminary objections and dismisses them;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 11 of the Convention on account of the interference with
the right of the applicants, as municipal civil servants, to form a
trade union;
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 11 of the Convention on account of the annulment ex
tunc of the collective agreement entered into by the trade union
Tüm Bel Sen following collective bargaining with the employing
authority;
- Holds that it is not necessary to examine
separately the complaints submitted under Article 14 of the
Convention;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay, within three months, the following
amounts, to be converted into new Turkish liras at the rate
applicable at the date of settlement:
(i) to
Mrs Vicdan Baykara, representative of the trade union Tüm Bel
Sen, EUR 20,000 (twenty thousand euros) in respect of
non pecuniary damage, to be distributed by her to the said trade
union;
(ii) to
Mr Kemal Demir, EUR 500 (five hundred euros) in respect of all heads
of damage combined;
(iii) any
tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicants' claim
for just satisfaction.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public hearing in
the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 12 November 2008.
Michael
O'Boyle Christos Rozakis
Deputy Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the following opinions are annexed to
this judgment:
(a) Separate
opinion of Judge Zagrebelsky;
(b) Concurring
opinion of Judge Spielmann joined by Judges Bratza, Casadevall and
Villiger.
C.L.R.
M.O.B.
SEPARATE OPINION OF JUDGE ZAGREBELSKY
(Translation)
I
would like to add to the reasoning in the judgment as regards the
right of trade unions to bargain collectively by expounding a few
considerations of my own on the subject of the Court's departures
from precedent.
- On
6 February 1976 in the case of Swedish Engine Drivers' Union
v. Sweden (Series A no. 20) the Court found in its
judgment as follows (§ 39):
“ ... Article [11 para. 1] does not secure any
particular treatment of trade unions, or their members, by the State,
such as the right that the State should conclude any given collective
agreement with them. Not only is this latter right not mentioned in
Article 11 para. 1, but neither can it be said that all the
Contracting States incorporate it in their national law or practice,
or that it is indispensable for the effective enjoyment of trade
union freedom.”
The
Court went on to conclude (§ 40):
“... the members of a trade union have a right, in
order to protect their interests, that the trade union should be
heard. Article 11 para. 1 certainly leaves each State a free choice
of the means to be used towards this end. While the concluding of
collective agreements is one of these means, there are others. What
the Convention requires is that under national law trade unions
should be enabled, in conditions not at variance with Article 11, to
strive for the protection of their members' interests.”
(see
also, a judgment of the same date, Schmidt and Dahlström
v. Sweden, §§ 34-35, Series A no. 21;
and National Union of Belgian Police v. Belgium, 27 October
1975, § 39, Series A no. 19).
This
case-law was referred to more recently, without being called into
question, in 1996 and 2002, in the Gustafsson v. Sweden judgment
(25 April 1996, § 45, Reports of Judgments and
Decisions 1996 II) and in the Wilson, National Union of
Journalists and Others v. the United Kingdom judgment of 2 July
2002 (nos. 30668/96, 30671/96 and 30678/96, § 44, ECHR
2002 V).
In
the present judgment, by contrast, the Court has found that “the
right to bargain collectively with the employer has, in principle,
become one of the essential elements of the 'right to form and to
join trade unions for the protection of [one's] interests' set forth
in Article 11 of the Convention” (paragraph 154 of the
judgment).
- The
Court has thus expressly departed from its case-law, taking into
account “the perceptible evolution in such matters, in both
international law and domestic legal systems” (paragraph 153 of
the judgment). In reality, the new and recent fact that may be
regarded as indicating an evolution internationally appears to be
only the proclamation (in 2000) of the
European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights. The evolution of
legislation in the various States (paragraphs 52 and 151 of the
judgment) is a more difficult basis on which to assess the time or
period from which a significant change became perceptible.
I
have the feeling that the Court's departure from precedent represents
a correction of its previous case-law rather than an adaptation of
case-law to a real change, at European or domestic level, in the
legislative framework (as was the case, for example, in its Stafford
v. the United Kingdom judgment of 28 May 2002 ([GC],
no. 46295/99, ECHR 2002 IV)) or in the relevant social
and cultural ethos (as, for example, in the Christine Goodwin v.
the United Kingdom judgment of 11 July 2002 ([GC], no. 28957/95,
ECHR 2002 VI)). This departure is probably closer to the
situation dealt with by the Court in the case of Pessino v. France
(no. 40403/02, 10 October 2006) than to the domestic case-law in
the S.W. v. the United Kingdom judgment of 22 November
1995 (Series A no. 335 B). In any event, the evolution
of public opinion which rendered foreseeable the solution adopted by
the domestic courts in the S.W. case was already evident by
the time of the offence of which the applicant stood accused.
