Mr. Jürgen Römer is
a retired employee of the City of Hamburg. Since
1969, he has been living with his partner, Mr. Alwin
Ulrich, in committed loving relationship, so for
over 40 years. In 1999 they registered their
partnership under the City of Hamburg’s registration
scheme and immediately after the introduction of
federal registered partnership they entered “life
partnership” in 2001.
The City of Hamburg pays to Mr. Römer a lower
pension then to its pensioners with a married
partner. His retirement pension is lower then for
married pensioners solely on the basis that he has a
(same-sex) registered partner and not a
(different-sex) married partner. Germany allows
registered partnership only for same-sex couples and
civil marriage only for opposite-sex couples. Mr.
Römer sued the City of Hamburg and the Hamburg
Labour Court referred the case to the ECJ for
interpretation of the
EU-Antidiscrimination-Directive.
Mr. Römer is represented by Hamburg attorney Birgit
Boßert and by ILGA-Europe with ILGA-Europe itself
represented by RKL-president Dr. Helmut Graupner.
Advocate General Niilo Jääskinen recently presented
his opinion saying that same-sex couples must have
access to employment benefits for married couples in
all 27 member-states. Based on the EJC’s
landmark-judgment in Maruko vs. VddB
(01.04.2008), which has also been litigated by
RKL-president Dr. Helmut Graupner, and following the
line of argument put forward by ILGA-Europe the
Advocate General argues that marriage and family law
rests in the competence of the member-states and not
of the Union. But if a member-states decides to
restrict civil marriage to opposite-sex couples
only, it nevertheless, under the
EU-Antidiscrimination-Directive, has to guarantee
equal treatment and grant homosexual couples
(despite not being married) access to all the
employment benefits granted to married couples.
If a member-state has a registered partnership
putting same-sex couples into a legal position
comparable to married couples, exclusion from
marriage benefits constitutes direct discrimination.
And if a member-states created a registration scheme
for same-sex couples inferior to civil marriage or
if it grants same-sex couples no registration at
all, exclusion constitutes indirect discrimination.
General principle of Union law
Protection of marriage and the family as such, the
Advocate General says, cannot serve as valid
justification for such discrimination (par.
106-111). Protection of marriage and the family in a
national constitution, as it is the case in Germany,
cannot compromise the prohibition of discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation. Union law
supersedes also national constitutional law.
The Advocate General finds that the prohibition of
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is
a general principle of Union law) (par. 129-133). So
the prohibition of (direct or indirect)
discrimination (on the ground of sexual orientation)
is not limited to periods after entry into force of
the EU-Antidiscrimination-Directive (2000/78/EC) or
after expiration of its implementation period
(December 2003), but it takes full effect also for
periods preceding those dates. So equal treatment
(and compensation) can be claimed back to the
beginning of a certain discrimination.
In most of the cases the ECJ follows the Advocates
Generals’ opinion.
„The Advocate General’s opinion is groundbreaking
for the whole Union“, says Dr. Helmut Graupner,
president of the Austrian lesbian and gay rights
organization Rechtskomitee LAMBDA (RKL) and
counsel of Jürgen Römer, “If the ECJ follows it, all
27 member-states will have to grant same-sex couples
access to all the employment benefits married
couples enjoy, no matter if they allow registered
partnership or not”.
See the opinion of the Advocate General at:
http://curia.europa.eu
www.RKLambda.at