What happened ?
Rechtbank Zeeland-West-Brabant issued a first-instance civil judgment on 15 April 2026 in ECLI:NL:RBZWB:2026:3005. A Dutch roofing company, Neo Dak, had worked for years with an administration and advice office for Dutch payroll. After a construction project in Denmark, Neo Dak came into conflict with Danish union 3F over labour conditions and remuneration. The court recorded that Neo Dak agreed in 2024 to pay €241,200 after 3F gave it a choice between that payment or back payments to employees plus a fine.
Neo Dak claimed the adviser had failed to set up the Denmark payroll according to Danish law. The court applied BW 7:401, the Haviltex contract-interpretation standard and Rv article 150 on burden of proof. It held that Neo Dak had not sufficiently established that this foreign-law payroll responsibility had been assigned to the adviser. Neo Dak's claims were dismissed.
Because Neo Dak had imposed conservatory seizures in 2025 and the underlying claims failed, the seizures were held wrongful. The court awarded €22,099.50 excluding VAT in advice costs, €2,625 in interest damage, process costs and statutory interest.
Analysis
The ruling matters because the expensive failure was not only payroll technique. It was scope control. A long relationship with a bookkeeper or payroll adviser did not, in this case, prove that the adviser had accepted responsibility for host-state labour law.
The current market context makes the point sharper. CBS reported preliminary Q1 2026 negotiated wages up 4.5 percent overall and 7.2 percent in construction. At the start of Q2, entrepreneur confidence was -14.8 and construction confidence -29.4. A late foreign payroll correction now meets thinner margins and weaker pricing power.
For founders, the practical question is simple: who is responsible for identifying host-state wage rules, tax thresholds, evidence and adviser escalation, and where is that responsibility written down?
Ensure your project’s compliance and scope control today, don’t wait for costly setbacks.
Governance
Foreign labour projects need owner-level scope control before the price is closed. The file should show the country, workers, dates, payroll entity, host-state wage assumptions, tax-day monitoring, adviser role and escalation route. Helpful emails are not the same as a mandate.
Risk
A foreign project can lose margin through back pay, union settlement, advice costs, management time and delayed cash recovery. Conservatory seizure, a pre-judgment attachment of assets, adds its own downside: if the claim fails entirely, the seizing party can become liable for damage.
Compliance
EU posting rules can bring host-state employment terms into the Dutch payroll file. Belastingdienst guidance on the 183-day rule concerns wage tax allocation; it does not settle labour conditions. Presence days in the work state, including weekends and holidays, need a controlled record.
Daily operational takeaway
Create one foreign-project scope note for every active cross-border job: adviser role, wage assumptions, tax-day count, evidence file and recovery downside if a dispute is already forming.
ECLI:NL:RBZWB:2026:3005 Rechtbank Zeeland-West-Brabant, 15 April 2026
The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Paolo Maria Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by the author before publication. Any translated versions are AI-generated from the original English text.