BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[New search]
[Contents list]
[Help]
FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF DUBINSKAYA v. RUSSIA
(Application
no. 4856/03)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
13 July 2006
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Dubinskaya v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr C.L. Rozakis, President,
Mrs N.
Vajić,
Mr A. Kovler,
Mrs E.
Steiner,
Mr K. Hajiyev,
Mr D.
Spielmann,
Mr S.E. Jebens, judges,
and Mr S.
Nielsen, Section Registrar
Having
deliberated in private on 22 June 2006,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 4856/03) against the Russian
Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by an Israeli and Russian national, Ms Galina
Ruvimovna Dubinskaya (Galina Dubinsky), on 23 January 2003.
- The
applicant was initially represented by Mr D. Shteynberg, a lawyer
practising in Moscow, and then by Ms L. van Kampen-Nasyrova, a lawyer
practising in Helmond, the Netherlands. The Russian Government (“the
Government”) were represented by Mr P. Laptev, the
Representative of the Russian Federation at the European Court of
Human Rights.
- On
28 February 2005 the Court decided to communicate the application to
the Government. Under the provisions of Article 29 § 3 of the
Convention, it decided to examine the merits of the application at
the same time as its admissibility.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicant was born in 1941 and lives in Tel-Aviv.
- On
27 August 1993 the applicant was severely injured in a traffic
accident in Moscow.
- On
12 May 1995 the applicant lodged a civil action before the
Chertanovskiy District Court of Moscow against the car driver and the
car owner, the Moscow branch of Tveruniversalbank, seeking
compensation for damage. She claimed 6,700 US dollars (USD) as
compensation for the loss of salary, for medical and travel expenses
incurred as a result of the traffic accident and USD 15,000 as
compensation for non-pecuniary damage. A copy of the statement of
claim produced to the Court bears a stamp of the District Court’s
registry showing the registration date as 12 May 1995.
- On
5 October 1995 the Chertanovskiy District Court, by an interim
decision, ordered a medical examination of the applicant by a panel
of experts. It put questions about the current state of the
applicant’s health, her previous ailments and their possible
causes and an eventual need for medical assistance and care.
- The
interim decision of 5 October 1995 was submitted to the Moscow bureau
for forensic medical examinations (Бюро
судебно-медицинской
экспертизы
при Комитете
здравоохранения
города
Москвы,
hereinafter the “Bureau”).
- On
13 October 1995 the Bureau asked the District Court for the
applicant’s medical documents.
- According
to the Government, upon receipt of the Bureau’s request, the
District Court asked the applicant’s lawyer Mr D. Shteynberg, a
member of the Moscow Regional Bar Association, to produce additional
medical information. No response followed. On an unspecified date the
District Court repeated its request. After Mr Shteynberg had failed
to respond for the second time, the District Court issued an interim
decision on discontinuation of the proceedings. The court returned
the applicant’s statement of claims with attached documents to
Mr Shteynberg.
- The
applicant indicated that neither she nor her lawyer had received the
District Court’s request for additional information and that
they had not been notified of the District Court’s interim
decision on discontinuation of the proceedings.
- In
2002 the applicant complained to the president of the Chertanovskiy
District Court about an excessive length of the proceedings.
- On
18 July 2002 the Chertanovskiy District Court informed the applicant
that, according to the registration log for the year of 1995, the
applicant’s claim against the bank had never been registered by
the District Court.
- In
August 2002 Mr Shteynberg inquired of the Bureau whether the expert
examination ordered by the decision of 5 October 1995 had been
carried out.
- By
letter of 19 August 2002, the Bureau responded to Mr Shteynberg that,
having received no response from the District Court for additional
medical information, it had not carried out any examination.