- The
Court, recognising that “it is in the interests of legal
certainty, foreseeability and equality before the law that [it]
should not depart, without good reason, from [its] precedents”,
and being responsible for interpretation of the Convention (Article
32 of the Convention), has nevertheless proceeded with this
departure, considering that “a failure by [it] to maintain a
dynamic and evolutive approach would risk rendering it a bar to
reform or improvement” (paragraph 153 of the judgment).
This
is all perfectly consistent with the practice of the Court, which,
whilst in principle following its own previous rulings, does from
time to time, very cautiously, develop its case-law by a reversal of
precedent (see Christine Goodwin, cited above, §§ 74
and 93; Vilho Eskelinen and Others v. Finland [GC], no.
63235/00, § 56, ECHR 2007 ....; and Mamatkulov and
Askarov v. Turkey [GC], nos. 46827/99 and 46951/99, §§ 109,
121 and 125, ECHR 2005 I).
- All
courts have to interpret the law in order to clarify it and, if need
be, to keep pace with the changes in the society which they are
serving (see, among many other authorities, Kokkinakis v. Greece,
25 May 1993, § 40, Series A no. 260 A; and
Cantoni v. France, 15 November 1996, § 31, Reports
1996 V). For the purposes of the Convention the term “law”
covers both enactments and the interpretation thereof by the courts
(Kruslin v. France, 24 April 1990, § 29,
Series A no. 176 A), such that divergences in case-law
create uncertainty and a lack of foreseeability that are capable of
raising doubt as to the legality of an interference with a Convention
right (see Driha v. Romania, no. 29556/02, § 32,
21 February 2008; and Păduraru v. Romania,
no. 63252/00, § 98, ECHR 2005 XII).
Any judicial interpretation of the law is by nature retrospective, in
the sense that it applies to a prior situation or conduct.
However,
in my opinion, the act of departing from precedent raises a
particular problem, because the interaction between the new
interpretation and the law, as previously contemplated, will give
rise to a new “law” whose content is different to that of
the previous “law”. The retrospectiveness of the new
“law” is problematic with regard to the requirements of
foreseeability and legal certainty. I would compare this to the
problems raised by the retrospective effect of an Act interpreting a
previous Act, justifying a certain resistance on the part of the
Court. The requirements in terms of the quality of the law, and
particularly that of the foreseeability of its application, entail a
need for a similar approach to the nature of judicial interpretation
to that obtaining in the situation of laws succeeding each other in
time, for which transitional provisions are often made.
- As
regards the case-law of domestic courts, the Court has already shown
that it is aware of the problem in cases where it has taken note of
rulings affording new domestic remedies to applicants (see Di
Sante v. Italy (dec.), no. 56079/00, 24 June 2004; and
Cocchiarella v. Italy [GC], no. 64886/01, § 44,
ECHR 2006 ...; see also Giummarra and Others v. France
(dec.), no. 61166/00, 12 June 2001; Mifsud v. France (dec.)
[GC], no. 57220/00, ECHR 2002 VIII; Broca and
Texier-Micault v. France, nos. 27928/02 and 31694/02, § 20,
21 October 2003; and Paulino Tomas v. Portugal (dec.),
no. 58698/00, ECHR 2003 VIII), whilst dealing with
such situations as if they entailed the creation of a new law due to
take effect (“enter into force”) after a certain period
of time, in the manner of a vacatio legis.
The
same awareness is reflected in certain judgments of the European
Court of Justice and of certain domestic courts, which, adopting the
principle of prospective overrulings, or addressing the consequences
of a mistake of law caused by existing case-law, do not apply
(retrospectively and automatically) the new case-law to the case
pending before it or to similar situations (see Les revirements de
jurisprudence – Report presented to President Guy Canivet
by the Working Party chaired by Nicolas Molfessis – Paris,
Litec, 2004). In this connection, a particularly clear and pointed
argument, in respect of Article 6 of the Convention, was used by the
French Court of Cassation in a plenary judgment of 21 December 2006
(Dalloz, 2007, pp. 835 et seq., with a note by P. Morvan, Le
sacre du revirement prospectif sur l'autel de l'équitable).
