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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF
VELIKOVI AND OTHERS v. BULGARIA
(Applications nos. 43278/98, 45437/99, 48014/99, 48380/99,
51362/99, 53367/99, 60036/00, 73465/01, and 194/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
15 March
2007
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 Velikovi and Others v. Bulgaria,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr P. Lorenzen, President,
Mrs S.
Botoucharova,
Mr K. Jungwiert,
Mr V. Butkevych,
Mrs M.
Tsatsa-Nikolovska,
Mr R. Maruste,
Mr M. Villiger, judges,
and
Ms C. Westerdiek, Section Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 20 February 2007,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in nine applications against the Republic of Bulgaria
lodged by Bulgarian nationals under Article 34 of the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) as follows: application no. 43278/98, Velikovi,
on 10 April 1998;
application no. 45437/99, Wulpe, on 11 December 1998;
application no. 48014/99, Cholakovi, on 12 March 1999;
application no. 48380/99, Todorova, on 4 February 1999;
application no. 51362/99, Eneva and Dobrev, on 13 May 1999,
application no. 53367/99, Stoyanova and Ivanov, on 2 November
1999; application no. 60036/00, Bogdanovi, on 4 January 2000;
application no. 73465/01, Tzilevi, on 11 May 2001; and
application no. 194/02, Nikolovi, on 29 September 2001.
- The
representatives of the applicants are indicated below. The applicants
in all cases with the exception of Eneva and Dobrev
(no. 51362/99) and Tzilevi (no. 73465/01) were granted
legal aid. The Bulgarian Government (“the Government”)
were represented by their agents, Mrs M. Dimova and Mrs M. Karadjova.
- All
the applicants alleged, inter alia, that they had been
deprived of their property in violation of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 to the Convention.
- By
separate decisions of 12 May 2005 in each case, the Court declared
some of the applications admissible and others partly admissible.
- The
applicants and the Government each filed further written observations
(Rule 59 § 1).
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF EACH CASE
A. The case of Velikovi (application no.
43278/98)
6. Mr
Ilia Velikov (“the first applicant”) was born in 1923. He
passed away on 27 April 2002. His sons, the second and the third
applicants, stated that they maintained the application. Mr Atanas
Velikov (“the second applicant”) was born in 1944.
Mr Rossen Atanassov (“the third applicant”) was born
in 1947. They were represented before the Court by Mr B. Voinov and
Mr R. Raykovski, lawyers practising in Sofia
- On
27 May 1968 the applicants bought jointly from the Sofia municipality
a five/six-room apartment which had been nationalised in 1949. They
made a 20% down-payment and reimbursed the remainder within the
following years. During the relevant period the prices of apartments
in big cities were fixed by legislation in amounts equal to at least
several years' worth of an average salary.
- In
1978 the apartment was divided into two apartments which became the
ownership of the second and the third applicants respectively. In
1991 the second applicant transferred his title to his two sons,
Alexander and Ilia Velikov.
- In
February 1993 the heirs of the pre-nationalisation owner of the whole
apartment brought an action against the applicants under section 7 of
the Restitution Law (see paragraphs 117-120 below explaining the
relevant law and practice). In the proceedings that followed, the
courts collected documentary evidence and also heard several
witnesses.
- On
17 February 1995 the Sofia District Court declared the 1968 contract
null and void as contrary to the law and restored the plaintiffs'
ownership rights.
- The
District Court found that the 1968 contract had not been signed by
the relevant official – the mayor of the relevant district
(председател
на ИК на общински
НС). In the applicants' case the decisions approving the
contract had been issued by the deputy mayor of the region of Sofia
(председател
на ИК на Окръжен/Градски
НС), the superior of the competent mayor of the relevant
district. However, a superior administrative body could not validly
usurp the powers vested in their subordinates in matters that were
not subject to appeal. Also, the regional mayor's power to approve
sales of apartments had only been introduced by an amendment that had
entered into force in 1969, several months after the relevant dates.
12. On
a final point, the District Court dismissed as unproven the
allegation that the first applicant, who had been registered as an
“anti-fascist and
anti-capitalist veteran” – a registration which at the
relevant time carried a number of privileges guaranteed by law –
had abused his position to obtain the apartment at issue.
- On
20 January 1997 the Sofia City Court dismissed the applicants'
ensuing appeal.
- Upon
the applicants' petition for review (cassation), on 27 October 1997
the Supreme Court of Cassation upheld the lower courts' judgments
while adding that there was sufficient circumstantial evidence of
abuse: information that the first applicant might have been given
priority, that he had made statements against persons who had applied
to buy the same apartment and that when applying to purchase the
apartment in 1968 he had stated that he should be “given his
due” as a veteran.
- On
25 November 1997 the restored owners brought an action for rei
vindicatio. On an unspecified date in the beginning of 2000 the
applicants and their sons vacated the two apartments and the
pre-nationalisation owners took possession thereof.
- Since
October 2000 the sons of the second applicant have been renting an
apartment at the monthly rate of 100 Euros (“EUR”). The
applicants' families unsuccessfully requested the Sofia municipality
to provide them with municipal apartments at fixed rental rates.
- On
an unspecified date the applicants and their sons requested
compensation by bonds under the Compensation Law (for an explanation
about that compensation scheme and the fluctuations in bond prices,
see paragraphs 133-139 below). The market value of the two apartments
was assessed in the beginning of 2000 by a certified expert at 84,756
Bulgarian levs (“BGN”), the equivalent of approximately
EUR 42,900. The applicants received compensation bonds of that
amount.
- Some
of the applicants or their sons sold their bonds in November 2004,
when such bonds were traded at about 68% of their face value. One of
the applicants sold his bonds at a moment when the market reached a
peak, bonds trading at 110% of face value. In total, the applicants
and their sons obtained the equivalent of approximately EUR 30,500 as
compensation.
B. The case of Wulpe (application no. 45437/99)
- The
applicant, Mrs Nadejda Wulpe, is a Bulgarian national,
who was born in 1929 and lives in Sofia. Before
the Court she was represented by Mrs S. Marguaritova-Voutchkova, a
legal adviser practising in Sofia.
- In
1969 the applicant's husband was granted the tenancy of a three room,
95-square-metres' state-owned apartment. The applicant's family moved
in. The applicant had two daughters.
- In
1982 the applicant, who had divorced and had obtained the tenancy of
the apartment, purchased it and reimbursed the price within the
following years.
- In
1993 the heirs of the pre-nationalisation owners of the apartment,
which had been nationalised in 1949 without compensation, brought an
action against the applicant under section 7 of the Restitution Law.
- It
appears that at that time the applicant no longer lived in Burgas.
She had moved to Sofia on an unspecified date.
- By
judgment of 24 March 1995 the Burgas District Court declared the 1982
purchase null and void. The court noted that the tenancy of the
apartment had been obtained in 1969 in breach of the law as,
according to the applicable rules, a four-member family – as
the applicant's – had only been entitled to a two-room
apartment. Furthermore, upon her divorce the applicant had been
granted the tenancy of the apartment in breach of the law as it had
largely exceeded her and her two daughters' needs. In any event, at
that time the applicant should have been treated as a “one-member”
family, her daughters having moved to Sofia. Moreover, at the moment
of the 1982 transaction the applicant had not yet been a resident of
Burgas (which was a pre-condition to buy an apartment there) and,
since her daughters had attained majority, they could not be counted
as members of the family to justify a right to buy a three-room
apartment. Finally, the 1982 sale purchase contract had not been
signed by the mayor personally.
- The
applicant's ensuing appeal was dismissed in January 1996 by the
Burgas Regional Court. On 17 September 1997 the applicant's
petition for review (cassation) was dismissed by the Supreme Court of
Cassation. The courts upheld the conclusions of the District Court
and stated that each of the breaches of the law found by that court
had been sufficient to warrant a finding that the applicant's title
was void.
- On
2 October 1997 the applicant wrote to the mayor requesting
market-value compensation in accordance with the June 1996 amendment
of the Restitution Law (see paragraphs 129-132 below). She received a
reply by the regional governor explaining that such compensation
would only be payable after the adoption by the Council of Ministers
of regulations on the implementation of the June 1996 amendment.
- On
20 May 1998 the Burgas Regional Court ordered the applicant to vacate
the apartment and to pay to the restored owners damages for having
continued to use the apartment since the judgments declaring her
title void. The court rejected the applicant's argument that she
should not be required to leave until receipt of the market-value
compensation provided for by the June 1996 amendment. The court found
that her right to compensation from the State could not be invoked
against the restored owners who were entitled to enter into
possession of their property.
- On
an unspecified date the restored owners took possession of the
apartment.
- Following
several unsuccessful applications of 1997 and 1998, on 30 September
1999 the applicant was granted the tenancy of a one-room municipal
apartment in Burgas. At that time she lived in Sofia with her
daughter and grand-daughter, still a minor. The applicant's daughter
was ill and the applicant helped looking after her grand-daughter.
- On
21 March 2000 the applicant filed a request with the regional
governor for compensation through bonds. On 11 October 2000 the
regional governor recognised the applicant's right to compensation
bonds and on 12 June 2001 appointed an expert to assess the
market value of the apartment. On 4 July 2001 the governor approved
the expert's report and ordered the issuance of compensation bonds
for face value BGN 39,600 (the equivalent of approximately EUR
20,000).
- On
18 July 2001 the applicant appealed, contesting the assessment. The
appeal was dismissed on 5 February 2002 by the Bourgas Regional Court
which, after having appointed another expert who arrived at the same
figure as the expert appointed by the regional governor, concluded
that the method of calculation used by the two experts had been in
conformity with the law. The applicant's ensuing cassation appeal was
dismissed on 19 November 2002 by the Supreme Administrative
Court.
- On
2 January 2003 the applicant applied to receive the compensation
bonds issued pursuant to the governor's order of 4 July 2001. She
received them on 21 April 2003.
- The
applicant sold her bonds in instalments. In September and October
2003 she sold in two parts approximately half of her bonds, at an
average rate of 22.6 % of face value. In September 2004 she sold part
of her remaining bonds for 25% of their face value. When the bond
prices started to rise in November 2004, she sold the remainder she
had at 50% of face value. As a final result, the applicant obtained a
total of BGN 11,923 (approximately EUR 6,050) as compensation for her
apartment.
C. The case of Cholakovi (application no.
48014/99)
- The
applicants, Mr Bojko Cholakov and Mrs Milka Cholakova,
both Bulgarian nationals, were born in 1914 and 1916 respectively. Mr
Cholakov passed away in March 2005. His wife (the second applicant)
and her daughter and son, Mr Cholakov's heirs, stated that they
wished to continue the proceedings before the Court. The applicants
were represented before the Court by Mrs Z. Kalaidjieva, a lawyer
practising in Sofia.
- In
1967 the applicants became tenants in a state-owned apartment of
three rooms covering 126 square metres, in the centre of Sofia. In
1969 they purchased the apartment.
- In
1993 Mr M., the heir of the pre-nationalisation owners of the
apartment, brought an action against the applicants under section 7
of the Restitution Law. By judgment of 19 April 1994 the Sofia
District Court dismissed the claim finding that that the 1969
transaction had been in conformity with the relevant law and that the
allegations of abuse of official position had not been proven. On 17
June 1996 these findings were upheld on appeal by the Sofia City
Court.
- Mr
M. filed a petition for review (cassation). On 17 September 1997 the
Supreme Court of Cassation quashed the lower courts' judgments and
declared the applicants' title to their apartment null and void. The
court found that in 1967 the applicants had obtained the tenancy of
the apartment in breach of the law as it had not been shown that they
had been registered as persons in need of housing. Furthermore, the
apartment had exceeded in size the applicants' housing needs as
defined in the applicable law in force at the time. Moreover,
assessing all circumstantial evidence, such as that the first
applicant had been at the relevant time head of the finance
department of the region of Sofia, that the tenancy had been granted
pursuant to a letter emanating from the regional administration and
that the apartment at issue had been located nearby the applicants'
previous residence, the court concluded that the only possible
explanation was that the apartment had been obtained through abuse of
power and contra bonas mores.
- On
12 October 1998 the applicants were ordered by the Sofia District
Court to vacate the apartment. They sought unsuccessfully a
postponement, invoking their age and poor health and the lack of
compensation, and appealed. It appears that eventually, not earlier
than September 2000, the applicants vacated the apartment.
- On
several occasions in 1997 and 1998 the applicants asked the municipal
authorities to provide them with a state-owned apartment for rent.
They were put on the waiting list. In November 1999 they obtained the
tenancy of a 56-square-metres' two-room apartment in the suburbs of
Sofia.
- In
the meantime, in July 1998 the applicants had applied for
compensation bonds. In 1999 or 2000 the market value of the apartment
was assessed by an expert at BGN 113,600 (the equivalent of
approximately EUR 57,000) and on 11 August 2000 the applicants
obtained compensation bonds for that amount.
- In
2001 the applicants applied to purchase the two-room municipal
apartment they had been renting since 1999. The municipality agreed.
On 16 June 2003 the applicants purchased the apartment for BGN 12,550
(the equivalent of approximately EUR 6,500). The applicants paid in
cash as their request to pay in compensation bonds had been refused.
- The
applicants sold their bonds on 26 January 2005 at 110% of face value,
at a moment when the market had reached a peak, and thus obtained BGN
124,960 (the equivalent of approximately EUR 63,000).
D. The case of Todorova (application no.
48380/99)
- The
applicant, Mrs Lubomira Nedkova Todorova, is a Bulgarian national who
lives in Plovdiv. She was represented before the Court by
Mr M. Ekimdjiev, a lawyer practising in Plovdiv.
- In
1953 the applicant's grandparents' plot of land and small house in
the centre of Stara Zagora were expropriated for the construction of
an administrative building. The expropriation was undertaken outside
the scope of the nationalisation laws of that period (it was not
punitive or redistributive in nature) but concerned building plans in
the town. On an unspecified date the house was demolished and an
office building was erected on its place.
- The
applicant's grandparents received in compensation ownership of
another plot of land and small house in the centre of Stara Zagora.