- On
7 October 2002 the President of the Chertanovskiy District Court
reported to the applicant that, according to the registration logs of
the Chertanovskiy District Court for the years of 1995 to 2002, the
District Court did not have a civil case to which the applicant and
the Moscow branch of Tveruniversalbank were the parties.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. Adjournment and discontinuation of proceedings
- The
RSFSR Code on Civil Procedure of 11 June 1964 (in force at the
material time) provided that civil cases were to be prepared for a
hearing no later than seven days after the action had been lodged
with the court. Civil cases were to be examined no later than one
month after the preparation for the hearing had been completed
(Article 99)
- Summonses
were to be served on the parties and their representatives in such
way so that they would have enough time to appear timely at the
hearing and prepare their case. If necessary, the parties could be
summoned by a phone call or a telegram (Article 106).
- A
court could adjourn examination of a case when an expert examination
had been ordered (Article 215).
- Article 221 set out an exhaustive list of grounds for
issuing an interim decision on discontinuation of the proceedings
(определение
об оставлении
заявления без
рассмотрения),
that is if parties failed to make use of a preliminary non-judicial
avenue of solving a dispute; if an action was lodged by an
incapacitated person or by a person lacking the authority to act; if
the parties, without valid reasons, failed to attend two hearings;
and if the same dispute between the same parties was pending before a
court.
-
A copy of an interim decision on discontinuation of the proceedings
was to be sent to the absent party no later than three days upon its
delivery (Article 213).
B. Regulation on keeping court documents
- Files in civil cases concerning claims for
compensation for health damage were to be kept by first-instance
courts for seventy-five years (Item 7 (A) (115) of the List of
documents of the USSR Ministry of Justice, justice departments and
authorities, and courts with indication of their period of keeping,
approved by the USSR Ministry of Justice on 31 January 1980).
- Original decisions on discontinuation of civil
proceedings must be kept permanently (Paragraph 5.4 of the
Instruction on the procedure for keeping, selecting and archiving of
court documents, approved by Order no. 13 of the USSR Minister
of Justice on 17 September 1980).
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicant complained that the length of the proceedings had been
incompatible with the “reasonable time” requirement,
provided in Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, which reads as
follows:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing within a
reasonable time... by [a]... tribunal...”
A. Submissions by the parties
- The
Government argued that the Court did not have competence ratione
temporis to examine the applicant’s complaint because the
proceedings in her case had been discontinued by an interim decision
of the Chertanovskiy District Court in the end of 1995, that is
before 5 May 1998 when the Convention entered into force in respect
of Russia. The interim decision was promptly served on the
applicant’s representative, Mr Shteynberg. Even assuming
that Mr Shteynberg had not received the interim decision, neither the
applicant nor Mr Shteynberg “took any steps in the course of
about seven years to find out the stage of consideration of the
case”. In the Government’s submission, they were not able
to produce a copy of that interim decision because the District
Court’s records and all materials related to the applicant’s
action had been destroyed some time in 1998 after expiry of their
period of keeping. In any event, the applicant may re-submit her
action to the District Court.
- The
applicant claimed that the District Court had never taken a formal
decision on her claim. Neither she nor her lawyer had been informed
of any such decision and the Government were not even able to
indicate the date of that decision. In the absence of any formal
decision in her case, the proceedings should be considered as still
pending. The District Court had a statutory obligation to keep the
documents related to her case for seventy-five years. In the
applicant’s opinion, the Government’s submissions were
inconsequential: there was no evidence that the District Court, on at
least two occasions, had asked Mr Shteynberg for additional
information. In any event, Article 221 of the RSFSR Code on Civil
Procedure did not permit a court to discontinue the proceedings for a
party’s failure to show additional evidence. The applicant and
her lawyer had inquired the District Court’s registry and its
President about the state of the proceedings in her case on several
occasions before and after 2002, but received no response.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. Admissibility
- The
Court reiterates that its jurisdiction ratione temporis covers
only the period after the ratification of the Convention or its
Protocols by the respondent State. From the ratification date
onwards, all of the State’s alleged acts and omissions must
conform to the Convention or its Protocols and subsequent facts fall
within the Court’s jurisdiction even where they are merely
extensions of an already existing situation (see, for example, Yağcı
and Sargın v. Turkey, judgment of 8 June 1995,
Series A no. 319-A, p. 16, § 40, and Almeida Garrett,
Mascarenhas Falcão and Others v. Portugal,
nos. 29813/96 and 30229/96, § 43, ECHR 2000-I).
