BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[New search]
[Contents list]
[Printable RTF version]
[Help]
FIRST
SECTION
CASE OF DMITRIYEVA v. RUSSIA
(Application
no. 27101/04)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
3
April 2008
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 Dmitriyeva v. Russia,
The
European Court of Human Rights (First Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Christos Rozakis, President,
Nina
Vajić,
Anatoly Kovler,
Elisabeth
Steiner,
Khanlar Hajiyev,
Dean
Spielmann,
Sverre Erik Jebens, judges,
and Søren
Nielsen, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 13 March 2008,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 27101/04) against the Russian
Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by a Russian national, Ms Tatyana Petrovna
Dmitriyeva (“the applicant”), on 20 June 2004.
- The
Russian Government (“the Government”) were represented by
Mr P. Laptev, Representative of the Russian Federation at the
European Court of Human Rights.
- The
applicant complained about non-enforcement of a judgment in her
favour and its quashing by way of supervisory review.
- On
22 February 2005 the Court decided to give notice of the application
to the Government. Under the provisions of Article 29 § 3 of the
Convention, it decided to examine the merits of the application at
the same time as its admissibility.
- On
4 April 2006 the Court put additional questions to the parties.
THE FACTS
- The
applicant was born in 1946 and lives in the village of Chulman in the
Sakha (Yakutiya) Republic of the Russian Federation.
- The
applicant brought an action against the Government, seeking to
enforce State promissory notes for purchasing of a Russian-made car
or to recover the monetary value thereof.
- On
15 November 2002 the Neryungri Town Court of the Sakha (Yakutiya)
Republic found for the applicant and awarded her RUB 138,967 against
the Treasury. On 20 January 2003 the Supreme Court of the Sakha
(Yakutiya) Republic (hereinafter the “Supreme Court”)
upheld the judgment on appeal.
- On
26 February 2003 the applicant submitted a writ of execution to the
Government of the Russian Federation. On 4 March 2003 the writ was
forwarded to the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation.
- According
to the Government, in October 2003 the Supreme Court stayed
proceedings on all claims concerning State promissory notes until
such time as the Constitutional Court had decided on the reference
for a preliminary ruling submitted by the Presidium of the Supreme
Court. The reference concerned compatibility of the law governing
redemption of State promissory notes with the Russian Constitution.
- On
21 December 2004 the Ministry of Finance asked the court for an
extension of the time-limit for filing an application for supervisory
review of the judgment in the applicant's favour.
- On
28 March 2005 a judge of the Neryungri Town Court granted the
Ministry's request, finding as follows:
“Pursuant to Article 376 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, final court judgments may be appealed against before the
supervisory-review instance within one year after they became final.
In the present case ... this procedural time-limit expired on
20 January 2004. However, as the court has established, on 23
October 2003 the Supreme Court of the Sakha (Yakutiya) Republic did
indeed suspend proceedings on the claims lodged by owners of State
promissory notes for purchasing of cars against the Government of
Russian Federation (the Ministry of Finance of the Russian
Federation) in connection with the reference for a preliminary
ruling..., which fact is confirmed by the Supreme Court's letter of 5
November 2003.
Having regard to the above, pursuant to Article 112 § 1
of the Code of Civil Procedure, a court may only extend a time-limit
if the party can show valid reasons for having missed it. The court
finds that the above reasons exposed by the [Ministry of Finance]
were valid.”
- On
7 July 2005 the Presidium of the Supreme Court of the Sakha
(Yakutiya) Republic, by way of supervisory-review proceedings,
quashed the judgment of 15 November 2002, as upheld on 20
January 2003, and dismissed the applicant's claims. According to the
applicant, she was not informed of the hearing. The Government
produced a copy of summons addressed to several persons, including
the applicant. In quashing the judgment, the Presidium noted that the
lower courts had not taken into account certain provisions relating
to reimbursement of State promissory notes and thereby committed a
breach of substantive law.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION AND ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 ON ACCOUNT OF
QUASHING OF THE JUDGMENT IN THE APPLICANT'S FAVOUR
- Without
invoking specific Convention provisions, the applicant complained
that the Presidium of the Supreme Court of the Sakha (Yakutiya)
Republic had incorrectly interpreted and applied the domestic law,
had wrongly quashed the judgment of 15 November 2002 and dismissed
her action in full. The Court considers that the question before it
is to determine whether the act of quashing violated the applicant's
“right to a court” under Article 6 § 1
of the Convention and her right to the peaceful enjoyment of
possessions under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. The relevant parts of
these provisions read as follows:
Article 6 § 1
“In the determination of his civil rights and
obligations ..., everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing within a
reasonable time... by [a]... tribunal...”
Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
“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...”
A. Admissibility
- The Court considers that this complaint is not
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of
the Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any
other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
1. Alleged violation of Article 6 of the Convention
- The
Government submitted that the Presidium of the Supreme Court of the
Sakha (Yakutiya) Republic had had lawful grounds to quash the
judgment in the applicant's favour because her claims had been
granted erroneously. Accordingly, there had been no violation of the
applicant's “right to a court” under Article 6 § 1
of the Convention.
- The
applicant maintained that, by quashing the judgment in her favour,
the State had unlawfully relieved itself of the obligation to enforce
the promissory notes.
- The
Court reiterates that Article 6 § 1 secures to everyone the
right to have any claim relating to his civil rights and obligations
brought before a court or tribunal. In this way it embodies the
“right to a court”, of which the right of access, that is
the right to institute proceedings before courts in civil matters,
constitutes one aspect. However, that right would be illusory if a
Contracting State's domestic legal system allowed a final and binding
judicial decision to be quashed by a higher court on an application
made by a State official whose power to lodge such an application is
not subject to any time-limit, with the result that the judgments
were liable to challenge indefinitely (see Ryabykh v. Russia,
no. 52854/99, §§ 54-56, ECHR 2003 IX).
- In
the present case the judgment of 15 November 2002, as upheld on
appeal on 20 January 2003, was set aside by way of supervisory review
on the ground that the courts had erred in application of the
substantive law. The Court has to assess whether the power to conduct
a supervisory review was exercised by the authorities so as to
strike, to the maximum extent possible, a fair balance between the
interests of the individual and the need to ensure the proper
administration of justice (see, mutatis mutandis, Nikitin
v. Russia, no. 50178/99, §§ 57 and 59, ECHR
2004 ...).
- The
Court takes note, firstly, of an exceptionally long period of time –
more than two years – that lapsed from the date the judgment in
the applicant's favour had become legally binding to the date the
supervisory-review proceedings were conducted. It observes that the
Code of Civil Procedure (“CCP”) set a time-limit of one
year for lodging an application for supervisory review, the starting
point being the date on which the judicial decision became legally
binding (Article 376 § 2 of the CCP). In the present case this
time-limit was extended on the ground that the proceedings on other
similar claims had been suspended pending the Constitutional Court's
decision. The reason invoked for granting an extension does not
appear convincing to the Court. Firstly, by the time the Supreme
Court decided to adjourn proceedings on similar claims in October
2003, the proceedings on the applicant's claim had already ended with
the final appeal judgment of 20 January 2003. It is not clear how the
decision on adjournment of pending proceedings could have effect on
the proceedings that had already been finished more than eight months
ago. Secondly, in so far as the decision on adjournment was invoked
as the sole reason for granting an extension, the Court observes that
at the time it was issued in October 2003 the statutory one-year
time-limit for lodging an application for supervisory review against
the appeal judgment of 20 January 2003 had not yet expired. It is
hardly conceivable that the Ministry of Finance would not be aware of
the adjournment decision immediately, taking into account that it
acted as the defendant in all similar cases. The Government did not
point to any exceptional circumstances which could have prevented the
Ministry of Finance from filing the supervisory-review application
between October 2003 and January 2004, that is within the statutory
time-limit. The Court finds that by accepting a belated application
for supervisory review without valid grounds the domestic courts
breached the principle of legal certainty.