The plot covered 352 square metres and the house 86 square metres.
That property had been nationalised in 1949.
- In
1992 the heirs of the pre-nationalisation owners brought an action
against the applicant relying on section 7 of the Restitution Law and
also on the general rei vindicatio provision of the relevant
property law.
- On
15 February 1994 the District Court dismissed the claim as there had
been no breaches of the law in 1953. On appeal, on 28 December 1994
the District Court's judgment was quashed by the Regional Court and
the case remitted for renewed examination.
- By
judgment of 12 April 1996 the District Court declared null and void
the 1953 expropriation and compensation order, relying on section 7
of the Restitution Law. The court found that at the relevant time an
expropriation could only be effected by decision of the Council of
Ministers whereas the property of the applicant's grandparents had
been expropriated – and they had been given another property in
compensation – by decision of the regional authority. As a
result, neither the applicant's grandparents nor the applicant, their
heir, had ever become owners of the property provided in
compensation. The District Court also granted the rei vindicatio
claim and ordered the applicant to vacate the property.
- On
appeal, on 14 March 1997 the Regional Court upheld the District
Court's judgment adding that the fact that the applicant's
grandparents had not been responsible for any omission was
irrelevant.
- On
18 December 1998 the Supreme Court of Cassation dismissed the
applicant's ensuing petition for review (cassation). It noted that
section 7 of the Restitution Law did not apply – it only
concerned property obtained through transactions whereas the
applicant's title had been based on an administrative decision.
Nevertheless, the lower courts' findings that the 1953 order was null
and void had been correct. In these circumstances, the applicant's
grandparents had never become owners of the plot of land and the
building they had received as compensation in 1953. That estate had
thus remained State property until 1992 (acquisition through adverse
possession against the State was not possible) and in 1992 the
pre-nationalisation owners had acquired it back ex lege, under
the general rule of the Restitution Law, its section 1, providing for
the return of certain categories of State properties to their former
owners.
- The
court therefore modified the characterisation of the claim in law and
upheld the lower courts' judgments insofar as they granted the rei
vindicatio claim and ordered the applicant to vacate the property
at issue. However, insofar as they declared null and void the 1953
order also in its expropriation part, the lower courts had acted
beyond their jurisdiction as circumscribed by the pre-nationalisation
owners' claim. That part of the judgments had to be quashed.
- The
applicant did not apply for bonds since compensation by bonds was
only applicable for persons having lost cases under section 7 of the
Restitution Law, whereas in her case the Supreme Court of Cassation
had found that provision inapplicable.
E. The case of Eneva and Dobrev (application no.
51362/99)
- The applicants, Mrs Anka Ivanova Eneva
and Mr Dobromir Enchev Dobrev, are Bulgarian nationals, who were born
in 1932 and 1953 respectively and live in Varna. Before the Court
they were represented by Mrs S. Margaritova-Voutchkova, a legal
adviser practising in Sofia.
- The
property at issue in the present case, a three-room apartment in
Varna of about 93 square metres, was nationalised in 1951 without
compensation. Between 1951 and 1959 the local municipal housing fund
rented the apartment to several different tenants. In 1961 a Ms G.,
who had been living in the apartment since 1959, purchased it from
the local municipality. In 1964, Ms G., having obtained the necessary
authorisation, sold the apartment to the applicants' family.
- In
1992 the pre-nationalisation owners brought an action under section 7
of the Restitution Law against the applicants and Ms G. They also
sought a rei vindicatio order.
- In
1994 the competent District Court dismissed the claim. On appeal its
judgment was quashed on 9 January 1996 by the Regional Court which
proceeded with an examination on the merits. .
- By
judgment of 24 June 1996 the Regional Court granted the claim. It
noted that no trace of a tenancy agreement of 1959 between the
municipality and Ms G. had been found in the archives. It found that,
therefore, Ms G. had not been a tenant in the apartment at issue and
that she had not been entitled to buy it. Furthermore, the 1961
sale-purchase contract between Ms G. and the municipality had not
been signed by the mayor personally – a comma was visible
before the signature, which meant that someone had signed in the
mayor's stead. It followed that Ms G.'s title had been void and that
the applicants – who had purchased the apartment from her in
1964 – had not become owners either. The applicants were
ordered to vacate the apartment.
- On 3 December 1998 the Regional Court's judgment was
upheld by the Supreme Court of Cassation. The applicants' objection
that they had been in good faith and had acquired the apartment
through adverse possession was dismissed on the basis of the
reasoning that the law excluded acquisitive prescription in respect
of State property.
- The applicants vacated the apartment in April 1999. In
August 2001, following an assessment of the market value of the
apartment by a certified expert, the applicants obtained compensation
bonds in the amount of BGN 71,800 (the equivalent of
approximately EUR 36,500).
- In
October and November 2002 the applicants requested the municipal and
regional authorities in Varna to sell them an apartment against
compensation bonds. The regional governor refused by letter of
7 October 2002. The municipality of Varna, by letter of 16
December 2002, informed the applicants that they could only buy a
municipal apartment if they were tenants in such an apartment.
Furthermore, in accordance with the relevant municipal regulations,
not more than 25 % of the apartment's price could be paid in
compensation bonds. The remainder had to be paid in cash.
- The
applicants sold their bonds in instalments. One part was sold in June
and August 2004 (at approximately 24.8% of face value) and the
remainder in December 2004, when the market rates surged (at 82% of
face value). The net amount the applicants obtained, after deduction
of the brokers' fees, was BGN 36,961 (the equivalent of approximately
EUR 18,800), approximately 50% of the value of the apartment as
assessed in 2001.
F. The case of Stoyanova and Ivanov (application
no. 53367/99)
- The applicants, Mrs Snejana Avramova
Stoyanova and her husband Mr Kosta Kanchev Ivanov, are Bulgarian
nationals, who were born in 1927 and 1926 respectively and live in
Sofia. They were represented before the Court by Mrs Z. Kalaidjieva,
a lawyer practising in Sofia.
- Since
the mid-1950s the first applicant's mother and later the applicants
were tenants in a state-owned five-room 197-square-metres' apartment
in Sofia. In 1971 the applicants and the first applicant's mother
purchased the apartment. After the first applicant's mother's death,
the applicants became the joint owners of the apartment.
- In
1992 the pre-nationalisation owner from whom the apartment had been
expropriated without compensation in 1949 brought an action against
the applicants under section 7 of the Restitution Law. The
proceedings were later continued by the heirs of the
pre-nationalisation owner.
- On
15 September 1994 the District Court dismissed the claim, noting that
at the relevant time the applicants' family had consisted of five
persons which entitled them to a three-room apartment, that the first
applicant, who was a researcher in philosophy, had been entitled to
an additional room for her study, and that the apartment consisted in
fact of four rooms, the fifth room being a connecting hall. The court
further noted that the first applicant's mother had been registered
as an “anti-fascist and anti-capitalist veteran” –
a registration that had carried privileges provided by law –
and that this fact had been mentioned in the papers relating to the
1971 purchase. However, at the relevant time the right of a
registered veteran to purchase a dwelling with priority had been
provided for by law. Therefore, it could not be considered that there
had been abuse of office or of a position in the communist party.
- Following
a decision terminating the proceedings and another decision ordering
their continuation, the plaintiffs' ensuing appeal was eventually
decided by the Sofia City Court by judgment of 6 April 1998 which
upheld the District Court's judgment.
- Upon
the plaintiff's cassation appeal, on 16 June 1999 the Supreme Court
of Cassation quashed the lower courts' judgments and granted the
claim, declaring the applicants' title null and void. The Supreme
Court of Cassation agreed with the lower courts that there had not
been abuse. However, the conclusions as regards the fifth room of the
apartment had been wrong. In reality, the apartment had exceeded by
one room the family's needs, as determined by the relevant
regulations.
- On
30 June 1999 the restored owners invited the applicants to vacate the
apartment and requested monthly payments of 500 US dollars. The
applicants refused to leave but were eventually evicted in June 2002
pursuant to an eviction court order.
- Between
1999 and 2002 the restored owners sued the applicants and obtained
judgments ordering them to pay damages for their failure to vacate
the property. Thus, as of October 2003 the applicants owed to the
restored owners approximately BGN 28,000 (the equivalent of
approximately EUR 14,000) which they refused to pay. The
applicants also owed at least BGN 3,000 in costs.
- The
applicants never applied for compensation bonds considering that
useless. On 19 October 1999 they requested the mayor to provide them
a municipal apartment for rent. They were placed on the waiting list
but never received an offer.
- On
an unspecified date the applicants purchased a small apartment for an
unspecified sum of money and moved there. Shortly thereafter, the
restored owners applied for and obtained an attachment of the
applicants' new apartment to secure the payment of their claims. On 8
April 2005 the enforcement judge undertook steps to put the
applicants' new apartment on sale with a view to satisfying the
restored owners' claims. In addition, monthly deductions are applied
to the applicants' pensions to cover their debt.
G. The case of Bogdanovi (application no.
60036/00)
- The applicants, Mr Stoiko Bogdanov and
Mrs Maria Bogdanova, both Bulgarian nationals and residents of
Burgas, were born in 1920 and 1924 respectively. Mrs Bogdanova passed
away in August 2004. Her heirs, the first applicant and the
applicants' two daughters, born in 1949 and 1955, stated that they
wished to continue the proceedings. The applicants are represented
before the Court by Mrs S. Margaritova Voutchkova, a legal
adviser practising in Sofia.
- In
1960 the applicants obtained a tenancy order for a State-owned
two room 92-square-metres' apartment in Burgas. The applicants,
their two minor daughters and the elderly mother of one of the
applicants lived in the apartment.
- On
8 May 1967 the applicants filed with the Burgas municipal authorities
a written request to buy the apartment under the relevant
regulations. As required, they enclosed a declaration of means and
family status.
- The
Burgas municipality instituted an administrative procedure. On
15 October 1967 the relevant expert committee assessed the value
of the apartment.
- On
17 November 1967 the Burgas municipal council submitted the file for
approval by the Minister of Building Planning, as required by the
regulations. By letter of 23 December 1967, the Deputy Minister of
Building Planning approved the sale. In accordance with the relevant
procedure, on 31 December 1967 a sale-purchase contract was signed
between the applicants and the Burgas municipality. The applicants
contracted a loan to pay the price of the apartment and reimbursed it
in monthly instalments for twenty years.
- In
February 1993 the heirs of the pre-nationalisation owners of the
apartment from whom it had been expropriated without compensation in
1949 brought an action against the applicants under section 7 of the
Restitution Law. The plaintiffs claimed that the applicants had
obtained the apartment in breach of the law. By judgments of 20
January 1995 and 2 May 1996 the District Court and the Regional
Court dismissed the claim.
- Upon
the plaintiffs' petition for review (cassation), on 12 October 1998
the Supreme Court of Cassation quashed the lower courts' judgments
and, deciding on the merits, declared the applicants' title null and
void.
- The
Supreme Court of Cassation noted that the regulations in force in
1967 had required approval of the sale by the Minister of Building
Planning, whereas in the applicants' case the document containing
that approval had been signed by a Deputy Minister. The Supreme Court
of Cassation did not accept the reasoning of the lower courts
according to which the approval had been valid since the Deputy
Minister who had signed it had been in charge of the sale of housing
and had thus been empowered to sign in the Minister's stead. That
reasoning was incorrect because the housing regulations as in force
at the time only mentioned the Minister as the official in whom the
relevant power was vested.
- On
4 August 1999 the restored owners invited the applicants to leave the
apartment and to pay rent for the time since the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Cassation. On 16 October 1999 the applicants signed
a rent contract with the restored owners and started paying monthly
rent of BGN 150 (the equivalent of approximately EUR 80). The
contract was renewed in December 2000.
- On
5 March 1999 the applicants requested the mayor of Burgas to provide
them with municipal housing. They reiterated their request in January
2000. No response was received.
- On
20 June 1999 the applicants requested compensation in bonds. In
February 2001 the regional governor approved the assessment of the
apartment's value, made by an expert, and determined that the
applicants were entitled to compensation bonds in the amount of BGN
64,200 (the equivalent of approximately EUR 32,500).
- On
16 November 2001 the applicants wrote to the mayor of Burgas asking
to buy a municipal apartment and to pay for it in bonds. On
29 November 2001 the mayor replied that for the moment the
municipality did not envisage selling apartments for bonds.
- On
23 November 2001 the applicants sold their compensation bonds at 17.5
% of their face value. They thus obtained BGN 11,335 (the equivalent
of approximately EUR 5,800).
- In
November 2001 the restored owners invited the applicants to leave.
The applicants did not have the resources necessary to buy an
apartment and refused. By judgment of 14 March 2003 of the Bourgas
District Court the applicants were ordered to vacate the property.
Their objection that they should be entitled to withhold possession
of the apartment until payment of the improvements they had made in
the property was dismissed. The applicants appealed. By judgment of
28 July 2005 the Supreme Court of Cassation upheld the eviction
order. The applicants rented an apartment and moved there on 14
November 2005.
H. The case of Tzilevi (application no.
73465/01)
- The applicants, Mrs Regina Tzileva and
Mr Konstantin Tzilev, are Bulgarian nationals, who were born in 1949
and 1942 respectively and live in Sofia. They were represented before
the Court by Mr Y. Grozev, a lawyer practising in Sofia.
- In
1970 the first applicant became a tenant in a state-owned two room
60-square-metres' apartment in Sofia. The applicants had two children
together, born in 1974 and 1975.
- In
1977 the applicants applied to purchase the apartment in accordance
with the relevant procedure for the sale of State housing to tenants.
After having obtained the relevant authorisations, the applicants
purchased the apartment from the local municipality and reimbursed
the full price within the following years.
- In
February 1993 Mr N., the pre-nationalisation owner of the apartment
from whom it had been nationalised without compensation in 1949,
brought an action against the applicants under section 7 of the
Restitution Law. In his claim Mr N. relied on all possible grounds
under section 7. On 6 June 1994 the Sofia District Court dismissed
the claim.