- Accordingly,
the Court is competent to examine the facts of the present case for
their compatibility with the Convention only in so far as they
occurred after 5 May 1998, the date of ratification of the Convention
by the Russian Federation. It may, however, have regard to the facts
prior to ratification inasmuch as they could be considered to have
created a situation extending beyond that date or may be relevant for
the understanding of facts occurring after that date (see Broniowski
v. Poland (dec.) [GC], no. 31443/96, §§ 74-77,
ECHR 2002-X).
29. Turning
to the facts of the present case, the Court notes that the applicant
complained that the domestic courts had failed to examine her tort
action within a “reasonable time”. This being so, in
order to decide whether the Court has jurisdiction ratione
temporis to examine the applicant’s complaint, it is
necessary to establish whether, on the date when the Convention
entered into force in respect of Russia, the applicant’s claim
was still pending before the domestic courts.
30. In
this respect, the Court reiterates that judicial proceedings are
considered to be pending until the parties are definitely able
to find out the content of the written judgment in
the determination of the merits of a dispute or a decision on
discontinuation of the proceedings (cf. Skorobogatova v. Russia,
no. 33914/02, §§ 39-40, 1 December 2005, Shatunov and
Shatunova v. Russia (dec.), no. 31271/02, 30 June 2005 and,
mutatis mutandis, Papachelas v. Greece [GC], no. 31423/96,
§ 30, ECHR 1999 II).
- The
Government claimed that the proceedings had ended some time in 1995
after the applicant’s lawyer had repeatedly failed to respond
to the District Court’s requests for additional medical
information.
- The
Court, however, is not satisfied with the accuracy and reliability of
the Government’s factual submissions which have not been
corroborated with any evidence. They did not produce a copy of the
decision by which the proceedings had been discontinued or indicate
the exact date when it had been issued. By way of justification for
that omission, they claimed that the decision, along with other
documents in the applicant’s case, had been destroyed in 1998
after the statutory period of keeping these documents had expired. If
it had indeed been so, the act of destruction appears to have been
carried out in breach of the express requirement of the Instruction
on keeping and archiving of court documents – a copy was
enclosed with the Government’s memorandum – which
provided for permanent keeping of judicial decisions on
discontinuation of proceedings (see paragraph 23 above). Another
applicable domestic regulation – produced by the applicant –
provided for the seventy-five-year-long period of keeping of judicial
documents concerning claims for compensation for health damage, as it
had been in the applicant’s case (see paragraph 22 above). The
Government however did not imply that the case file had been
destroyed unlawfully. A further reason to doubt the accuracy of the
Government’s assertion that the decision at issue could not be
produced because it had been destroyed is the acknowledgement by the
District Court’s officers, in their letters of 2002 to the
applicant, that they were still in possession of all registration
logs for the past years, including 1995.
- Furthermore,
the Court finds it anomalous that in the absence of the text of the
decision or, in fact, any materials from the case file, the
Government were able to put forward a specific ground for
discontinuation of the proceedings on the applicant’s claim,
namely that she had repeatedly failed to produce evidence. The Court
notes, in any event, no such ground featured in the text of Article
221 of the RSFSR Code on Civil Procedure, which the Government
invoked (see paragraph 20 above). They did not indicate any other
legal basis for discontinuing proceedings on the applicant’s
claim.
- In
these circumstances, the Court is not persuaded that the
Chertanovskiy District Court ever issued any formal decision on the
applicant’s claim. On the other hand, there is no doubt that
the claim was validly introduced. Although in 2002 the District Court
denied that the claim had ever been lodged, the statement of claim
bearing the registry’s stamp and the interim decision of 5
October 1995 conclusively show that the claim had indeed been
introduced by the applicant and accepted into work by the
Chertanovskiy District Court.
