David A.J.G. de Groot,
EU-CITZEN Network*
* I would like to thank Tania Isacu, Rainer Bauböck and Gerd Valchars for
their very useful comments.
Introduction
The Supreme Administrative Court of Austria has requested a
preliminary ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in
the case C-118/20
JY v. Wiener Landesregierung,
concerning the revocation of a guarantee of the grant of Austrian nationality.
Austria maintains a strict ‘single nationality’ policy,
meaning that wherever possible, it requires that a person has only Austrian
nationality and no other. Consequently, Austrian nationality is lost in most
cases automatically upon voluntary acquisition of another nationality. Equally,
Austria requires that upon acquisition of its nationality all previous
nationalities have to be relinquished. Austria, as opposed to e.g. Germany, has
made no exceptions to this rule where the previous or future nationality is the
nationality of a Member State.
C-118/20 JY
concerns the procedure for acquisition of Austrian nationality, and more
specifically at which moment during the procedure the previous nationalities
have to be lost, and whether this is in conformity with the rules on EU
citizenship.
Facts of the case
It is unclear from the facts when JY exactly moved to
Austria. What is known is that JY applied on 15 December 2008 for Austrian
citizenship. At the time, JY held Estonian citizenship and was therefore an EU
citizen. More than five years later, in March 2014, the authorities granted her
a guarantee of the grant of Austrian nationality, which would enable
acquisition of Austrian nationality on condition of providing proof that the
previous nationality had been relinquished.
Technically speaking, at this moment she was still not an
Austrian national.
She subsequently relinquished her Estonian citizenship on 27
August 2015. Consequently, from that moment on she was stateless.
On 6 July 2017, the authorities revoked the original
guarantee of the grant of Austrian nationality and rejected her application for
Austrian citizenship.
The reasons provided by the authorities was that JY had
committed two serious administrative offences since the decision on the
guarantee of the grant of Austrian nationality. These, in combination with
eight prior offences (all speeding offences), made her ineligible for
naturalization. The two serious administrative offences concerned a failure to
provide a compliant vehicle inspection disk and driving under the influence of
alcohol.
Based on this, the Administrative
Court considered that her future conduct could not be ascertained.
Additionally, the Administrative Court considered that the
C-135/08 Rottmann decision
of the CJEU was not applicable, since at the time of the revocation decision,
JY no longer was an EU citizen, as she was stateless. The court furthermore
considered that the breaches were of such a serious nature that the revocation
of the guarantee was proportionate in light of the 1961
Convention on the reduction of statelessness. Also, the requirements for
revocation of the guarantee as provided for in the Austrian
Citizenship Act were considered fulfilled.
On appeal, the Supreme Administrative Court referred the
following questions to the CJEU:
Does the situation of a natural
person who, like the appellant in cassation in the main proceedings, has
renounced her only nationality of a Member State of the European Union, and
thus her citizenship of the Union, in order to obtain the nationality of
another Member State, having been given a guarantee by the other Member State
of grant of the nationality applied for, and whose possibility of recovering
citizenship of the Union is subsequently eliminated by revocation of that
guarantee, fall, by reason of its nature and its consequences, within the scope
of EU law, such that regard must be had to EU law when revoking the guarantee
of grant of citizenship?
If the first question is answered
in the affirmative,
Is it for the competent national
authorities, including any national courts, involved in the decision to revoke
the guarantee of grant of nationality of the Member States, to establish
whether the revocation of the guarantee that prevented the recovery of
citizenship of the Union is compatible with the principle of proportionality
from the point of view of EU law in terms of its consequences for the situation
of the person concerned?
Analysis
There are many different issues in this case.
Primarily, there is the question: is EU citizenship
applicable? Does it only have to be taken into account? Or, has it in fact been
violated?
In its C-369/90 Micheletti
judgment, the CJEU stated back in 1992 that “under International law, it is for each Member State, having due
regard to Community law, to lay down the conditions for the acquisition
and loss of nationality” (emphasis added). This was consistently
repeated in the EU citizenship cases C-192/99 Kaur,
C-200/02 Zhu and Chen,
C-135/08 Rottmann and C-221/17 Tjebbes (discussed
here).