- Upon
the plaintiff's appeal, on 15 July 1998 the Sofia City Court quashed
the lower court's judgment and granted the claim as the
administrative decision authorising the 1977 sale-purchase contract
had been signed by the deputy mayor and not by the mayor personally.
The court dismissed as unproven the plaintiff's allegation that there
had been abuse on the part of the applicants.
- The
applicants filed a cassation appeal. They argued that even if the
administrative decision authorising the transaction had been signed
by a deputy mayor, the sale-purchase contract itself had been signed
by the mayor. On 28 November 2000 the Supreme Court of Cassation
dismissed the appeal and upheld the Sofia City Court's judgment. It
held, inter alia, that the relevant procedure had required an
administrative authorisation as a separate step and that therefore
the nullity of that authorisation could not be redressed by the fact
that the sale-purchase contract that followed it had been executed
properly.
- Between
1999 and 2001 the applicants addressed numerous unsuccessful requests
to the local municipality asking to be provided tenancy of a
municipal dwelling.
- In
2001 the heirs of the pre-nationalisation owner brought a rei
vindicatio action against the applicants. As the applicants had
no place to live, they decided to oppose the claim and gain time. As
of February 2006 the proceedings were still pending before the Sofia
District Court.
- In
2001 the applicants requested compensation by bonds. On an
unspecified date an expert assessed the value of their apartment at
BGN 45,000 (the equivalent of about EUR 23,000). Weighing their
options, the applicants decided, however, not to seek bonds as
compensation. They considered that, having regard to the rates at
which bonds were traded at that time, 15-25% of face value, such
compensation would offer no realistic perspective of finding a place
to live. By refusing to accept such partial compensation, the
applicants also wished to express their protest against the injustice
visited on them.
I. The case of Nikolovi (application no. 194/02)
- The applicants, Mr Dimitar Georgiev
Nikolov and his daughter Zvezda Dimitrova Nikolova, are Bulgarian
nationals, who were born in 1934 and 1960 respectively and live in
Russe. Before the Court they were represented by Mrs S.
Margaritova-Voutchkova, a legal adviser practising in Sofia.
- In
1970 the first applicant and his wife bought a three-room
96 square-metres' apartment from the local municipality.
- In
1992 the pre-nationalisation owner, from whom the property had been
expropriated in 1949, brought an action against the applicants under
section 7 of the Restitution Law. By judgments of 19 December 1994 of
the Ruse District Court, 15 May 1996 of the Regional Court and 24
June 1998 of the Supreme Court of Cassation, the courts granted the
claim.
- They
found, in particular, that the 1970 administrative decision for the
sale of the apartment had been signed by the secretary to the
Municipal Council whereas it should have been signed by the mayor.
The courts noted that in January 1970 the municipal council had
issued a decision delegating to its secretary matters related to the
sale of municipal housing but considered that that delegation had
been null and void since in accordance with the relevant law as in
force at the time the vice-president of the municipal council
replaced the president in his absence.
- The
courts also noted a second shortcoming. The law at the relevant time
provided that the municipality's decision to sell the apartment had
to be approved by the mayor of the respective region. In the
applicants' case, a comma was visible in front of the signature
placed on the document containing the approval. In Bulgaria it was
customary to “sign with a comma” when the person who
signed was replacing. In these circumstances, since the applicants
had failed to adduce evidence demonstrating that the signature on the
relevant document was that of the mayor, the courts found that the
approval must have been signed by another person and was therefore
invalid.
- The
courts concluded that the applicants' title was null and void and
ordered them to vacate the apartment. They did so on 27 October 1998.
- In
1998 the applicants requested compensation by bonds. In April 1999
they received bonds for BGN 47,800 (the equivalent of approximately
EUR 24,200), in accordance with the valuation of the property by
an expert appointed by the regional governor.
- On
31 March 1999 the applicants were granted the tenancy of a municipal
apartment. They applied to purchase it by bonds.
- In
March 2000 the municipal council in Russe decided that as a matter of
principle applications to purchase an apartment by persons who had
lost cases under section 7 of the Restitution Law should be granted.
In accordance with the relevant law, however, the power to sell
municipal property was vested with the mayor.
- On
3 May 2000 the mayor of Russe wrote to the Ministry of Finance
inquiring whether the municipality would be able to make use of the
bonds it would acquire if it were to sell municipal apartments to
individuals in the applicants' position. On 26 July 2000 the Ministry
replied negatively. On 19 January 2001 the mayor informed the
applicants that the municipality was not under an obligation to sell
an apartment to them.
- On
8 February 2001 the applicants brought an action against the mayor
challenging his refusal to sell an apartment. The Russe Regional
Court rejected the claim as inadmissible. On 17 April 2001 the
Supreme Administrative Court upheld the rejection of the claim. It
noted that in accordance with the provisions of the Compensation Law,
compensation bonds could be used for the purchase of municipal
dwellings and persons who had lost cases under section 7 could do so
with priority. Nonetheless, those provisions did not give rise to
rights for the applicants and duties for the municipality. The
decision of the municipal council of March 2000 did not create such
rights and duties either. Municipal property sales were regulated by
the Municipal Property Law. The sale of an apartment being a civil
transaction to which the parties are at an equal footing, the mayor's
refusal was nothing more than a refusal to enter into a transaction,
not an administrative decision affecting rights. Therefore, the
mayor's refusal did not affect any right of the applicants. It
followed that the refusal was not amenable to judicial review.
- On
29 March 2002 the mayor of Russe refused the applicants' renewed
request to sell them an apartment for bonds.
- In
2001 the applicants brought an action against the State and the local
municipality, seeking damages for the fact that they had been
deprived of their apartment owing to an administrative omission
imputable to municipal clerks.
- By
judgments of the Russe District Court of 7 June 2002 and the Russe
Regional Court of 9 May 2003 the applicants' claims were dismissed.
The courts found that the State Responsibility For Damage Act only
applied in respect of facts that occurred after its entry into force
in 1988. The courts also stated that the alleged omissions had
occurred in the context of a civil transaction, whereas the State
Responsibility For Damage Act concerned State liability occasioned by
acts in the exercise of State power.
- On
25 January 2005, at a moment when the market for compensation bonds
was reaching a peak, the applicants sold their bonds at 105% of their
face value. They thus obtained BGN 49,660 (the equivalent of
approximately EUR 25,400).
II. THE RELEVANT BACKGROUND AND LEGAL AND PRACTICAL
DEVELOPMENTS
A. The nationalisation of real property by the
communist regime
- After
1945 the communist regime in Bulgaria introduced a series of
nationalisation laws of a punitive or redistributive nature. As
regards housing, the policy was to limit private real estate
ownership to one dwelling per family and to take away from their
owners apartments allegedly exceeding their needs. All city
apartments “in excess” were nationalised. In some cases
the owners received State bonds in compensation. Owing to regulations
modifying the conditions of payment on these bonds, in practice
compensation was never received by the owners.
B. Renting and buying a State-owned apartment in
Bulgaria before 1990: legal regulation and practice
- The
nationalised apartments were allocated to municipal housing funds
which managed them and rented them out at fixed rates. Special
legislation established a system of categorisation of those in need
of housing and provided for detailed rules on the basis of which
municipalities rented out and sold apartments. The rules, which
changed many times during the relevant period, provided for, inter
alia, precedence rights for various groups (“anti-fascist
and anti-capitalist” veterans, large families, etc),
limitations on the number of rooms and on the size of the apartments
candidates could rent or buy (on the basis of factors such as number
of children, profession, health problems, etc) and special procedures
for renting or buying apartments belonging to State enterprises. Most
of these rules were also applicable where newly built State
apartments were rented out or sold.
- A
large number of nationalised apartments were sold to tenants in the
1960s and 1970s pursuant to a new housing policy whose purpose was
the accumulation of financial resources for the construction of new
dwellings.
- In
practice, during the communist period and until 1990 an individual in
need of housing could only buy an apartment by applying to a
competent State body. The procedure was administrative, followed by
the signing of a contract prepared by the administration. Candidates
had to fill out the relevant forms and submit the required documents.
The relevant municipal authority would then issue a decision and
present to the candidate for signature the sale-purchase contract.
C. Consequences of a breach of the housing regulations
at the relevant time
- Until
1970, the courts had no power to review administrative decisions.
According to the Supreme Court, the courts had no jurisdiction to
examine an action for a declaration that the sale of a State-owned
apartment to an individual had been null and void. The decision which
apartment to sell and to whom belonged to the administration. The
courts had no power to examine whether or not there had been a breach
of the relevant rules such as those concerning precedence (реш.
1706 от 17.11.1962 по
гр.д. 1435/62; ТР
No. 47 от 1.3.1967 по
гр.д. 2045/67).
- The
law and practice changed after the adoption of the Administrative
Procedure Act 1970. In 1973 the Supreme Court held that the courts,
without repealing an administrative decision – which they had
no power to do –, could take note that it was null and void and
draw the ensuing civil-law conclusions such as that an individual
concerned was not the owner of a disputed property (ОСГК,
реш. No 78 oт
12.7.1973, гр.д. 58/73).
- At
all relevant times, Bulgarian civil law distinguished between
possessing property in bad faith and doing so in good faith.
According to section 70 of the Property Act 1951, still in force, an
individual is considered to have acted in good faith if, unaware of a
procedural defect in his title, he entered into possession of a piece
of property. A bona fide possessor may acquire ownership
rights (over private property) after five years of acquisitive
prescription or, if evicted, claim the value of improvements made in
the property (реш. No.
1051 от 25.3.1960 по
гр.д. 1060/60;
Interpretative Decree No. 6 of 1974 of the Supreme Court; реш.
No. 507 от 1.7.1994 по
гр.д. 381/94).
D. The process of restitution of property after the
fall of the communist regime; sections 1 and 7 of the Restitution Law
- After
the fall of the communist regime in 1990, Parliament enacted
legislation aiming at restoring justice for those whose property had
been nationalised without compensation, or for their heirs. A number
of denationalisation laws covering different types of property
(industrial plants, shops, dwellings, agricultural land, etc.) were
adopted.
- Section
1 of the Law on the Restitution of Ownership of Nationalised Real
Property (“the Restitution Law”), which entered into
force in February 1992, provided that the former owners, or their
heirs, of certain types of real property nationalised by virtue of
several specific laws dating from the period between 1947 and 1952,
became ex lege the owners of their nationalised property if it
still existed, if it was still owned by the State and if no adequate
compensation had been received at the time of the nationalisation.
- Section
7 provided for an exception to the requirement that the real property
be still owned by the State. It provided that even if certain
property had been acquired by third persons after the
nationalisation, the former owners or their heirs could still recover
it if the third persons in question had become owners in breach of
the law, by virtue of their position in the Communist party or
through abuse of power. According to the Government this provision
was necessary since during the communist period there had been many
cases in which the privileged of the day had obtained apartments
unlawfully. The former pre-nationalisation owners had to bring an
action before the courts against the post-nationalisation owners
within a one-year time limit. If the courts established that the
title of the post-nationalisation owners involved breaches of the law
or was tainted by abuse they declared it null and void and restored
the property to the pre-nationalisation owners.
- In
1997 former pre-nationalisation owners who had missed the initial
one-year period under section 7 of the Restitution Law for bringing
an action against post-nationalisation owners were given a second
chance through a legislative amendment renewing the one-year
time-limit. On 11 March 1998 the Constitutional Court struck
down the amendment as it encroached on the principle of protection of
property and legal certainty (реш. 4 от
11.3.1998 по к.д. 16/97). Nevertheless, as
the judgments of the Constitutional Court have no retroactive effect,
the courts, in accordance with their established practice, were bound
to examine claims under section 7 brought in the interval
between the entry into force of the 1997 law renewing the time-limit
and the 1998 Constitutional Court's judgment quashing that law (опр.
1280, 22.10.1998 по
гр.д. 1539/98 г.,
ВКС-IV).
E. The Restitution Law's scope and manner of
application – judicial practice, public debates and amendments
- In
practice, in some cases the ground for annulment was a finding that
there had been abuse of office or of a position in the Communist
party. In other cases the relevant files retrieved from the archives
did not contain proof of approval by an administrative authority, as
required by regulations in force at the relevant time. Other grounds
on which the courts granted section 7 claims included breaches of
regulations dating from the 1950s and the 1960s establishing a link
between the number of family members and the number of rooms they
were entitled to, breaches of requirements such as that the buyer
should be a tenant or an employee of the State agency or enterprise
using the apartment, etc.
- In
a large number of cases under section 7, the omission identified by
the courts as decisive was the fact that the sale contract, or
another relevant document, such as, for example, a tenancy order or a
relevant approval, had been signed by the deputy to, or the superior
of, the official in whom the relevant power was vested (i.e. deputy
mayor instead of the mayor, deputy minister instead of the minister,
regional governor instead of district governor). After an initial
period of uncertain practice, the courts adopted the view that such
defects had the automatic effect of rendering the transactions null
and void ab initio. The outcome was the same even where the
relevant minister or mayor had authorised a deputy to sign, since the
housing regulations did not mention expressly a possibility to
delegate (реш. No. 762/ 21.06.2000 по
гр.д. 2026/99, ВКС – IV).
The argument that the individuals concerned bore no responsibility
for such omissions by the administration and had never had any legal
means to seek their rectification was considered as irrelevant (ТР
1/95, ОСГК, Бюл. ВС
кн. 4/95; реш. No. 1623/
10.03.1994 по гр.д. No. 186/1993,
ВС-IV; реш. No. 1036 от
13.07.1994 по гр.д. No. 9/1994, ВС-IV).
- In
reaction to post-nationalisation owners' argument that they had
acquired the property through adverse possession, even if there had
been a minor omission in the relevant transaction, the courts relied
on section 86 of the Property Act, which provided that State property
could not be acquired through adverse possession.
- The
application of section 7 has been the object of heated public debate,
including in the Parliament. One of the central issues has been the
question whether or not it was justified to allow the nullification
of decades-old property titles for minor administrative omissions
that had been the responsibility of the administration, not the
individual concerned. In 1995 and 1996 the Parliament adopted
amendments to the Restitution Law repealing section 7 or limiting its
scope to cases involving substantial breaches of the law committed in
bad faith or abuse of power. All those amendments were declared
anti-constitutional by the Constitutional Court on the basis that
they purported to modify already acquired civil rights to restitution
(реш. No. 9 по к.д. No.