- In
addition to the laxity of the time-limits which the Court has noted
above, it reiterates its constant approach that in the absence of a
fundamental defect in the previous proceedings a party's disagreement
with the assessment made by the first-instance and appeal courts is
not a circumstance of a substantial and compelling character
warranting the quashing of a binding and enforceable judgment and
re-opening of the proceedings on the applicant's claim (see
Dovguchits v. Russia, no. 2999/03, § 30, 7 June
2007; and Kot v. Russia, no. 20887/03, § 29, 18 January
2007). The Government did not claim that the previous proceedings
before the first-instance and appeal courts had been tarnished by a
fundamental defect. In fact, the judgment in the applicant's favour
was quashed because of incorrect application of substantive law. That
ground was not a fundamental defect within the meaning of the Court's
case-law and could not justify a departure from the principle of
legal certainty.
- The
Court has already found a violation of an applicant's “right to
a court” guaranteed by Article 6 § 1 of the Convention in
the cases in which a judicial decision that had become final and
binding, was subsequently quashed after a substantial delay for the
sole purpose of re-arguing the case (see the Dovguchits, Kot
and Ryabykh judgments, cited above). The Government did
not put forward any arguments which would enable the Court to reach a
different conclusion in the present case. The Court therefore finds
that the quashing of the judgment of 15 November 2002, as upheld on
appeal on 20 January 2003, by way of supervisory review, infringed
the principle of legal certainty and the applicant's “right to
a court”. There has been, accordingly, a violation of Article 6
§ 1 of the Convention.
2. Alleged violation of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1
- The
Court reiterates that the existence of a debt confirmed by a binding
and enforceable judgment furnishes the judgment beneficiary with a
“legitimate expectation” that the debt would be paid and
constitutes the beneficiary's “possessions” within the
meaning of Article 1 of Protocol No. 1. Quashing of such a
judgment amounts to an interference with his or her right to peaceful
enjoyment of possessions (see, among other authorities, Androsov
v. Russia, no. 63973/00, § 69, 6 October 2005).
- The
Government denied that there had been an interference with the
applicant's rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 because she
could still apply for redemption of the promissory note.
- The
Court observes that the applicant obtained a binding and enforceable
judgment in her favour, by the terms of which the Ministry of Finance
was to pay her a substantial sum of money. She was prevented from
receiving the award through no fault of hers. The quashing of the
enforceable judgment frustrated the applicant's reliance on the
binding judicial decision and deprived her of an opportunity to
receive the money she had legitimately expected to receive. In these
circumstances, even assuming that the interference was lawful and
pursued a legitimate aim, the Court considers that the quashing of
the enforceable judgment in the applicant's favour by way of
supervisory review placed an excessive burden on her and was
incompatible with Article 1 of the Protocol No. 1. There has
therefore been a violation of that Article.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE
CONVENTION AND ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL NO. 1 ON ACCOUNT OF
NON-ENFORCEMENT OF THE JUDGMENT
- The
applicant complained that non-enforcement of the judgment of 15
November 2002, as upheld on appeal on 20 January 2003, had violated
her rights under Article 6 § 1 of the Convention
and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1, cited above.
A. Admissibility
- The Court considers that this complaint is not
manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of
the Convention. It further notes that it is not inadmissible on any
other grounds. It must therefore be declared admissible.
B. Merits
- The
Government claimed that the complaint was premature because the
supervisory review proceedings had been instituted. The applicant
disagreed.
- The
Court observes that the issue to be examined is whether the judgment
in the applicant's favour was enforced within a “reasonable
time”. Accordingly, it is necessary to ascertain that the
judgment was “enforceable”. In the instant case, after
the Supreme Court had dismissed an appeal against the judgment of 25
November 2002, in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure the
judgment became legally binding and enforceable. From that moment on,
it was incumbent on the debtor, a State ministry, to comply with it.
The launching of the supervisory-review procedure could not, in
itself, extinguish the debtor's obligation to comply with the
enforceable judgment which obligation existed until 7 July 2005 when
the Presidium of the Supreme Court quashed that judgment. In any
event, the Court reiterates that the quashing of a judgment in a
manner which has been found to have been incompatible with the
principle of legal certainty and the applicant's “right to a
court” cannot be accepted as justification for the failure to
enforce that judgment (see Sukhobokov v. Russia, no.
75470/01, § 26, 13 April 2006).
- It follows that from 20 January 2003 to 7 July 2005
the judgment in the applicant's favour was “enforceable”
and it was incumbent on the State agency to execute it. As it
appears, no steps were taken for enforcement of the judgment.