Therefore, the role of EU citizenship in this case will feature quite prominently.
However, before we delve into the questions of whether and
how EU law is applicable, we should wonder whether the procedure applied by
Austria for acquisition of nationality is actually even in conformity with
international law.
Relinquishment
requirement under international law
The Austrian authorities and the referring court seem to be
under the impression that this method of using a temporary guarantee for the
acquisition of nationality in order for the person to relinquish their other
nationality is in conformity with international law. In short: it is not!
By de facto requiring that before a final assessment for naturalization
the person has already relinquished all nationalities and consequently is
stateless, Austria is violating the 1961 Convention on the reduction of
statelessness and the European
Convention on Nationality (ECN). By making a full reassessment of the
eligibility (with the exception of the income requirement, a reassessment of
which had been considered in violation
with the Constitution) after the other nationalities have been relinquished,
thus by conducting an assessment ex nunc
and not ex tunc, the law deviates
from international standards.
The guarantee given by Austria did not satisfy the criteria
of Article 7(2) of the 1961 Convention, which provides that “A national of a
Contracting State who seeks naturalization in a foreign country shall not lose
his nationality unless he acquires or has been accorded assurance of acquiring
the nationality of that foreign country.” In the 2013 Tunis Declaration of
the UNHCR, concerning the interpretation of the 1961 Convention, it is
stated that loss of the previous nationality should in principle only occur
upon acquisition of the other nationality. An exception is provided where an
assurance for the future acquisition is given. However, the Declaration clearly
states that such an assurance for the grant of nationality may not be “retracted
on grounds that conditions for naturalization are not met”. It is equally
provided in the Declaration that the state of previous nationality may only provide
for loss of its nationality if the guarantee provided is “unconditional and
does not leave any discretion to the authorities of the country.” Since the
guarantee made by Austria was not unconditional, could be and was actually retracted
based on a new assessment of eligibility, Austria can be considered in violation
of international law.
Additionally, by giving the impression that its nationality
will be acquired and thus a renouncement of the previous nationality will not
cause statelessness, Austria has violated the principle of mutual trust in EU
law. Every renouncement made in accordance with the nationality laws of the
other Member States in order to obtain Austrian citizenship in essence violated
those other Member States’ laws and commitments to the prevention of
statelessness.
Paradoxically, one could consider that any guarantee ever
made by Austria, irrespective of whether the nationality was acquired later or
not, had no legal value under international law. Thus, Austria may have created
a situation where many naturalized citizens have technically never lost their
previous nationality, because the renouncement was contra legem at the time it was made (due to the fact that it would
have rendered the person stateless and the guarantee could not provide
sufficient assurance that it would not). Only those naturalized citizens who
would have lost the previous nationality automatically due to voluntary
acquisition of Austrian nationality (e.g. previous nationals of the Netherlands,
Lithuania and Slovakia) would only have Austrian citizenship.
Question 1 - EU citizenship
law applicable
The Administrative Court considered that EU law, and
specifically EU citizenship, was not applicable to the case because at the
moment of the decision revoking the guarantee, JY was already stateless and no
longer an EU citizen.
This is a rather narrow interpretation and also rather
galling considering the fact that it was the Austrian procedure for the
acquisition of nationality that created that situation in the first place.
One should consider the question of applicability of EU law,
and specifically EU citizenship, from two slightly different perspectives: (1)
EU citizenship (Article
20 TFEU) and (2) free movement (Article
21 TFEU).
(1) Taking the view point of Article 20 TFEU, the case
already clearly falls within the ambit of EU citizenship, but not necessarily
for the reasons pointed out by the referring court.
The referring court makes this a case of loss of EU
citizenship, while arguably it is actually a case of acquisition of EU
citizenship.