4/95, Д.В. бр.66/95; реш.
No. 20 по к.д. No. 24/95, Д.В.
бр. 94/95; реш. No. 11 по
к.д. 10/96, Д.В. бр. 61/96, попр.
Д.В. бр.87/96).
- In
some cases the courts allowed claims by pre-nationalisation owners
against post-nationalisation owners who had purchased the property
from an individual, not from the State (see the case of Eneva and
Dobrev, paragraphs 53-58 above). Also, in cases where section 7 did
not apply, the courts nevertheless granted restitution claims,
without limitation in time, by reference to the general provisions of
civil law concerning nullity of transactions combined with section 1
of the Restitution Law (реш. N: 2109, 25.1.99 г.
по гр. д. N: 1754/97 г., ВКС-IV
– see paragraphs 50 and 51 above, concerning the case of
Todorova; but see, by contrast, реш.
N: 1623, 10.3.94 г. по гр. д. N:
186/93 г., ВКС-IV).
F. The issue of State liability for administrative
omissions
126. In
its judgment of 18 January 1996, refusing a motion to declare section
7 unconstitutional, the Constitutional Court dealt with the argument
that the law affected
disproportionately the rights of the post-nationalisation owners many
of whom had not done anything unlawful. It stated:
“The Constitutional Court shares the
[petitioners'] concern that there may be many cases where the
breaches of the law ... resulted from [acts of] the administration...
That fact, however, does not concern the nullity of the transactions
... The transaction[s] remain null and void regardless of which party
had breached the law. The question of responsibility for damages in
such cases is a separate issue. The Constitutional Court considers
that section 7 of the [Restitution Law] does not exclude claims for
damages against State bodies or State officials who have breached the
law when effecting the transactions. The possible legislative
elaboration of that responsibility in cases under section 7 falls
within the competence of Parliament.”
- Parliament
has not adopted a law elaborating on possible civil liability of
officials or State bodies responsible for a breach of the law that
led to nullification of a property title. As confirmed by the courts
(see paragraphs 107 and 108 above about the case of Nikolovi
and, also, реш. 1893
от 1.12.2004 по гр.д.
1518/2003 на ВКС), such claims
by persons in the applicants' position are not possible either under
the State Responsibility for Damage Act 1988 (as it did not apply
with regards to damage occasioned before its entry into force) or
under general civil law.
G. Compensation and other pecuniary consequences for
the post-nationalisation owners
1. Developments until 2000
- The
initial text of the Restitution Law of 1992 did not provide for any
compensation for persons ordered to vacate their property under
section 7. For several years, the question whether such
compensation should be paid by the State was the subject matter of
heated debates. In 1995 and 1996 Parliament adopted amendments to the
Restitution Law concerning the issue of compensation (Д.В.
броеве 40/1995, 87/1995,
51/1996). Most of these amendments were thereafter declared
unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court on various grounds (see
the decisions cited in paragraph 124 above).
- An
amendment introduced in June 1996 (paragraph 3 of the supplementary
provisions to the Restitution Law, State Gazette no. 51/96, “the
June 1996 amendment”) was not struck down by the Constitutional
Court and remained in force until its repeal by Parliament in January
2000. It provided that persons who had been ordered to vacate their
apartments under section 7 were to be paid by the State full market
value cash indemnity. Also, until this payment was effected, they
were entitled to rent temporarily State-owned apartments, or to
receive a rent allowance. The above obligations of the State were to
be governed by regulations to be issued by the Council of Ministers.
- The
Council of Ministers did not adopt the regulations necessary to put
in practice the June 1996 amendment to the Restitution Law. Former
owners who lost their apartments in cases under section 7 of the
Restitution Law did not receive market-value cash indemnity or any
rent allowance. In some cases, the evicted post-nationalisation
owners were able to rent municipal apartments at fixed rates. In a
large number of cases, however, the requests made were unsuccessful
because of lack of availability or because the competent authorities
interpreted the relevant law as allowing discretion and refused the
requests.
- In
November 1997 a new law, the Law on Compensation for Owners of
Nationalised Real Property (“the Compensation Law”) –
whose main purpose was providing compensation for property taken
under several laws of punitive or redistributive nature and which
could not be returned physically – introduced a provision
(section 5 § 3) which stated that persons who had lost their
dwellings pursuant to section 7 of the Restitution Law should
“receive housing compensation bonds, if they [had] not received
the indemnity provided for in [the June 1996 amendment]” (see
paragraphs 133-139 below).
- In
January 2000, the June 1996 amendment was repealed. The bill
repealing the amendment was introduced in Parliament with the
explanation that the State did not have the resources necessary to
pay in cash.
2. Compensation by bonds
- After
January 2000, the former owners whose title had been declared null
and void could apply for bonds under section 5 § 3 of the
Compensation Law (see paragraph 131 above) within three months of
January 2000 or within two months of the final judgment in their
case.
- The
requests are examined by the relevant ministry or regional governor.
Experts assess the market value of the property. The face value of
the bonds to be issued is equal to the full market value of the
dwelling. The decisions are subject to appeal before the Supreme
Administrative Court.
- Compensation
bonds are not exchangeable for cash. No interest accrues. They can
only be used for participation in privatisation tenders and their
value thus largely depends on the availability of privatisation
offers.
- A
secondary market for compensation bonds developed in Bulgaria. Until
November 2004, they were traded at between 15 and 25 % of their face
value. As bond prices remained low over a long time, many persons in
the applicants' situation sold their bonds during that period and
obtained between 15 and 25% of their face value.
137. In
the beginning of November 2004, there was a sudden surge in the price
of compensation bonds at the secondary stock market in connection
with the privatisation of several major enterprises. Within several
weeks, in January 2005 bond rates reached 100 % and more of face
value. In the end of January 2005
housing bond prices fell again and later stabilised at around 70 % of
their face value.
- In
accordance with section 5 § 2 of the Compensation Law, as in
force between November 1997 and November 2004, housing compensation
bonds could also be used to purchase, “with priority”,
State or municipal dwellings. However, municipalities had no interest
in parting with their real property in exchange of compensation bonds
and prefer to sell for cash. Some municipalities adopted rules
according to which not more than 20 or 30% of the price of a dwelling
could be paid by compensation bonds. The Supreme Administrative
Court, when examining an appeal against a refusal of a mayor to sell
an apartment for bonds, held that persons who had lost cases under
section 7 did not have a right to buy an apartment, the matter being
within the discretion of the municipality (опр.
2571/17.04.2001 по адм. д. 2065/01,
ВАС-III, see paragraph 105 above, concerning the
case of Nikolovi v. Bulgaria). In November 2004, by
virtue of an amendment to section 41 of the Municipal Property Act,
the sale of apartments for bonds was prohibited.
- In
June 2006 the Parliament amended again section 7 of the Restitution
Law, introducing new paragraphs 2 and 3. The amendment only concerns
persons who had not yet sold the compensation bonds they had
received. New paragraph 2 provided that persons who had lost their
property under section 7 should have priority when applying to buy
municipal apartments and should be entitled to pay in bonds, at face
value. The new provision was not accompanied by an amendment to
section 41 of the Municipal Property Act, which prohibits the sale of
apartments for bonds. Also, the new paragraph 2 does not affect the
established case-law according to which municipalities are under no
duty to sell apartments (see the preceding paragraph). New paragraph
3 provided that if no apartment was offered by the relevant
municipality within three months, the person concerned was entitled
to receive in cash the face value of his or her bonds from the
Ministry of Finance. The realisation of this right is conditioned by
the adoption by the Council of Ministers of implementing regulations.
3. Other consequences
- A
person whose title has been declared null and void could in principle
claim the price that he, she or their ancestors had paid when buying
the apartment (usually decades ago). However, owing to the
depreciation of the national currency and the established practice of
the Bulgarian courts refusing re valorisation, such claims can
only lead to recovery of minimal amounts.
141. In
accordance with interpretative decision No. 1 of 1995 of the Supreme
Court, persons who lost cases under section 7 of the Restitution Law
are not entitled to claim compensation for improvements they had made
in the property. To reach that conclusion and thus establish an
exception from the general rule, the
Supreme Court referred to the fact that the aim of the Restitution
Law had been to give back to their owners property confiscated
without compensation. Justice required that they should not bear the
burden to pay for improvements and maintenance expenses. Also,
section 8 § 1 of the Restitution Law provided that persons who
had obtained restitution of their nationalised property could not
claim compensation for the fact that their property had been used by
others after the nationalisation. It followed that the
post-nationalisation owners whose titles had been nullified under
section 7 should not be entitled to compensation for maintenance
expenses and improvements in the property.
THE LAW
I. JOINDER OF THE APPLICATIONS
- The
Court considers that, in accordance with Rule 42 § 1 of the
Rules of Court, the applications should be joined, given their common
factual and legal background.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL No. 1 TO
THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that they had been deprived of their property
in violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention.
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 provides:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
A. The parties' submissions
1. The applicants
144. Several
applicants stated that they (or persons whom they inherited) had done
nothing more than apply, in the 1950s, 1960s or 1970s, to rent or
purchase housing, as many others had.
The relevant procedure had been purely administrative and the
applicants had had no control. Until 1957 applications for housing
had been satisfied exclusively through the grant of tenancy rights –
in private and State-owned apartments alike. At that time and also in
the 1960s most of the apartments owned by the State had been
nationalised apartments. Persons in housing need had been granted
tenancies in such apartments. Later the authorities had launched a
new policy and started selling State apartments in order to fund the
construction of new dwellings. Nothing more than a fortuity had led
to the fact that in the process the applicants had ended up with
formerly nationalised apartments, not newly built ones. Therefore,
there was no reason why they – and not society as a whole –
should bear the burden of the restitution laws.
- The
applicants stressed that they did not wish to call into question the
entire restitution process in Bulgaria since 1989. In their view,
while the restitution of State-owned property was in the public
interest and thus pursued a legitimate aim, the same could not be
said of section 7 of the Restitution Law, which sought to satisfy the
restitution claims of certain individuals by depriving others. In any
event, section 7 as applied in practice had resulted in an unlawful
and disproportionate interference with property rights. In order to
correct an injustice committed in the past, in 1992 and the following
years the State had committed another injustice.
- The
applicants maintained that they had never had any reason to doubt the
lawfulness of the transactions whereby they or persons from whom they
had inherited had become owners in good faith. The initial idea
underlying section 7 of the Restitution Law had been to sanction
those who had obtained property by abusing their position of power
during the communist past. However, the open-ended language of
section 7 and its interpretation by the courts had resulted in
depriving individuals of their property for nothing more than a
trivial administrative omission on the part of municipal clerks. Such
a situation did not meet the Convention requirements for lawfulness
as the applicable law opened the door to arbitrariness.
147. In
particular, by allowing the nullification of titles to property for
any breach of the law, without distinction between material breaches
and trivial ones, section 7 had set the scene for heated judicial
battles over details in transactions dating from decades ago. In the
applicants' view, the large majority of real estate transactions
effected in Bulgaria during the communist period involved omissions
of some nature. Disrespect for the law had been common in the
communist bureaucracy where arbitrariness had reigned. Most
importantly, trivial omissions had not, in accordance with the
case-law of the Bulgarian courts at the relevant time, served as
grounds for nullification of contracts for the sale of State housing
and until 1970 the courts had not even had the power to review such
contracts. Allowing their nullification decades later was absurd. The
open-ended language of section 7
and its judicial interpretation had led to a situation where almost
every transaction might at any time be nullified. A number of
essential legal principles embedded in Bulgarian law such as the
prohibition against retrospective application of the law and the
provisions on acquisitive prescription for undisturbed possession in
good faith had been misapplied.
- As
to proportionality, the applicants submitted that the relevant law
and practice after 1992 had favoured the pre-nationalisation owners
and had not been based on a considered attempt to strike a fair
balance. When the Restitution Law had been passed, the burden it had
placed on the post nationalisation owners had not been taken
into account. Initially, in 1992, the Restitution Law had not
provided for any compensation. Although in 1996 it had been amended
and provided for full compensation in cash, the Government had never
paid such compensation and in 2000 the Parliament had abolished the
relevant provisions. The applicants stressed that that constituted a
retroactive deprivation of possessions, as they must be deemed to
have acquired pecuniary claims to full compensation in cash. After
2000, compensation by bonds had been inadequate and clearly
insufficient in view of the time-consuming procedure and the fact
that for several years the amount that could be obtained had not
exceeded 15 – 25 % of the value of the apartment. Moreover, no
compensation had been provided for improvements to the properties and
some applicants owed damages for having used their own apartments
after 1992.
- Summing
up their position, the applicants stated that after 1992 without any
fault on their part they had seen themselves implicated in lengthy
judicial battles to preserve their own apartments and eventually lost
them owing to an unclear and unjust restitution law and decades-old
administrative omissions on the part of municipal officials. After
further proceedings they could only obtain in compensation a portion
of the value of their property and no redress for the moral suffering
they had endured in the process.
2. The Government
- The
Government stated that the legislation on the restitution of
nationalised property pursued important legitimate aims in the public
interest: providing justice and moral satisfaction for all those
whose property had been nationalised without compensation in the past
and launching the foundations of a modern social and economic system,
based on democracy and a market economy. In choosing the means to
achieve those aims, the national authorities enjoyed a wide margin of
appreciation in accordance with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
151. The
Government maintained that the restitution laws were sufficiently
clear. They provided for judicial examination of disputes between
pre nationalisation owners and those who had purchased the
nationalised properties after the nationalisation. The applicants'
cases had been dealt with by three levels of
jurisdiction. Thus, the conclusions that their titles were null and
void had been reached on the basis of the examination of all
pertinent material in accordance with the applicable rules of
evidence.