- The
Court further notes that the Government produced no evidence in
support of their contention that certain additional information had
been requested in writing from the applicant’s representative,
Mr Shteynberg. The present application is distinguishable from the
cases in which the Government supported a similar assertion with
copies of the cover letter accompanying the documents sent to the
applicant (see Sukhorubchenko v. Russia, no. 69315/01, §
50, 10 February 2005). As it follows from a certificate from the
Moscow Regional Bar Association, of which Mr Shteynberg was a
member, he has not received any documents from the Chertanovskiy
District Court after May 1995.
- Having
introduced her claim in compliance with the formal requirements and
having been advised that a medical examination would be carried out
but without further notices from the District Court, on the date the
Convention entered into force in respect of Russia, that is on 5 May
1998, the applicant could have reasonably assumed that the
proceedings on her claim were still pending. It would certainly have
been preferable if she had inquired about the state of proceedings
before 2002. In fact, she claimed that she had done so but received
no response. However, having regard to the fact that the
Chertanovskiy District Court denied that it had ever registered the
claim, such an inquiry would not have brought about any change in her
situation, irrespective of the moment it would have been made.
- Taking
into account the above considerations, the Court considers that it
has competence ratione temporis to examine the applicant’s
complaint and dismisses the Government’s objection.
- The Court notes that the application is not manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any other
grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
2. Merits
(a) Right of access to a court
- The
Court reiterates that the procedural guarantees laid down in Article
6 secure to everyone the right to have any claim relating to his
civil rights and obligations brought before a court or tribunal; in
this way it embodies the “right to a court”, of which the
right of access, that is the right to institute proceedings before
courts in civil matters, constitutes one aspect (see Golder v. the
United Kingdom, judgment of 21 February 1975, Series A no. 18,
pp. 13-18, §§ 28-36).
- The
Court observes that the applicant brought a civil action against the
car owner and driver. The Chertanovskiy District Court accepted the
claim for examination on 12 May 1995 and ordered an expert
examination on 5 October 1995. The Government did not dispute these
facts. As the Court has found above, there is no evidence that a
decision on discontinuation of the proceedings was taken, contrary to
the Government’s contention, and that on the date when the
Convention entered into force in respect of Russia the applicant’s
claim was pending before the district court.
- The
Court recalls that the institution of proceedings does not, in
itself, satisfy all the requirements of Article 6 § 1. The
Convention is intended to guarantee not rights that are theoretical
or illusory but rights that are practical and effective. The right of
access to a court includes not only the right to institute
proceedings but also the right to obtain a “determination”
of the dispute by a court. It would be illusory if a Contracting
State’s domestic legal system allowed an individual to bring a
civil action before a court without ensuring that the case would be
determined by a final decision in the judicial proceedings. It would
be inconceivable for Article 6 § 1 to describe in detail
procedural guarantees afforded to litigants – proceedings that
are fair, public and expeditious – without guaranteeing the
parties that their civil disputes will be finally determined (see
Multiplex v. Croatia, no. 58112/00, § 45,
10 July 2003; Kutić v. Croatia, no. 48778/99,
§ 25, ECHR 2002 II). A litigant’s right of
access to a court would be illusory if he or she were to be kept in
the dark about the developments in the proceedings and the court’s
decisions on the claim, especially when such decisions are of the
nature to bar further examination (see Sukhorubchenko, cited
above, § 53).
- The
Court notes that the applicant was not notified of any decision in
her case, if such, in fact, had been made. When she inquired about
the state of the proceedings in 2002, the domestic authorities denied
the registration of the claim. The Government’s submissions
shed little light on the developments in the case and do not enable
the Court to establish what happened to the case file and the
applicant’s claim. What is certain is that the applicant has
never obtained a judgment on the merits.
- The
Government’s argument that the applicant is able to
re-introduce her claim does not convince the Court. The violation
complained about stems from the domestic authorities’ failure
to determine judicially the claim that the applicant had once
introduced, rather than from the absence of a general possibility to
sue the car driver and owner. In any event, the Court considers that
it would place an excessive and unreasonable burden on the applicant
to require her to re-submit her action ten years after she had
validly introduced it for the first time and more than thirteen years
after the circumstances that had given rise to that claim had
occurred.