As was stated above, the CJEU has consistently held that the
Member States must have due regard to Union law when laying down the conditions
on acquisition and loss of nationality. However, until now there have been no
cases concerning acquisition of nationality. National courts seem to believe that
only where the nationality, and thus EU citizenship, is lost, does EU law comes
into play. However, arguing so, they forget that EU law is equally applicable to
the acquisition of nationality.
This principle of applicability of EU law to the acquisition
of the nationality of a Member State should apply irrespective of the
nationality of the person prior to the acquisition, be it that of a Member
State, a Third-Country or when the person is stateless.
In the present case, though, since JY had the nationality of
a Member State before starting the procedure for acquisition of another Member
State’s nationality – which Austria cannot deny considering that it applied the
facilitated naturalization criteria for EU citizens on the basis of Article
11a(4)(2) of the Austrian Citizenship Act to JY – the applicability of EU law
to the case is beyond doubt.
Any arguments brought forward by the Austrian authorities
that the moment of revocation of the guarantee is the point of reference for
establishing whether the nationality of the person makes EU citizenship law
applicable (which is irrelevant, as explained, since it concerns an acquisition
and not a loss case) conflicts with the principle of estoppel. It was the
Austrian guarantee that did not fulfil the requirements to ensure that JY would
have been an EU citizen.
(2) The referring court has only made reference to Article
20 TFEU in its submissions; however, one should consider that Article 21 TFEU
is equally applicable.
Prior to becoming stateless, JY was an EU citizen who made
use of her right of free movement by residing in a Member State other than the
Member State of nationality. Consequently, her residence prior to becoming
stateless was based on Directive
2004/38.
In its judgment C-165/16 Toufik Lounes
(discussed here),
the CJEU stated that “the rights conferred on a Union citizen by
Article 21(1) TFEU, […] are intended, amongst other things, to promote the
gradual integration of the Union citizen concerned in the society of the host
Member State.” The Court furthermore considered that “Union citizens, […] who,
after moving, in the exercise of their freedom of movement, to the host Member
State and residing there for a number of years pursuant to and in accordance
with Article 7(1) or Article 16(1) of Directive 2004/38, acquire the
nationality of that Member State, intend to become permanently integrated in that
State.”
Thus, according to the CJEU, naturalization by an EU citizen
in the Member State of residence is the ultimate proof of having become
permanently integrated in the society of the host Member State.
The CJEU considered that “it would be contrary to the
underlying logic of gradual integration that informs Article 21(1) TFEU to
hold that such citizens, who have acquired rights under that provision as a
result of having exercised their freedom of movement, must forego those rights
–– in particular the right to family life in the host Member State –– because
they have sought, by becoming naturalised in that Member State, to become more
deeply integrated in the society of that State.”
Considering that the CJEU stated that one could not allow an
EU citizen to forego rights by becoming more deeply integrated in the society
of the host State, a fortiori one cannot expect a Union citizen to gamble away
his or her EU citizenship on the possibility of becoming more deeply integrated
in the society of the host State, not only foregoing some rights, but the
entire legal framework their existence in that State and personal identity are
based on. For, from the moment she became stateless, Directive 2004/38 seized
to be applicable to JY.
This case, therefore, goes beyond mere Article 20 TFEU,
since the rights acquired under Article 21 TFEU are equally at stake.
For that reason, under all circumstances the questions would
have to be rephrased in order to include Article 21 TFEU.
The answer to the first preliminary question is thus a
definite ‘yes, EU law has to be taken into consideration when a guarantee to
acquire the nationality of a Member State is revoked.’
Question 2 - EU law
violated
In its second question, the referring court wonders if the
national authorities have to consider whether the revocation of the guarantee
that prevented the recovery of citizenship of the Union is compatible with the
principle of proportionality from the point of view of EU law in terms of its
consequences for the situation of the person concerned.
This is the wrong question.