- Citing
the Constitutional Court (judgment No. 1 of 18 January 1996 in case
no. 29/1995), the Government emphasised that nullity was an adequate
sanction in respect of abusive transactions or transactions concluded
in breach of the law, regardless of the origin and “seriousness”
of that breach. Any other solution would run contrary to the
principles of legal certainty and the rule of law.
- In
particular, in some cases the courts had established that there had
been abuse of power. In other cases the breach of the law identified
by the courts consisted in the fact that the apartment exceeded in
size the relevant limits. In all those cases, the applicants' claim
that they had not known that the transaction violated the law was
preposterous.
- Restitution
was equally justified in cases where the sole ground for
nullification had been the fact that a deputy mayor or a deputy
minister had signed instead of the relevant mayor or minister. In the
Government's view it had always been an established law in Bulgaria
that administrative decisions issued by a body or a State agent in
whom no power to do so was vested were null and void. The fact that
the irregularities had occurred long ago was irrelevant as nullity
could be invoked without limitation in time and, according to
Bulgarian law, State property could not be acquired through adverse
possession, whether in good or bad faith.
155. In
so far as the applicants had alleged that arbitrariness and omissions
had been common in the communist bureaucracy and that they had had no
control over oversights imputable to the administration, the
Government was of the view that those allegations were too general
and thus unproven. One could very well reply, in the same general
manner, that it was a notorious fact that only the privileged of the
day could obtain, during the communist period, large apartments in
the central parts of the cities.
In any event, the Court was not competent ratione
temporis to analyse events dating
from the communist period and assess the justification for the rules
on the sale of housing then in force. During the communist period
there had been strict rules on the distribution of housing and it was
not unjustified to nullify titles to property acquired in breach
thereof.
156. In
the Government's view, the present case was different from
Pincová and Pinc v. the
Czech Republic (no.
36548/97, § 51, ECHR 2002 VIII) where in somewhat
similar circumstances the Court had found that the proportionality
requirement had not been complied with. The main difference lied in
the fact that, unlike the applicants in Pincová
and Pinc, the applicants in the
Bulgarian cases (or the persons whom they had inherited) had been
aware that the apartments they had purchased had been
nationalised apartments, taken from others. The applicants had
applied to purchase them of their own will.
- The
Government also considered that the relevant law and practice had not
imposed on the applicants an excessive burden. While it was true that
the modalities of compensation changed several times, that was the
reflection of State policy priorities and the availability of State
resources. Compensation by bonds was a normal practice in a number of
countries from Central and Eastern Europe. In Bulgaria, bonds could
be traded in accordance with the relevant stock exchange rules and in
July 2005, for example, they were traded at 70 % of their face value.
The Government also referred to the fact that in accordance with the
relevant law and practice the pre-nationalisation owners were
entitled to restitution but could not claim compensation for damage
or changes in the property since the nationalisation in the 1940s. It
was therefore justified that the post nationalisation owners,
who had to return the apartments they had possessed on the strength
of a void title, could not claim compensation for improvements they
had made. In the Government's view, this solution struck a fair
balance between all interests involved.
158. In sum, the
Government considered that the restitution legislation was based on
the principles of the rule of law, justice and equality before the
law. It struck a balance between the interests of those whose
property had been confiscated without compensation in the past and
the persons who had lost cases brought against them under section 7
of the Restitution Law. Therefore, as the former Commission had found
in the case of Panikian v. Bulgaria
(no. 29583/96, Commission decision of
10 July 1997), the national authorities had not acted beyond their
margin of appreciation. In that case, examining under Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 the complaints of three persons who had been deprived
of their apartment pursuant to a judgment under section 7 of the
Restitution Law, the former Commission had accepted that the
Bulgarian authorities had acted within their margin of appreciation,
having regard to the particular background, the transitional
character of the impugned measures and the fact that the applicants
had been entitled to full market-value compensation (under the June
1996 amendment - see paragraphs 129-132 above).
B. The Court's assessment
1. Has there been interference
159. It
is not disputed that the applicants were deprived of their respective
property as a consequence of the adoption by Parliament and
application by the courts of the Restitution Law. By virtue of that
law as implemented by the courts, the authorities allowed the
nullification of titles of property acquired during the
communist period, to satisfy the restitution claims of persons from
whom the property had been expropriated without compensation in the
1940s.
- The
Court finds, therefore, that there was a deprivation of property
within the meaning of the second sentence of Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1 to the Convention. Such deprivation of property must be lawful,
in the public interest and must strike a fair balance between the
demands of the general interest of the community and the requirements
of the protection of the individual's fundamental rights.
- In
so far as the applicants alleged that the authorities' failure to pay
them the market-value cash indemnity provided for under the June 1996
amendment (see paragraphs 129-132 above) constituted a separate
deprivation of possessions, the Court considers that the restitution
and compensation legislation affecting the applicants must be seen as
a whole. The interference with the applicants' rights under Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 can only be examined in the light of the
multitude of measures applied in their cases and related to the
process of restitution of nationalised property, including
compensation schemes.
2. Lawfulness
- The
applicants' property titles were declared null and void in
application of the Restitution Law, the relevant provisions of
Bulgarian civil law on property and contracts and Bulgarian
administrative law. The Court accepts, therefore, that the
interference with the applicants' property rights was provided for by
Bulgarian law.
- Much
argument was devoted by the parties to the relevant law's clarity and
foreseeability, or lack thereof (see paragraphs 155, 156 and 160 164
above).
164. As
the former Commission noted in its decision in the case of
Panikian and Others v. Bulgaria (cited
above), the Restitution Law introduced a novelty in Bulgarian law in
that it gave third persons locus standi to
challenge in court the validity of transactions between the State and
another individual. It is also true that the terms used by section 7
to define the grounds on which a title to property could be declared
null and void were broad. One of those grounds, “breaches of
the law”, was interpreted as referring to laws, decrees and
various other enactments dating from the communist period and
regulating matters as diverse as State housing policy, the
functioning of the State administrative apparatus, real estate and
civil transactions. Those rules – which the courts had to apply
through section 7 – had often changed and had previously been
part of a system that had not been governed by the rule of law (see
paragraphs 111 115 and 121-125 above). The above inevitably
engendered uncertainty, as illustrated by the frequency with which
the present cases involved reversals by a higher court
of lower courts' judgments (see paragraphs 36, 37, 47, 56, 65-67, 77,
78, 89 and 90 above).
- The
Court would also note that for years there was uncertainty in the
interpretation of the Restitution Law and its consequences on a
number of issues (for example, as regards the consequences of various
defects in the transactions, the position of bona fide third
persons, State liability for administrative omissions and
compensation for improvements – see paragraphs 122-127 and 141
above). Furthermore, the Bulgarian legislature's approach to
compensation for persons who had been deprived of property under
section 7 changed several times in contradictory directions. Although
in 1996 the law provided for full market value compensation, the
Council of Ministers failed to adopt implementing regulations and no
such compensation was paid. After 2000, the modalities for obtaining
and using compensation bonds changed several times (see paragraphs
128-139 above).
- The
present cases concern, however, a unique period of social and legal
transition in Bulgaria. The legal reform after the fall of communism,
in particular with regard to the restitution of nationalised
property, was the product of a difficult political compromise. The
law underwent modifications reflecting a heated public debate and a
search for a balanced solution. The Court cannot disregard the
ensuing difficulties and would not adopt a purist approach to legal
predictability. A measure of uncertainty was inevitable in respect of
legislation aiming at undoing decades-old injustices. While legal
uncertainty may not satisfy the Convention requirements of clarity
and foreseeability and may contravene the prohibition of
arbitrariness, in the assessment whether such a situation obtained in
the present case and whether, consequently, there was an unjustified
State interference contrary to Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the
Convention, due account must be taken of the special transitional
period at the relevant time and the individual circumstances of each
case (see application no. 40064/98, Credit Bank and Others v.
Bulgaria (dec.), 30 April 2002).
- The
Court considers, therefore, that the issues raised by the applicants
with respect to the quality of the relevant law are intertwined and
undissociable from the question whether or not the interference with
their property rights had a legitimate aim and was necessary in a
democratic society for the achievement of such an aim. It will
examine these questions below.
3. Legitimate aim
168. The
Court reiterates that, because of their direct knowledge of their
society and its needs, the national authorities are in principle
better placed than the international judge to appreciate what is “in
the public interest”. Under the system of protection
established by the Convention, it is thus for the national
authorities to make the initial assessment as to the existence of
a problem of public concern
warranting measures of deprivation of property. Here, as in other
fields to which the safeguards of the Convention extend, the national
authorities, accordingly, enjoy a certain margin of appreciation.
- Furthermore,
the notion of “public interest” is necessarily extensive.
In particular, the decision to enact laws expropriating property will
commonly involve consideration of political, economic and social
issues. The Court, finding it natural that the margin of appreciation
available to the legislature in implementing social and economic
policies should be a wide one, will respect the legislature's
judgment as to what is “in the public interest” unless
that judgment is manifestly without reasonable foundation. The same
applies necessarily, if not a fortiori, to radical social
changes as those occurring in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989
(see Jahn and Others v. Germany [GC], nos. 46720/99,
72203/01 and 72552/01, § 91, 30 June 2005).
- In
the cases under examination the Court has no doubt that the
Restitution Law, which provided that the State should restore the
property it had expropriated without compensation during the
communist regime, pursued an important aim in the public interest.
Indeed, that was not disputed by the applicants. It is obvious that
compensating the victims of those arbitrary expropriations was an
important step in the restoration of democracy in Bulgaria, after
several decades of totalitarian rule.
- As
to the goal pursued by section 7 specifically, the Court notes that
that provision authorised persons whose property had been
expropriated by the State in the 1940s without compensation to claim
it back not only from the State but also from private individuals,
whenever the latter's title had been tainted by abuse of power or
breaches of the law.
- The
Court accepts, in view of the specific context of the transition from
a totalitarian to democratic society and the wide margin of
appreciation enjoyed by the respondent State in these matters, that
such an approach cannot be considered as illegitimate or not in the
public interest, despite the fact that it consisted in providing
private property as compensation for wrongs committed by the State
decades earlier. Persons who have taken advantage of their privileged
position or have otherwise acted unlawfully to acquire property in a
totalitarian regime, as well as their heirs, cannot expect to keep
their gain in a society governed democratically through the rule of
law. The underlying public interest in such cases is to restore
justice and respect for the rule of law (see Pincová and
Pinc v. the Czech Republic, cited above, § 51 and
Mohylová v. the Czech Republic
(dec.), no. 75115/01, 6 September 2005).
173. It
is true that section 7, as its text indicates and as implemented by
the courts, affected adversely not only individuals who had acquired
property through abuse of power or other unlawful acts but also, more
generally, persons whose title to their apartment was found defective
– often decades after its acquisition – as
it involved one or more administrative omissions (see paragraphs
122-125 above).
- In
their submissions the Government suggested that the presence of
omissions or irregularities in a given case could be seen as an
indication that it concerned unlawful profiting by the privileged of
the day. Thus, in the Government's view, section 7 pursued the
legitimate aim of correcting past injustice in all cases in which it
applied.
- The
applicants offered a different view. They alleged that section 7, as
applied in practice by the courts, went beyond its original aim. They
argued that the interference with their property rights had no
legitimate aim as their cases did not concern any profiteering or
unlawful act on their part but only omissions on the part of the
authorities. The applicants stated that disorder and lack of respect
for law and procedure had been common during the communist period and
that, therefore, thousands of transactions had involved some sort of
omission, without there having been any unlawful act or profiteering
on the part of the person purchasing the apartment.
- The
Court considers that the applicants' arguments do not affect its
finding that the Restitution Law in general pursued a legitimate aim
in the public interest. They concern in essence another issue - the
question whether or not a “fair balance” was struck
between the demands of the general interest of the community and the
requirements of the protection of the individual's fundamental
rights.
4. Proportionality
(a) The Court's approach
- The
concern to achieve “fair balance” between the demands of
the general interest of the community and the requirements of the
protection of the individual's fundamental rights is reflected in the
structure of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 as a whole. In particular,
there must be a reasonable relationship of proportionality between
the means employed and the aim sought to be realised by any measure
depriving a person of his possessions (see Pressos Compania
Naviera S.A. and Others v. Belgium, judgment of 20 November
1995, Series A no. 332, p. 23, § 38). In determining whether
this requirement is met, the Court recognises that the State enjoys a
wide margin of appreciation with regard both to choosing the means of
enforcement and to ascertaining whether the consequences of
enforcement are justified in the general interest for the purpose of
achieving the object of the law in question (see Chassagnou and
Others v. France [GC], nos. 25088/94, 28331/95 and 28443/95,
§ 75, ECHR 1999 III). Nevertheless, the Court cannot
abdicate its power of review and must determine whether the requisite
balance was maintained in a manner consonant with the applicants'
right to “the peaceful enjoyment of [their] possessions”,
within the meaning of the first sentence of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 (see Jahn and Others v. Germany [GC], cited above, §
93).
- The
present nine cases bear resemblance to a group of Czech cases that
also concerned the proportionality of measures which – with the
aim to compensate persons from whom property had been arbitrarily
taken by the communist regime – had deprived other individuals
of property they had purchased from the State (see Pincová
and Pinc v. the Czech Republic, cited above, Bečvář
and Bečvářová v. the Czech Republic, no.
58358/00, 14 December 2004, Netolický and Netolická
v. the Czech Republic (dec.), no. 55727/00, 25 May 2004 and
Mohylová v. the Czech Republic (dec.), cited above).
The Court's general approach in the Czech cases was expressed in
Pincová and Pinc as follows:
“The Court accepts that the general objective of
the restitution laws, namely to attenuate the consequences of certain
infringements of property rights caused by the communist regime, is a
legitimate aim and a means of safeguarding the lawfulness of legal
transactions and protecting the country's socio-economic development.
However, it considers it necessary to ensure that the attenuation of
those old injuries does not create disproportionate new wrongs. To
that end, the legislation should make it possible to take into
account the particular circumstances of each case, so that persons
who acquired their possessions in good faith are not made to bear the
burden of responsibility which is rightfully that of the State which
once confiscated those possessions.”
