composed of: C. Gulmann, acting for the President of the Chamber, J.-P. Puissochet and J.N. Cunha Rodrigues (Rapporteur), Judges,
Advocate General: C. Stix-Hackl,
after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 20 September 2001,
The facts and procedure before the Court of First Instance are set out as follows at paragraphs 1 to 18 of the contested judgment:
1The annual promotions exercise with respect to Commission officials takes place according to a procedure set out in the Guide pratique de la procédure de promotions des fonctionnaires à la Commission européenne de la catégorie A et du cadre linguistique, as produced by the parties in this case (the promotions guide). That procedure is divided into five stages.
2The first stage is the publication by the administration of the list of officials eligible for promotion, including all those officials who meet the requirement of a minimum period in their grade as prescribed by Article 45 of the Regulations and Rules applicable to Officials and other Servants of the European Communities (the Staff Regulations). That publication enables the officials concerned to point out possible errors or omissions to the administration.
3In the second stage, each Director-General carries out a preliminary examination of the comparative merits of the officials eligible for promotion in his directorate-general and notifies his proposals, ranked in order of priority, to the Promotions Committee.
4In the third stage, that committee draws up a list of the most deserving officials by comparing the merits of the officials eligible for promotion according to a method of assessment adapted to the grade in question. In the applicant's case, the Promotions Committee used the method of assessment applicable to A 6 officials eligible for promotion to Grade A 5. That method is based on the award of a certain number of points to the candidates according to the order of priority drawn up by each Director-General, the staff reports, seniority in grade and service and age. In particular, the order of priority drawn up by each Director-General enables the candidates for promotion to be awarded a certain number of points (70, 45, 20 or 0), according to their ranking, which are allocated to each directorate-general on the basis of the number of candidates eligible for promotion in that directorate-general.
5During that stage, the case of those officials, such as the applicant, who have, inter alia, moved to a different post, is first considered by a select joint working party which reports to the Committee on the cases referred to it.
6In the fourth stage, the appointing authority adopts or amends the Committee's draft list and publishes the list of the most deserving candidates. The fifth and final stage is a matter for the member of the Commission responsible for personnel who adopts a promotion decision on the basis of that list, and then signs the individual decisions.
7There are two types of promotion: promotion within a career bracket and promotion from one career bracket to the next. The present case concerns a promotion falling within the latter situation, namely, from Grade A 6 to Grade A 5, that is to say, from administrator to principal administrator.
8The applicant, Mr Cubero Vermurie, was assigned to the Directorate-General of Financial Control (DG XX) during the period from 16 September 1986 to 31 August 1996. From 1 January 1989 to 31 December 1990 he was on secondment, in the interests of the service, to the Court of Justice of the European Communities. [With effect from 1] September 1996 he was assigned to the Directorate-General of Consumer Policy (DG XXIV) as assistant to the Director-General. Since 1 April 1997 he has been assigned to the Directorate-General for Audiovisual Media, Information, Communication and Culture (DG X).
9The applicant, an official in Grade A 6 since 1 January 1993, was proposed for promotion to Grade A 5 by DG XX and was ranked sixth for the 1996 promotions exercise and fourth for the 1997 exercise without any priority points.
10DG XXIV placed him third on its list for the 1998 promotions exercise.
11By letter dated 13 January 1998, the applicant brought the matter before the President of the Promotions Committee in the following terms:
In the context of the procedure, under the 1998 exercise, for promotion from one career bracket, my name does not appear in a promising position in the list drawn up by DG XXIV. I came from DG XX to DG XXIV in the interests of the service (given the nature of the duties to be fulfilled) to carry out important tasks assisting the Director-General. If I had not been so transferred, I would have been promoted to Grade A 5 in the course of the current promotions procedure by remaining on the list of DG XX (2nd reserve from the previous year).
Unless something is done to remedy this situation, it is clear that mobility will have seriously prejudiced my career development (even though the Commission is consistently in favour of a policy of mobility).
...
12By letter of 2 April 1998, the President of the Promotions Committee wrote to the applicant as follows:
[Further to] your request of 13 January 1998, the select joint working party responsible for examining applications and problems connected with mobility has considered your case.
Having considered your file, the select joint working party is not in a position to recommend a favourable assessment to the Promotions Committee.
At its plenary meeting on 5 March 1998 the Promotions Committee adopted the position taken by the select joint working party with regard to your application.
13The applicant's name did not appear in the list of the most deserving officials or in the list of promoted officials published in the Administrative Notices No 1033 of 16 March 1998 and No 1036 of 6 April 1998 respectively.
14The applicant then lodged a complaint on 21 April 1998 in which he stated, inter alia:
It is clear from the facts [set out in the complaint] that mobility, even though the Commission is consistently in favour of a policy of mobility, has seriously prejudiced my career development because [the appointing authority], in its decision of 6 April 1998 on the 1998 promotions, did not promote me to Grade A 5 as would have been the case if I had not been transferred in the interests of the service from DG XX to DG XXIV.
15By letter of 12 May 1998, the Director-General of DG X (the directorate to which the applicant is currently assigned) intervened in support of the applicant's complaint. In that letter, addressed to the Director-General of the Personnel and Administration Directorate (DG IX), he explained, inter alia, that the applicant was moved in the interests of the service, that he fulfilled his duties as assistant to the Director-General very efficiently, and that he would have been promoted to Grade A 5 if he had remained in DG XX, pursuant to the rules governing the award of promotions within the Commission. In conclusion, he was of the view that the applicant had suffered injury not only to his career, but also of a non-material nature.
16The applicant's former Director-General in DG XX also intervened in support of the complaint in a letter of 15 May 1998 to the Director-General of DG IX, which states, inter alia:
Without wishing to interfere with the decision on the merits of the case, I can confirm that, [if] Mr Cubero Vermurie had not left DG XX, he would have been promoted - unless he had become less deserving - to Grade A 5 under the present 1998 exercise.
Since the 1996 round, Mr Cubero Vermurie has appeared in DG XX's list of candidates for promotion to Grade A 5, being placed just behind [M.H.] in the order of priority, and, in 1998, DG XX obtained two promotions to Grade A 5, including [M.H.] (the sole reserve from 1997) plus an official ranked after the latter in our order of priority (that is, in the place made vacant by Mr Cubero Vermurie's departure).
17The applicant's complaint was dismissed by a decision of 9 October 1998 which stated, inter alia:
In the light of the foregoing, [the appointing authority] considers that it cannot be criticised as having used its power of assessment in a manifestly erroneous way or for an improper purpose. The Promotions Committee considered the comparative merits of the officials in strict application of the rules published in the Administrative Notices No 309 of 26 February 1981, that is by having regard to the proposals of the Directorates-General and the career profile of the candidates for promotion. Furthermore, the specific case of Mr Cubero Vermurie was taken into consideration by the Promotions Committee, which nevertheless considered that, on [the] basis of the information available to it, notwithstanding Mr Cubero Vermurie's obvious merits, which moreover enabled him to be proposed by DG XXIV and which are acknowledged in [a] note [drawn up for the attention of the select joint working party], he did not meet the conditions which would justify the award to him of the additional points enabling his name to be included in the list of the most deserving candidates and, possibly, to be promoted.
18It was in those circumstances that, by application lodged at the Registry of the Court of First Instance on 25 November 1998, the applicant brought the present action.