As a result, since this ruling, Belgian labour courts, confronted with claims from employees for overtime pay, face a dilemma, torn between their obligation to achieve the result set out in the European Directive and their concern not to encroach on the powers of the legislature.
Thus, in the light of the above-mentioned judgment of the Court of Justice, some Belgian courts have ruled that it is up to the employer to prove the hours actually worked by the employees, thus reversing the procedural rules on the burden of proof. For example, in a judgment of 22 May 2020, the Brussels Labour Court held that the employer had an obligation to set up an objective, reliable and accessible system for recording working hours, failing which it was up to the employer to prove the hours actually worked by the employee or, at the very least, to prove that the employee had not worked the (overtime) hours for which he was claiming payment. The Brussels Labour Court based this reversal of the burden of proof on the employer's manifestly inadequate cooperation in providing evidence.
Although other judges have subsequently followed, the majority of case law remains reluctant to make such a U-turn on the grounds that, as long as Belgian legislation has not been adapted to impose an obligation on employers to introduce a system for recording working time, they cannot be forced to introduce such a system.
Thus, in a recent judgment of 26 March 2024, the Labour Tribunal of Walloon Brabant (Wavre division), called upon to rule on the request of an employee claiming payment of overtime, refused to grant the request, forced to note the limits of its jurisdictional power. The employee, on the basis of the aforementioned Labour Court judgment of 22 May 2020, sought to have the burden of proof reversed in his favour, arguing that the employer had failed to cooperate in the administration of evidence. The Court ruled as follows (free translation):