- The
Court is mindful that in the present cases, as in the Czech cases
cited above, the impugned measures were the result of difficult
decisions the authorities had to make in the conditions of transition
from a totalitarian regime to a democratic society. The legislative
history of section 7 and the developments in its application testify
of a continuing effort on the part of the authorities to take into
account the relevant interests and achieve a better balance between
them (see paragraphs 124, 126, and 128-139 above).
- In
keeping with the wide margin of appreciation afforded to States in
such matters and the subsidiary nature of the Court's control under
the Convention, the proportionality of the impugned measures must be
assessed with due regard to the concerns and factors that guided the
national authorities in their policy in the relevant area and shaped
the national public debate.
181. In the Czech cases
cited above, in deciding whether or not the requisite fair balance
under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 had been respected, the Court took
into account the specificity of the transition in the Czech Republic
and based its analysis on mainly three groups of factors: (i) whether
or not the applicants had acquired the property from the State in
good faith and without being able to influence the terms of the
transaction (see
Pincová and Pinc, cited
above, § 59); (ii) the amount of the compensation paid compared
to the value of the property (ibid., § 61); and (iii) “social”
factors, such as whether the property at issue was the
applicants' only housing available and their chances to purchase
another dwelling (ibid., § 62).
- The
Court considers that a similar approach is appropriate in the present
cases. It is not convinced by the Government's argument that the
present cases are substantially different from the Czech cases cited
above in that unlike those cases the Bulgarian applicants or persons
from whom they inherited had known that they had obtained formerly
nationalised property. The Government have not argued that the
applicants bore responsibility for the nationalisations in the 1940s.
The Government have not disproved the applicants' assertion that at
least some of them did nothing more than apply for housing and ended
up with formerly nationalised apartments. The question whether or not
the applicants or persons from whom they inherited had acted in good
or bad faith can only be answered with reference to the manner in
which they had obtained the disputed properties.
- In
these circumstances the Court considers that the first factor to be
taken into consideration in the proportionality analysis in the
present cases must be the importance of the Restitution Law's aim –
to restore justice for persons whose property had been taken away by
the communist regime arbitrarily and without any compensation –,
and the underlying rationale of section 7 – to sanction those
who had profited from their position in the communist regime or had
acted unlawfully to acquire property.
- In
addition, the Court notes that it is not disputed between the parties
– and the Government in their submissions emphasise this point
– that through successive legislative amendments adopted
between 1995 and 2006 the national authorities tried to alleviate the
burden the Restitution Law placed on the post-nationalisation owners.
Several amendments, albeit often contradictory, concerned the right
to compensation for persons in the applicants' position and other
provisions sought to ensure that evicted persons did not remain
homeless (see paragraphs 128-139 above). While many of these
amendments were never applied in practice, it is highly significant
that the adequacy of the compensation received and the possibilities
to buy a new dwelling were seen, at the national level, as relevant
elements in the balance the restitution legislation had to achieve.
- Furthermore,
when in 1996 the Constitutional Court struck down a law amending
section 7, it acknowledged that that provision might result in an
individual losing his or her property through the fault of the State
administration and through no fault of his or her own and stated that
it was for Parliament to legislate and provide a possibility for
additional compensation in such cases. The applicants' position that
section 7 deprived of their property not only those who had abused
their power or had acted unlawfully but also ordinary individuals
whose title happened to involve administrative omissions, was
recognised as valid by the Constitutional Court (see paragraphs 124,
126, 127 and 144-146 above).
- Therefore,
the question whether, in a particular case of deprivation of property
under the Restitution Law, the property was taken owing to a material
breach of substantive provisions of the law or abuse of power on the
one hand or, on the other hand, as a result of an administrative
omission of a minor nature for which the administration, not the
individual, had been responsible, must be seen as highly relevant to
the assessment of proportionality under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
to the Convention.
- It
is true that the Government suggested that, in general, the presence
of irregularities in a sale-purchase transaction from the communist
period could be seen as an indication that the case concerned
profiteering by the privileged of the day – the persons who at
that time could obtain valuable properties by virtue of their
position. The Government added, however, that this was impossible to
prove.
- The
Court recalls that one of the grounds for nullity under section 7 of
the Restitution Law was abuse of office or of a position in the
Communist Party. It was for the domestic courts to establish, on the
basis of evidence adduced by the parties to the civil proceedings,
whether or not there had been unlawful profiteering in a particular
case. Where the domestic courts have not made such a finding, the
respondent Government cannot rely before the Court on suppositions in
the opposite sense. Such an approach would run contrary to the
principle of rule of law inherent in the Convention.
189. In
addition, the Court considers, like the Bulgarian Constitutional
Court (see paragraph 120 above) and the former Commission in the
Panikian and Others decision
cited above, that departures from the transitory nature of the
impugned Bulgarian legislation are difficult to reconcile with the
requirements of legal certainty. Therefore, cases where the legal
process against the applicants was put in motion after the expiry of
the one-year time limit provided for in the Restitution Law 1992 are
to be seen as a separate category (see paragraphs 120 and 125 above).
190. In
sum, having regard to the relevant law, its application in practice,
the parties' submissions and the concerns and factors that guided the
national authorities in their policy in the relevant area and shaped
the national public debate, the Court considers that the
proportionality issue must be decided with reference to the following
factors: (i) whether or not the case falls clearly within the scope
of the legitimate aims of the Restitution Law, having regard to the
factual and legal basis of the applicants' title and the findings of
the national courts in their judgments declaring it null and void
(abuse of power, substantive unlawfulness or minor omissions
attributable to the administration) and (ii) the hardship suffered by
the applicants and the adequacy of the compensation actually obtained
or the compensation which could be obtained through a normal use of
the procedures and possibilities available to the applicants at the
relevant time, including the bonds compensation scheme
and the possibilities for the applicants to secure a new home for
themselves.
- In
respect of amounts obtained through the sale of compensation bonds,
the Court will take into account the amounts actually received by the
applicants, having regard to the fact that the rise in bond prices in
the end of 2004 could not be foreseen and that, in general, the
legislation on compensation for persons in the applicants' position
changed frequently and cannot be characterised as foreseeable.
- The
Court will therefore analyse the concrete circumstances of each of
the applicants' cases with reference to the above factors. It will
not regard as disproportionate every imbalance between the public
interest pursued by the Restitution Law and its effects on the
particular individual concerned. For, example, the Court is not
prepared to attach weight to the issue of compensation for
improvements made by the post-nationalisation owners (see paragraph
141 above), unless in exceptional circumstances. In complex cases as
the present one, which involve difficult questions in the conditions
of transition from a totalitarian regime to democracy and rule of
law, a certain “threshold of hardship” must have been
crossed for the Court to find a breach of the applicants' Article 1
Protocol No. 1 rights.
(b) Application of the Court's approach to
the facts of each case
- On
the basis of the criteria it summarised above (see paragraph 190
above), the Court considers that the nine applications under
examination may be seen as falling in four categories (see the
subheadings below). Therefore, for the sake of clarity, it will deal
with them in four groups.
(i) Cases in which there had been abuse
(α) The case of Velikovi
194. The
heirs of the persons from whom the apartment at issue had been
nationalised without compensation in 1949 challenged the applicants'
property rights within the relevant one-year time limit after the
adoption of the
Restitution Law in 1992 (see paragraph 9 above). The
Velikovi case, therefore, did
not involve a deviation from the transitory nature of the restitution
legislation.
- The
applicants' title to their property was declared null and void on the
ground that the contract whereby they acquired it in 1968 had not
been signed by the mayor of the relevant district but by the mayor of
the region in which that district had been located (see paragraph 11
above). This was an omission which could have been the result of
administrative error or negligence on the part of the authorities.
- In
its judgment of 27 October 1997, however, the Supreme Court of
Cassation noted that the first applicant had abused his position of
an “anti fascist and anti-capitalist veteran”. This
finding was based on an analysis of documentary evidence and the
testimony of witnesses heard by the national courts (see paragraph 14
above).
- In
these circumstances, the Court does not consider that the
Velikovi case is one in which
the applicants can be said to have lost their property owing to an
excessively extensive interpretation of section 7 of the Restitution
Law, having regard to its aims and the context in which it was
adopted (see paragraphs 117-119 above). The impugned deprivation of
property clearly fell within the scope of the legitimate aims pursued
by the restitution legislation. In the Court's view, this carries a
particularly significant weight in the proportionality analysis.
- The
Court also notes that the applicants and their sons obtained the
equivalent of approximately EUR 30,500 as compensation for the
property at issue, nearly 73% of its value as assessed by a certified
expert in 2000 (see paragraphs 17 and 18 above). The Court notes,
furthermore, that the applicants had benefited from the use of the
property for thirty-two years (1968-2000).
- The
above suffices, in the Court's view, to conclude that in the
applicants' case the authorities did not act beyond their margin of
appreciation. The interference with the applicants' rights under
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 did not breach that provision's
requirement that a fair balance must be struck between the
individual's Convention rights and the public interest. The public
interest at stake here was not only to restore a piece of property to
its owner, from whom it had been taken arbitrarily in 1949 without
any compensation, but also, more generally, to restore justice and
the rule of law.
- It
follows that there has been no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1.
(β) The case of Cholakovi
- In
the case of Cholakovi, which did not involve any departure
from the transitory nature of the measures under the Restitution Law,
the national courts found a violation of the substantive provisions
of the relevant housing legislation: the applicants had purchased an
apartment bigger than permitted by law. Furthermore, there was
sufficient evidence, albeit circumstantial, that the apartment had
been obtained through abuse of power and contra bonas mores
(see paragraph 37 above).
- The
Court further notes that in compensation for the apartment they had
to surrender the applicants obtained BGN 124,960 (the equivalent of
approximately EUR 63,000) and that in 2003 the Sofia municipality
sold them a two-room apartment for the equivalent of EUR 6,500 (see
paragraphs 40-42 above).
- Like
in the Velikovi case,
the above is largely sufficient to conclude that the applicants have
not suffered a disproportionate interference with their
Convention rights. It follows that there has been no violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in their case.
(ii) Cases in which material violations of
substantive provisions of the relevant housing regulations were found
(α) The case of Wulpe
- Mrs
Wulpe's title was challenged in 1993, within the one-year time-limit
under section 7 of the Restitution Law. The grounds on which the
applicant's title was declared null and void included at least two
violations of substantive provisions of the relevant housing
legislation: (i) the apartment exceeded the relevant size limit for a
four-member family, as applicable in 1969, when the applicant's
four-member family obtained tenancy rights, and (ii) contrary to the
applicable requirements the applicant was not a resident of Burgas
when she purchased the apartment in 1982 (see paragraphs 24 and 25
above).
- In
these circumstances, the Court does not consider that the present
case is one in which the applicant can be said to have lost her
property owing to an excessively extensive interpretation of section
7 of the Restitution Law, having regard to its aims and the context
in which it was adopted (see paragraphs 117-119 above). In the
Court's view, that finding carries a particularly significant weight
in the proportionality analysis.
- The
Court also notes that the applicant did not live in the apartment at
issue at the time when she was ordered to vacate it. She had moved to
Sofia, some 400 km away, and lived with her daughter. In addition, in
1999 the applicant obtained the tenancy of a small municipal
apartment in Burgas (see paragraphs 23 and 29 above). Therefore, the
impugned measures against the applicant did not result in depriving
her of a place to live.
- It
is true that the pecuniary compensation received by the applicant was
the equivalent of approximately EUR 6,050, an amount that did not
exceed 30% of the apartment's value as assessed by experts in 2001
and 2002 (see paragraphs 30 and 33 above). That amount was clearly
insufficient for the purchase of a dwelling at market prices. Housing
prices increased between 2002, when the expert assessment was made,
and 2003 and 2004, when the applicant sold her compensation bonds.
- The
Court considers decisive, however, the fact that the applicant's
title had involved substantive breaches of the law. Her case fell
clearly within the scope of the Restitution Law's legitimate aims.
The Court notes, furthermore, that the applicant had benefited from
the use of the property at issue for approximately thirty years
(1969-1999).
- On
the basis of the above considerations and having regard to the wide
margin of appreciation the national authorities enjoyed, the Court
finds that the interference with the applicants' rights under Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 cannot be seen as failing to strike a fair
balance between the applicants' Convention rights and the public
interest. The public interest at stake here was not only to restore
the property to its owner from whom it had been taken arbitrarily in
1949 without any compensation, but also, more generally, to restore
justice and the rule of law.
- It
follows that there has been no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1.
(β) The case of Stoyanova and Ivanov
- In
the case of Stoyanova and Ivanov, which did not involve any
departure from the transitory nature of the measures under the
Restitution Law, the national courts found a violation of the
substantive provisions of the relevant housing legislation: the
applicants had purchased a five-room, 197 square metres apartment
which exceeded the relevant size limits for the purchase of an
apartment by a five-member family, as the applicants' at the time
(see paragraphs 63, 64 and 67 above). It follows from the nature of
the violation found that it cannot be maintained that the applicants
were unaware that they had purchased an apartment in breach of the
law or that it was the result of omissions on the part of the State
administration. The present case, therefore, is one which clearly
fell within the scope of section 7 of the Restitution Law and
its legitimate aim in the public interest.
- The
Court also notes that the applicants did not apply for compensation
bonds. Had they done so, they could have recovered at least between
15 and 25% of the value of the apartment, as that was the rate at
which bonds were traded until the end of 2004 (see paragraphs 70 and
133 139 above).
- As
to the liability the applicants incurred as a consequence of their
refusal to abide by the judicial order of June 1999 requiring them to
vacate the apartment, the Court notes that there is no indication
that the applicants risked to become homeless and had no choice but
to oppose the eviction order. In particular, on a date they have not
communicated to the Court, the applicants purchased an apartment (see
paragraphs 68-71 above). The respondent Government cannot be held
responsible for the consequences of the applicants' refusal to vacate
the apartment and to apply for compensation bonds.
- The
Court also notes that the applicants benefited from the use of the
property at issue for many years (from the mid-1950s until 1971 as
tenants and after 1971 as owners) (see paragraphs 63 and 68 above).
