The seventh edition of our Monthly Dose Employment Law 2025 on current case law explains the judgments of:
In its judgment of 28 January 2025 (1 AZR 33/24), the German Federal Labour Court (Bundesarbeitsgericht, BAG) decided on the question of whether the tariff-responsible trade union can request the individual employer to use the company's digital communication tools (such as company email addresses, internal platforms or intranet links) for campaigning and information purposes – with negative answer.
o Disclosure of all work email addresses of employees working at the company
o Establishment of an automated email distribution list
o Access to the group-wide communication platform ‘Viva Engage’ (formerly Yammer) as an ‘internal user’
o Permanent link to her website on the intranet homepage
The BAG's decision makes it clear that there is no general digital access right for trade unions. Employers are not obliged to disclose work email addresses, grant access to internal platforms or set up permanent intranet links.
For trade union activities, this means that traditional means of access – in particular physical access to the workplace – continue to be considered sufficient. Trade unions must base digital contacts on data voluntarily provided by employees or use their own channels outside the employer's infrastructure.
Employers can protect their digital communication systems from external use through clear internal regulations or works agreements without violating freedom of association. At the same time, voluntary solutions – such as temporary intranet notices or agreed digital formats – can be considered in individual cases to promote constructive dialogue.
In its judgment of 29 January 2025 (4 AZR 83/24), the BAG ruled that a general reference in an employment contract to the entire relevant MTV also effectively covers the limitation periods contained therein and is therefore subject to the control privilege of Section 310 (4) sentence 3 of the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, BGB). Special collective bargaining agreements (CBA) – such as restructuring CBA – do not apply to employees not covered by CBA without a separate contractual agreement.
Employers should ensure that reference clauses in employment contracts refer clearly and unambiguously to the entire relevant collective agreement in order to make use of the control privilege of Section 310 (4) sentence 3 BGB. An exemplary list of individual areas of regulation (‘such as ... etc.’) is permissible, but must not restrict the global nature of the reference; it is not necessary to include the entire collective agreement for an industry. Special or in-house collective agreements – such as restructuring collective agreements – only apply to employees not covered by collective agreements if they are expressly agreed upon by mutual consent; mere silence or acceptance of reductions is not sufficient. CBA exclusion periods only apply if the relevant collective agreement applies in its entirety and the category of claims is covered. Although they are invalid insofar as they relate to the statutory minimum wage (Section 3 MiLoG) or liability for intent (Section 202 (1) BGB), they remain valid in all other respects.
In its judgment of 20 February 2025 (8 AZR 61/24), the BAG ruled that a mere delay in fulfilling a right to information under Art. 15 GDPR does not in itself justify a claim for non-material damages under Art. 82 (1) GDPR. The decisive factor is whether the data subject can demonstrate and prove specific, objectively comprehensible damage, for example in the form of a justified loss of control over their personal data. Abstract fears or mere negative feelings such as concern, anxiety or annoyance are not sufficient for this.
Employers should continue to take GDPR requests for information seriously and respond to them in a timely manner. For employers, however, the BAG's decision also shows that a delayed or initially incomplete response to a request for information under Art. 15 GDPR does not, as a rule, lead to a claim for non-material damages under Art. 82 GDPR, provided that the data subject cannot prove any specific, objectively justified damage. This reduces the financial risk in the case of purely formal violations, but does not release employers from their obligation to respond to requests for information in a timely and complete manner. In order to be on the safe side in the event of a dispute, it is advisable to keep complete documentation of the processing, including deadlines, content and communication history. However, employers should be aware that in the case of actual risks such as data loss or misuse, compensable damage can quickly be affirmed. Delayed disclosure may also continue to result in regulatory measures and undermine the trust of those affected.
On 19 March 2025, the BAG ruled that clauses in general terms and conditions (Allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen, AGB) which (1) cause the employee's vested virtual option rights to expire immediately upon termination of the employment relationship due to resignation, or (2) cause the virtual option rights to expire twice as quickly as they were created, may in each case unreasonably disadvantage the employee.
o A vesting period of four years, whereby periods of unpaid leave were not to be taken into account for the vesting period
o Immediate forfeiture of all options already vested in the event of voluntary resignation (Section 4.2 ESOP)
o Proportional forfeiture of all options within two years of termination of employment (12.5% per quarter, beginning three months after departure, Section 4.5 ESOP)
The ruling of the BAG, which is not entirely convincing in terms of content (see also) requires employers who currently or in future wish to retain their employees through long-term employee participation programmes and who, among other things, provide for vesting rules for this purpose, to adjust the vesting rules and, in this context, also the rules on the forfeiture of the relevant remuneration options in the so-called bad leaver/good leaver rules. If the provisions of the participation programme are to provide for a complete forfeiture of options in the event of an employee leaving the company during the vesting period solely on the basis of their own decision, the granting of options should generally be linked exclusively to the existence of the employment relationship at the time of vesting and not to any further conditions relating to the employee's work performance.
In its judgment of 20 November 2024 (10 Sa 13/24), the Regional Labour Court Baden-Württemberg ruled that reassigning of a potential customer from the care of a consultant at the customer's request constitutes direct discrimination on the basis of gender within the meaning of Section 3 (1) of the General Equal Treatment Act (Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz, AGG). If the employer complies with such a discriminatory customer request without taking protective measures, it violates its obligations under Section 12 (4) AGG and is liable for compensation under Section 15 (2) AGG, according to the Regional Labour Court.
The ruling makes it clear that discriminatory requests from customers that relate to a characteristic listed in Section 1 AGG – in this case gender – should generally not be accepted without further consideration. Otherwise, there is a risk that the labour court deciding on the matter will assume direct discrimination against the employees concerned and that a claim for compensation will arise under Section 15 (2) AGG. Employers should discuss the context of discrimination with the customer in the initial stages of the specific opportunity/transaction, for example by informing customers about the professional suitability of the person concerned or by considering alternative solutions. The discussion must be documented in an appropriate manner. In addition, it may be advisable in individual cases to establish training courses on how to deal with discriminatory customer requests so that managers can respond in such situations in a legally compliant and prevention-oriented manner.
Did you find this useful?
To tell us what you think, please update your settings to accept analytics and performance cookies.