07/08/14

Judgment in Dahmane case troubles Belgian soccer clubs

Introduction

Mohamed Dahmane is an Algerian soccer player whom played for different French clubs (Lens, US Maubeuge, …) before arriving in Belgium in 2005 to play for the third division club Francs Borains. On 1 July 2007 he was transferred to KRC Genk for the amount of €700,000.

At his new club, the midfielder signed a four-year contract, but was sent to the second team due to a personal conflict with the club. Shortly after his removal from the first team, Dahmane decided to unilaterally end his labour contract with the club on 23 January 2008.

Labour Court of Hasselt condemns Dahmane to € 800,000

KRC Genk filed a writ of summons to the Labour Court of Hasselt, demanding a compensation of €878,888.88 from the player due to the alleged unlawful termination of the labour contract between the parties. The Court of Hasselt ruled in favour of the club, stating that a professional soccer player, such as Dahmane, has to accept his (temporary) removal from the first team and therefore condemned Dahmane to the payment of an indemnity of €800,000 (being 36 times his monthly salary!).

The ruling was based upon the legal provisions of Article 4, §4 of the Belgian Act on Professional Athletes of 24 February 1978 (hereafter ‘the Act on Professional Athletes’) and Article 5, §2 of the Royal Decree of 13 July 2004 (hereafter ‘the Royal Decree’), which state that any professional athlete who wishes to ends his/her contract with his/her employer before its expiry date, is obliged to remunerate the latter, hereby taking the remaining contractual period into account. Since the player ended his contract shortly after its execution, the Court found itself compelled to condemn Dahmane to the maximum penalty.

Court of Appeal reduces the indemnity to €220,000

Shortly after this ruling, Dahmane filed an appeal before the Court of Appeal of Antwerp. During these proceedings, Dahmane pointed out that there exists a rather important discrepancy between the legal provisions of the Belgian Act on Labour Contracts, which are applicable to ‘common’ employees on the one hand, and the legal provisions of the Act on Professional Athletes on the other, especially when it comes to the indemnities due in case of an early termination of a labour contract. If Dahmane had been a ‘common’ employee (and consequently would have been judged based upon Article 40, §1 of the Belgian Act on Labour Contracts), the player would have been condemned to an indemnity of (maximum) nine to 10 times his monthly salary (or 26 to 27 months less than ruled by the Court of Hasselt). According to Dahmane, the above-mentioned Articles of the Act on Professional Athletes and Royal Decree have therefore to be qualified as a breach of Article 10 and 11 of the Belgian Constitution on equal treatment and non-discrimination.

On 6 May 2014, the Court of Appeal decided to review the judgment of the Court of Hasselt and reduced the indemnity to an amount of €220,000. Although the Court of Appeal agreed with the argument of KRC Genk that sport exhibits certain characteristics that can deviate from ‘normal’ labour relationships, the Court stated clearly that the Royal Decree does not provide any objective justifications which can be invoked to justify separate rulings relating to the compensation after an unilateral termination of a labour contract in the field of professional sports. According to the Court of Appeal, sport’s economic dimension can also be covered by the existing ‘common’ labour legislation.

The Court of Appeal also reminded both parties that the transfer system, which constitutes of two periods per calendar year during which players can be sold and/or bought to/from other clubs, limits the possibility for professional soccer players to switch from one club to another (and therefore limits the possibility to improve their financial situation by doing so). A compensation of (only) 12 months’ salary comprises two transfer periods, and should therefore be qualified as reasonable.

Finally, the Court of Appeal referred to the fact that an average career of a professional athlete is ‘relatively short’ (six to eight years). An indemnity of 36 months of salary would, for many professional athletes, be equal to a third of the salary that such athletes will have earned during his/her entire professional career, and should therefore be considered as ‘unjustifiable.’ Taking the abovementioned into consideration, the Court of Appeal considered the regulation on the remuneration following the unilateral termination of a labour contract, as stipulated in the Act on Professional Athletes and the Royal Decree, contrary to the prohibition of discrimination between citizens and the principle of equal treatment and non-discrimination, as embedded in the Belgian Constitution.

No new Bosman Ruling

Although certain media have qualified the judgment of the Court of Appeal as ‘a new Bosman ruling,’ it is rather unlikely that the decision of the Court will have the same effect on the professional sports and/or soccer world as the Bosman case. Notwithstanding the fact that Dahmane had demanded the Court of Appeal to raise a preliminary question to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) with regards to the compatibility of the Act on Professional Athletes with the European principle of the free movement of workers, the Court was of the opinion that this case could be decided under Belgian law.

Moreover, other European countries have implemented labour law regulations which are demonstrably different from the Belgian legislation and therefore would not have been automatically influenced by the decision of the Court of Appeal of Antwerp in this case, even if the CJEU had ruled similarly as the said Court. However, it is clear that the decision of the Court of Appeal has created the possibility for any other Belgian court to inspire itself using this ruling, if these courts are faced with a similar case.

Professional sport clubs in Belgium now fear that the outcome of the Dahmane case will facilitate its (better) athletes to end his/her contract prematurely, every time when such athlete is no longer happy with his/her current (financial of sporting) situation at the club in question. In such case, the compensation - which has to be paid by these athletes - will (under normal circumstances) always be inferior to the amount that his/her employer would receive in case of a normal transfer of the athlete in question. On the other hand, the ruling of the Court of Appeal makes it, financially spoken, also less difficult for clubs/employers to terminate the labour contract with athletes which have become, in their point of view, redundant.

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