The opinion of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in the National
Westminster Bank plc v. Spectrum Plus Limited and others and others
judgment of the House of Lords of 30 June 2005 ([2005] UKHL 41)
is also worthy of note.
- In
its Marckx v. Belgium judgment of 13 June 1979 (§ 58,
Series A no. 31), the Court, responding to the Government's
request for determination of the effects of its ruling on previous
situations, and taking into account the slow evolution towards the
equality of treatment at issue in that case, dispensed the Belgian
State from re-opening legal acts or situations that antedated the
delivery of its judgment.
The
Court, out of a concern for legal certainty, thus showed that it was
aware of the need to refrain from calling into question situations
concerning individuals whose proceedings relating to distributions of
estates had already been concluded. However, that was an exceptional
case, which could probably also be explained by the significance of
the consequences that could otherwise have affected a large number of
individuals.
The
Court nevertheless applied its new case-law, finding that Belgium had
breached the Convention in respect of the applicants. In the same
vein, the Court held in its Aoulmi v. France judgment of 17
January 2006 (no. 50278/99, ECHR 2006 ... ) that there had
been a violation of Article 34 of the Convention, dismissing the
respondent Government's argument to the effect that the applicant's
expulsion had taken place prior to the adoption by the Court, in its
Mamatkulov and Askarov judgment of 4 February 2005 (cited
above), of its new case-law as to the binding nature of measures
indicated under Rule 39 of the Rules of Court. The Court thus
considered that Contracting States had already been required to
fulfil their obligations arising from Article 34 of the Convention at
the time of the expulsion in question (see Aoulmi, cited
above, § 111). Rightly so, but in the meantime the “content”
of the obligation had changed as a result of the Court's new
interpretation of Rule 39.
- When
it departs from precedent, the Court certainly changes the content of
the Convention in relation to its own previous interpretation, given
with the authority conferred on it by Article 32 of the Convention.
If the new case-law extends the scope of a Convention provision and
thus imposes a new obligation on States, a retrospective effect that
is automatic and not subject to directions by the Court would, in my
view, be difficult to reconcile with the requirements of
foreseeability and legal security, which are essential pillars of the
Convention system. Moreover, the application in each State, by
domestic courts, of the Convention as interpreted by the Court, will
then become difficult, if not impossible. I therefore find it
necessary that provision be made for the period that precedes the
departure from precedent.
- In
the light of the foregoing, I would have preferred it if the Court
had stipulated the time from which the right in question “became”
(paragraph 154 of the judgment) one of the essential elements of the
right set forth in Article 11. In my own opinion, it would seem
legitimate to doubt that this could already have come about by 1995,
when the Turkish Court of Cassation disposed of the case at domestic
level. I moreover find it regrettable that the Court has once again
allowed the “natural” retrospectiveness of judicial
interpretation to impugn an approach that, at the material time, was
(probably) not in breach of the Convention.
I
did, however, vote in favour of finding a violation on account of the
annulment of the collective agreement at issue (operative paragraph
3), as I share the Court's interpretation of Article 11. I must also
take account of the Court's practice concerning the retrospective
effect of its departures from precedent, although I personally
believe that this practice should itself be the subject of such a
departure.
CONCURRING OPINION OF JUDGE SPIELMANN JOINED BY JUDGES
BRATZA, CASADEVALL AND VILLIGER
(Translation)
- I
voted without hesitation for finding a violation of Article 11 of the
Convention on account of the failure to recognise the right of the
applicants, as municipal civil servants, to form a trade union.
- In
the following lines I wish to explain why I also voted with the
majority in favour of finding a violation of Article 11 of the
Convention on account of the annulment ex tunc of the
collective agreement entered into by the trade union Tüm Bel Sen
following collective bargaining with the authority.
- Paragraph
154 of the judgment reads as follows:
“... the Court considers that, having regard to
the developments in labour law, both international and national, and
to the practice of Contracting States in such matters, the right to
bargain collectively with the employer has, in principle, become one
of the essential elements of the 'right to form and to join trade
unions for the protection of [one's] interests' set forth in Article
11 of the Convention, it being understood that States remain free to
organise their system so as, if appropriate, to grant special status
to representative trade unions. Like other workers, civil servants,
except in very specific cases, should enjoy such rights, but without
prejudice to the effects of any 'lawful restrictions' that may have
to be imposed on 'members of the administration of the State' within
the meaning of Article 11 § 2 – a category to which the
applicants in the present case do not, however, belong.”