The reference in the question to the principle of
proportionality is a consequence of the erroneous reasoning of the referring
court that the case concerns loss of nationality, while – as explained above –
it actually concerns acquisition of nationality. If indeed it were to concern
loss of nationality, then it would be clear based on C-135/08 Rottmann and in C-221/17 Tjebbes that it is mainly the principle
of proportionality that has to be observed when it concerns the loss of the
nationality of a Member State and of EU citizenship. In C-221/17 Tjebbes the Court listed multiple
criteria which have to be observed in such cases. In the present case
concerning acquisition of nationality, while the principle of proportionality
of course has to be observed, this is by far not the only part of EU law that
will have to be considered.
It should be noted at this point that the Administrative
Court considered the traffic violations ‘serious crimes’ capable of and
proportionate for justifying a revocation of the guarantee. Driving under
influence might cause a situation where the consequences could result in a
criminal offence; however, the referring court also stated that according to
its recurring case-law such a violation will cause revocation of the guarantee
irrespective of the actual volume of consumption in the case. If we consider
e.g. a situation where the volume is very low, but just above the permitted
limit, this cannot be equated to an offence which requires a long prison term
(in Austria it does not. The two administrative offences solely resulted in
fines totalling
€412). It should definitely not be an administrative offence that renders
you stateless.
I would like you to also think about the other violation of
not having a compliant vehicle inspection disk. Just consider the next time
when you have to bring your car to the vehicle inspection that your nationality
might depend on it. Would you consider this reasonable? For the time being, I
would advise any person who is considering to ever naturalize in Austria to
sell their car.
Considering the fact that it concerns ‘recovery of
citizenship of the Union’, one should wonder first whether the entire situation
that led to this can be considered compatible with EU law.
As was already explained above, the guarantee of the grant
of nationality was not unconditional and could be retracted. Therefore, the
guarantee did not even fulfil the requirements under international law.
Since EU law is applicable, the Charter of Fundamental
Rights of the EU (CFR) and the general principles of EU law are also applicable.
One should consider that JY’s legitimate expectations have
clearly been violated. She acted in complete good faith by renouncing her
Estonian citizenship in order to acquire the Austrian nationality. This good
faith has been thoroughly betrayed.
One should, furthermore, consider that there might be a
violation of JY’s right to private life as protected by Article 7 CFR. This is
due to the fact that nationality, just like all other civil status, is governed
by private life. A requirement to become stateless in order to acquire another
nationality, and then additionally refuse the grant of this nationality, is an
unjustifiable violation of the right to private life.
Furthermore, as was explained above, we are presented here
with a clear violation of Article 21 TFEU. No EU citizen should ever have to
forego all rights derived from EU law in order to become more permanently
integrated in an EU host State.
The second question should therefore be rephrased in order
for it not to be limited to the principle of proportionality, but to EU law in
general. Additionally, it would serve the CJEU to extend the scope of the
question to include an assessment whether the naturalization procedure of
Austria is in conformity with EU law.
Time to take a stance
on dual EU citizenship
There is an additional reason why the method employed by
Austria violates the free movement rights, but this requires a longer
explanation.
One should consider this case in a large and complex web of
different lines of case-law.
In my Article on the “Free
Movement of Dual EU Citizens”, I have explained that the C-165/16 Lounes case has created a rather
complicated situation. This is due to the distinction made by the CJEU between
‘single’ EU citizens – being persons who have the nationality of only one
Member State – and ‘dual’ EU citizens – being persons who have the nationality
of more than one Member State.
As I explained in that Article, when a person returns to
their Member State of nationality, and this is the only Member State of which
(s)he has the nationality, the ‘right to return’ case-law applies (C‑370/90 Surinder Singh;
C‑291/05 Eind; C-456/12
O&B,
discussed here;
C-230/17 Altiner and Ravn).
This means that the person will only retain those rights derived from EU law that
(s)he had made use of prior to the return while residing in another Member
State. As was shown, prior to C-165/16 Lounes,
problems arose for dual EU citizens when they moved between Member States of
nationality, being on the one hand excluded from the scope of Directive
2004/38, while on the other hand only rights that were acquired on the basis of
the Directive could be retained.