- On
the basis of the above considerations and having regard to the wide
margin of appreciation the national authorities enjoyed, the Court
finds that the interference with the applicants' rights under Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 cannot be seen as failing to strike a fair
balance between the applicants' Convention rights and the public
interest. The public interest at stake here was not only to restore
the property to its owner from whom it had been taken arbitrarily in
1949 without any compensation, but also, more generally, to restore
justice and the rule of law.
- It
follows that there has been no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1.
(iii) Cases in which the State
administration was responsible for the irregularities that led to
nullification of titles
(α) The case of Bogdanovi
- In
this case, which did not involve a deviation from the transitory
nature of the impugned measures under the Restitution Law (see
paragraph 77 above), the applicants' title to their property was
declared null and void on the ground that a relevant document in the
file concerning the purchase of their apartment in 1967 had been
signed by the Deputy Minister of Building Planning, not by the
Minister personally. The Supreme Court of Cassation adopted the view
that the Deputy Minister had no power to sign in the Minister's stead
and that therefore the applicants' title was null and void (see
paragraph 79 above).
- The
Court observes that it has not been claimed by the respondent
Government that the applicants were responsible for the irregularity
or that in 1967 or later they could have undertaken steps to ensure
that the relevant approval be signed by the Minister personally, not
by the Deputy Minister. It is not disputed that the applicants
applied to purchase the apartment under the relevant procedure, that
the file was sent by the Burgas municipality to the Ministry of
Building Planning for approval and that it was later returned
accompanied by a letter approving the sale, signed by the Deputy
Minister (see paragraphs 74-76 above). It follows that in the
Bogdanovi case the State administration was responsible for
the deficiency that led to the nullification of the applicants' title
some forty years later.
- The
Bulgarian Constitutional Court recognised that an issue of State
liability might arise where an individual had lost a property under
the Restitution Law owing to a deficiency imputable to the State
administration. However, the Parliament did not legislate on this
issue, as suggested by the Constitutional Court and it was not
possible to obtain damages in court (see paragraphs 126 and 127
above).
- As
stated above (see the summary of the Court's approach in paragraphs
177-192 above), the Court considers as highly relevant in the
proportionality analysis the fact that the applicants' title did not
involve breaches of the substantive requirements of the housing
legislation and was annulled on the sole ground that in 1967 the
State authorities had not complied with the letter of an
administrative rule of procedural nature. In the Court's view, absent
other relevant circumstances, in such cases the fair balance required
by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 could not be achieved without adequate
compensation. The applicants undertook all necessary steps under the
bonds compensation scheme as it operated but only obtained the
equivalent of approximately EUR 5,800 – less than 18% of the
value of the apartment as of February 2001, when it was assessed by a
certified expert. The respondent Government have not shown
convincingly that such an outcome was justified in the case of
Bogdanovi.
- Despite
the wide margin of appreciation enjoyed by the respondent State, the
Court is not convinced that it was not possible to devise the
relevant legislation in such a manner as to take into account the
fact that omissions occurred through the fault of the State
administration in cases of individuals who had applied for housing
and obtained an apartment in good faith. Indeed, the necessity to
adjust the legislation on this issue had been recognised by the
Bulgarian Constitutional Court.
- The
Court thus finds that in the Bogdanovi case there were no
circumstances justifying the inadequate compensation received by the
applicants. It follows that the interference with their property
rights failed to strike a fair balance between the public interest
and the applicants' rights. There has been therefore a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
(β) The case of Tzilevi
- In
this case too, there was no deviation from the transitory nature of
the impugned measures. Similarly to the case of
Bogdanovi, the title of
Mrs Tzileva and Mr Tzilev to their property was declared null
and void on the sole ground that a relevant document in the file
concerning the purchase of their apartment had been signed by the
deputy mayor, not by the mayor personally (see paragraphs 89-91
above). It follows that in the particular circumstances the State
administration was responsible for the deficiency that led to the
nullification of the applicants' title. In the Tzilevi
case that is borne out, moreover, by the fact that the domestic
courts examined and dismissed the allegation that the applicants had
obtained their apartment through abuse (see paragraph 90 above).
- Absent
other relevant circumstances, in such cases the fair balance required
by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 could not be achieved without adequate
compensation. In the assessment whether adequate compensation was
available to the applicants, the Court must have regard to the
particular circumstances of each case, including the amounts received
and losses incurred and, as the case may be, the availability of
compensation and the practical realities in which the applicants
found themselves (see paragraphs 190 and 191 above about the
Court's general approach).
- No
special circumstances justifying less than adequate compensation
exist in the Tzilevi case. The Court notes, moreover, that the
applicants had no other place to live and endured additional hardship
after having lost their property under section 7 of the Restitution
Law (see paragraphs 92 and 93 above). This is a relevant factor in
the proportionality analysis.
- Turning
to the question whether adequate compensation was available to the
applicants, the Court notes that Mrs Tzileva and Mr Tzilev could have
received compensation bonds in 2001 but renounced their right (see
paragraph 94 above). The respondent State cannot be held responsible
for the consequences of the applicants' choice. It can be said with
certainty that as a result of their failure to take advantage of the
bonds compensation scheme, the applicants forewent a possibility to
obtain at least between 15 and 25% of the value of the apartment, as
that was the rate at which bonds were traded until the end of 2004
(see paragraphs 135-137 above). The fact that bond prices rose in the
end of 2004 cannot lead to the conclusion that the authorities would
have secured adequate compensation to the applicants but for their
refusal to receive their bonds. The applicants could not have
foreseen bond prices and the Court cannot speculate whether they
would have waited three or more years before cashing their bonds.
Indeed, the legislation on compensation for persons in the
applicants' position changed frequently and cannot be characterised
as foreseeable. In so far as the law was amended again in June 2006,
the Court notes that the Government have not shown that the amendment
was applicable in the applicants' case (see paragraph 139 above). In
any event, the time that elapsed since the applicants lost their
apartment must be taken into account.
- In
these circumstances, for purposes of the proportionality analysis
under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 the Court finds that no clear and
foreseeable possibility to obtain adequate compensation was secured
to the applicants. The applicants' failure to use the bonds
compensation scheme will have to be taken in consideration under
Article 41 of the Convention but for the reasons stated above it
cannot affect decisively the Court's conclusion under Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1.
- It
follows that the interference with the applicants' property rights
failed to strike a fair balance between the public interest and their
Convention rights. There has been therefore a violation of Article 1
of Protocol No. 1.
(γ) The case of Nikolovi
- In
the case of Nikolovi, which did not involve any deviation from
the transitory nature of the measures under Restitution Law, the
applicants' title to their property was declared null and void on the
sole ground that two relevant documents in the file concerning the
purchase of their apartment had not been signed by the officials in
whom the appropriate power had been vested (see paragraphs 98-100
above). It follows that in the particular circumstances of the
present case the State administration was responsible for the
deficiency that led to the nullification of the applicants' title. It
is noteworthy in this regard that in 2002 and 2003 the courts
examining the applicants' action for damages against the State did
not reject their allegation that the relevant omissions had been
imputable to State bodies (see paragraphs 107 and 108 above).
- Despite
the wide margin of appreciation enjoyed by the respondent State, the
Court is not convinced that it was not possible to devise the
relevant legislation in such a manner as to take into account the
fact that omissions occurred through the fault of the State
administration in cases of individuals who had applied for housing
and obtained an apartment in good faith. Indeed, the necessity to
adjust the legislation on this issue had been recognised by the
Bulgarian Constitutional Court (see paragraph 126 above).
- Absent
other relevant circumstances, in such cases the fair balance required
by Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention could not be
achieved without adequate compensation. In the assessment whether
adequate compensation was available to the applicants, the Court must
have regard to the particular circumstances of each case, including
the amounts received and losses incurred and, as the case may be, the
availability of compensation and the practical realities in which the
applicants found themselves.
- The
Court notes that in 2005 the applicants obtained BGN 49,660 (the
equivalent of approximately EUR 25,400) as compensation, which was a
little more than the value of their apartment as assessed by a
certified expert in 1999 (see paragraphs 101 and 109 above).
- The
applicants thus obtained full compensation for the value of the
apartment as it stood in 1999, shortly after they vacated it. They
suffered a loss, however, because they were able to obtain that
amount only in 2005, whereas housing prices had increased
significantly since 1999. The Court notes, however, that shortly
after they vacated the apartment in 1998 the applicants were granted
the tenancy of a municipal apartment. They have benefited from its
use ever since 1999 and there is no reason to consider that they may
lose it.
- As
the Court stated earlier on (see the summary of the Court's approach
in paragraphs 177-192 above), being mindful of the importance of the
legitimate aims pursued by the Restitution Law and the particular
difficulties involved in regulating the restitution of nationalised
property after decades of totalitarian rule, the Court would not
regard as disproportionate every imbalance between the relevant
public interest and the Restitution Law's effects on the particular
individual concerned. A certain “threshold” of hardship
must have been crossed for the Court to find a breach of the
applicants' Article 1 Protocol No.1 rights.
- Despite
the authorities' failure to take into account the responsibility of
the State administration for the defect in the applicants' title, the
Court does not consider that the threshold of hardship has been
reached. It finds, therefore, that there has been no violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
(iv) Cases of excessively extensive
interpretation of the Restitution Law's scope of application
(α) The case of Todorova
- The
Todorova case stands out in that Mrs Todorova's title was
nullified on the basis of section 1 of the Restitution Law, not its
section 7 (see paragraphs 50 and 51 above). The property at issue
here had been acquired by the applicant's grandparents in 1953 as
compensation for the expropriation of their own plot of land and
their house. In 1996-98 the courts noted that the 1953 expropriation
decision had been taken by an administrative body which had lacked
the relevant power and drew the conclusion that the apartment
provided in compensation for that expropriation had not been validly
acquired (see paragraphs 44-51 above).
- The
respondent State obviously enjoyed a wide margin of appreciation when
regulating the consequences of a judicial decision establishing that
a particular legal act was null and void.
- The
Court observes, however, that the applicant's title did not derive
from a transaction to which she or her family had become parties, but
from an order issued by the authorities irrespective of the
applicant's or her family's will. It follows that the State was fully
responsible for all the consequences of the defective order it had
issued. The Court considers that in such cases, the principle of
proportionality required that compensation reasonably related to the
market value of the proparty be paid.
- In
Mrs Todorova's case, the solution the relevant legal regime produced
was the opposite – no compensation. The respondent Government
failed to furnish a single argument demonstrating that some kind of
compensation was available to the applicant or justifying the absence
of redress. The Court considers, however, that in the circumstances
the State was under a duty to provide a clearly regulated and
effective redress procedure. That was not done. The bonds
compensation scheme was not applicable since it only concerned
persons having lost cases under section 7 of the Restitution Law –
a provision which was not applied in Mrs Todorova's case. The
Government have not disputed that the applicant could not seek the
restitution of her grandparents' property on which an office building
had been constructed in the meantime. Finally, she was not entitled
to compensation for her grandparents' plot under the Compensation Law
because it only concerned property expropriated under several
specific pieces of nationalisation legislation of punitive and
redistributive nature, whereas her grandparents' property had been
expropriated under building planning legislation (see paragraphs 44,
51, 131 and 133 above).
- By
depriving the applicant of the apartment her family had received in
compensation for the expropriation of their property, the courts
effectively placed her in the very situation the Restitution Law
intended to remedy – expropriation without compensation. Her
grandparents' property remained in State hands and through no fault
of her own she lost the property received in compensation. In the
Court's view, to accept that such consequences of the application of
the Restitution Law were foreseeable and struck a fair balance
between the public interest and the individual's rights under
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 would be to stretch beyond limits
the margin of appreciation left to the national authorities.
- The
authorities' failure to set clear boundaries on the restitution of
property from bona fide post-nationalisation owners, in
disregard of the principle of proportionality, generated legal
uncertainty and disrupted the balance between the public interest
pursued by the Restitution Law and the individual's rights.
- It
follows that the deprivation of property without compensation in the
Todorova case was a clearly disproportionate measure that was
not necessary in a democratic society. It follows that there has been
a violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention.
(β) The case of Eneva and Dobrev
- Ms
Eneva and Mr Dobrev lost their apartment not because their title was
defective – it was valid – but as a consequence of
defects found to exist in the title of the individual from whom they
had purchased the property some forty years before the implementation
of the Restitution Law against them (see paragraphs 54-58 above).
- The
domestic courts applied a principle of Bulgarian property law,
according to which a sale-purchase contract – albeit valid as a
source of contractual obligations – does not effectively
transfer ownership if the seller was not the owner of the property.
It follows from this principle that a bona fide buyer may have
to restore the property to its original owner seeking rei
vindicatio if it is established that the person with whom the
bona fide buyer entered into a transaction was not the owner.
In theory, a rei vindicatio claim by the original owner can be
brought even after a long chain of transactions, since none of those
would generate ownership rights for the successive buyer.
Nonetheless, the provisions on acquisitive prescription (five years
for a bona fide buyer) curtailed the danger of prolonged legal
uncertainty in most circumstances (see paragraphs 54-58, 116 and 123
above).
- After
the adoption of the Restitution Law, however, the courts, relying on
section 86 of the Property Act, according to which State property
cannot be obtained through acquisitive prescription, adopted the view
that a formerly nationalised piece of property, if it was sold by the
State to an individual under a defective transaction, could be
recovered by the pre nationalisation owner regardless of the
passage of time and from any successive buyer who happened to
purchase it lawfully and in good faith. In the case of Eneva and
Dobrev, the fact that a relevant document had not been found in
the archives concerning the sale of the apartment by the State to a
Ms G. and that that sale was found to have been signed by a
replacement for the relevant mayor sufficed to deprive the applicants
from the property they had acquired from Ms G. in good faith and in
due form forty years before the adoption of the Restitution Law.
Furthermore, the compensation the applicants obtained, five years
after they had to vacate the apartment, amounted to approximately 50%
of the value the property as it stood in 2001 (see paragraphs 54-59
and 61 above).