- The
Court has frequently found violations of Article 6 § 1
of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 in cases raising
issues similar to the ones in the present case (see Burdov v.
Russia, no. 59498/00, ECHR 2002-III; and, more recently,
Poznakhirina v. Russia, no. 25964/02, 24 February 2005;
Wasserman v. Russia (no. 1), no. 15021/02, 18 November
2004).
- Having
examined the material submitted to it, the Court notes that the
Government did not put forward any fact or argument capable of
persuading it to reach a different conclusion in the present case.
They did not advance any justification for the delay in enforcement.
Having regard to its case-law on the subject, the Court finds that by
failing for a substantial period to comply with the enforceable
judgment in the applicant's favour the domestic authorities violated
her right to a court and prevented her from receiving the money she
legitimately expected to receive. Accordingly, there has been a
violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention and Article 1
of Protocol No. 1 on account of non-enforcement of the judgment of
15 November 2002, as upheld on appeal on 20 January 2003.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
- The
applicant claimed 25,000 euros (EUR) in respect of non-pecuniary
damage and EUR 15,000 in respect of pecuniary damage, representing
the present-day value of a Russian-made passenger car, plus EUR 5,000
in respect of the interest accrued on the promissory note.
- The
Government submitted that the claim was excessive and ill-founded.
They insisted that there was no causal link between the
non-enforcement of the judgment and the claim for the car value. In
any event, the price of such a car did not exceed 6,500 US dollars.
- The
Court recalls that in the instant case it found a violation of
Article 6 § 1 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol
No. 1, in that the judgment in the applicant's favour had remained
unenforced for a long period of time and had been subsequently
quashed. The applicant was thereby prevented from receiving the money
she had legitimately expected to receive. There has been therefore a
causal link between the violations found and the applicant's claim
for the pecuniary damage in so far as it concerned the original award
(compare Prisyazhnikova and Dolgopolov v. Russia,
no. 24247/04, § 45, 28 September 2006). The
applicant's right to receive any additional amount was not upheld in
the domestic proceedings. The Court further notes that the applicant
did not explain her method of calculation of the interest or produce
any documents showing the evolution of the interest rate she had used
for calculations. Accordingly, the Court awards the applicant EUR
4,100 in respect of the pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may be
chargeable on that amount, and dismisses the remainder of her claim
for the pecuniary damage.
- The
Court further considers that the applicant suffered distress and
frustration because of the State authorities' failure to enforce the
judgment in her favour and their subsequent decision to quash it. The
particular amount claimed is, however, excessive. The Court takes
into account the amount and nature of the award in the instant case
and the period of the authorities' inactivity. Making its assessment
on an equitable basis, it awards the applicant EUR 3,500, plus any
tax that may be chargeable on it.
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicant also claimed EUR 5,000 for the costs and expenses incurred
before the domestic courts and the Court. She submitted a few postal
receipts and train tickets.
- The
Government pointed out that the documents produced by the applicant
did not cover the entire amount claimed. The relevance of these
documents to the domestic proceedings was also not apparent.
- According
to the Court's case-law, an applicant is entitled to the
reimbursement of costs and expenses only in so far as it has been
shown that these have been actually and necessarily incurred and were
reasonable as to quantum. In accordance with Rule 60 §§ 2
and 3 of the Rules of Court, the Court makes no award in respect of
costs and expenses because the applicant did not submit itemised
particulars of her claim.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Declares the application admissible;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 on account of the
quashing of the judgment of 15 November 2002, as upheld on appeal on
20 January 2003, by way of supervisory review;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
6 of the Convention and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 on account of
prolonged non-enforcement of the judgment of 15 November 2002, as
upheld on appeal on 20 January 2003;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant, within three months
from the date on which the judgment becomes final in accordance with
Article 44 § 2 of the Convention, the following
amounts, to be converted into Russian roubles at the rate applicable
at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR
4,100 (four thousand one hundred euros) in respect of pecuniary
damage;
(ii) EUR
3,500 (three thousand five hundred euros) in respect of non-pecuniary
damage;
(iii) any
tax that may be chargeable on the above amounts;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three
months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above
amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European
Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicant's claim
for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 3 April 2008, pursuant to
Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Søren Nielsen Christos Rozakis
Registrar President