International Transport Workers Federation v Viking Line ABP

The Rosella
Court European Court of Justice
Full case name The International Transport Workers’ Federation and The Finnish Seamen's Union v Viking Line ABP and OÜ Viking Line Eesti
Decided 11 December 2007
Case history
Prior action(s) [2005] EWCA Civ 1299 and [2005] EWHC 1222 (Comm)
Case opinions
AG Maduro's Opinion, 23 May 2007
Court membership
Judge(s) sitting V Skouris, P Jann, A Rosas, K Lenaerts, U Lõhmus, L Bay Larsen, R Schintgen, R Silva de Lapuerta, K Schiemann, J Makarczyk, P Kūris, E Levits and A Ó Caoimh
Keywords
Right to strike, Freedom of establishment

The Rosella or International Transport Workers Federation v Viking Line ABP (2007) C-438/05 is an EU law case, relevant to all labour law within the European Union, including UK labour law, which held that there is a positive right to strike. However, it also held that the right to strike could infringe a business's freedom of establishment under the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union article 49 (ex TEC article 43). The decision has been criticised for the Court's inarticulate line of reasoning, and its disregard of fundamental human rights.

The Rosella was shortly followed by a case on freedom to provide services called Laval Un Partneri Ltd v Svenska Byggnadsarbetareforbundet,[1] and by the influential European Court of Human Rights decision in Demir and Baykara v Turkey.[2]

Facts

Viking Line ABP operated a ship called The Rosella between Estonia and Finland. It wanted to operate under the Estonian flag so that it could use Estonian workers on lower wages than the higher Finnish wages for the existing crew. The policy of the International Transport Workers Federation (ITWF) was to oppose such "reflagging" for convenience by companies registering their ship abroad in a low labour cost jurisdiction, when their real seat is in another country. The Finnish Seamen's Union, a member of the ITWF, planned industrial action. The ITWF told its partners to not negotiate with Viking and hinder its business. Viking Line ABP responded by seeking an injunction in the English courts, claiming that the industrial action would infringe its right to freedom of establishment under TEC art 43, now TFEU art 49.

The High Court of Justice granted the injunction, but the Court of Appeal of England and Wales overturned the injunction on the balance of convenience.[3] It held that there were important issues of EU law to be heard, given that, in the words of Waller LJ, it affected the "fundamental rights of workers to take industrial action". So it made a TEC article 234 reference (now article 267) to the European Court of Justice.

Judgment

The European Court of Justice held that, though it was for the national court to ultimately answer the question, it was possible that collective action taken by workers to protect their interests could be unlawful because it infringed the employer's interests under TFEU article 56. It could not be the case, in this situation that the workers' interests were sufficiently threatened, because the ECJ felt that the jobs and conditions of the workers' employment were not 'jeopardised or under serious threat'.[4] It was the case that 'the right to take collective action, including the right to strike, must... be recognised as a fundamental right which forms an integral part of the general principles of Community law', but 'the exercise of that right may nonetheless be subject to certain restrictions... in accordance with Community law and national law and practices.'[5]

Significance

The judgment of the European Court of Justice was met with widespread condemnation by labour law experts, on the basis that it failed to give due regard for the respect of human rights, and places business freedom above the interests of working people. It was one of the triggers for the UK's 2009 Lindsey Oil Refinery strikes. The ILO’s Committee of Experts found severe breaches of the ILO Convention 87 on the freedom of association and protection of the right to organise. Thus it generally viewed as being characterised by poor quality reasoning, and is regarded by most commentaries as wrong.[6]

See also

EU cases
ECHR cases

Notes

  1. [2008] IRLR 160, Case 341/05)
  2. (2009) 48 EHRR 54
  3. See American Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] 1 All ER 504
  4. [2008] IRLR 143, [81]
  5. [2008] IRLR 143, [44]
  6. See P Craig and G de Burca (2015) 819, fn 147, 92 case notes written so far.

References

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