- The
Court is mindful of the exceptional nature of the Restitution Law and
accepts that in the difficult conditions of transition from a
totalitarian regime to a democratic society its aims could not be
realised without affecting third parties in certain circumstances.
Even so, it should have been possible to devise the restitution
legislation in such a manner so as to avoid dispossessions of bona
fide third persons who had acquired a nationalised property
through a valid transaction or at least to compensate them.
- The
approach applied in the applicants' case meant that anyone who had
purchased in good faith a formerly nationalised property from an
individual could not be certain about his or her ownership rights and
may lose the property without compensation reasonably related to its
market value. As in the case of Mrs Todorova (see paragraph 241
above), the Court considers that the authorities' failure to set
clear limits on the restitution of property from bona fide
third parties and to have regard to the principle of proportionality,
generated legal uncertainty.
- As
regards compensation, there was nothing to justify placing bona
fide third persons, such as the applicants, in the same position
as persons who had acquired property from the State in breach of
substantive provisions of the relevant housing regulations or through
abuse of power (see paragraphs 186 and 190 above). The Government
have not offered any convincing argument in this respect. In the
Court's view, nothing short of compensation reasonably related to the
market value of the applicants' apartment could have maintained the
requisite fair balance under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in their
case. However, by availing themselves of the bonds compensation
scheme as it operated, the applicants did not obtain such
compensation and it has not been alleged by the Government that other
possibilities existed (see paragraphs 59-61 above).
- It
follows that the taking of the applicant's property was a clearly
disproportionate measure that was not necessary in a democratic
society and that there has been, therefore, a violation of Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF ARTICLES 13 AND 14 OF THE
CONVENTION
- In
some of the nine cases under examination the applicants also relied
on Articles 13 and 14 of the Convention, alleging that they had no
effective remedy against the alleged violations of Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 in their cases and that they had been
discriminated against in that the Restitution Law favoured
pre-nationalisation owners to the detriment of post-nationalisation
owners and produced arbitrary results. In support of these
complaints, the applicants made submissions related to the
deficiencies of the bonds compensation scheme, the impossibility to
seek damages from the State for administrative omissions or from the
pre nationalisation owners for improvements. The applicants also
stressed that the Restitution Law had resulted in arbitrary outcomes
for persons who happened to have purchased a formerly nationalised
apartment in good faith.
- The
Court notes that the issues raised by the applicants under Articles
13 and 14 are intrinsically linked to the question whether a fair
balance was achieved under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 and were dealt
with by the Court under the latter provision.
- The
Court finds, therefore, that it is not necessary to examine the same
questions separately under Articles 13 and 14 of the Convention.
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONVENTION IN
THE CASE OF NIKOLOVI
- In
the case of Nikolovi, the applicants, referring to the 2001
judicial proceedings between them and the Russe municipality (see
paragraph 105 above), complained under Article 6 of the Convention
that they had been denied access to a court for the determination of
their right to buy an apartment. The relevant part of Article 6 §
1 of the Convention reads:
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a ... hearing ... by [a] ...
tribunal...”
- The
applicants considered that the mayor of Russe had been under an
obligation to sell an apartment, pursuant to the municipal council's
decision of March 2000 directing that persons who had lost cases
under section 7 of the Restitution Law should be allowed to purchase
municipal apartments (see paragraph 104 above).
- The
Government stated that the impugned refusal of the mayor had not been
a legal act but a simple refusal to enter into a transaction. The
municipality had been free to decide whether or not they wished to
sell an apartment to the applicants. That was not a question to be
decided by the courts.
- As
to the applicability of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, the
Court considers that in 2001, at the time when the applicants
instituted proceedings against the mayor's refusal to sell them an
apartment, their arguments that they had a right under Bulgarian law
to purchase a municipal apartment were at least arguable. In
particular, the wording of section 5 § 2 of the Compensation
Law, which spoke of “priority”, could be understood as
providing for such a right and the respondent Government have not
claimed that at that time there existed established case-law in the
opposite sense. The fact that the Supreme Administrative Court later
adopted the view that there was no “right” to purchase a
municipal apartment under section 5 § 2 of the Compensation Law
did not remove, retrospectively, the arguability of the applicant's
claim at the time it was submitted for adjudication (see Z and
Others v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 29392/95, § 89, ECHR
2001 V and Yanakiev v. Bulgaria, no. 40476/98, § 58,
10 August 2006).
- It
is not disputed that the alleged right the applicants sought to
enforce was civil in nature and that the 2001 proceedings were
decisive for its determination. It follows that Article 6 § 1 of
the Convention applied.
- That
provision secures to everyone the right to have any claim relating to
his civil rights and obligations brought before a court or tribunal.
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 (see Golder v. the United Kingdom,
judgment of 21 February 1975, Series A no. 18, pp. 13-18, §§ 28-36;
Osman v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 28 October 1998,
Reports 1998 VIII, p. 3166, § 136, and p. 3169,
§ 147; and Kutić v. Croatia, no. 48778/99, §
25, ECHR 2002-II).
- In
the present case the Bulgarian courts declared inadmissible the
applicants' appeal against the mayor's refusal to sell them an
apartment. This does not mean, however, that the applicants were
denied access to a court, provided that the dispute which they
submitted for adjudication was the subject of a genuine examination
(see, mutatis mutandis, Obermeier v. Austria,
judgment of 28 June 1990, Series A no. 179, p. 21, § 68).
The decisive issue is whether or not the courts determined the
substance of the dispute between the applicants and the municipality.
- The
applicants had asked the courts to recognise that the municipality
had been under a duty under Bulgarian law to sell them an apartment
and that therefore the mayor's refusal to do so had been unlawful. In
their decisions, the courts ruled that the municipality was not under
a duty to sell an apartment to the applicants. That conclusion was
based on analysis of all relevant arguments of the applicants and the
provisions of domestic law (see paragraph 105 above). The dispute
submitted for adjudication was thus the subject of a genuine
examination and was decided by a legally binding decision. In this
respect the present case differs from the case of Yanakiev v.
Bulgaria, where the Supreme Administrative Court “did not
touch upon the substance of the applicant's claim and the main thrust
of his argument” and thus violated the right of access to a
court (Yanakiev v. Bulgaria, cited above, § 70). In these
circumstances the fact that the courts ruled by way of an
admissibility decision, not a judgment, is irrelevant for purposes of
the applicants' Article 6 complaint.
- Finally,
in so far as the applicants alleged that the findings of the
Bulgarian courts in their case were erroneous, the Court reiterates
that it is not a court of appeal from the decisions of domestic
courts and that, as a general rule, it is for those courts to
interpret domestic law and assess the evidence before them (see Kern
v. Austria, no. 4206/02, § 61, 4 February 2005 and Wittek
v. Germany, no. 37290/97, § 49, ECHR 2000-XI).
- The
Court thus finds that there has been no violation of Article 6 of the
Convention in the case of Nikolovi.
IV. 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.”
- The
Court is required to rule on the applicants' just satisfaction claims
in the cases in which it found a violation of the Convention:
Todorova, Eneva and Dobrev, Bogdanovi and
Tzilevi.
A. Damage
- The
applicants' claims in those four applications were as follows:
a) in
the case of Todorova, EUR 160,500 in respect of pecuniary
damage (supported by a valuation report of the market value of the
property) and EUR 10,000 in non-pecuniary damages;
b) in
the case of Eneva and Dobrev –
EUR 98,280 in respect of the apartment (being the difference between
EUR 117,080, the apartment's market value as assessed in a valuation
report commissioned by the applicants, and EUR 18,800 obtained by the
applicants in 2004 through the sale of their compensation bonds), EUR
35,900 in respect of improvements, loss of gains and damaged
furniture and EUR 20,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
c) in
the case of Bogdanovi, EUR
52,200 in respect of the apartment (being the difference between EUR
58,000, the market value as assessed in by an expert commissioned by
the applicants, and EUR 5,800 obtained in compensation), EUR 14,000
in respect of improvements, losses and liabilities and EUR 25,000 in
non-pecuniary damages; and
d) in
the case of Tzilevi, EUR 56,470 in respect of
the market value of the apartment (supported by a valuation report by
an expert appointed by them), EUR 4,893 in respect of
liabilities incurred and EUR 30,000 for the pain and suffering
endured.
- The
Government did not comment.
- In
the circumstances, the Court considers that the question of the
application of Article 41 is not ready for decision in so far as it
concerns the claims in respect of damage and reserves it, due regard
being had to the possibility that an agreement between the respondent
State and the applicants will be reached (Rule 75 § 1 of the
Rules of Court).
B. Costs and expenses
1. In the case of Todorova
- The
applicant claimed EUR 4,730 for approximately 68 hours of legal work
on the case at the hourly rate of EUR 70. She also claimed EUR 331
in respect of translation, mailing and copying costs. The applicant
submitted a legal fees' agreement between her and their lawyer, a
time-sheet and receipts. She requested that the above amounts –
EUR 5,061 in total – be paid directly into their lawyer's bank
account, after deduction of the legal aid received from the Council
of Europe. Finally, the applicant also claimed EUR 128 for the cost
of the report on the value of the property. The Government did not
comment.
- The
Court considers that the expenses for translation, mailing, copying
and a valuation report have been necessarily incurred and are
reasonable in quantum. As regards legal fees, the Court notes the
complexity of the present case but also the fact that the applicant's
representative acted for several applicants in similar cases the
issues in which overlapped. Taking into account EUR 685 paid in legal
aid by the Council of Europe, it awards the applicant EUR 2,000 in
respect of all costs and expenses, to be paid directly into her
lawyer's bank account, and dismisses the remainder of the claim under
this head.
2. In the case of Eneva and Dobrev
- The
applicants claimed EUR 2,100 in respect of legal fees charged by
their lawyer for work done after the communication of the application
to the respondent Government. They submitted a copy of a legal fees'
agreement and asked that the above amount be paid directly into their
lawyer's bank account. The applicants also claimed the equivalent of
approximately EUR 240 in respect of translation, postal and other
expenses and the cost of the valuation report they submitted. The
Government did not comment.
- The
Court considers that the expenses for translation, mailing and a
valuation report have been necessarily incurred and are reasonable in
quantum. As regards legal fees, the Court notes the complexity of the
present case but also that the applicants' representative was not
involved in the initial stage of the proceedings and represented
several applicants in similar cases the issues in which overlapped.
Taking into account EUR 398 paid in legal aid by the Council of
Europe, it awards the applicants EUR 1,500 in respect of all
costs and expenses, to be paid directly into their lawyer's bank
account, and dismisses the remainder of the claim under this head.
3. In the case of Bogdanovi
- The
applicants claimed EUR 5,100 for legal fees charged by their lawyer
under a contract between them. They submitted a copy of a legal fees'
agreement and asked that the above amount be paid directly into their
lawyer's bank account. The applicants also claimed approximately EUR
450 in respect of translation, postal and travel expenses and the
cost of the valuation report. The Government did not comment.
- The
Court considers that the expenses for translation, mailing and a
valuation report have been necessarily incurred and are reasonable in
quantum. As regards legal fees, the Court notes the complexity of the
present case but also that the applicants' representative acted for
several applicants in similar cases the issues in which overlapped.
Taking into account EUR 685 paid in legal aid by the Council of
Europe, it awards the applicants EUR 2,000 in respect of all costs
and expenses, to be paid directly into their lawyer's bank account,
and dismisses the remainder of the claim under this head.
4. In the case of Tzilevi
- The
applicants claimed EUR 3,430 in legal fees for 49 hours at the hourly
rate of EUR 70. They submitted copies of a legal fees' agreement and
a time sheet and asked that the above amount be paid directly into
their lawyer's bank account. The Government did not comment.
- The
Court considers that the number of hours claimed is excessive. In
view thereof, but also having regard to the complexity of the case,
the Court awards EUR 2,500 in respect of costs and expenses.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Decides to join the applications;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in the applications of Velikovi
(application no. 43278/98), Wulpe (no. 45437/99),
Cholakovi (no. 48014/99), Stoyanova and Ivanov
(no. 53367/99) and Nikolovi (no. 194/02);
- Holds that there has been a violation of
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in the applications of Todorova
(application no. 48380/99), Eneva and Dobrev (no. 51362/99),
Bogdanovi (no. 60036/00) and Tzilevi (no. 73465/01);
- Holds that it is not necessary to examine
separately the applicants' complaints under Articles 13 and 14 of the
Convention;
- Holds that there has been no violation of
Article 6 of the Convention in the application of Nikolovi
(no. 194/02);
- Holds that the question of the application of
Article 41, which arises in respect of the applications of Todorova
(application no. 48380/99), Eneva and Dobrev (no. 51362/99),
Bogdanovi (no. 60036/00) and Tzilevi (no. 73465/01), is
not ready for decision in so far as it concerns the claims in respect
of damage;
accordingly,
(a) reserves
the said question;
(b) invites
the Government and the applicants in the above mentioned four
applications to submit, within two months from the date on which the
judgment becomes final in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the
Convention, their written observations on the matter and, in
particular, to notify the Court of any agreement that they may reach;
(c) reserves
the further procedure in the applications of Todorova
(application no. 48380/99), Eneva and Dobrev (no. 51362/99),
Bogdanovi (no. 60036/00) and Tzilevi (no. 73465/01)
and delegates to the President of the Chamber the power to
fix the same if need be.
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the respective applicants, within
three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final in
accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following
amounts in respect of costs and expenses, payable directly into the
respective lawyer's bank account:
(i) in
the case of Todorova (application no. 48380/99) – EUR
2,000 (two thousand euros);
(ii) in
the case of Eneva and Dobrev (application no. 51362/99) –
EUR 1,500 (one thousand five hundred euros);
(iii) in
the case of Bogdanovi (application no. 60036/00) –
EUR 2,000 (two thousand euros);
(iv) in
the case of Tzilevi (application no. 73465/01) – EUR
2,500 (two thousand five hundred euros);
(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 applicants'
claims for costs and expenses.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 15 March 2007, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Claudia Westerdiek Peer Lorenzen
Registrar President