- The
emphasis is thus placed on the “right to bargain collectively
with the employer”.
- It
would be erroneous to infer that, for those working in the public
service, “bargaining” has only one possible outcome: the
“collective agreement”. It should not be forgotten that,
in many legal systems, the statutory situation of civil servants is
an objective situation, governed by laws and/or regulations, from
which no derogation can be made by means of individual agreements.
The introduction of an unlimited contractual dimension through
Article 11 of the Convention would have a drastic impact on
civil-service law in many States. The status of civil servant is
based on the unification, organisation and efficiency of the public
service.
- The
following comments have been made by Nicolas Valticos with regard to
ILO Convention No. 151 and the Labour Relations (Public Service)
Recommendation, 1978 (R159):
“335. A difficult issue in the area of trade-union
rights, as more generally in the determination of employment
conditions, is that of public officials, since they are employed to
serve the State and the general interests of the nation, the State is
not an employer like any other and, as depositary of the common
interest, the State is not inclined, as an employer, to renounce its
public-authority attributes, at least not systematically. This
concept of relations between the State and its officials will vary,
however, depending on the country. In some countries nowadays civil
servants and other public officials – or most of them –
tend to be treated as workers in the private sector, as regards, for
example, collective bargaining and even the right to strike. In other
countries, however, the traditional notions are still recognised.
Another problem stems from the fact that the definition of civil
servant varies in scope depending on the country, according to the
extent of the public sector and to whether or not a distinction is
made – and also to what degree – between civil servants
as such (even distinguishing between sub-categories thereof) and
public-sector employees in a broader sense ...
...
337. The recommendation (no. 159) which supplements the
Convention ... leaves to national legislation, or to other
appropriate means, the task of determining the various provisions
(participation of public officials, procedure to be followed) for
negotiation or other methods of determining terms and conditions of
employment ...” (Nicolas
Valticos, Droit
international du travail,
Coll. Droit du travail (dir. G.H.
Camerlynck), Tome 8, 2nd
edition, Dalloz, 1983, pp. 264-266).
- That
being said, it is no longer in dispute – as is made clear by
the judgment – that freedom of association exists in the public
service. Similarly, trade union associations have become permanent
partners in discussions on working conditions between State employees
and public authorities. Such associations cannot be ignored by the
State as employer, or more generally by public authorities.
- Even
though the right to bargain collectively can no longer be called into
question as such (see paragraphs 42-44 and 49-52 of the judgment),
certain exceptions or limits must nevertheless always be possible in
the public service, provided that the role of staff representatives
in the drafting of the applicable employment conditions or
regulations remains guaranteed. For example, as indicated by the
Court in paragraph 149 of the judgment:
“According to the meaning attributed by the
European Committee of Social Rights (ECSR) to Article 6 § 2 of
the Charter, which in fact fully applies to public officials, States
which impose restrictions on collective bargaining in the public
sector have an obligation, in order to comply with this provision, to
arrange for the involvement of staff representatives in the drafting
of the applicable employment regulations.”
Similarly,
the following provision is made by Article 7 of ILO Convention No.
151, quoted at paragraph 44 of the judgment:
“Measures appropriate to national conditions shall
be taken, where necessary, to encourage and promote the full
development and utilisation of machinery for negotiation of terms and
conditions of employment between the public authorities concerned and
public employees' organisations, or of such other methods as will
allow representatives of public employees to participate in the
determination of these matters.”
This
provision thus authorises a certain flexibility in the choice of
procedures for determining conditions of employment with the
participation of civil servants (see also J. Llobera, “La
fonction publique et la liberté syndicale dans les normes
internationales du travail”, Revue trimestrielle des droits
de l'homme, 1992, p. 336, for whom such flexibility would not
even entail recourse to collective bargaining).
- In
short, the basic issue is to ascertain what is meant by collective
bargaining. The authorising of public officials to make their voices
heard certainly implies that they have a right to engage in social
dialogue with their employer, but not necessarily the right to enter
into collective agreements or that States have a corresponding
obligation to enable the existence of such agreements. States must
therefore be able to retain a certain freedom of choice in such
matters.
- In
the present case, however, the right to bargain collectively at issue
had been rendered totally meaningless by the obstacles placed in the
way of the social dialogue. The annulment ex tunc of the
collective agreement entered into following collective bargaining
with the authority had therefore entailed a violation of Article 11
of the Convention.