25 May The right of trade unions to control their membership vis-à-vis the right to freedom of association of would-be members
In the case of Vlahov v. Croatia (application no. 31163/13, 05.05.2022) the European Court of Human Rights held, unanimously, that there had been a violation of Article 11 (freedom of association) of the European Convention on Human Rights.
The case concerned the right of trade unions to control their membership vis-à-vis the right to freedom of association of would-be members. At the beginning of 2007 the applicant was representative for the Šibenik branch of the Croatian Customs Officers’ Trade Union (“the CSH”). The CSH was one of two trade unions operating within the Šibenik Customs Office and was a relatively small organisation of some 30 members at the time, with membership being purely on a voluntary basis. The applicant refused the applications of 15 employees of the Šibenik Customs Office. He explained the decision in a letter addressed to those concerned within the customs office, saying that he was acting in agreement with other members of the trade union not to extend membership of the CSH. At the same time, however, the president of the CSH, who had had disagreements with Mr Vlahov as to the governance of the trade union, enrolled the 15 would-be members. At an extraordinary general meeting in March Mr Vlahov’s refusal to accept the 15 members was discussed and it was decided to remove him as trade-union representative. The Municipal Court found him guilty and stated that he in particular had acted contrary to the Constitution, the relevant domestic law and the statutes of the CSH. It also dismissed as irrelevant his request for three witnesses to be questioned. This reasoning was endorsed by the County Court in December 2010 and by the Constitutional Court in October 2012.
Firstly, the Court considered that Mr Vlahov’s conviction had amounted to an interference with the right of trade unions – as associations formed by people – to control their membership, as guaranteed under Article 11 of the Convention.
It was, furthermore, prepared to accept that that interference had been prescribed by law, namely Article 109 of the Criminal Code, and that it had aimed to protect the would-be trade-union members’ right to exercise freedom of association. It found, however, that the domestic courts’ decisions had lacked proper reasoning. The decisions had lacked detail and had failed to elaborate, in the light of the relevant principles under Article 11 of the Convention, on the applicant’s compliance with the trade union’s internal regulations and statutes, on the fact that the applicant had had the right at the time as trade-union representative to take actions to protect the interests of its members and on the internal dispute in the CSH and ist possible effects. Moreover, the courts had refused the applicant’s request to take further evidence, without a properly reasoned decision.
In any case, the Court found that the would-be members had not apparently suffered any identifiable hardship as there had been no closed-shop agreement. Furthermore, they had been free to join the other trade union or to bring legal proceedings concerning their conditions of employment.
Nor could the Court find any discriminatory motive behind the applicant’s actions. Indeed, he had not intended to deny the would-be members’ admission as such but to delay the decision on extending the union’s membership until an upcoming annual general meeting. The Court found that the interference complained of had not been necessary in a democratic society and therefore held that there had been a violation of Article 11 of the Convention.
Reference from the official website of the European Court of Human Rights