After C-165/16 Lounes, on the contrary, a dual EU citizen
who returns or moves to one of his or her Member States of nationality, would
not only be able to retain rights which were previously used, but continues to
be able to derive new rights from the EU citizenship framework. This means that
a single EU citizen is not treated in the same manner as a dual EU citizen
would in a Member State of nationality, while both have made use of their free
movement rights. While single EU citizens are still affected by reverse
discrimination, dual EU citizens are only affected by it if they have never
moved to and resided in the Member State in which they were born and of which
they have the nationality.
I wrote that this differentiation is dangerous. I also stated
that the CJEU should consider situations where the EU citizen had to renounce
or automatically lost their original Member State’s nationality upon
naturalization in another Member State, like in the case at hand.
I considered that one may not make a distinction between
persons who acquired a nationality at birth and those who acquired it by
naturalization. The reasoning of the CJEU in Lounes would have required a further distinction between persons
who had naturalized and previously had the nationality of another Member State
and those that had the nationality of a Third Country prior to naturalization.
This would create immense problems.
Consequently, an application of C-165/16 Lounes to naturalized EU citizens who
lost the previous nationality, without completely abolishing reverse
discrimination, is impossible.
I stated that if the CJEU considered that there are two
lines of case-law – one concerning single EU citizen returners and one
concerning dual EU citizens – , it would have to restrict Member States as to
requirements of renouncing the previous nationality if this is the nationality
of another Member State and to the automatic loss of the nationality upon
acquisition of another Member State’s nationality.
I considered that the requirement of renunciation of the
previous nationality would equal a requirement to choose for the ‘single EU
citizen’ framework and, therefore, to forego rights; and equally the automatic
loss of a Member State’s nationality would be for the sole reason that the
person wanted to become more integrated in the Member State of residence. This
also meant that a person with only the nationality of a Member State with a
strict ‘single nationality’ policy would be at an enormous disadvantage, since
(s)he would have to naturalize twice in order to get within the dual EU citizen
framework. In order to get within the ambit of this framework, a person who is
a national from a Member State with a strict ‘single nationality’ policy would,
in a first stage, have to lose this nationality by naturalizing in another
Member State which permits multiple nationalities; and subsequently, in a
second stage, acquire, additionally to this newly acquired nationality, another
nationality from another Member State. While a person who originally already
had the nationality of a Member State that permits dual nationality, would
immediately start at the second stage.
In the case C-230/17 Altiner
and Ravn, which concerned returners, the CJEU had the opportunity to make C-165/16
Lounes applicable to single EU
citizens and end reverse discrimination. This opportunity has passed and the
Court repeated its ‘right to return’ case-law without any significant change.
One should be aware though that, whatever happens in C-118/20
JY, this case will have an impact in other areas of EU law. For example, the
C-386/02 Baldinger
case of the CJEU where the Court accepted Austria’s refusal to continue to
grant certain pension rights to a person who lost Austrian nationality upon
acquisition of Swedish nationality, will have to be revisited.
The Court will have to follow through with the line it has
taken and declare in C-118/20 JY that
these automatic loss clauses and requirements to renounce the other Member
State’s nationality are incompatible with EU citizenship.
If it does not, there will be no more legal EU citizenship
framework building up to a fundamental status, but just a random set of cases
which had potential, once upon a time. That is not the story we would like to
tell.
Conclusions
The case C-118/20 JY
v. Wiener Landesregierung, concerning the revocation of a guarantee of the
grant of Austrian nationality, is more than a case on loss of EU citizenship.
It is the first case where the CJEU will have to rule on the acquisition of EU
citizenship.
It was considered here that the preliminary questions
referred imply that the Austrian rules concerning the duty to renounce the
previous nationality are compatible with international law and EU law in
general. It was demonstrated that they are not.
It has been shown that the guarantee of the grant of
Austrian nationality violates international law to such an extent by being
revocable that any naturalized person in Austria might argue that (s)he might
still have the original nationality, due to the fact that the renouncement had
been contra legem. It was furthermore considered that Austria, in having a
guarantee that is revocable, violated the principle of mutual trust.
Additionally, it was argued that not only Article 20 TFEU is
applicable to the case, as the referring court insinuated, but also, and especially,
Article 21 TFEU.