- The
Court finds therefore that the failure of the domestic authorities to
determine the applicant’s claim deprived her of the right of
access to a court. There has been therefore a violation of Article 6
§ 1 of the Convention.
(b) Length of proceedings
- The
Court notes that all delays in the proceedings during the period
under consideration are due to the failure of the district court to
update the applicant about the status of the proceedings she had
initiated. The Court has already taken this aspect into account in
its examination of the applicant’s right of access to a court
above. Having regard to its findings on that point, it considers that
the issue of the length of the proceedings must be regarded as having
been absorbed by the issue of access to a court.
- The
Court therefore finds that it is not necessary to examine separately
the issue of the length of the proceedings.
II. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- As
regards pecuniary damage, the applicant claimed 115,558 US dollars
(USD) as compensation for the loss of salary and USD 123,088 as
compensation for medical and travel expenses incurred as a result of
the traffic accident. The applicant claimed that she could have
obtained this compensation if the Russian courts determined her claim
on its merits. The applicant claimed USD 150,000 in respect of
non-pecuniary damage.
- The
Government contested that there was any casual link between the
alleged violation and the pecuniary damage claimed by the applicant.
They also pointed out that the applicant had submitted certain
documents in Hebrew in support of her claims for pecuniary damage
which the Court should not take into account. As regards claims for
non-pecuniary damage, they are excessive and unreasonable.
- The
Court notes that in the present case an award of just satisfaction
may only be based on the fact that the applicant did not have the
benefit of the guarantees of Article 6. Whilst the Court cannot
speculate as to the outcome of the proceedings had the situation been
otherwise, it does not find it unreasonable to regard the applicant
as having suffered a loss of real opportunities (cf. Leoni v.
Italy, no. 43269/98, § 32, 26 October 2000; Pélissier
and Sassi v. France [GC], no. 25444/94, § 80, ECHR
1999 II). To this has to be added the non-pecuniary damage
undoubtedly suffered by the applicant. These elements of damage do
not lend themselves to a process of calculation. Taking them on an
equitable basis, as required by Article 41 of the Convention, the
Court awards the applicant the sum of 5,000 euros (“EUR”),
plus any tax that may be chargeable on that amount.
B. Costs and expenses
- Relying
on the contract with Mr Shteynberg, the applicant also claimed USD
7,750 for the costs and expenses incurred before the domestic courts
and in the Strasbourg proceedings.
- The
Government argued that the applicant should not be awarded any sum
under this head. She had not submitted any document, apart from the
contract with Mr Shteynberg, showing that she had actually paid for
the legal assistance. The Government also insisted that the contract
was void because the lawyer’s fee was expressed in US dollars,
allegedly in breach of the Russian laws. In any event, the
applicant’s claim is excessive and unreasonable.
- According
to the Court’s case-law, an applicant is entitled to
reimbursement of his costs and expenses only in so far as it has been
shown that these have been actually and necessarily incurred and were
reasonable as to quantum. In the present case, the applicant
submitted a copy of the contract with Mr Shteynberg which set out, in
a detailed manner, the time spent by Mr Shteynberg and his associate
on the preparation of the applicant’s case before the domestic
courts and the Court. The Government did not dispute the fact that Mr
Shteynberg had represented the applicant in the domestic and
Strasbourg proceedings. The contract between the applicant and Mr
Shteynberg had not been declared null and void by any court. It was
enforceable under the Russian law and bound the applicant to pay the
amounts indicated therein. The Court, however, considers the amount
claimed to be excessive. Accordingly, it awards the applicant
EUR 3,000, plus any tax that may be chargeable on that amount.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the application admissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 § 1 of the Convention on account of the domestic authorities’
failure to examine the applicant’s civil claim;
- Holds that no separate examination of the issue
of the length of the proceedings is required;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three months
from the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following
amounts:
(i) EUR 5,000 (five thousand euros) in respect of pecuniary and
non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 3,000 (three thousand euros) in respect of costs and
expenses;
(iii) any tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicant’s
claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 13 July 2006, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President