It was maintained that the CJEU will additionally have to
consider that this case is an extension of its Lounes judgment. In Lounes
and subsequently in Altiner and Ravn,
the Court has made a distinction in the EU citizenship framework between
‘single’ EU citizens and ‘dual’ EU citizens. In JY it will now have to complete this distinction by decreeing that
it is no longer permissible for a Member State to require that a person who
wants to naturalize has to forego rights by renouncing his or her other Member
State’s nationality. Equally, Member States will no longer be permitted to provide
for the automatic loss of their nationality when one of their nationals
acquires the nationality of another Member State.
One should keep a close watch on this case as it will have
an impact in many areas of EU law. The fundamental status of EU citizenship
might be on the horizon.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 13
Photo
credit: Jules Verne Times Two / julesvernex2.com / CC-BY-SA-4.0 (linked
to: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en)
See also: http://julesvernex2.com
Indeed, you should sell your car if you intend to apply for Austrian citizenship... One can only be astounded by the arguments used by Austria to come back on their promise to grant Austrian citizenship! More seriously : 1) is the ECJ the right forum to address the very relevant question of the compatibility between the (peculiar) Austrian policy of the nationality guarantee and international law?; 2) should Estonia not have provided that the renunciation was conditional upon effective acquisition of the Austrian citizenship, 3) I completely agree that this is the right case for the ECJ to make clear that its Rottmann/Tjebbes case law also applies to acquisition of the nationality of a MS. The peculiar mechanism used by Austria could backfire : by withdrawing the promise made to grant Austrian citizenship, the central question becomes one of acquisition and no longer of loss...
ReplyDeleteDear Patrick, thank you for the questions.
DeleteAs to your first question, I would consider the CJEU is the right forum. In para. 291 of the C-402/05 P and C-415/05 P Kadi judgment, the CJEU stated that it had "to be borne in mind that the European Community must respect international law in the exercise of its powers (Poulsen and Diva Navigation, paragraph 9, and Racke, paragraph 45), the Court having in addition stated, in the same paragraph of the first of those judgments, that a measure adopted by virtue of those powers must be interpreted, and its scope limited, in the light of the relevant rules of international law." If the CJEU has to consider the revelant rules of international law when deciding on the conformity of an act of an Institution, should it not also consider this question when it concerns the question whether a national act is in conformity with EU law. Would it not be implied from being in conformity with EU law, that the rule is equally in conformity with international law since the CJEU should check this. The CJEU stated also in Kadi in para. 283 that "the Court draws inspiration from the constitutional traditions common to the Member States and from the guidelines supplied by international instruments for the protection of human rights on which the Member States have collaborated or to which they are signatories." Such a Guideline supplied by international instruments that should be taken into account are the 2013 Tunis Conclusions.
As to the second question, should Estonia not have made the reunciation conditional? That would definitely have been better. When reading the Estonian Citizenship Act, it seems at least from the English translation, that according to Art. 26(1) that the renouncement may be refused if this would have as a consequence that the person would be rendered stateless. The question is, would a conditional renouncement have sufficed for Austria? Considering the fact that Artt. 22(3) and 29(1) of the Estonian Citizenship Act state that the nationality will automatically be lost upon acquisition of another nationality, I would say it would not. The Austrian system requires statelessness and nothing else.
Has there been any case law about the impact of renunciation of EU Citizenship on any rights gained as a result of exercising their rights as an EU National? (mostly pertaining to Permanent Residence gained as an EU Citizen under the 2004 directive)
ReplyDeleteIf a German who had Permanent Residence in France (as a result of residing there for the 5 years and not letting that status lapse due to absence) lost their German Citizenship as a result of naturalizing in a country abroad, would they lose that Residence Right in France.
Does this refer to loss of nationality of one Member State due to acquisition of the nationality of another Member State? In Case C-419/92 Scholz the CJEU said that all that matters in such cases is that free movement has been exercised. If it has been, the person concerned is still covered by free movement law.
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